81_FR_92709 81 FR 92466 - Promulgation of Certain Federal Water Quality Standards Applicable to Maine

81 FR 92466 - Promulgation of Certain Federal Water Quality Standards Applicable to Maine

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 243 (December 19, 2016)

Page Range92466-92494
FR Document2016-30331

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is finalizing federal Clean Water Act (CWA) water quality standards (WQS) for certain waters under the state of Maine's jurisdiction, including human health criteria (HHC) to protect the sustenance fishing designated use in waters in Indian lands and in waters subject to sustenance fishing rights under the Maine Implementing Act (MIA). EPA is promulgating these WQS to address various disapprovals of Maine's standards that EPA issued in February, March, and June 2015, and to address the Administrator's determination that Maine's HHC are not adequate to protect the designated use of sustenance fishing for certain waters.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 243 (Monday, December 19, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 243 (Monday, December 19, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 92466-92494]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-30331]



[[Page 92465]]

Vol. 81

Monday,

No. 243

December 19, 2016

Part IX





Environmental Protection Agency





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40 CFR Part 131





Promulgation of Certain Federal Water Quality Standards Applicable to 
Maine; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / 
Rules and Regulations

[[Page 92466]]


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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Part 131

[EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0804; FRL-9952-99-OW]
RIN 2040-AF59


Promulgation of Certain Federal Water Quality Standards 
Applicable to Maine

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is finalizing 
federal Clean Water Act (CWA) water quality standards (WQS) for certain 
waters under the state of Maine's jurisdiction, including human health 
criteria (HHC) to protect the sustenance fishing designated use in 
waters in Indian lands and in waters subject to sustenance fishing 
rights under the Maine Implementing Act (MIA). EPA is promulgating 
these WQS to address various disapprovals of Maine's standards that EPA 
issued in February, March, and June 2015, and to address the 
Administrator's determination that Maine's HHC are not adequate to 
protect the designated use of sustenance fishing for certain waters.

DATES: This final rule is effective on January 18, 2017. The 
incorporation by reference of certain publications listed in the rule 
is approved by the Director of the Federal Register as of January 18, 
2017.

ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket ID 
No. EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0804. All documents in the docket are listed on the 
http://www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in the index, some 
information is not publicly available, e.g., CBI or other information 
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such 
as copyrighted material, is not placed on the Internet and will be 
publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket 
materials are available electronically through http://www.regulations.gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jennifer Brundage, Office of Water, 
Standards and Health Protection Division (4305T), Environmental 
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20460; 
telephone number: (202) 566-1265; email address: 
[email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule is organized as follows:

I. General Information
    A. Does this action apply to me?
    B. How did EPA develop this final rule?
II. Background and Summary
    A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
    B. Description of Final Rule
III. Summary of Major Comments Received and EPA's Response
    A. Overview of Comments
    B. Maine Indian Settlement Acts
    C. Sustenance Fishing Designated Use
    D. Human Health Criteria for Toxics for Waters in Indian Lands
    E. Other Water Quality Standards
IV. Economic Analysis
    A. Identifying Affected Entities
    B. Method for Estimated Costs
    C. Results
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
    A. Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) and 
Executive Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review)
    B. Paperwork Reduction Act
    C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    E. Executive Order 13132
    F. Executive Order 13175 (Consultation and Coordination With 
Indian Tribal Governments)
    G. Executive Order 13045 (Protection of Children From 
Environmental Health and Safety Risks)
    H. Executive Order 13211 (Actions That Significantly Affect 
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use)
    I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
    J. Executive Order 12898 (Federal Actions To Address 
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income 
Populations)
    K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)

I. General Information

A. Does this action apply to me?

    Entities such as industries, stormwater management districts, or 
publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) that discharge pollutants to 
waters of the United States in Maine could be indirectly affected by 
this rulemaking, because federal WQS promulgated by EPA are applicable 
to CWA regulatory programs, such as National Pollutant Discharge 
Elimination System (NPDES) permitting. Citizens concerned with water 
quality in Maine, including members of the federally recognized Indian 
tribes in Maine, could also be interested in this rulemaking. 
Dischargers that could potentially be affected include the following:

      Table 1--Dischargers Potentially Affected by This Rulemaking
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                                      Examples of potentially affected
             Category                             entities
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Industry..........................  Industries discharging pollutants to
                                     waters of the United States in
                                     Maine.
Municipalities....................  Publicly owned treatment works or
                                     other facilities discharging
                                     pollutants to waters of the United
                                     States in Maine.
Stormwater Management Districts...  Entities responsible for managing
                                     stormwater runoff in the state of
                                     Maine.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a 
guide for readers regarding entities that could be indirectly affected 
by this action. Any parties or entities who depend upon or contribute 
to the quality of Maine's waters could be affected by this rule. To 
determine whether your facility or activities could be affected by this 
action, you should carefully examine this rule. If you have questions 
regarding the applicability of this action to a particular entity, 
consult Jennifer Brundage, whose contact information can be found in 
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION section above.

B. How did EPA develop this final rule?

    In developing this final rule, EPA carefully considered the public 
comments and feedback received from interested parties. EPA provided a 
60-day public comment period after publishing the proposed rule in the 
Federal Register on April 20, 2016.\1\ In addition, EPA held two 
virtual public hearings on June 7 and 9, 2016, to discuss the contents 
of the proposed rule and accept verbal public comments.
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    \1\ See Proposal of Certain Federal Water Quality Standards 
Applicable to Maine, 81 FR 23239, April 20, 2016.
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    Over 100 organizations and individuals submitted comments on a 
range of issues. Some comments addressed issues beyond the scope of the 
rulemaking, and thus EPA did not consider them in finalizing this rule. 
In section III of this preamble, EPA discusses certain public comments 
so that the public is aware of the Agency's position. For a full 
response to these

[[Page 92467]]

and all other comments, see EPA's Response to Comments (RTC) document 
in the official public docket.

II. Background and Summary

A. Statutory and Regulatory Background

1. Clean Water Act (CWA)
    CWA section 101(a)(2) establishes as a national goal ``water 
quality which provides for the protection and propagation of fish, 
shellfish, and wildlife, and recreation in and on the water, wherever 
attainable.'' These are commonly referred to as the ``fishable/
swimmable'' goals of the CWA. EPA interprets ``fishable'' uses to 
include, at a minimum, designated uses providing for the protection of 
aquatic communities and human health related to consumption of fish and 
shellfish.\2\
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    \2\ USEPA. 2000. Memorandum #WQSP-00-03. U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-01/documents/standards-shellfish.pdf.
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    CWA section 303(c) (33 U.S.C. 1313(c)) directs states to adopt 
water quality standards (WQS) for waters under their jurisdiction 
subject to the CWA. CWA section 303(c)(2)(A) and EPA's implementing 
regulations at 40 CFR part 131 require, among other things, that a 
state's WQS specify appropriate designated uses of the waters, and 
water quality criteria to protect those uses that are based on sound 
scientific rationale. EPA's regulations at 40 CFR 131.11(a)(1) provide 
that such criteria ``must be based on sound scientific rationale and 
must contain sufficient parameters or constituents to protect the 
designated use.'' In addition, 40 CFR 131.10(b) provides that ``[i]n 
designating uses of a waterbody and the appropriate criteria for those 
uses, the state shall take into consideration the water quality 
standards of downstream waters and ensure that its water quality 
standards provide for the attainment and maintenance of the water 
quality standards of downstream waters.''
    States are required to review applicable WQS at least once every 
three years and, if appropriate, revise or adopt new standards (CWA 
section 303(c)(1)). Any new or revised WQS must be submitted to EPA for 
review, to determine whether it meets the CWA's requirements, and for 
approval or disapproval (CWA section 303(c)(2)(A) and (c)(3)). If EPA 
disapproves a state's new or revised WQS, the CWA provides the state 
ninety days to adopt a revised WQS that meets CWA requirements, and if 
it fails to do so, EPA shall promptly propose and then within ninety 
days promulgate such standard unless EPA approves a state replacement 
WQS first (CWA section 303(c)(3) and (c)(4)(A)). If the state adopts 
and EPA approves a state replacement WQS after EPA promulgates a 
standard, EPA then withdraws its promulgation. CWA section 303(c)(4)(B) 
authorizes the Administrator to determine, even in the absence of a 
state submission, that a new or revised standard is necessary to meet 
CWA requirements. Upon making such a determination, EPA shall promptly 
propose, and then within ninety days promulgate, any such new or 
revised standard unless prior to such promulgation, the state has 
adopted a revised or new WQS that EPA approves as being in accordance 
with the CWA.
    Under CWA section 304(a), EPA periodically publishes water quality 
criteria recommendations for states to consider when adopting water 
quality criteria for particular pollutants to protect the CWA section 
101(a)(2) goal uses. For example, in 2015, EPA updated its CWA section 
304(a) recommended criteria for human health for 94 pollutants (the 
2015 criteria update).\3\ Where EPA has published recommended criteria, 
states should adopt water quality criteria based on EPA's CWA section 
304(a) criteria, section 304(a) criteria modified to reflect site-
specific conditions, or other scientifically defensible methods (40 CFR 
131.11(b)(1)). CWA section 303(c)(2)(B) requires states to adopt 
numeric criteria for all toxic pollutants listed pursuant to CWA 
section 307(a)(1) for which EPA has published CWA section 304(a) 
criteria, as necessary to support the states' designated uses.
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    \3\ Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the 
Protection of Human Health, (80 FR 36986, June 29, 2015). See also: 
USEPA. 2015. Final 2015 Updated National Recommended Human Health 
Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, 
Washington, DC. http://water.epa.gov/scitech/swguidance/standards/criteria/current/hhfinal.cfm.
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2. Maine Indian Settlement Acts
    There are four federally recognized Indian tribes in Maine 
represented by five governing bodies. The Penobscot Nation and the 
Passamaquoddy Tribe have reservations and trust land holdings in 
central and coastal Maine. The Passamaquoddy Tribe has two governing 
bodies, one on the Pleasant Point Reservation and another on the Indian 
Township Reservation. The Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians and the 
Aroostook Band of Micmacs have trust lands farther north in the state. 
To simplify the discussion, EPA will refer to the Penobscot Nation and 
the Passamaquoddy Tribe together as the ``Southern Tribes'' and the 
Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians and Aroostook Band of Micmacs as the 
``Northern Tribes.'' EPA acknowledges that these are collective 
appellations the tribes themselves have not adopted, and the Agency 
uses them solely to simplify this discussion.
    In 1980, Congress passed the Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act 
(MICSA) that resolved litigation in which the Southern Tribes asserted 
land claims to a large portion of the state of Maine. Public Law 96-
420, 94 Stat. 1785. MICSA ratified a state statute passed in 1979, the 
Maine Implementing Act (MIA, 30 M.R.S. 6201, et seq.), which was 
designed to embody the agreement reached between the state and the 
Southern Tribes. In 1981, MIA was amended to include provisions for 
land to be taken into trust for the Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians, 
as provided for in MICSA. Public Law 96-420, 94 Stat. 1785 section 
5(d)(1); 30 M.R.S. 6205-A. Since it is Congress that has plenary 
authority as to federally recognized Indian tribes, MIA's provisions 
concerning jurisdiction and the status of the tribes are effective as a 
result of, and consistent with, the Congressional ratification in 
MICSA.
    In 1989, the Maine legislature passed the Micmac Settlement Act 
(MSA) to embody an agreement as to the status of the Aroostook Band of 
Micmacs. 30 M.R.S. 7201, et seq. In 1991, Congress passed the Aroostook 
Band of Micmacs Settlement Act (ABMSA), which ratified the MSA. Act of 
Nov. 26, 1991, Public Law 102-171, 105 Stat. 1143. One principal 
purpose of both statutes was to give the Micmacs the same settlement 
that had been provided to the Maliseets in MICSA. See ABMSA 2(a)(4) and 
(5). In 2007, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit confirmed 
that the Micmacs and Maliseets are subject to the same jurisdictional 
provisions in MICSA. Aroostook Band of Micmacs v. Ryan, 484 F.3d 41 
(1st Cir. 2007). Where appropriate, this preamble discussion will refer 
to the combination of MICSA, MIA, ABMSA, and MSA as the ``Indian 
settlement acts'' or ``settlement acts.''
3. EPA's Disapprovals of Portions of Maine's Water Quality Standards
    On February 2, March 16, and June 5, 2015, EPA disapproved a number 
of Maine's new and revised WQS. These decision letters are available in 
the docket for this rulemaking. They were prompted by an ongoing 
lawsuit

[[Page 92468]]

initiated by Maine against EPA.\4\ As discussed in the preamble to the 
proposed rule (see 81 FR 23239, 23241-23242), some of the disapprovals 
applied only to waters in Indian lands in Maine, while others applied 
to waters throughout the state or to waters in the state outside of 
Indian lands.\5\ EPA concluded that the disapproved WQS did not 
adequately protect designated uses related to the protection of human 
health and/or aquatic life.\6\ EPA requested the state to revise its 
WQS to address the issues identified in the disapprovals. The statutory 
90-day timeframe provided to the state to revise its WQS has passed 
with respect to all of the disapproved WQS. EPA is required by the CWA 
to promptly propose and then, within 90 days of proposal, to promulgate 
federal standards unless, in the meantime, the state adopts and EPA 
approves state replacement WQS that address EPA's disapproval. The 
state has not adopted WQS revisions to address the disapprovals. Having 
published the proposed rule on April 20, 2016, EPA is today finalizing 
the rule. With the exception of minor revisions to several human health 
criteria as noted in section II.B.1.a and two small changes discussed 
in section II.B.2, EPA's final rule is identical to the proposed rule.
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    \4\ The state has filed an amended complaint in that lawsuit, 
challenging, among other things, EPA's February 2, 2015 approval of 
certain designated uses and disapprovals of Maine's HHC.
    \5\ As discussed in the proposal for this rule, unlike in most 
other states, Maine has the authority to promulgate WQS for waters 
in Indian lands in Maine, as a result of the settlement acts.
    \6\ After further consideration, by letter of January 19, 2016, 
EPA withdrew its February 2, 2015, disapprovals of Maine's HHC for 
six pollutants (copper, asbestos, barium, iron, manganese and 
nitrates) and instead approved them. EPA concluded that those 
criteria were not calculated using a fish consumption rate, and 
therefore the basis for EPA's disapprovals of the HHC in the 
February 2, 2015, decision letter did not apply. EPA approved them 
as being consistent with EPA's recommended CWA section 304(a) 
criteria. In addition, by letter of April 11, 2016, EPA withdrew its 
February 2, 2015, disapprovals of Maine's HHC for the following HHC 
and instead approved them: (1) For the consumption of water plus 
organisms for 1,2-dichloropropane, 1,4-dichlorobenzene, 
dichlorobromomethane, chlorodibromomethane, chrysene, methylene 
chloride, chlorophenoxy herbicide (2, 4, 5-TP), chlorophenoxy 
herbicide (2,4-D), and Nnitrosopyrrolidine; (2) for the consumption 
of organisms alone for acrolein and gamma-BHC (Lindane); and (3) for 
both the consumption of water plus organisms and for the consumption 
of organisms alone for 1,2-dichloroethane, acrylonitrile, benzidine, 
bis(chloromethyl) ether, chloroform, methyl bromide, and 
tetrachloroethylene. EPA calculated the HHC for these pollutants 
using the best science reflected in the 2015 criteria updates (which 
were finalized after the disapprovals), along with a fish 
consumption rate (FCR) of 286 g/day to protect the sustenance 
fishing use, and concluded that the resulting HHC were either the 
same or less stringent than Maine's HHC that EPA had disapproved. 
Accordingly, EPA withdrew the disapprovals and approved these HHC 
based on their being adequate to protect the sustenance fishing use.
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4. Scope of Action
a. Scope of Promulgation Related to Disapprovals
    To address the disapprovals discussed in section II.A.3, EPA is 
promulgating human health criteria (HHC) for toxic pollutants and six 
other WQS that apply only to waters in Indian lands; two WQS for all 
waters in Maine including waters in Indian lands; and one WQS for 
waters in Maine outside of Indian lands. For the purpose of this 
rulemaking, ``waters in Indian lands'' are those waters in the tribes' 
reservations and trust lands as provided for in the settlement acts.
b. Scope of Promulgation Related to the Administrator's Determination
    On April 20, 2016, EPA made a CWA section 303(c)(4)(B) 
determination that, for any waters in Maine where there is a sustenance 
fishing designated use and Maine's existing HHC are in effect, new or 
revised HHC for the protection of human health in Maine are necessary 
to meet the requirements of the CWA. EPA proposed (see 81 FR 23239, 
23242-23243), and is now finalizing, HHC for toxic pollutants, in 
accordance with the CWA section 303(c)(4)(B) determination, for the 
following waters: (1) Waters in Indian lands in the event that a court 
determines that EPA's disapprovals of HHC for such waters were 
unauthorized and that Maine's existing HHC are in effect; \7\ and (2) 
waters where there is a sustenance fishing designated use outside of 
waters in Indian lands.\8\
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    \7\ Maine has challenged EPA's disapprovals in federal district 
court, asserting that EPA did not have the authority to disapprove 
the HHC in waters in Indian lands. While EPA's position is that the 
disapprovals were authorized and Maine's existing HHC are not in 
effect, this determination ensures that EPA has the authority to 
promulgate the proposed HHC, and that the tribes' sustenance fishing 
use would be protected, even if Maine were to prevail in its 
challenge to EPA's disapproval authority.
    \8\ In its February 2015 Decision, EPA concluded that section 
6207(4) and (9) of MIA constituted a new or revised water quality 
standard and approved the provision as a designated use of 
sustenance fishing applicable to all inland waters of the Southern 
Tribes' reservations in which populations of fish are or may be 
found. Accordingly, EPA's approval of MIA section 6207(4) and (9) as 
a designated use of sustenance fishing applies to all waters where 
the Southern Tribes have a right to sustenance fish, irrespective of 
whether such waters are determined to be outside of the scope of 
their reservation for purposes other than sustenance fishing.
    EPA notes that there may be one or more waters where the 
sustenance fishing designated use based on MIA section 6207(4) and 
(9) extends beyond ``waters in Indian lands.'' For example, a 
federal district court recently held that the Penobscot Nation's 
``reservation'' for sustenance fishing purposes, as contained in MIA 
section 6207(4), is broader in scope than its ``reservation'' under 
MIA section 6203(8). Penobscot Nation v. Mills, 151 F. Supp. 3d 181 
(D. Maine Dec. 16, 2015) (formerly, Penobscot v. Schneider), appeal 
docketed, No. 16-1435 (1st Cir. April 26, 2016). The court held that 
the Penobscot Nation has a right to sustenance fish throughout the 
main stem of the Penobscot River (from Indian Island to the 
confluence of the East and West Branches of the Penobscot River), 
though its reservation under section 6203(8) consists solely of the 
islands in that stretch of the river. The determination and 
corresponding final HHC apply to any water that is beyond the scope 
of ``waters in Indian lands'' and to which the sustenance fishing 
designated use based on MIA section 6207(4) and (9) applies. For a 
more detailed discussion, see section III.D.5 of this preamble, and 
also Topic 5 in EPA's Response to Comments document and the ``Scope 
of Waters'' Technical Support Document; both documents are in the 
docket for this rulemaking.
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5. Applicability of Water Quality Standards
    These water quality standards apply to the categories of waters for 
CWA purposes, as described in II.B below. Although EPA is finalizing 
WQS to address the standards that it disapproved or for which it has 
made a determination, Maine continues to have the option to adopt and 
submit to EPA new or revised WQS that remedy the issues identified in 
the disapprovals and determination, consistent with CWA section 303(c) 
and EPA's implementing regulations at 40 CFR part 131.
    Some commenters urged EPA to finalize its rule without any further 
delay. Conversely, the state noted that EPA should give it additional 
time to adopt and submit its own WQS to address EPA's disapprovals. EPA 
acknowledges the perspectives of all of these commenters. EPA agrees 
that there is a compelling need to finalize the WQS, particularly in 
waters in Indian lands in Maine. For many pollutants, there are no 
criteria in effect for CWA purposes in waters in Indian lands, 
including most human health criteria, and it is important to remedy 
this gap in protection without further delay where possible. Further, 
the tribes have repeatedly expressed their desire for, and the 
importance of, their right to a sustenance fishing way of life, 
reserved for them under the settlement acts, to be protected. EPA, as a 
federal government agency, is taking action to protect that right, 
consistent with the settlement acts and CWA, as described further 
below.
    EPA also agrees that the CWA is intended to protect the Nation's 
waters through a system of cooperative federalism, with states having 
the primary responsibility of establishing protective WQS for waters 
under their jurisdiction. However, Maine is challenging EPA's 
disapproval of the

[[Page 92469]]

HHC for waters in Indian lands in federal court, and it commented 
adversely on EPA's proposed HHC, pH, bacteria, and tidal temperature 
criteria for waters in Indian lands. Consequently, EPA has no assurance 
that Maine will develop WQS that EPA can approve as scientifically 
defensible and protective of Maine's designated uses.
    Having considered these comments, EPA, in keeping with its 
statutory obligation to promulgate WQS within 90 days after proposing 
them and the need for these WQS to meet the requirements of the CWA, is 
finalizing the WQS.
    In the April 20, 2016, Federal Register notice, EPA proposed that 
if Maine adopted and submitted WQS that meet CWA requirements after EPA 
finalized its proposed rule, they would become effective for CWA 
purposes upon EPA approval and EPA's corresponding promulgated WQS 
would no longer apply. No commenters supported this proposal. Two 
commenters objected to it, and one asked that EPA specify that WQS 
adopted by the state would have to be at least as stringent as the 
federally proposed WQS for EPA to approve and make the state WQS 
effective for CWA purposes.
    Upon consideration of comments received on its proposed rule, EPA 
decided not to finalize the above proposed approach. Consistent with 40 
CFR 131.21(c), EPA's federally promulgated WQS are and will be 
applicable for purposes of the CWA until EPA withdraws those federally 
promulgated WQS. EPA would undertake a rulemaking to withdraw the 
federal WQS if and when Maine adopts and EPA approves corresponding WQS 
that meet the requirements of section 303(c) of the CWA and EPA's 
implementing regulations at 40 CFR part 131.

B. Description of Final Rule

1. Final WQS for Waters in Indian Lands in Maine and for Waters outside 
of Indian Lands in Maine Where the Sustenance Fishing Designated Use 
Established by 30 M.R.S. 6207(4) and (9) Applies
a. Human Health Criteria for Toxic Pollutants
    After consideration of all comments received on EPA's proposed 
rule, EPA is finalizing the proposed criteria for 96 toxic pollutants 
in this rule applicable to waters in Indian lands.\9\ Table 2 provides 
the criteria for each pollutant as well as the HHC inputs used to 
derive each one. These criteria also apply to any waters that are 
covered by the determination referenced in section II.A.4.
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    \9\ Final human health criteria for antimony, 
dichlorobromomethane, nickel, nitrosamines, N-nitrosodibutylamine, 
N-nitrosodiethylamine, PCBs, selenium, and zinc have been modified 
slightly from the criteria as proposed to better reflect the 
appropriate number of significant figures (i.e., precision) in the 
value.

[[Page 92470]]



                                                                 Table 2--Final HHC and Key Parameters Used in Their Derivation
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                                                                                                   Bioaccumu-       Bioaccumu-       Bioaccumu-
                                                   Cancer slope  Relative source    Reference    lation factor    lation factor    lation factor      Bioconcen-      Water &
           Chemical name                CAS No.     factor, CSF    contribution     dose, RfD     for  trophic     for  trophic     for  trophic    tration factor   organisms   Organisms  only
                                                     (per mg/        RSC (-)          (mg/       level 2 (L/kg    level 3 (L/kg    level 4 (L/kg    (L/kg tissue)    ([micro]g/    ([micro]g/L)
                                                   kg[middot]d)                   kg[middot]d)      tissue)          tissue)          tissue)            \e\             L)
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1 1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane........       79-34-5           0.2  ...............  ............              5.7              7.4              8.4  ...............         0.09              0.2
2 1,1,2-Trichloroethane............       79-00-5         0.057  ...............  ............              6.0              7.8              8.9  ...............         0.31             0.66
3 1,1-Dichloroethylene.............       75-35-4  ............             0.20          0.05              2.0              2.4              2.6  ...............          300             1000
4 1,2,4,5-Tetrachlorobenzene.......       95-94-3  ............             0.20        0.0003           17,000            2,900            1,500  ...............        0.002            0.002
5 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene...........      120-82-1         0.029  ...............  ............            2,800            1,500              430  ...............       0.0056           0.0056
6 1,2-Dichlorobenzene..............       95-50-1  ............             0.20           0.3               52               71               82  ...............          200              300
7 1,2-Dichloropropane..............       78-87-5         0.036  ...............  ............              2.9              3.5              3.9  ...............  ...........              2.3
8 1,2-Diphenylhydrazine............      122-66-7           0.8  ...............  ............               18               24               27  ...............         0.01             0.02
9 1,2-Trans-Dichloroethylene.......      156-60-5  ............             0.20          0.02              3.3              4.2              4.7  ...............           90              300
10 1,3-Dichlorobenzene.............      541-73-1  ............             0.20         0.002               31              120              190  ...............            1                1
11 1,3-Dichloropropene.............      542-75-6         0.122  ...............  ............              2.3              2.7              3.0  ...............         0.21             0.87
12 1,4-Dichlorobenzene.............      106-46-7  ............             0.20          0.07               28               66               84  ...............  ...........               70
13 2,4,5-Trichlorophenol...........       95-95-4  ............             0.20           0.1              100              140              160  ...............           40               40
14 2,4,6-Trichlorophenol...........       88-06-2         0.011  ...............  ............               94              130              150  ...............         0.20             0.21
15 2,4-Dichlorophenol..............      120-83-2  ............             0.20         0.003               31               42               48  ...............            4                4
16 2,4-Dimethylphenol..............      105-67-9  ............             0.20          0.02              4.8              6.2              7.0  ...............           80              200
17 2,4-Dinitrophenol...............       51-28-5  ............             0.20         0.002          \a\ 4.4          \a\ 4.4          \a\ 4.4  ...............            9               30
18 2,4-Dinitrotoluene..............      121-14-2         0.667  ...............  ............              2.8              3.5              3.9  ...............        0.036             0.13
19 2-Chloronaphthalene.............       91-58-7  ............             0.80          0.08              150              210              240  ...............           90               90
20 2-Chlorophenol..................       95-57-8  ............             0.20         0.005              3.8              4.8              5.4  ...............           20               60
21 2-Methyl-4,6-Dinitrophenol......      534-52-1  ............             0.20        0.0003              6.8              8.9               10  ...............            1                2
22 3,3'-Dichlorobenzidine..........       91-94-1          0.45  ...............  ............               44               60               69  ...............       0.0096            0.011
23 4,4'-DDD........................       72-54-8          0.24  ...............  ............           33,000          140,000          240,000  ...............      9.3E-06          9.3E-06
24 4,4'-DDE........................       72-55-9         0.167  ...............  ............          270,000        1,100,000        3,100,000  ...............      1.3E-06          1.3E-06
25 4,4'-DDT........................       50-29-3          0.34  ...............  ............           35,000          240,000        1,100,000  ...............      2.2E-06          2.2E-06
26 Acenaphthene....................       83-32-9  ............             0.20          0.06          \a\ 510          \a\ 510          \a\ 510  ...............            6                7
27 Acrolein........................      107-02-8  ............             0.20        0.0005              1.0              1.0              1.0  ...............            3  ...............
28 Aldrin..........................      309-00-2            17  ...............  ............           18,000          310,000          650,000  ...............      5.8E-08          5.8E-08
29 alpha-BHC.......................      319-84-6           6.3  ...............  ............            1,700            1,400            1,500  ...............      2.9E-05          2.9E-05
30 alpha-Endosulfan................      959-98-8  ............             0.20         0.006              130              180              200  ...............            2                2
31 Anthracene......................      120-12-7  ............             0.20           0.3          \a\ 610          \a\ 610          \a\ 610  ...............           30               30
32 Antimony........................     7440-36-0  ............             0.40        0.0004  ...............  ...............  ...............                1            5               40
33 Benzene.........................       71-43-2     \b\ 0.055  ...............  ............              3.6              4.5              5.0  ...............         0.40              1.2
34 Benzo (a) Anthracene............       56-55-3          0.73  ...............  ............        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900  ...............      9.8E-05          9.8E-05
35 Benzo (a) Pyrene................       50-32-8           7.3  ...............  ............        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900  ...............      9.8E-06          9.8E-06
36 Benzo (b) Fluoranthene..........      205-99-2          0.73  ...............  ............        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900  ...............      9.8E-05          9.8E-05
37 Benzo (k) Fluoranthene..........      207-08-9         0.073  ...............  ............        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900  ...............      0.00098          0.00098
38 beta-BHC........................      319-85-7           1.8  ...............  ............              110              160              180  ...............       0.0010           0.0011
39 beta-Endosulfan.................    33213-65-9  ............             0.20         0.006               80              110              130  ...............            3                3
40 Bis(2-Chloro-1-Methylethyl)           108-60-1  ............             0.20          0.04              6.7              8.8               10  ...............          100              300
 Ether.............................
41 Bis(2-Chloroethyl) Ether........      111-44-4           1.1  ...............  ............              1.4              1.6              1.7  ...............        0.026             0.16
42 Bis(2-Ethylhexyl) Phthalate.....      117-81-7         0.014  ...............  ............          \a\ 710          \a\ 710          \a\ 710  ...............        0.028            0.028
43 Bromoform.......................       75-25-2        0.0045  ...............  ............              5.8              7.5              8.5  ...............          4.0              8.7
44 Butylbenzyl Phthalate...........       85-68-7        0.0019  ...............  ............       \a\ 19,000       \a\ 19,000       \a\ 19,000  ...............       0.0077           0.0077
45 Carbon Tetrachloride............       56-23-5          0.07  ...............  ............              9.3               12               14  ...............          0.2              0.3
46 Chlordane.......................       57-74-9          0.35  ...............  ............            5,300           44,000           60,000  ...............      2.4E-05          2.4E-05
47 Chlorobenzene...................      108-90-7  ............             0.20          0.02               14               19               22  ...............           40               60
48 Chlorodibromomethane............      124-48-1         0.040  ...............  ............              3.7              4.8              5.3  ...............  ...........              1.5
49 Chrysene........................      218-01-9        0.0073  ...............  ............        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900  ...............  ...........           0.0098
50 Cyanide.........................       57-12-5  ............             0.20        0.0006  ...............  ...............  ...............                1            4               30
51 Dibenzo (a,h) Anthracene........       53-70-3           7.3  ...............  ............        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900  ...............      9.8E-06          9.8E-06
52 Dichlorobromomethane............       75-27-4         0.034  ...............  ............              3.4              4.3              4.8  ...............  ...........              2.0
53 Dieldrin........................       60-57-1            16  ...............  ............           14,000          210,000          410,000  ...............      9.3E-08          9.3E-08
54 Diethyl Phthalate...............       84-66-2  ............             0.20           0.8          \a\ 920          \a\ 920          \a\ 920  ...............           50               50
55 Dimethyl Phthalate..............      131-11-3  ............             0.20            10        \a\ 4,000        \a\ 4,000        \a\ 4,000  ...............          100              100
56 Di-n-Butyl Phthalate............       84-74-2  ............             0.20           0.1        \a\ 2,900        \a\ 2,900        \a\ 2,900  ...............            2                2
57 Dinitrophenols..................    25550-58-7  ............             0.20         0.002  ...............  ...............  ...............             1.51           10               70
58 Endosulfan Sulfate..............     1031-07-8  ............             0.20         0.006               88              120              140  ...............            3                3
59 Endrin..........................       72-20-8  ............             0.80        0.0003            4,600           36,000           46,000  ...............        0.002            0.002

[[Page 92471]]

 
60 Endrin Aldehyde.................     7421-93-4  ............             0.80        0.0003              440              920              850  ...............         0.09             0.09
61 Ethylbenzene....................      100-41-4  ............             0.20         0.022              100              140              160  ...............          8.9              9.5
62 Fluoranthene....................      206-44-0  ............             0.20          0.04        \a\ 1,500        \a\ 1,500        \a\ 1,500  ...............            1                1
63 Fluorene........................       86-73-7  ............             0.20          0.04              230              450              710  ...............            5                5
64 gamma-BHC (Lindane).............       58-89-9  ............             0.50        0.0047            1,200            2,400            2,500  ...............         0.33  ...............
65 Heptachlor......................       76-44-8           4.1  ...............  ............           12,000          180,000          330,000  ...............      4.4E-07          4.4E-07
66 Heptachlor Epoxide..............     1024-57-3           5.5  ...............  ............            4,000           28,000           35,000  ...............      2.4E-06          2.4E-06
67 Hexachlorobenzene...............      118-74-1          1.02  ...............  ............           18,000           46,000           90,000  ...............      5.9E-06          5.9E-06
68 Hexachlorobutadiene.............       87-68-3          0.04  ...............  ............           23,000            2,800            1,100  ...............       0.0007           0.0007
69 Hexachlorocyclohexane-Technical.      608-73-1           1.8  ...............  ............              160              220              250  ...............      0.00073          0.00076
70 Hexachlorocyclopentadiene.......       77-47-4  ............             0.20         0.006              620            1,500            1,300  ...............          0.3              0.3
71 Hexachloroethane................       67-72-1          0.04  ...............  ............            1,200              280              600  ...............         0.01             0.01
72 Indeno (1,2,3-cd) Pyrene........      193-39-5          0.73  ...............  ............        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900        \a\ 3,900  ...............      9.8E-05          9.8E-05
73 Isophorone......................       78-59-1       0.00095  ...............  ............              1.9              2.2              2.4  ...............           28              140
74 Methoxychlor....................       72-43-5  ............             0.80         2E-05            1,400            4,800            4,400  ...............        0.001  ...............
75 Methylene Chloride..............       75-09-2         0.002  ...............  ............              1.4              1.5              1.6  ...............  ...........               90
76 Methylmercury...................    22967-92-6  ............         2.70E-05        0.0001  ...............  ...............  ...............  ...............  ...........    \c\ 0.02 (mg/
                                                                                                                                                                                             kg)
77 Nickel..........................     7440-02-0  ............             0.20          0.02  ...............  ...............  ...............               47           20               20
78 Nitrobenzene....................       98-95-3  ............             0.20         0.002              2.3              2.8              3.1  ...............           10               40
79 Nitrosamines....................  ............         43.46  ...............  ............  ...............  ...............  ...............             0.20      0.00075            0.032
80 N-Nitrosodibutylamine...........      924-16-3          5.43  ...............  ............  ...............  ...............  ...............             3.38      0.00438           0.0152
81 N-Nitrosodiethylamine...........       55-18-5         43.46  ...............  ............  ...............  ...............  ...............             0.20      0.00075            0.032
82 N-Nitrosodimethylamine..........       62-75-9            51  ...............  ............  ...............  ...............  ...............            0.026      0.00065             0.21
83 N-Nitrosodi-n-propylamine.......      621-64-7           7.0  ...............  ............  ...............  ...............  ...............             1.13       0.0042            0.035
84 N-Nitrosodiphenylamine..........       86-30-6        0.0049  ...............  ............  ...............  ...............  ...............              136         0.40             0.42
85 N-Nitrosopyrrolidine............      930-55-2          2.13  ...............  ............  ...............  ...............  ...............            0.055  ...........              2.4
86 Pentachlorobenzene..............      608-93-5  ............             0.20        0.0008            3,500            4,500           10,000  ...............        0.008            0.008
87 Pentachlorophenol...............       87-86-5           0.4  ...............  ............               44              290              520  ...............        0.003            0.003
88 Phenol..........................      108-95-2  ............             0.20           0.6              1.5              1.7              1.9  ...............        3,000           20,000
89 Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs)     1336-36-3             2  ...............  ............  ...............  ...............  ...............           31,200    \d\ 4E-06        \d\ 4E-06
90 Pyrene..........................      129-00-0  ............             0.20          0.03          \a\ 860          \a\ 860          \a\ 860  ...............            2                2
91 Selenium........................     7782-49-2  ............             0.20         0.005  ...............  ...............  ...............              4.8           20               60
92 Toluene.........................      108-88-3  ............             0.20        0.0097               11               15               17  ...............           24               39
93 Toxaphene.......................     8001-35-2           1.1  ...............  ............            1,700            6,600            6,300  ...............      5.3E-05          5.3E-05
94 Trichloroethylene...............       79-01-6          0.05  ...............  ............              8.7               12               13  ...............          0.3              0.5
95 Vinyl Chloride..................       75-01-4           1.5  ...............  ............              1.4              1.6              1.7  ...............        0.019             0.12
96 Zinc............................     7440-66-6  ............             0.20           0.3  ...............  ...............  ...............               47          300              400
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ This bioaccumulation factor was estimated from laboratory-measured bioconcentration factors; EPA multiplied this bioaccumulation factor by the overall fish consumption rate of 286 g/day to
  calculate the human health criteria.
\b\ EPA's CWA section 304(a) HHC for benzene use a CSF range of 0.015 to 0.055 per mg/kg-day. EPA used the higher end of the CSF range (0.055 per mg/kg-day) to derive the final benzene
  criteria.
\c\ This criterion is expressed as the fish tissue concentration of methylmercury (mg methylmercury/kg fish) and applies equally to fresh and marine waters. See Water Quality Criterion for the
  Protection of Human Health: Methylmercury (EPA-823-R-01-001, January 3, 2001) for how this value is calculated using the criterion equation in EPA's 2000 Methodology rearranged to solve for
  a protective concentration in fish tissue rather than in water.
\d\ This criterion applies to total PCBs (i.e., the sum of all congener or isomer or homolog or Aroclor analyses).
\e\ EPA multiplied this bioconcentration factor by the overall fish consumption rate of 286 g/day to calculate the human health criteria.


[[Page 92472]]

i. Sustenance Fishing Designated Use and Tribal Target Population
    In its February 2015 decision, EPA concluded that MICSA granted the 
state authority to set WQS in waters in Indian lands. EPA also 
concluded that in assessing whether the state's WQS were approvable for 
waters in Indian lands, EPA must effectuate the CWA requirement that 
WQS must protect applicable designated uses and be based on sound 
science in consideration of the fundamental purpose for which land was 
set aside for the tribes under the Indian settlement acts in Maine. EPA 
found that those settlement acts provide for land to be set aside as a 
permanent land base for the Indian tribes in Maine, in order for the 
tribes to be able to continue their unique cultural practices, 
including the ability to exercise sustenance fishing practices. 
Accordingly, EPA interpreted the state's ``fishing'' designated use, as 
applied to waters in Indian lands, to mean ``sustenance fishing'' and 
approved it as such. EPA also approved a specific sustenance fishing 
right reserved in MIA sections 6207(4) and (9) as a designated use for 
all inland waters of the Southern Tribes' reservations. Against this 
backdrop, EPA approved or disapproved all of Maine's HHC for toxic 
pollutants as applied to waters in Indian lands after evaluating 
whether they satisfied CWA requirements.
    EPA determined that the tribal populations must be treated as the 
general target population in waters in Indian lands. EPA disapproved 
many of Maine's HHC for toxic pollutants based on EPA's conclusion that 
they do not adequately protect the health of tribal sustenance fishers 
in waters in Indian lands. EPA concluded that the disapproved HHC did 
not support the designated use of sustenance fishing in such waters 
because they were not based on the higher, unsuppressed fish 
consumption rates that reflect the tribes' sustenance fishing 
practices. Accordingly, EPA proposed, and is now finalizing, HHC that 
EPA has determined will protect the sustenance fishing designated use, 
based on sound science and consistent with the CWA and EPA regulations 
and policy.
ii. General Recommended Approach for Deriving HHC
    HHC for toxic pollutants are designed to minimize the risk of 
adverse cancer and non-cancer effects occurring from lifetime exposure 
to pollutants through the ingestion of drinking water and consumption 
of fish/shellfish obtained from inland and nearshore waters. EPA's 
practice is to establish CWA section 304(a) HHC for the combined 
activities of drinking water and consuming fish/shellfish obtained from 
inland and nearshore waters, and separate CWA section 304(a) HHC for 
consuming only fish/shellfish originating from inland and nearshore 
waters. The latter criteria apply in cases where the designated uses of 
a waterbody include supporting fish/shellfish for human consumption but 
not drinking water supply sources (e.g., in non-potable estuarine 
waters).
    The criteria are based on two types of biological endpoints: (1) 
Carcinogenicity and (2) systemic toxicity (i.e., all adverse effects 
other than cancer). EPA takes an integrated approach and considers both 
cancer and non-cancer effects when deriving HHC. Where sufficient data 
are available, EPA derives criteria using both carcinogenic and non-
carcinogenic toxicity endpoints and recommends the lower value. HHC for 
carcinogenic effects are typically calculated using the following input 
parameters: Cancer slope factor, excess lifetime cancer risk level, 
body weight, drinking water intake rate, fish consumption rate(s), and 
bioaccumulation factor(s). HHC for noncarcinogenic and nonlinear 
carcinogenic effects are typically calculated using reference dose, 
relative source contribution (RSC), body weight, drinking water intake 
rate, fish consumption rate(s) and bioaccumulation factor(s). EPA 
selects a mixture of high-end and central (mean) tendency inputs to the 
equation in order to derive recommended criteria that ``afford an 
overall level of protection targeted at the high end of the general 
population (i.e., the target population or the criteria-basis 
population).'' \10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \10\ United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA). 
2000. Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality Criteria for 
the Protection of Human Health. EPA-822-B-00-004, p. 2-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA received comments supporting and opposing specific input 
parameters EPA used to derive the proposed HHC. The specific input 
parameters used are explained in the following paragraphs.
iii. Maine-Specific HHC Inputs
    I. Cancer Risk Level. As set forth in EPA's 2000 Methodology for 
Deriving Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection of Human 
Health (the ``2000 Methodology''), EPA calculates its CWA section 
304(a) HHC at concentrations corresponding to a 10-\6\ 
cancer risk level (CRL), meaning that if exposure were to occur as set 
forth in the CWA section 304(a) methodology at the prescribed 
concentration over the course of one's lifetime, then the risk of 
developing cancer from the exposure as described would be a one in a 
million increment above the background risk of developing cancer from 
all other exposures.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ Id., p. 2-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In this rule, EPA derived the final HHC for carcinogens using a 
10-\6\ CRL, consistent with EPA's 2000 Methodology and with 
Maine Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) Rule Chapter 584, 
which specifies that water quality criteria for carcinogens must be 
based on a 10-\6\ CRL, and which EPA approved for waters in 
Indian lands on February 2, 2015.\12\ The HHC provide the tribes 
engaged in sustenance fishing in waters in Indian lands in Maine with 
an equivalent level of cancer risk protection (i.e., 10-\6\) 
as is afforded to the general population in Maine outside of waters in 
Indian lands.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ The only exception from the requirement to use a CRL of 
10-\6\ in Chapter 584 is for arsenic, for which a CRL of 
10-\4\ is required. EPA disapproved the arsenic CRL for 
waters in Indian lands.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA received comments in favor of using the proposed 
10-\6\ CRL level as well as recommendations for higher and 
lower CRLs. Responses to those comments are summarized in section 
III.D.5.
    II. Cancer Slope Factor and Reference Dose. For noncarcinogenic 
toxicological effects, EPA uses a chronic-duration oral reference dose 
(RfD) to derive HHC. An RfD is an estimate (with uncertainty spanning 
perhaps an order of magnitude) of a daily oral exposure of an 
individual to a substance that is likely to be without an appreciable 
risk of deleterious effects during a lifetime. For carcinogenic 
toxicological effects, EPA uses an oral cancer slope factor (CSF) to 
derive HHC. The oral CSF is an upper bound, approximating a 95% 
confidence limit, on the increased cancer risk from a lifetime oral 
exposure to a stressor.
    EPA did not receive any comments on the pollutant-specific RfDs or 
CSFs used in the derivation of the proposed criteria, which were based 
on EPA's National Recommended Water Quality Criteria.\13\ EPA has used 
the same values to derive the final HHC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the 
Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986 (June 29, 2015). See also: 
USEPA. 2015. Final 2015 Updated National Recommended Human Health 
Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, 
Washington, DC. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-criteria.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    III. Body Weight. The final HHC were calculated using the proposed 
body weight of 80 kilograms (kg), consistent with the default body 
weight used in EPA's most recent National

[[Page 92473]]

Recommended Water Quality Criteria.\14\ This body weight is the average 
weight of a U.S. adult age 21 and older, based on National Health and 
Nutrition Examination Survey (``NHANES'') data from 1999 to 2006.\15\ 
EPA received one comment regarding body weight, which requested that 
EPA use a body weight of 70 kg. However, the commenter did not present 
a sound scientific rationale to support the use of a different body 
weight. See Topic 6 of the RTC document for a more detailed response.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the 
Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986 (June 29, 2015). See also: 
USEPA. 2015. Final 2015 Updated National Recommended Human Health 
Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, 
Washington, DC. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-criteria.
    \15\ USEPA. 2011. EPA Exposure Factors Handbook. United States 
Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC EPA 600/R-090/052F. 
http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/recordisplay.cfm?deid=236252.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    IV. Drinking water intake. The final HHC were calculated using the 
proposed drinking water intake rate of 2.4 liters per day (L/day), 
consistent with the default drinking water intake rate used in EPA's 
most recent National Recommended Water Quality Criteria.\16\ This rate 
represents the per capita estimate of combined direct and indirect 
community water ingestion at the 90th percentile for adults ages 21 and 
older.\17\ EPA did not receive any comments regarding the proposed 
drinking water intake rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the 
Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986 (June 29, 2015). See also: 
USEPA. 2015. Final 2015 Updated National Recommended Human Health 
Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, 
Washington, DC. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-criteria.
    \17\ USEPA. 2011. EPA Exposure Factors Handbook. United States 
Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC. EPA 600/R-090/052F. 
http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/recordisplay.cfm?deid=236252.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    V. Bioaccumulation Factors (BAFs) and Bioconcentration Factors 
(BCFs). The final HHC were calculated using the proposed pollutant-
specific BAFs or BCFs, consistent with the factors used in EPA's most 
recent National Recommended Water Quality Criteria.\18\ These factors 
are used to relate aqueous pollutant concentrations to predicted 
pollutant concentrations in the edible portions of ingested species. 
EPA did not receive any comments regarding specific proposed BAFs or 
BCFs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the 
Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986 (June 29, 2015). See also: 
USEPA. 2015. Final 2015 Updated National Recommended Human Health 
Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, 
Washington, DC. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-criteria.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    VI. Fish Consumption Rate (FCR). In finalizing the HHC, EPA used 
the proposed FCR of 286 g/day to represent present day sustenance level 
fish consumption for waters in Indian lands. This FCR supports the 
designated use of sustenance fishing. EPA selected this consumption 
rate based on information contained in an historical/anthropological 
study, entitled the Wabanaki Cultural Lifeways Exposure Scenario \19\ 
(``Wabanaki Study''), which was completed in 2009. EPA also consulted 
with the tribes in Maine about the Wabanaki Study and their sustenance 
fishing uses of the waters in Indian lands. There has been no 
contemporary local survey of current fish consumption that documents 
fish consumption rates for sustenance fishing in the waters in Indian 
lands in Maine. In the absence of such information, EPA concluded that 
the Wabanaki Study contains the best currently available estimate for 
contemporary tribal sustenance level fish consumption for waters where 
the sustenance fishing designated use applies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ Harper, B., Ranco, D., et al. 2009. Wabanaki Traditional 
Cultural Lifeways Exposure Scenario. https://www.epa.gov/tribal/wabanaki-traditional-cultural-lifeways-exposure-scenario.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA received many comments that agreed and some that disagreed with 
EPA's selection of the proposed FCR of 286 g/day. Responses to those 
comments can be found in section III.D of this preamble and, in further 
detail, in Topic 3 of the RTC document.
    VII. Relative Source Contribution (RSC). For pollutants that 
exhibit a threshold of exposure before deleterious effects occur, as is 
the case for noncarcinogens and nonlinear carcinogens, EPA applied a 
RSC to account for other potential human exposures to the 
pollutant.\20\ Other sources of exposure might include, but are not 
limited to, exposure to a particular pollutant from non-fish food 
consumption (e.g., consumption of fruits, vegetables, grains, meats, or 
poultry), dermal exposure, and inhalation exposure. For substances for 
which the toxicity endpoint is carcinogenicity based on a linear low-
dose extrapolation, only the exposures from drinking water and fish 
ingestion are reflected in HHC; no other potential sources of exposure 
to pollutants or other potential exposure pathways have been considered 
in developing HHC.\21\ In these situations, HHC are derived with 
respect to the incremental lifetime cancer risk posed by the presence 
of a substance in water, rather than an individual's total risk from 
all sources of exposure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality 
Criteria for the Protection of Human Health. U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. EPA-822-B-00-
004.
    \21\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As in the proposed HHC, for the pollutants included in EPA's 2015 
criteria update, EPA used the same RSCs in the final HHC as were used 
in the criteria update. Also as in the proposed HHC, for pollutants 
where EPA did not update the section 304(a) HHC in 2015, EPA used a 
default RSC of 0.20 to derive the final HHC except for antimony, for 
which EPA used an RSC of 0.40 consistent with the RSC value used the 
last time the Agency updated this criterion. EPA did not receive any 
comments on specific RSCs used in the derivation of the proposed 
criteria.

2. Final WQS for Waters in Indian Lands in Maine

a. Bacteria Criteria
i. Recreational Bacteria Criteria
    EPA is finalizing the proposed year-round recreational bacteria 
criteria for Class AA, A, B, C, GPA, SA, SB and SC waters in Indian 
lands. The magnitude criteria are expressed in terms of Escherichia 
coli colony forming units per 100 milliliters (cfu/100 ml) for fresh 
waters and Enterococcus spp. colony forming units per 100 milliliters 
(cfu/100 ml) for marine waters and are based on EPA's 2012 Recreational 
Water Quality Criteria (RWQC) recommendations.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ USEPA. 2012. Recreational Water Quality Criteria. U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. 
Office of Water 820-F-12-058. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/2012-recreational-water-quality-criteria.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Several comments supported EPA's proposed rule and the year round 
applicability of the criteria. Maine DEP objected to EPA's inclusion of 
wildlife sources in the scope of the bacteria criteria and requested 
that the criteria not be applicable from October 1-May 14, similar to 
Maine's disapproved criteria. For the reasons discussed in section 
III.E.2., EPA has determined that, based on best available information, 
it is necessary to include wildlife sources in the scope of the 
criteria, and to apply the criteria year round, in order to protect 
human health and the designated use of recreation in and on the water.
ii. Shellfishing Bacteria Criteria
    EPA's final bacteria rule for Class SA shellfish harvesting areas 
for waters in

[[Page 92474]]

Indian lands differs slightly from the proposed numeric total coliform 
bacteria criteria, as a result of comments from the state. Maine DEP 
requested EPA to express the criteria in terms of fecal coliform 
bacteria rather than total coliform bacteria, noting that the National 
Shellfish Sanitation Program (NSSP) allows the use of either indicator, 
that Maine DEP sets permit limits on fecal coliform bacteria rather 
than total coliform, and that Maine Department of Marine Resources 
(DMR) uses fecal coliform bacteria as its indicator parameter when 
making shellfish area opening/closure decisions. Maine DMR requested 
EPA not to specify a specific numeric standard but rather to promulgate 
the same narrative criterion that applies to Class SB and SC waters. 
For those classes of waters, Maine's WQS provide that instream bacteria 
levels may not exceed the criteria recommended under the NSSP.
    The NSSP is the federal/state cooperative program recognized by the 
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Interstate Shellfish 
Sanitation Conference (ISSC) for the sanitary control of shellfish 
produced and sold for human consumption.
    EPA agrees that the NSSP allows for the use of either fecal 
coliform bacteria or total coliform bacteria as the indicator organism 
to protect shellfish harvesting. The current NSSP recommendations \23\ 
for those organisms are consistent with EPA's national recommended 
water quality criteria.\24\ The NSSP recommendations for fecal coliform 
standards and sampling protocols are set forth in Section II. Model 
Ordinance Chapter IV. Growing Areas .02 Microbial Standards (pages 51-
54). The NSSP recommendations for total coliform standards and sampling 
protocols are set forth in Section IV, Guidance Documents Chapter II. 
Growing Areas .01 Total Coliform Standards (pages 216-219). Both sets 
of recommendations apply to various types of shellfish growing areas 
including remote status, areas affected by point source pollution, and 
areas affected by nonpoint source pollution.
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    \23\ http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FederalStateFoodPrograms/UCM505093.pdf.
    \24\ USEPA. 1986. Quality Criteria for Water 1986, United States 
Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC. EPA 440/5-86-001.
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    In light of the state's concerns and suggestions, EPA's final rule 
contains a narrative criterion similar to Maine's approved criterion 
for Class SB and SC waters. The final rule provides ``The numbers of 
total coliform bacteria or other specified indicator organisms in 
samples representative of the waters in shellfish harvesting areas may 
not exceed the criteria recommended under the National Shellfish 
Sanitation Program, United States Food and Drug Administration as set 
forth in the Guide for the Control of Molluscan Shellfish, 2015 
Revision.'' EPA has added a specific reference to the date of the NSSP 
recommendations because there are legal constraints on incorporating 
future recommendations by reference. The NSSP 2015 recommendations are 
available online at: http://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FederalStateFoodPrograms/ucm2006754.htm. The recommendations are also 
included in the docket for this rulemaking, which is available both 
online at regulations.gov and in person at the EPA Docket Center 
Reading Room, William Jefferson Clinton West Building, Room 3334, 1301 
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20004, and (202) 566-1744. 
Finally, the 2015 NSSP recommendations are obtainable from the U.S. 
Food and Drug Administration's Center for Food Safety and Applied 
Nutrition, Shellfish and Aquaculture Policy Branch, 5100 Paint Branch 
Parkway (HFS-325), College Park, MD 20740.
b. Ammonia Criteria for Fresh Waters
    EPA is finalizing the proposed ammonia criteria for fresh waters in 
Indian lands to protect aquatic life. The criteria are based on EPA's 
2013 updated CWA section 304(a) recommended ammonia criteria.\25\ They 
are expressed as functions of temperature and pH, so the applicable 
criteria vary by waterbody, depending on the temperature and pH of 
those waters. EPA received several comments in support of the proposed 
ammonia criteria, and received no comments requesting changes.
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    \25\ USEPA. 2013. Aquatic Life Ambient Water Quality Criteria 
for Ammonia-Freshwater 2013. United States Environmental Protection 
Agency, Washington, DC. EPA 822-R-13-001. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/aquatic-life-criteria-ammonia.
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c. pH Criterion for Fresh Waters
    EPA is finalizing the proposed pH criterion of 6.5 to 8.5 to 
protect aquatic life in fresh waters in Indian lands. The criterion is 
based on EPA's 1986 national recommended criterion.\26\ EPA received 
comments from the state and one industry, both requesting that Maine's 
pH criterion of 6.0-8.5 be retained. However, EPA does not agree that 
6.0 adequately protects aquatic life and notes in particular that pH 
values of 6.0 and lower have been shown to be detrimental to sensitive 
aquatic life, such as developing Atlantic salmon eggs and 
smolts.27 28 29 See Topic 11 of the RTC document for more 
detailed responses to comments.
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    \26\ USEPA. 1986. Quality Criteria for Water 1986, U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. 
EPA 440/5-86-001. pH section. https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=00001MGA.txt.
    \27\ Peterson, R.H., P.G. Daye, J.L. Metcalfe. 1980. Inhibition 
of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) hatching at low pH. Can. J. Fish. 
Aquat. Sci. 37: 770-774.
    \28\ Staurnes, M., F. Kroglund and B.O. Rosseland. 1995. Water 
quality requirement of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in water 
undergoing acidification or liming in Norway. Water, Air and Soil 
Pollution 85: 347-352.
    \29\ Staurnes, M., L.P. Hansen, K. Fugelli, R. Haraldstad. 1996. 
Short-term exposure to acid water impairs osmoregulation, seawater 
tolerance, and subsequent marine survival of smolts of Atlantic 
salmon (Salmo salar L.) Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 53: 1965-1704.
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d. Temperature Criteria for Tidal Waters
    EPA is finalizing the proposed temperature criteria for tidal 
waters in Indian lands. The criteria will assure protection of the 
indigenous marine community characteristic of the intertidal zone at 
Pleasant Point in Passamaquoddy Bay, and are consistent with EPA's CWA 
section 304(a) recommended criteria for tidal waters.\30\ They include 
a maximum summer weekly average temperature and a maximum weekly 
average temperature rise over reference site baseline conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ USEPA. 1986. Quality Criteria for Water 1986, U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. 
EPA 440/5-86-001. Temperature section. https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=00001MGA.txt.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Maine DEP commented with concerns about the difficulty of finding 
reference sites to determine baseline temperatures and a question about 
whether there should be a baseline established for each season. EPA is 
confident that reference sites will not be difficult to identify, and 
there is no need to establish separate baselines outside the defined 
summer season. See Topic 12 of the RTC document for a more detailed 
response.
e. Natural Conditions Provisions
    EPA is finalizing the proposed rule for waters in Indian lands that 
stated that Maine's natural conditions provisions in 38 M.R.S. 420(2.A) 
and 464(4.C) do not apply to water quality criteria intended to protect 
public health. EPA received several comments in support of the proposed 
rule, and received no comments requesting changes.
f. Mixing Zone Policy
    EPA is finalizing the proposed mixing zone policy for waters in 
Indian lands with one small change to the

[[Page 92475]]

prohibition of mixing zones for bioaccumulative pollutants. 
Specifically, in order to avoid confusion over what is meant by 
``bioaccumulative pollutants'' for the purpose of this rule, EPA has 
added a parenthetical definition which specifies that bioaccumulative 
pollutants are those ``chemicals for which the bioconcentration factors 
(BCF) or bioaccumulation factors (BAF) are greater than 1,000.'' This 
definition is based on EPA's definition of bioaccumulation for chemical 
substances found at 64 FR 60194 (November 4, 1999).
    EPA received several comments in support of the mixing zone policy. 
One of those commenters added that a total ban on mixing zones would be 
preferable. Two commenters asserted that EPA does not have the legal 
authority or the scientific basis to ban mixing zones for 
bioaccumulative pollutants outside the Great Lakes. EPA disagrees, for 
the reasons discussed in section III.E.1 of this preamble. One 
commenter raised comments about thermal mixing zones specific to its 
facility, and EPA's response to those comments are contained in the RTC 
document at Topic 9.
3. Final WQS for All Waters in Maine
a. Dissolved Oxygen for Class A Waters
    EPA is finalizing the proposed dissolved oxygen criteria for all 
Class A waters in Maine. The rule provides that dissolved oxygen shall 
not be less than 7 ppm (7 mg/L) or 75% of saturation, whichever is 
higher, year-round. For the period from October 1 through May 14, in 
fish spawning areas, the 7-day mean dissolved oxygen concentration 
shall not be less than 9.5 ppm (9.5 mg/L), and the 1-day minimum 
dissolved oxygen concentration shall not be less than 8 ppm (8.0 mg/L). 
EPA received several comments in support of the proposed criteria, and 
received no comments requesting changes.
b. Waiver or Modification of WQS
    EPA is finalizing the proposed rule stating that 38 M.R.S. 363-D, 
which allows waivers of state law in the event of an oil spill, does 
not apply to state or federal WQS applicable to waters in Maine, 
including designated uses, criteria to protect designated uses, and 
antidegradation requirements. EPA received several comments in support 
of the proposed rule, and received no comments requesting changes.
4. Final WQS for Waters in Maine Outside of Indian Lands
a. Phenol HHC for Consumption of Water Plus Organisms
    EPA is finalizing the proposed phenol HHC for consumption of water 
plus organisms of 4000 [mu]g/L, for waters in Maine outside of Indian 
lands. The criterion is consistent with EPA's June 2015 national 
criteria recommendation,\31\ except that EPA used Maine's default fish 
consumption rate for the general population of 32.4 g/day, consistent 
with DEP Rule Chapter 584.\32\ EPA received several comments in support 
of the proposed rule, and received no comments requesting changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \31\ Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the 
Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986 (June 29, 2015). See also: 
USEPA. 2015. Final 2015 Updated National Recommended Human Health 
Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, 
Washington, DC. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-criteria.
    \32\ 06-096 Code of Maine Rules, Chapter 584, Surface Water 
Quality Criteria for Toxic Pollutants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Summary of Major Comments Received and EPA's Response

A. Overview of Comments

    EPA received 104 total comments, 100 of which are unique comments. 
The vast majority of the comments were general statements of support 
for EPA's proposed rule from private citizens, including tribal 
members. Tribes and others provided substantive comments that also were 
generally supportive regarding the importance of protecting the 
designated use of sustenance fishing, identifying tribes as the target 
population, and using a 286 g/day fish consumption rate.
    EPA also received comments critical of the proposal, principally 
from the Maine Attorney General and DEP, a single discharger and a 
coalition of dischargers, and two trade organizations. The focus of the 
remainder of this section III identifies and responds to the major 
adverse comments. Additionally, a comprehensive RTC document addressing 
all comments received is included in the docket for this rulemaking.

B. Maine Indian Settlement Acts

    Before providing a more detailed discussion of the rationale 
relating to each element of EPA's analysis supporting this 
promulgation, the Agency first addresses a general complaint made by 
several commenters that EPA has developed a complex rationale for its 
disapproval of Maine's HHC and corresponding promulgation.
    EPA acknowledges that there are several steps in the Agency's 
analysis of how Maine's WQS must protect the uses of the waters in 
Indian lands, including application of the Agency's expert scientific 
and policy judgment. The basic concepts are as follows:
     The Indian settlement acts provide for the Indian tribes 
to fish for their individual sustenance in waters in Indian lands and 
effectively establish a sustenance fishing designated use cognizable 
under the CWA for such waters.
     The CWA and EPA's regulations mandate that water quality 
criteria must protect designated uses of waters provided for in state 
law. Designated uses are use goals of a water, whether or not they are 
being attained.
     When analyzing how water quality criteria protect a 
designated use, an agency must focus on the population that is 
exercising that use, and must assess the full extent of that use's 
goal, where data are available.
    The relevant explanatory details for each step of this rationale 
are presented below. But the underlying structure of the analysis is 
straightforward and appropriate under and consistent with applicable 
law.
    Another general comment EPA received was that the agency's approach 
``would impermissibly give tribes in Maine an enhanced status and 
greater rights with respect to water quality than the rest of Maine's 
population.'' Comments of Janet T. Mills, Maine Attorney General, (page 
2). EPA explains below why the analysis EPA presented in its February 
2015 decision and the proposal for this action is not only permissible, 
but also mandated by the CWA as informed by the Indian settlement acts. 
But as a general matter EPA disagrees that this action is impermissible 
because it accords the tribes in Maine ``greater rights'' or somehow 
derogates the water quality protection provided to the rest of Maine's 
population.
    EPA is addressing the particular sustenance fishing use provided 
for these tribes under Maine law and ratified by Congress. Because that 
use is confirmed in provisions in the settlement acts that pertain 
specifically and uniquely to the Indian tribes in Maine, EPA's analysis 
of the use and the protection of that use must necessarily focus on how 
the settlement acts intend for the tribes to be able to use the waters 
at issue here. However, Maine's claim that EPA is providing tribes in 
Maine ``greater rights'' than the general population is incorrect. In 
this action, EPA is not granting ``rights'' to anyone. Rather, EPA is 
simply promulgating

[[Page 92476]]

WQS in accordance with the requirements of the CWA--i.e., identifying 
the designated use for waters in Indian lands, and establishing 
criteria to protect the target population exercising that use. As 
explained above, in light of the Indian settlement acts, the designated 
use is sustenance fishing, the tribes are the target population, and 
EPA has selected the appropriate FCR of that target population. This 
approach, together with EPA's selection of 10-6 CRL, is 
consistent with Maine's approach to protecting the target population in 
Maine waters outside of Indian lands. EPA's rule provides a comparable 
level of protection for the target population (sustenance fishers) for 
the waters in Indian lands that Maine provides to the target population 
for its fishing designated use (recreational fishers) that applies to 
waters outside Indian lands.\33\ Further, the resulting HHC that EPA is 
promulgating in this rule protect both non-tribal members and tribal 
members in Maine. The great majority of the waters subject to the HHC 
are rivers and streams that are shared in common with non-Indians in 
the state or that flow into or out of waters outside Indian lands. It 
is not just the members of the Indian tribes in Maine who will benefit 
from EPA's action today.
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    \33\ EPA recognizes that the final HHC also reflect inputs 
consistent with EPA's 2015 section 304(a) recommendations, which are 
not currently reflected in Maine's HHC. EPA anticipates that Maine 
will update its HHC consistent with these inputs in its next 
triennial review.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    One striking aspect of the comments EPA received on its proposal is 
that every individual who commented supported EPA's proposed action, 
including many non-Indians. Nearly all of the comments were 
individualized expressions of support, ranging from a profound 
recognition of the need to honor commitments made to the tribes in the 
Indian settlement acts to an acknowledgement that everyone in Maine 
benefits from improved water quality. It is notable that the record for 
this action shows that individuals in Maine who commented did not 
express concern that the tribes are being accorded a special status or 
that this action will in any way disadvantage the rest of Maine's 
population.
    As described in section II.B.1, EPA previously approved MIA 
sections 6207(4) and (9) as an explicit designated use for the inland 
waters of the reservations of the Southern Tribes and interpreted and 
approved Maine's designated use of ``fishing'' for all waters in Indian 
lands to mean ``sustenance fishing.'' Several commenters challenged 
EPA's conclusion that the Indian settlement acts in Maine have the 
effect of establishing a designated use that includes sustenance 
fishing. This section explains how the Indian settlement acts provide 
for the Indian tribes in Maine to fish for their sustenance, and 
responds to arguments that this conclusion violates the settlement 
acts. Section III.C explains how EPA, under the CWA, interprets those 
provisions of state law as a sustenance fishing designated use which 
must be protected by the WQS applicable to the waters where that use 
applies.
    As explained in more detail in the RTC document, MICSA, MIA, ABMSA, 
and MSA include different provisions governing sustenance practices, 
including fishing, depending on the type of Indian lands involved. In 
the reservations of the Southern Tribes, MIA explicitly reserves to the 
tribes the right to fish for their individual sustenance.\34\ In the 
trust lands of the Southern Tribes, MIA provides a regulatory framework 
that requires consideration of ``the needs or desires of the tribes to 
establish fishery practices for the sustenance of the tribes,'' among 
other factors.\35\ Congress clearly intended the Northern Tribes to be 
able to sustain their culture on their trust lands, consistent with 
Maine law, which amply accommodates a sustenance fishing diet.\36\ 
Therefore, each of these provisions under the settlement acts in its 
own way is designed to establish a land base for these tribes where 
they may practice their sustenance lifeways. Indeed, EPA received an 
opinion from the Solicitor of the United States Department of the 
Interior (DOI), which analyzed the settlement acts and concluded that 
the tribes in Maine ``have fishing rights connected to the lands set 
aside for them under federal and state statutes.'' \37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \34\ 30 M.R.S. section 6207(4).
    \35\ 30 M.R.S. section 6207(1), (3).
    \36\ 102 S. Rpt. 136 (1991).
    \37\ Letter from Hilary C. Tompkins, Solicitor, Department of 
Interior, to Avi S. Garbow, General Counsel, EPA, January 30, 2015, 
a copy of which is in the docket supporting this action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In its February 2015 decision, EPA analyzed how the settlement acts 
include extensive provisions to confirm and expand the tribes' land 
base. The legislative record makes it clear that a key purpose behind 
that land base is to preserve the tribes' culture and support their 
sustenance practices. MICSA section 5 establishes a trust fund to allow 
the Southern Tribes and the Maliseets to acquire land to be put into 
trust. In addition, the Southern Tribes' reservations are confirmed as 
part of their land base.\38\ MICSA combines with MIA sections 6205 and 
6205-A to establish a framework for taking land into trust for those 
three Tribes, and laying out clear ground rules governing any future 
alienation of that land and the Southern Tribes' reservations. Sections 
4(a) and 5 of the ABMSA and section 7204 of the state MSA accomplish 
essentially the same result for the Micmacs, consistent with the 
purpose of those statutes to put that tribe in the same position as the 
Maliseets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ 30 M.R.S. section 6205(1)(A) and (2)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA has concluded that one of the overarching purposes of the 
establishment of this land base for the tribes in Maine was to ensure 
their continued opportunity to engage in their unique cultural 
practices to maintain their existence as a traditional culture. An 
important part of the tribes' traditional culture is their sustenance 
lifeways. The legislative history for MICSA makes it clear that one 
critical purpose for assembling the land base for the tribes in Maine 
was to preserve their culture. The Historical Background in the Senate 
Report for MICSA opens with the observation that ``All three Tribes 
[Penobscot, Passamaquoddy and Maliseet] are riverine in their land-
ownership orientation.'' \39\ Congress also specifically noted that one 
purpose of MICSA was to avoid acculturation of the tribes in Maine:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ Sen. Rep. No. 96-957, at 11.

    Nothing in the settlement provides for acculturation, nor is it 
the intent of Congress to disturb the cultural integrity of the 
Indian people of Maine. To the contrary, the Settlement offers 
protections against this result being imposed by outside entities by 
providing for tribal governments which are separate and apart from 
the towns and cities of the State of Maine and which control all 
such internal matters. The Settlement also clearly establishes that 
the Tribes in Maine will continue to be eligible for all federal 
Indian cultural programs.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ Id. at 17.

    As both the Penobscot and Maliseet extensively documented in their 
comments on this action, their culture relies heavily on sustenance 
practices, including sustenance fishing. So if a purpose of MICSA is to 
avoid acculturation and protect the tribes' continued political and 
cultural existence on their land base, then a key purpose of that land 
base is to support those sustenance practices.
    Several comments dispute that the settlement acts are intended to 
provide for the tribes' sustenance lifeways, and assert instead that 
their key purpose was to subject the tribes to the jurisdictional

[[Page 92477]]

authority of the state and treat tribal members identically to all 
citizens in the state. These comments do not dispute the evidence EPA 
relied on in February 2015 to find that Congress intended to support 
the continuation of the tribes' traditional culture. Rather, the 
commenters argue that the overriding purpose of the settlement acts was 
to impose state law, including state environmental law, on the tribes, 
which the commenters believe the state could do without regard to the 
settlement act provisions for sustenance fishing. These assertions 
reflect an overly narrow interpretation of the settlement acts, and 
EPA, with a supporting opinion from DOI, has concluded that the 
settlement acts both provide for the tribes' sustenance lifeways and 
subject the tribal lands to state environmental regulation. Those two 
purposes are not inconsistent, but rather support each other. It would 
be inconsistent for the state to codify provisions for tribal 
sustenance fishing in one state law, which was congressionally 
ratified, and then in another state law subject that practice to 
environmental conditions that render it unsafe.
    EPA disagrees with the comment that promulgation of the HHC 
violates the jurisdictional arrangement in MICSA and MIA. The assertion 
appears to be that the grant of jurisdiction to the state in the 
territories of the Indian tribes in Maine means that the tribes must 
always be subject to the same environmental standards as any other 
person in Maine. As EPA made clear in its February 2015 decision, the 
Agency agrees that MICSA grants the state the authority to set WQS in 
Indian territories. Making that finding, however, does not then lead to 
the conclusion that the state has unbounded authority to set WQS 
without regard to the factual circumstances and legal framework that 
apply to the tribes under both the CWA and the Indian settlement acts. 
No state has authority or jurisdiction to adopt WQS that do not comply 
with the requirements of the CWA. The state, like EPA and the tribes, 
is bound to honor the provisions of the Indian settlement acts. Here, 
the CWA, as informed by and applied in light of the requirements of the 
settlement acts, requires that WQS addressing fish consumption in these 
waters adequately protect the sustenance fishing use applicable to the 
waters. Because this use applies only to particular waters that pertain 
to the tribes, the WQS designed to protect the use will necessarily 
differ from WQS applicable to other waters generally in the state. This 
result does not violate the grant of jurisdiction to the state. Rather, 
the state retains the authority to administer the WQS program 
throughout the state, subject to the same basic requirements to protect 
designated uses of the waters as are applicable to all states.
    EPA also disagrees that promulgation of the HHC violates the so-
called savings clauses in MICSA, Pub. L. 96-420, 94 Stat. 1785 sections 
6(h) and 16(b), which block the application of federal law in Maine to 
the extent that law ``accords or relates to a special status or right 
of or to any Indian'' or is ``for the benefit of Indians'' and ``would 
affect or preempt'' the application of state law. EPA has consistently 
been clear that this action does not treat tribes in Maine in a similar 
manner as a state (TAS) or in any way authorize any tribe in Maine to 
implement tribal WQS under the federal CWA. Therefore, arguments about 
whether MICSA blocks the tribes from applying to EPA for TAS under CWA 
section 518(e) are outside the scope of, and entirely irrelevant to, 
EPA's promulgation of federal WQS.
    Additionally, EPA disagrees that its disapproval of certain WQS in 
tribal waters and this promulgation will ``affect or preempt the 
application of the laws of the State of Maine'' using a federal law 
that accords a special status to Indians within the meaning of MICSA 
section 6(h) or a federal law ``for the benefit of Indians'' within the 
meaning of section 16(b). With this promulgation, EPA is developing WQS 
consistent with the requirements of the CWA as applied to the legal 
framework and factual circumstances created by the Indian settlement 
acts. EPA here is acting under CWA section 303, which was not adopted 
``for the benefit of Indians,'' but rather sets up a system of 
cooperative federalism typical of federal environmental statutes, where 
states are given the lead in establishing environmental requirements 
for areas under their jurisdiction, but within bounds defined by the 
CWA and subject to federal oversight. In this case, the Indian 
settlement acts provide for the tribes to fish for their sustenance in 
waters in or adjacent to territories set aside for them, which has the 
effect of establishing a sustenance fishing use in those waters. 
Because that sustenance fishing use applies in those waters, CWA 
section 303 requires Maine and EPA to ensure that use is protected. It 
cannot be the case that the savings clauses in MICSA are intended to 
block implementation of the Indian settlement acts or MICSA itself.
    In the RTC document, EPA addresses in detail the distinctions 
contained in the Indian settlement acts for the Maine tribes and 
comments received by EPA on this point. In short, the settlement acts 
clearly codify a tribal right of sustenance fishing for inland, 
anadromous, and catadromous fish in the inland waters of the Penobscot 
Nation's and Passamaquoddy's reservations.\41\ EPA approved this right, 
contained in state law, as an explicit designated use. The Southern 
Tribes also have trust lands, to which the explicit sustenance fishing 
right in section 6207 of MIA does not apply, but which are covered by a 
regulatory regime under MIA that specifically provides for the Southern 
Tribes to exercise their sustenance fishing practices. The statutory 
framework for the Northern Tribes' trust lands provides for more direct 
state regulation of those tribes' fishing practices. Nevertheless, as 
confirmed by an opinion from the U.S. Department of the Interior,\42\ 
the Northern Tribes' trust lands include sustenance fishing rights 
appurtenant to those land acquisitions, subject to state regulation. 
Accordingly, EPA appropriately approved the ``fishing'' designated use 
as ``sustenance fishing'' for all waters in Indian lands.
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    \41\ 30 M.R.S. section 6207.
    \42\ Letter from Hilary C. Tompkins, Solicitor, Department of 
Interior, to Avi S. Garbow, General Counsel, EPA, January 30, 2015, 
a copy of which is in the docket supporting this action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Tribal representatives and members commented that EPA's 
promulgation of HHC is consistent with EPA's trust responsibility to 
the Indian tribes in Maine, and some suggested that EPA's trust 
relationship with the tribes compels EPA to take this action. 
Conversely, one commenter argued that this action is not authorized 
because the federal government has no obligation under the trust 
responsibility to take this action, and the Indian settlement acts 
create no specific trust obligation to protect the tribes' ability to 
fish for their sustenance. These comments raise questions about the 
nature and extent of the federal trust responsibility to the Indian 
tribes in Maine and the extent to which the trust is related to this 
action. EPA agrees that this action is consistent with the United 
States' general trust responsibility to the tribes in Maine. EPA also 
agrees that the trust relationship does not create an independent 
enforceable mandate or specific trust requirement beyond the Agency's 
obligation to comply with the legal requirements generally applicable 
to this situation under federal law, in this case the CWA as applied to 
the circumstances of the tribes in Maine under the settlement acts.

[[Page 92478]]

    Consulting with affected tribes before taking an action that 
affects their interests is one of the cornerstones of the general trust 
relationship with tribes. EPA has fulfilled this responsibility to the 
tribes in Maine. EPA has consulted extensively with the tribes to 
understand their interests in this matter. EPA has also carefully 
weighed input from the tribes, as it has all the comments the Agency 
received on this action.
    EPA does not agree that the substance of this action is compelled 
or authorized by the federal trust relationship with the tribes in 
Maine independent of generally applicable federal law. This action is 
anchored in two sets of legal requirements: First, the Indian 
settlement acts, which reserve the tribes' ability to engage in 
sustenance fishing; second, the CWA, which requires that this use must 
be protected. The trust responsibility does not enhance or augment 
these legal requirements, and EPA is not relying on the trust 
responsibility as a separate legal basis for this action. The Indian 
settlement acts created a legal framework with respect to these tribes 
that triggered an analysis under the CWA about how to protect the 
sustenance fishing use provided for under the settlement acts. This 
analysis necessarily involves application of EPA's WQS regulations, 
guidance, and science to yield a result that is specific to these 
tribes, but each step of the analysis is founded in generally 
applicable requirements under the CWA, not an independent specific 
trust mandate.

C. Sustenance Fishing Designated Use

    Several commenters challenged EPA's approval, in its February 2015 
Decision, of sections 6207(4) and (9) of the MIA as a designated use of 
sustenance fishing applicable to inland waters of the Southern Tribes' 
reservations. Several commenters also argued that EPA had no authority 
to approve Maine's ``fishing'' designated use with the interpretation 
that it means ``sustenance fishing'' for waters in Indian lands. 
Related to both approvals, the commenters argued that Maine had never 
adopted a designated use of ``sustenance fishing,'' thus EPA could not 
approve such a use, and that EPA did not follow procedures required 
under the CWA in approving any ``sustenance fishing'' designated use. 
EPA disagrees, as discussed in sections III.C.1 and 2.
1. EPA's Approval of Certain Provisions in MIA as a Designated Use of 
Sustenance Fishing in Reservation Waters.
    State laws can operate as WQS when they affect, create or provide 
for, among other things, a use in particular waters, even when the 
state has not specifically identified that law as a WQS.\43\ EPA has 
the authority and duty to review and approve or disapprove such a state 
law as a WQS for CWA purposes, even if the state has not submitted the 
law to EPA for approval.\44\ Indeed, EPA has previously identified and 
disapproved a Maine law as a ``de facto'' WQS despite the fact that 
Maine did not label or present it as such.\45\
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    \43\ See Florida Pub. Interest Grp v. EPA, 386 F.3d 1070, 1089-
90 (11th Cir. 2004) (holding that in order to determine whether a 
state law constitutes a WQS, a district court must ``look beyond the 
[state's] characterization of [the law]'' and ``determine[ ] whether 
the practical impact of the [law] was to revise [the state's WQS]'' 
irrespective of the state's ``decision not to describe its own 
regulations as new or revised [WQS]''); Pine Creek Valley Watershed 
Ass'n v. United States, 137 F. Supp. 3d 767, 776 (E.D. Pa. 2015) 
(deferring to EPA's determination on whether or not a state law 
constitutes a WQS).
    \44\ See EPA, What is a New or Revised Water Quality Standard 
Under CWA 303(c)(3)? Frequently Asked Questions, October 2012. See 
also, Friends of Merrymeeting Bay v. Olsen, 839 F. Supp. 2d 366, 375 
(D. Me. 2012) (``The EPA is under an obligation to review a law that 
changes a water quality standard regardless of whether a state 
presents it for review.''); Miccosukee Tribe of Indians v. EPA, 105 
F.3d 599, 602 (11th Cir. 1997) (``Even if a state fails to submit 
new or revised standards, a change in state water quality standards 
could invoke the mandatory duty imposed on the Administrator to 
review new or revised standards.'').
    \45\ Letter from Stephen S. Perkins, Director of Office of 
Ecosystem Protection, EPA, to William J. Schneider, Maine Attorney 
General (July 9, 2012) (disapproving as a WQS a state law that 
required prevention of river herring passage on St. Croix River); 
see Friends of Merrymeeting Bay, 839 F. Supp. 2d at 375 (indicating 
EPA must consider whether such state law has the effect of changing 
a WQS).
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    The MIA is binding law in the state, and sections 6207(4) and (9) 
in that law clearly establish a right of sustenance fishing in the 
inland reservation waters of the Southern Tribes. See Topic 3 of the 
RTC document for a more detailed discussion. In other words, the state 
law provides for a particular use in particular waters. It was 
therefore appropriate for EPA to recognize that state law as a water 
quality standard, and more specifically, as a designated use. EPA's 
approval of these MIA provisions as a designated use of sustenance 
fishing does not create a new federal designated use of tribal 
``sustenance fishing,'' but rather gives effect to a WQS in state law 
for CWA purposes in the same manner as other state WQS. Furthermore, 
contrary to commenters' assertions, EPA did not fail to abide by any 
required procedures before approving the MIA provisions as a designated 
use. They were a ``new'' WQS for the purpose of EPA review, because EPA 
had never previously acted on them. When EPA acts on any state's new or 
revised WQS, there are no procedures necessary for EPA to undertake 
prior to approval.\46\ The Maine state legislature, which has the 
authority to adopt designated uses, held extensive hearings reviewing 
the provisions of the MIA, including those regarding sustenance 
fishing.
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    \46\ See 33 U.S.C. 1313(c)(3) and 40 CFR part 131.
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2. EPA's Interpretation and Approval of Maine's ``Fishing'' Designated 
Use To Include Sustenance Fishing.
    In addition to approving certain provisions of MIA as a designated 
use in the Southern Tribes' inland reservation waters, EPA also 
interpreted and approved Maine's designated use of ``fishing'' to mean 
``sustenance fishing'' for all waters in Indian lands. EPA disagrees 
with comments that claim that EPA had no authority to do so because EPA 
had previously approved that use for all waters in Maine without such 
an interpretation. While EPA approved the ``fishing'' designated use in 
1986 for other state waters, prior to its February 2015 decision, EPA 
had not approved any of the state's WQS, including the ``fishing'' 
designated use, as being applicable to waters in Indian lands.
    Under basic principles of federal Indian law, states generally lack 
civil regulatory jurisdiction within Indian country as defined in 18 
U.S.C. 1151.\47\ Thus, EPA cannot presume a state has authority to 
establish WQS or otherwise regulate in Indian country. Instead, a state 
must demonstrate its jurisdiction, and EPA must determine that the 
state has made the requisite demonstration and has authority, before a 
state can implement a program in Indian country. Accordingly, EPA 
cannot approve a state WQS for a water in Indian lands if it has not 
first determined that the state has authority to do so.
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    \47\ Alaska v. Native Vill. of Venetie Tribal Gov't, 522 U.S. 
520, 527 n.1. (1998) (``[g]enerally speaking, primary jurisdiction 
over land that is Indian country rests with the Federal Government 
and the Indian Tribe inhabiting it, and not with the States.''); see 
also Okla. Tax Comm'n v. Sac and Fox Nation, 508 U.S. 114, 128 
(1993) (``[a]bsent explicit congressional direction to the contrary, 
we presume against a State's having the jurisdiction to tax within 
Indian Country . . . .'').
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    EPA first determined on February 2, 2015, that Maine has authority 
to establish WQS for waters in Indian lands. Consistent with the 
principle articulated above, it is EPA's position that all WQS 
approvals that occurred prior to this date were limited to state

[[Page 92479]]

waters outside of waters in Indian lands. With regard to the 
``fishing'' designated use, Maine submitted revisions to its water 
quality standards program now codified at 38 M.R.S. section 464-470, to 
EPA in 1986. This submittal included Maine's designated use of 
``fishing'' for all surface waters in the state. On July 16, 1986, EPA 
approved most of the revised WQS, including the designated uses for 
surface waters, without explicit mention of the ``fishing'' designated 
use or of the standards' applicability to waters in Indian lands. Maine 
did not expressly assert its authority to establish WQS in Indian 
waters until its 2009 WQS submittal, and EPA did not expressly 
determine that Maine has such authority until February 2015. Therefore, 
EPA did not approve Maine's designated use of ``fishing'' to apply in 
Indian waters in 1986, and EPA's approval of that use for other waters 
in Maine at that time was not applicable to Indian waters in Maine.
    EPA acknowledges the comment that, prior to February 2015, EPA had 
not previously taken the position that Maine's designated use of 
``fishing'' included a designated use of ``sustenance fishing.'' As 
explained herein, it was not until February 2, 2015, that EPA 
determined that Maine's WQS were applicable to waters in Indian lands, 
so it was not until then that EPA reviewed Maine's ``fishing'' 
designated use for those waters and concluded that, in light of the 
settlement acts, it must include sustenance fishing as applied to 
waters in Indian lands.
    EPA disagrees with comments that asserted that EPA could not 
approve the ``fishing'' designated use as meaning ``sustenance 
fishing'' for waters in Indian lands unless EPA first made a 
determination under CWA section 303(c)(4)(B) that the ``fishing'' 
designated use was inconsistent with the CWA. Because EPA had not 
previously approved the ``fishing'' designated use for waters in Indian 
lands, EPA had the duty and authority to act on that use in its 
February 2015 decision, and was not required to make a determination 
under CWA section 303(c)(4)(B) before it could interpret and approve 
the use for waters in Indian lands. Additionally, because the term 
``fishing'' is ambiguous in Maine's WQS, even if EPA had previously 
approved it for all waters in the state, it is reasonable for EPA to 
explicitly interpret the use to include sustenance fishing for the 
waters in Indian lands in light of the Indian settlement acts.\48\ This 
is consistent with EPA's recent actions and positions regarding tribal 
fishing rights and water quality standards in the State of 
Washington.\49\
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    \48\ See Arkansas v. Oklahoma, 503 U.S. 91, 110 (1992) (holding 
that EPA's interpretation of state WQS in the NPDES context is 
entitled to ``substantial deference'').
    \49\ See Revision of Certain Federal Water Quality Criteria 
Applicable to Washington: 81 FR 85417 (November 28, 2016).
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    In acting on the ``fishing'' designated use for waters in Indian 
lands for the first time, it was reasonable and appropriate for EPA to 
explicitly interpret and approve the use to include sustenance fishing 
for the waters in Indian lands. This interpretation harmonized two 
applicable laws: The provision for sustenance fishing contained in the 
Indian settlement acts, as explained above in section III.B, and the 
CWA. Indeed, where an action required of EPA under the CWA implicates 
another federal statute, such as MICSA, EPA must harmonize the two 
statutes to the extent possible.\50\ This is consistent with 
circumstances where federal Indian laws are implicated and the Indian 
canons of statutory construction apply.\51\ Because the Indian 
settlement acts provide for sustenance fishing in waters in Indian 
lands, and EPA has authority to reasonably interpret state WQS when 
taking action on them, EPA necessarily interpreted the ``fishing'' use 
as ``sustenance fishing'' for these waters, lest its CWA approval 
action contradict and, as a practical matter, effectively limit or 
abrogate the Indian settlement acts (a power that would be beyond EPA's 
authority).\52\ Accordingly, EPA's interpretation of Maine's 
``fishing'' designated use reasonably and appropriately harmonized the 
intersecting provisions of the CWA and the Indian settlement acts.
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    \50\ See Nat'l Ass'n of Home Builders v. Defenders of Wildlife, 
551 U.S. 644, 664 (2007) (acknowledging EPA's duty to harmonize CWA 
and Endangered Species Act to give effect to both statutes where the 
Agency has discretion to do so); see also United States v. Borden 
Co., 308 U.S. 188, 198 (1939) (``When there are two acts upon the 
same subject, the rule is to give effect to both if possible.'').
    \51\ See Penobscot Nation v. Mills, 151 F. Supp. 3d at 213-214 
(applying the Indian canons of statutory construction to MIA and 
MICSA); see also Penobscot Nation v. Fellencer, 164, F.3d 706, 709 
(1st Cir. 1999) (applying Indian cannon to MICSA and citing to 
County of Oneida v. Oneida Indian Nation, 470 U.S. 226, 247 (1985) 
(``it is well established that treaties should be construed 
liberally in favor of the Indians with ambiguous provisions 
interpreted for their benefit'')).
    \52\ See Minn. v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians, 526 U.S. 
172, 202 (1999) (``Congress may abrogate Indian treaty rights, but 
it must clearly express its intent to do so.'').
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    Finally, one commenter argued that the settlement acts' provisions 
for sustenance fishing are merely exceptions to otherwise applicable 
creel limits and have no implications for the WQS that apply to the 
waters where the tribes are meant to fish. EPA does not agree with this 
narrow interpretation of the relationship between the provisions for 
tribal sustenance practices on the one hand and water quality on the 
other. Fundamentally, the tribes' ability to take fish for their 
sustenance under the settlement acts would be rendered meaningless if 
it were not supported under the CWA by water quality sufficient to 
ensure that tribal members can safely eat the fish for their own 
sustenance.
    When Congress identifies and provides for a particular purpose or 
use of specific Indian lands, it is reasonable and supported by 
precedent for an agency to consider whether its actions have an impact 
on a tribe's exercise of that purpose or use and to ensure through 
exercise of its authorities that its actions protect that purpose or 
use. For example, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals recently 
determined that the right of tribes in the State of Washington to fish 
for their subsistence in their ``usual and accustomed'' places 
necessarily included the right to an adequate supply of fish, despite 
the absence of any explicit language in the applicable treaties to that 
effect.\53\ Specifically, the Court held that ``the Tribes' right of 
access to their usual and accustomed fishing places would be worthless 
without harvestable fish.'' \54\ Similarly, it would defeat the purpose 
of MIA, MICSA, MSA, and ABMSA for the

[[Page 92480]]

tribes in Maine to be deprived of the ability to safely consume fish 
from their waters at sustenance levels. Consistent with this case law, 
the Department of the Interior provided EPA with a legal opinion which 
concludes that ``fundamental, long-standing tenets of federal Indian 
law support the interpretation of tribal fishing rights to include the 
right to sufficient water quality to effectuate the fishing right.'' 
\55\ If EPA were to ignore the impact that water quality, and 
specifically water quality standards under the CWA, could have on the 
tribes' ability to safely engage in their sustenance fishing practices 
on their lands, the Agency would be contradicting the clear purpose for 
which Congress ratified the settlement acts in Maine and provided for 
the establishment of Indian lands in the state. Therefore, it is 
incumbent upon EPA when applying the requirements of the CWA to 
harmonize those requirements with this Congressional purpose.
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    \53\ United States v. Washington, No. 13-35474, 2016 U.S. App. 
Lexis 11709 (9th Cir. June 27, 2016). See also United States v. 
Winans, 198 U.S. 371, 384 (1905) (tribe must be allowed to cross 
private property to access traditional fishing ground); Kittitas 
Reclamation District v. Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District, 763 
F.2d 1032, 1033-34 (9th Cir. 1985) (tribe's fishing right protected 
by enjoining water withdrawals that would destroy salmon eggs before 
they could hatch); Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa 
Indians v. Director, Mich. Dept of Nat. Resources, 141 F.3d 635 (6th 
Cir. 1989) (treaty right to fish commercially in the Great Lakes 
found to include a right to temporary mooring of treaty fishing 
vessels at municipal marinas because without such mooring the 
Indians could not fish commercially); Colville Confederated Tribes 
v. Walton, 647 F.2d 42, 47-48 (9th Cir. 1981) (implying reservation 
of water to preserve tribe's replacement fishing grounds); Winters 
v. United States, 207 U.S. 564, 576 (1908) (express reservation of 
land for reservation impliedly reserved sufficient water from the 
river to fulfill the purposes of the reservation); Arizona v. 
California, 373 U.S. 546, 598-601 (1963) (creation of reservation 
implied intent to reserve sufficient water to satisfy present and 
future needs).
    \54\ United States v. Washington, No. 13-35474, 2016 U.S. App. 
Lexis 11709 (9th Cir. June 27, 2016). The court also acknowledged 
that the fishing clause of the Stevens Treaties could give rise to 
other environmental obligations, but that those would need to be 
addressed on a case-by-case basis depending on the precise nature of 
the action. Id. at *18-19.
    \55\ Letter from Hilary C. Tompkins, Solicitor, Department of 
Interior, to Avi S. Garbow, General Counsel, EPA, January 30, 2015, 
a copy of which is in the docket supporting this action.
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D. Human Health Criteria for Toxics for Waters in Indian Lands
1. Target Population
    EPA received two comments that it improperly and without 
justification identified the tribes as the target population, as 
opposed to a highly exposed subpopulation, for the HHC for waters in 
Indian lands. On the contrary, EPA's approach is entirely consistent 
with EPA regulations and policy, as informed by the settlement acts.
    Pursuant to 40 CFR 131.11(a)(1), water quality criteria must be 
adequate to protect the designated uses. Developing HHC to protect the 
sustenance fishing designated use in waters in Indian lands necessarily 
involves identifying the population exercising that use as the target 
population.\56\ The tribes are not a highly exposed or high-consuming 
subpopulation in their own lands; they are the general population for 
which the federal set-aside of these lands and their waters was 
designed.\57\ Treating tribes as the target general population results 
in HHC sufficient under the CWA to ensure that the tribes' ability to 
exercise the designated use of sustenance fishing, as provided for in 
the settlement acts, is not substantially affected or impaired. 
Therefore, the tribal population must be the focus of the risk 
assessment supporting HHC for the waters to which the sustenance 
fishing use applies. To do otherwise risks undermining the purpose for 
which Congress established and confirmed the tribes' land base, as 
described more fully in section III.B.
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    \56\ One of the commenters, Maine's Attorney General, concedes 
as much. Her objection to EPA's approach rests on her assertion that 
there is no designated use of sustenance fishing for the waters in 
Indian lands. But she recognizes that had the Maine Legislature 
adopted proposed legislation for a ``subsistence fishing'' 
designated use for a portion of the Penobscot River, the adoption of 
that use would have protected the subsistence fishers as the target 
population for the stretch of the river to which the use applied. 
See Comments of Maine's Attorney General at 11.
    \57\ EPA recognizes that tribal members will not be the only 
population fishing from some of these waters. On major rivers such 
as the Penobscot River, for example, the general population has the 
right to pass through the waters in Indian lands. The presence of 
some nonmembers fishing on these waters, however, does not change 
the fact that the resident population in the Indian lands is made up 
of tribal members who expect to fish for their sustenance in the 
waters in Indian lands pursuant to the settlement acts.
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    Contrary to the commenters' claims, EPA's 2000 Methodology does not 
mandate that the tribes be treated as a highly exposed subpopulation. 
EPA's general approach in the 2000 Methodology, and in deriving 
national CWA section 304(a) recommended criteria, is for HHC to provide 
a high level of protection for the general population, while 
recognizing that more highly exposed ``subpopulations'' may face 
greater levels of risk.\58\ However, in addition to recommending 
protection of the general population based on fish consumption rates 
designed to represent ``the general population of fish consumers,'' the 
2000 Methodology recommends that states assess whether there might be 
more highly exposed subpopulations or ``population groups'' that 
require the use of a higher fish consumption rate to protect them as 
the ``target population group(s).'' \59\ The 2000 Methodology does not 
speak to or expressly envision the unique situation of setting HHC for 
waters where there is a tribal sustenance fishing designated use. 
Nevertheless, it is entirely consistent with the 2000 Methodology for 
EPA to identify the tribes as the target general population for 
protection, rather than as a highly exposed subpopulation, and to apply 
the 2000 Methodology's recommendations on exposure for the general 
population, including the FCR and CRL, to the tribal target population.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality 
Criteria for the Protection of Human Health (2000). U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Science and Technology, 
Washington, DC. EPA 822-B-00-004, pp. 2-1 to 2-3.
    \59\ Id., pp. 4-24 to 4-25.
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2. Wabanaki Study
    EPA received several comments that the FCR of 286 g/day, derived to 
support the sustenance fishing use, and used in the calculation of the 
promulgated HHC, is too high and not based on sound science. In 
particular, commenters asserted that it was improper for EPA to rely on 
the Wabanaki Study because it is irrelevant and aspirational. These 
commenters instead prefer the use of a 1992 study conducted by McLaren/
Hart--ChemRisk of Portland, Maine (``the 1992 ChemRisk Study'').\60\ 
EPA disagrees for the following reasons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \60\ ChemRisk, A Division of McLaren Hart, and HBRS, Inc., 
Consumption of Freshwater Fish by Maine Anglers, as revised, July 
24, 1992.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    After considering other sources, including the 1992 ChemRisk Study 
(see discussion below), EPA derived the FCR from a peer-reviewed 
estimate of traditional sustenance fish consumption from the Wabanaki 
Study. EPA finds that the Wabanaki Study used a sound methodology (peer 
reviewed, written by experts in risk assessment and anthropology), and 
contains the best currently available information for the purpose of 
deriving an FCR for HHC adequate to protect present day sustenance 
fishing for such waters. It is the only local study focused on the 
tribal members and areas most heavily used by those members today. 
While it relies on daily caloric and protein intake to derive heritage 
FCRs, the FCR of 286 g/day is also the best currently available 
estimate for contemporary tribal sustenance level fish consumption for 
waters where the sustenance fishing designated use applies.
    In addition, EPA consulted with tribal governments to obtain their 
views on the suitability of the Wabanaki Study and any additional 
relevant information to select a FCR for this final rulemaking. The 
tribes represented that the Wabanaki study and corresponding rate of 
286 g/day is an appropriate and accurate portrayal of their present day 
sustenance fishing lifeway, absent significant improvement in the 
availability of anadromous fish species, and EPA gave significant 
weight to the tribes' representations.\61\
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    \61\ Indeed, in developing its own 2014 tribal water quality 
criteria, the Penobscot Nation used a FCR of 286 g/day. The Nation 
explained that it chose the inland non-anadromous total FCR of 286 
g/day presented in the Wabanaki Study because, although the 
Penobscot lands are in areas that would have historically supported 
an inland anadromous diet (with total FCR of 514 g/day), the 
contemporary populations of anadromous species in Penobscot waters 
are currently too low to be harvested in significant quantities. 
Penobscot Nation, Department of Natural Resources, Response to 
Comments on Draft Water Quality Standards, September 23, 2014, p. 9.

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[[Page 92481]]

    As explained in EPA's disapproval and preamble to the proposed 
rule, the data from the ChemRisk Study are not suitable as a source for 
deriving the FCR for waters in Indian lands in Maine. That study was 
not a survey of tribal sustenance fishers in tribal waters. Rather, it 
was a statewide recreational angler survey that polled anglers with 
state fishing licenses and was not a survey intended to characterize 
tribal fish consumption in tribal waters. As explained by tribal 
representatives both in comments on Maine's 2012 revisions and in 
comments on this rule, and by DEP in its response to comments on the 
2012 revisions, tribal members are not necessarily required to get 
state licenses to fish and therefore were likely underrepresented in 
the survey.\62\
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    \62\ Id., Exhibit 8, pages 14 and 19; June 20, 2016, Letter from 
Chief Brenda Commander, Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians, to Gina 
McCarthy, Administrator, EPA, page 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition, EPA disagrees with commenters who assert that there 
were no fish advisories or that there were an insignificant number of 
river miles covered by fish advisories during the time of the ChemRisk 
Study. It is well documented that fish advisories were in place on some 
waters in Maine at the time of the ChemRisk Study. As documented by 
Maine's Department of Health and Human Services in a 2008 history of 
dioxin fish consumption advisories in Maine,\63\ fish advisories were 
first issued in Maine on the Androscoggin River in 1985 and on the 
Kennebec and Penobscot River in 1987, before the ChemRisk Study survey 
was conducted. While relative to the state as a whole this may seem to 
be a small portion of river miles that were affected by a fish 
consumption advisory, the Penobscot River is a very large portion of 
the sustenance fishery for the Penobscot Indian Nation, and it is a 
waterbody with a high profile and symbolic significance in the Indian 
community.
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    \63\ Smith, Andrew E., and Frohmberg, Eric, Evaluation of the 
Health Implications of Levels of Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-Dioxins 
(dioxins) and Polychlorinated Dibenzofurans (furans) in Fish from 
Maine Rivers, Maine Department of Health and Human Service, January, 
2008, pages 2-3.
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    Further, as documented by DEP in its response to comments on its 
2012 WQS revisions, during the time that the ChemRisk survey was 
conducted:

    [P]ublic awareness of historical pollution in industrialized 
rivers can be expected to have suppressed fish consumption on a 
local basis. The Department is unable to quantify the extent of 
suppression due to historical pollution in the major rivers or the 
dioxin advisories in place at the time of the ChemRisk study, but 
believes that the ChemRisk (Ebert et al.) estimates of fish 
consumption for rivers and streams as well as the inclusive `all 
waters' categories are likely to have been affected to some 
degree.\64\
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    \64\ January 14, 2013, Letter from Patricia Aho, DEP to Curt 
Spalding, EPA, regarding ``USEPA Review of P.L. 2011, Ch. 194 and 
revised 06-096 CMR 584'', Exhibit 8, pages 20-21.
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3. Cancer Risk Level
    With respect to the cancer risk management value used in deriving 
the HHC of 10-6, one commenter noted that this value was 
unduly protective of public health while another implied the Agency 
could adopt a more protective risk management level, and several 
supported EPA's use of 10-6. In promulgating HHC for the 
tribes in Maine, EPA incorporated an excess cancer risk level of 
10-6 as the appropriate target level for two reasons. First, 
it is consistent with Maine DEP Rule 06-096, Chapter 584, which EPA 
approved for waters in Indian lands on February 2, 2015, and which 
specifies that water quality criteria for carcinogens must be based on 
a 10-6 CRL.\65\ Second, it is consistent with EPA guidance 
that states, ``For deriving CWA section 304(a) criteria or promulgating 
water quality criteria for states and tribes under Section 303(c) based 
on the 2000 Human Health Methodology, EPA intends to use the 
10-6 risk level, which the Agency believes reflects an 
appropriate risk for the general population.'' \66\ As explained above, 
EPA considers the tribes to be the general target population for waters 
in Indian lands. In promulgating HHC that correspond to an excess 
cancer risk level of 10-6 for tribes in Maine, not only is 
EPA acting consistent with both EPA guidance and Maine's existing rule, 
but EPA is providing the tribes engaged in sustenance fishing in waters 
in Indian lands with an equivalent level of cancer risk protection as 
is afforded to the general population in Maine outside of waters in 
Indian lands.
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    \65\ The only exception from the requirement to use a CRL of 
10-6 in Chapter 584 is for arsenic, for which a CRL of 
10-4 is required. EPA disapproved the arsenic CRL for 
waters in Indian lands.
    \66\ USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality 
Criteria for the Protection of Human Health. U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. EPA-822-B-00-
004, p. 2-6.
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4. Trophic Level Specific Fish Consumption Rates
    Since the Wabanaki Study presented estimates of the total amount of 
fish and aquatic organisms consumed but not the amount consumed from 
each trophic level, for the purpose of developing HHC for the Maine 
tribes, EPA assumed that Maine tribes consume the same relative 
proportion of fish and aquatic organisms from the different trophic 
levels 2 through 4 as is consumed by the adult U.S. population. As 
identified in the 2015 criteria update, the relative percent of the 
total fish consumption rate for trophic levels 2 through 4 for the 
adult U.S. population amounts to 36%, 40%, and 24%.\67\ Accordingly, 
EPA adjusted the 286 g/day total tribal fish consumption rate by these 
same percentages and arrived at trophic-specific fish consumption rates 
of 103 g/day (trophic level 2), 114 g/day (trophic level 3), and 68.6 
g/day (trophic level 4). These trophic specific fish consumption rates 
were thus used in deriving the HHC for those compounds for which the 
2015 criteria update included trophic level specific BAFs. For 
compounds where, in 2015, EPA estimated BAFs from laboratory-measured 
BCFs and therefore derived a single pollutant-specific BAF for all 
trophic levels, and where EPA's existing 304(a) recommended human 
health criteria for certain pollutants still incorporate a single BCF 
and those pollutants are included in this final rule, EPA derived the 
HHC using a total fish consumption rate of 286 g/day.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \67\ USEPA. 2014. Estimated Fish Consumption Rates for the U.S. 
Population and Selected Subpopulations (NHANES 2003-2010). EPA-820-
R-14-002. https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-01/documents/fish-consumption-rates-2014.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Penobscot Nation requested EPA use a slightly different 
weighting scheme when refining the fish consumption rate based on the 
trophic levels of the fish and shellfish species they consume. While 
EPA recommends the use of local data relevant to the population of 
interest whenever possible in deriving human health criteria, such data 
must be from a sound scientific study before it can be utilized. The 
Penobscot Nation did not provided adequate information to support a 
different trophic level weighting scheme. See Topic 5 in the RTC 
document for a more detailed response.
5. Geographic Extent of Waters To Which the HHC Apply
    The HHC contained in the rule are designed to protect the 
designated use of sustenance fishing as exercised by the tribes in 
Maine. The HHC thus apply to waters where that designated use is 
approved. EPA approved a sustenance fishing designated use in two 
general categories of waters: (1) Waters in Indian lands, and (2) 
waters outside Indian lands where the sustenance fishing right reserved 
in MIA section

[[Page 92482]]

6207(4) applies.\68\ The first category, ``waters in Indian lands,'' 
covers waters within the tribes' reservations and trust lands as 
provided for under the settlement acts. The second category applies in 
the limited circumstances where it is determined that a Southern 
Tribe's sustenance fishing right reserved in MIA section 6207(4) 
extends to a waterbody outside of its reservation as provided for under 
the settlement acts. As explained below, this situation currently 
exists in only one waterbody, a clearly delineated stretch of the 
Penobscot River.
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    \68\ For ``waters in Indian lands,'' this final rule promulgates 
HHC as well as six other WQS (narrative and numeric bacteria 
criteria for the protection of primary contact recreation and 
shellfishing; ammonia criteria for protection of aquatic life in 
fresh waters; provisions that ensure that WQS apply to HHC even if 
they are naturally occurring; a mixing zone policy; a pH criterion 
for fresh waters; and tidal temperature criteria). For the second 
category of waters, where there is a sustenance fishing designated 
use outside of waters in Indian lands, the rule promulgates only the 
HHC. This response focuses on the HHC because the HHC apply to the 
broadest set of tribal-related waters and because the comments 
addressing the geographical scope of the rule are largely framed in 
terms of concerns about the HHC.
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    The outer bounds of waters that may fall within the two categories 
of the rule are based on the settlement acts and are thereby generally 
identifiable. The rule, however, does not identify the specific 
boundaries of each waterbody or portion thereof to which the HHC apply. 
Whether a specific waterbody falls within one of these categories will 
depend on the status of such water under applicable federal and state 
law. The status of such a waterbody may therefore be determined as a 
result of litigation or other legal developments regarding that 
specific waterbody. The two general categories of waters to which the 
HHC apply, however, will remain constant.
    Three commenters asserted that this approach is overly broad and 
vague. EPA disagrees. Here, EPA has clearly described the specific 
categories of waters to which this rule applies, which flow directly 
from and are bounded by the express provisions of the settlement acts. 
The purpose of the rule is to establish WQS that address EPA's 
disapprovals and necessity determination and adequately protect 
applicable designated uses. It is both reasonable and appropriate, and 
consistent with prior practice under the CWA, for EPA to promulgate 
these WQS without a final adjudication or determination of the precise 
boundaries of each specific waterbody that falls within each category, 
so long as the WQS protect the uses and clearly apply only to waters 
subject to those uses. As described below, the extent of waters in 
Indian lands is largely established under the settlement acts and 
subsequent trust conveyances that have occurred under the terms of 
those acts. But there are isolated disputes and one pending lawsuit 
regarding the boundaries of Indian lands and the geographic extent of 
tribal sustenance fishing rights. EPA's approach is designed to be 
responsive to the potential that these disputes could result in 
clarifications of the particular boundaries of the disputed waters, 
while maintaining protection of the tribes' sustenance fishing use.\69\
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    \69\ It is important to note that EPA has expressly answered the 
question of who has jurisdiction over all the waters involved in 
this matter, irrespective of which category they fall under or which 
use(s) and criteria apply. EPA did so in its February 2015 decision 
when it determined that the state has jurisdiction to set WQS over 
all waterbodies in Maine, including those within tribal reservations 
and trust lands. EPA is also determining that the HHC at issue will 
apply only where designated use of sustenance fishing applies. EPA 
is not, however, making any determinations in this rulemaking on the 
narrower technical question regarding the full extent of precise 
waters to which that use, and thus the HHC, apply.
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a. Adequate Notice
    Although this rulemaking does not identify the exact boundaries of 
each waterbody or portion thereof covered by the rule, it nevertheless 
provides adequate notice to potentially regulated parties because the 
categories are clearly described, and waters that could reasonably fall 
within these two categories are either precisely described in the 
settlement acts or, in circumstances where there are ongoing disputes 
or uncertainties, located in limited areas in Maine representing a 
small fraction of all waters within the state. In fact, any 
uncertainties as to the scope of waters in Indian lands largely pertain 
to particular stretches of the Penobscot and St. Croix Rivers. EPA 
anticipates that any existing uncertainty will be addressed by the 
current litigation regarding the Main Stem of the Penobscot River and 
DOI's work with the Passamaquoddy Tribe to determine the status of the 
relevant stretch of the St. Croix River.
    The first category--``waters in Indian lands''--covers waters 
within a tribe's reservation or trust lands. The tribes' trust lands 
are all the result of modern conveyances recorded after the 1980 
settlements, the boundaries of which are described in the deeds for 
those parcels. Although there are ongoing disputes over the extent of 
some of the reservation lands, the Indian settlement acts identify the 
outer bounds of what could reasonably be identified as reservation 
land. In the Economic Analysis conducted for this rulemaking, EPA took 
a conservative approach and identified all discharges for which there 
is any reasonable potential that they discharge to waters in Indian 
lands or their tributaries. In doing so, EPA identified a total of only 
33 facilities, a small subset of the 478 Maine Pollutant Discharge 
Elimination System (MEPDES) permitted dischargers in the state.
    One commenter expressed concern that the boundaries of the 
sustenance fishing designated use as it applies to the tribes' trust 
lands may expand if any of the tribes exercise what remaining authority 
they may have under the settlement acts to purchase and take more land 
into trust outside the reservations. However, EPA did not intend for 
its approval and disapproval decisions on WQS for waters in Indian 
lands, or for this rule, to apply to waters that may be part of after-
acquired trust lands. EPA's promulgation of HHC to address the 
disapprovals is thus limited to waters in trust lands as of February 2, 
2015, and waters in the Southern Tribes' reservations. EPA's 
promulgation of HHC in accordance with the Administrator's 
determination is likewise limited. The sustenance fishing designated 
use and appropriate HHC would not apply to any waters in after-acquired 
trust lands until such time as the state or EPA took further action 
under the CWA. This step would give interested parties an opportunity 
to comment on that action. EPA also notes that where the settlement 
acts have not already specifically identified parcels that qualify to 
be taken into trust, they clearly provide for the state to receive 
notice of any trust acquisition.\70\
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    \70\ 30 MRSA 6205-A(1); 30 MRSA 7204.
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    The second category is quite narrow, limited to waterbodies outside 
of Indian lands where the Southern Tribes' sustenance fishing right 
reserved in MIA section 6207(4) applies. Currently, the Main Stem of 
the Penobscot River is the only waterbody in the state that has been 
adjudicated to be a waterbody outside of Indian lands to which a tribe, 
the Penobscot Nation, has a right to sustenance fish based in MIA.\71\ 
The ``Main Stem'' addressed by the court in the Mills litigation is 
clearly identified as ``a portion of the Penobscot River and stretches 
from Indian Island north to the confluence of the East and West 
Branches of the Penobscot River.'' \72\ Significantly, the court in 
Mills concluded that the Penobscot Nation has a sustenance fishery 
reservation, under MIA section 6207, in ``the waters

[[Page 92483]]

adjacent to its island reservation,'' under MIA section 6203.\73\ 
Accordingly, in scenarios like the one addressed by the court in Mills, 
waters that fall under this second category will likely share a 
geographic nexus with the Southern Tribes' reservations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \71\ Penobscot Nation v. Mills, 151 F. Supp. 3d at 222-223.
    \72\ Id. at 186.
    \73\ Id. at 221-222.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This second category thus represents a limited universe of 
potential waters that fall outside the existing waters in Indian lands 
only to the extent the fishing right reserved in MIA section 6207(4) 
extends beyond the reservation of a Southern Tribe under MIA section 
6203 under the reasoning of the U.S. District Court in the Mills 
litigation. In the event the law of the case in the Mills litigation 
changes, it is also possible that no waters would fall within this 
second category. Accordingly, the waters covered by this rule are at 
most the waters in Indian lands and the limited additional waters where 
a Southern Tribe has a right to sustenance fish, which will likely 
share a geographic nexus with the tribes' reservations.
b. General Approach
    Under the CWA, it is not uncommon for a state, authorized tribe, or 
EPA to take an approach, when promulgating WQS (i.e., designated uses, 
water quality criteria, and antidegradation policies), of identifying a 
category of waters to which the WQS apply, where additional information 
will need to be gathered before the implementing agency can determine 
whether such WQS applies to any specific waterbody. For these WQS, any 
uncertainties regarding applicability to a specific waterbody are 
appropriately resolved as the standards are implemented through various 
actions under the CWA, such as NPDES permitting and listing of impaired 
waters under section 303(d) of the CWA, among others.
    An example of this approach already in effect in Maine involves the 
state's criteria for dissolved oxygen (DO). Maine's longstanding DO 
criteria for Class B and C waters include generally applicable criteria 
as well as more protective criteria that apply only to fish spawning 
areas in the colder months.\74\ The DO criteria do not list each 
specific fish spawning area in Class B or C waters, nor do the more 
general classifications of fresh waters at 38 M.R.S. 467 and 468. 
Rather, Maine must determine whether a spawning area is implicated on a 
permit-by-permit basis.\75\ Similarly, Maine's WQS contain certain 
natural conditions provisions that alter the way in which pollutants 
may be treated for WQS purposes if they are naturally occurring.\76\ 
The waters in which such conditions occur are not identified in the WQS 
themselves but rather must be determined on a case-by-case basis.
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    \74\ 38 M.R.S. sections 465.3.B and 465.4.B, respectively. Note 
that as part of this rulemaking, EPA is promulgating dissolved 
oxygen criteria for Class A waters, also with specific criteria that 
apply to fish spawning areas.
    \75\ 06-096-585 Code of Maine Rules, Chapter 584, Surface Water 
Quality Criteria for Toxic Pollutants.
    \76\ This rule includes provisions to ensure that these natural 
conditions WQS are not applied to HHC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    There are numerous examples from other states identifying general 
categories of waters to which certain standards apply. For example, the 
State of Wisconsin has several narrative water quality criteria that 
apply to ``wetlands,'' defined as ``an area where water is at, near or 
above the land surface long enough to be capable of supporting aquatic 
or hydrophytic vegetation and which has soils indicative of wet 
conditions.'' \77\ Florida has promulgated numeric interpretations of 
its narrative nutrient criteria that apply to ``streams,'' defined as 
``a predominantly fresh surface waterbody with perennial flow in a 
defined channel with banks during typical climatic and hydrologic 
conditions for its region within the state,'' but excluding certain 
non-perennial stream segments, ditches, canals, and other conveyances 
that have various characteristics as defined in the regulation.\78\ 
Whether a specific discharge implicates a waterbody that falls within 
these general categories, and thus whether the associated water quality 
criteria apply, is left to the implementing agency to determine by 
applying the case-specific facts to the general category definition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \77\ Wis. Admin. Code NR section 103.03 (2016). For additional 
examples of states with WQS for ``wetlands,'' see 5 Colo. Code Regs. 
section 1002-31.11 (LexisNexis 2016); Iowa Admin. Code r. 567-61.3 
(2016); Minn. R. 7050.0186 (2016)l 117 Neb. Admin. Code section 7-
001 (2015); 15A N.C. Admin. Code 02B.0231 (2016); Ohio Admin Code 
3475-1-50.
    \78\ Fla. Admin. Code. Ann. r. 62-302.200 (2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA is taking a similar approach here, by defining two general 
categories of waters covered by this rule. The determination of whether 
a specific waterbody falls within one of these categories will be made, 
in the first instance, by the implementing (e.g., permitting) 
authority. Determining whether a waterbody is within one of the two 
categories covered by EPA's rule will require application of the facts 
relevant to that particular waterbody to the definition of the 
category. However, disputes regarding the extent of waters which may be 
subject to this rule are primarily limited to stretches of two 
waterbodies, as described above. Therefore, EPA anticipates that the 
case-by-case identification of whether a waterbody is covered by this 
rule will be straight-forward in most instances.
E. Other Water Quality Standards
1. Mixing Zone Policy for Waters in Indian Lands
    Two commenters asserted that EPA does not have the legal authority 
or the scientific basis to ban mixing zones for bioaccumulative 
pollutants outside the Great Lakes. EPA disagrees. EPA's authority to 
promulgate a mixing zone policy, and to prohibit its use for 
bioaccumulative pollutants, derives from section 303(c) of the CWA. 
While states are not required to adopt mixing zone policies, when a 
state includes a mixing zone policy in its water quality standards, the 
policy is subject to EPA's review and approval or disapproval. 40 CFR 
131.13. Adoption of a mixing zone policy is necessary for a mixing zone 
to be authorized in the issuance of a CWA discharge permit. EPA 
disapproved Maine's mixing zone policy for waters in Indian lands 
because it did not meet the requirements of the CWA. Recognizing that 
Maine intended to authorize mixing zones as part of its water quality 
standards, EPA, pursuant to CWA section 303(c)(4)(A), is now 
promulgating a mixing zone policy that includes protections that were 
missing from Maine's policy that EPA disapproved. EPA has determined 
that a ban on a mixing zone for bioaccumulating pollutants is 
reasonable and appropriate for the reasons discussed below, and nothing 
in CWA section 303(c) or EPA's implementing regulations constrains 
EPA's legal authority to do so.
    EPA guidance has long cautioned states and tribes against mixing 
zone policies that allow mixing zones for discharges of bioaccumulative 
pollutants, since they may cause significant ecological and human 
health risks such that the designated use of the waterbody as a whole 
may not be protected.79 80 81 EPA's WQS Handbook notes that 
this is particularly the case where mixing zones may encroach on

[[Page 92484]]

areas used for fish harvesting. The waters in Indian lands, to which 
this mixing zone policy will apply, not only are used for fish 
harvesting but have a designated use of sustenance fishing. By their 
very nature, bioaccumulative pollutants are those that accumulate in 
fish and shellfish and other organisms. Moreover, as EPA has explained 
elsewhere, the effects of such pollutants are not short term, nor are 
they limited to a localized zone of initial dilution.\82\ Since the 
effects could be persistent and occur well beyond the mixing zone, 
there is no assurance that all designated uses would be protected. EPA 
is particularly concerned about the potential adverse effects of such a 
mixing zone on the sustenance fishing use for those reasons. EPA also 
notes that the state has not in the past granted mixing zones for 
bioaccumulative pollutants, and neither the state nor the regulated 
community in Maine have raised a concern in their comments about EPA's 
proposal that mixing zones cannot be authorized for bioaccumulative 
pollutants. Therefore, EPA's final rule includes the prohibition on a 
mixing zone for bioaccumulative pollutants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \79\ USEPA. 1991. Technical Support Document for Water Quality-
based Toxics Control. US Environmental Protection Agency, Office of 
Water, Washington, DC. Section 2.2.2, p. 34; Section 4.3.1, p. 71; 
Section 4.3.4, p. 72; Section 4.6.2, p. 87. EPA 505-290-001.
    \80\ Final Rule to Amend the Final Water Quality Guidance for 
the Great Lakes System to Prohibit Mixing Zones for Bioaccumulative 
Chemicals of Concern, 65 FR 67638, 67641-42 (November 13, 2000); 40 
CFR part 132.
    \81\ USEPA. 2014. Water Quality Standards Handbook, Chapter 5 at 
5-8. EPA 820-B-14-008.
    \82\ Id.
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2. Bacteria Criteria for Waters in Indian Lands
a. Recreational Bacteria Criteria
    EPA received one comment in opposition to the proposed recreational 
bacteria criteria. Maine DEP objected to EPA's inclusion of wildlife 
sources in the scope of the bacteria criteria for several reasons. It 
argued that inclusion of wildlife sources is beyond the scope of the 
CWA, which DEP asserts is only concerned with human pollution, and that 
E.coli are used only as an indicator of human sewage. It also asserted 
that EPA incorrectly ``construed `animal sources' of bacteria from 
studies as equivalent to naturally occurring `wildlife sources' in the 
proposed rule''; that EPA cited to only one study in EPA's 2012 
Recreational Water Quality Criteria (RWQC) that links potential human 
health risks with non-human sources of fecal contamination; and that 
because bacteria from natural sources are likely to be ``temporal,'' 
removing a use (recreation in and on the water) simply due to a high 
level of E. coli where the bacteria source is of natural origins ``is, 
at best, unwise.'' \83\ None of these comments provides a basis for 
excluding wildlife sources from EPA's rule, which is based on the 2012 
recommended RWQC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \83\ The commenter also refers to the 1997 Guidance 
(``Establishing Site Specific Aquatic Life Criteria Equal to Natural 
Background'') ``cited by EPA,'' and states that it ``stands for 
possible reevaluation of uses based on known background 
concentrations not establishing criteria which necessitates 
regulation of naturally occurring bacteria. . . .'' EPA did not cite 
to that guidance in the context of the proposed bacteria criteria, 
and it has no bearing on EPA's decision to include wildlife sources 
in the scope of the criteria.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    First, the CWA does not limit EPA to consideration of human causes 
of pollution when developing water quality criteria protective of human 
health. CWA section 502(23) defines ``pathogen indicator'' to mean ``a 
substance that indicates the potential for human infectious disease'' 
with no limitation on source. EPA's recommended RWQC identify levels of 
fecal indicator bacteria (which include fecal coliforms, E.coli, 
enterococci or Enterococcus spp.) that will be protective of human 
health. Those pathogen indicators are not limited to pathogens coming 
only from human sources.\84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \84\ USEPA. 2012. Recreational Water Quality Criteria. U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. 
Office of Water 820-F-12-058, pages 1-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Second, E. coli are typically found in the digestive systems of 
warm-blooded animals, and can be used to indicate the presence of fecal 
material in surface waters regardless of their origin, whether from 
humans, domestic animals, or wildlife. The literature provides many 
studies documenting wildlife as sources of E. coli.85 86 87 
For decades, EPA's regulatory premise concerning recreational water 
quality has been that nonhuman-derived human pathogens, including those 
from wildlife, in fecally contaminated waters present a potential risk 
to human health.\88\ EPA has investigated sources of fecal 
contamination in its Review of Published Studies to Characterize 
Relative Risks from Different Sources of Fecal Contamination in 
Recreational Waters \89\ and Review of Zoonotic Pathogens in Ambient 
Waters,\90\ and determined that both human and animal feces, including 
feces from wildlife, in recreational waters do pose potential risks to 
human health. EPA again confirmed, in the development of the 2012 RWQC, 
that wildlife can carry both zoonotic pathogens capable of causing 
illness in humans and fecal indicator bacteria, and these microbes can 
be transmitted to surface waters.\91\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \85\ Levesque, B., P. Brousseau, P. Simard, E. Dewailly, M. 
Meisels, D. Ramsay, and J. Joly. 1993. Impact of the ring-billed 
gull (Larus delawarenesis) on the microbiological quality of 
recreational water. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 59 (4) 
1128-1230.
    \86\ Center for Watershed Protection. 1999. Microbes and urban 
watersheds: concentrations, sources, and pathways. Watershed 
Protection Techniques. 3(1):554-565.
    \87\ Makino. S., H. Kobori, H. Asakura, M. Watarai, T. 
Shirahata, T. Ikeda, K. Takeshi and T. Tsukamoto. 2000. Detection 
and characterization of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli from 
seagulls. Epidemiol. Infect. 125: 55-61.
    \88\ USEPA. 2009. Review of Published Studies to Characterize 
Relative Risks from Different Sources of Fecal Contamination in 
Recreational Water. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of 
Water, Health and Ecological Criteria Division. Washington, DC. EPA 
822-R-09-001.
    \89\ Id.
    \90\ USEPA. 2009. Review of Zoonotic Pathogens in Ambient 
Waters. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, 
Health and Ecological Criteria Division. Washington, DC. EPA-822-R-
09-002.
    \91\ USEPA. 2012. Recreational Water Quality Criteria. U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. 
Office of Water 820-F-12-058.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Contrary to the commenter's assertion, EPA cited more than one 
study in the RWQC that links potential human health risks with non-
human sources of fecal contamination.\92\ Furthermore, in the 
development of the RWQC, EPA did not, as the commenter claimed, equate 
bacteria from domestic animal sources to those of naturally occurring 
wildlife. On the contrary, EPA's research for the development of the 
RWQC clearly recognized that there is a risk differential between human 
and non-human animal sources, as well as among non-human animal 
sources.\93\ Nevertheless, because zoonotic pathogens are present in 
animal (including wildlife) fecal matter, creating a potential risk 
from recreational exposure to zoonotic pathogens in animal-impacted 
waters, EPA found no scientific basis on which to exclude wildlife 
altogether from the scope of the RWQC, nor has the commenter provided 
any scientific basis for excluding wildlife sources altogether from the 
scope of the EPA's rule for waters in Indian lands in Maine.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \92\ Id., pages 34-38.
    \93\ Id., pages 36-38.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Maine DEP commented that because bacteria from natural sources are 
likely to be ``temporal,'' removing a use (recreation in and on the 
water) simply due to a high level of E. coli where the bacteria source 
is of natural origins ``is, at best, unwise.'' This circumstance is not 
a justification for excluding wildlife sources altogether from the 
scope of recreational bacteria criteria. EPA recognizes that health 
risks associated with exposure to waters impacted by animal sources can 
vary substantially, depending on the animal source. In some cases, 
these risks can be similar to exposure to human fecal contamination, 
and in other cases, the risk is lower.94 95 96 97 In 
situations with

[[Page 92485]]

non-human sources of fecal contamination, the state may choose to 
conduct sanitary surveys, epidemiological studies and/or a Quantitative 
Microbial Risk Assessment (QMRA). If sanitary surveys, water quality 
information, or health studies show the sources of fecal contamination 
to be non-human, and the indicator densities reflect a different risk 
profile, then the state has the option to develop and adopt site-
specific alternative recreational bacteria criteria to reflect the 
local environmental conditions and human exposure patterns.\98\ For 
waterbodies where non-human fecal sources predominate, QMRA can be used 
to determine a different enterococci or E. coli criteria value that is 
equally protective as the criteria EPA is promulgating today.\99\
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    \94\ Schoen, M.E. and N.J. Ashbolt. 2010. Assessing pathogen 
risk to swimmers at non-sewage impacted recreational beaches. 
Environmental Science and Technology 44(7): 2286-2291.
    \95\ Soller, J.A., M.E. Schoen, T. Bartrand, J.E. Ravenscroft, 
N.J. Ashbolt. 2010. Estimated human health risks from exposure too 
recreational waters impacted by human and non-human sources of 
faecal contamination. Water Research 44: 4674-4691.
    \96\ Soller, J.A., T. Bartrand, J. Ravenscroft, M. Molina, G. 
Whelan, M. Schoen, N. Ashbolt. 2015. Estimated health risks from 
recreational exposures to stormwater runoff containing animal faecal 
material. Environmental Modelling and Software 72: 21-32.
    \97\ USEPA. 2010. Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment to 
Estimate Illness in Freshwater Impacted by Agricultural Animals 
Sources of Fecal Contamination. U.S. Environmental Protection 
Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. EPA 822-R-10-005.
    \98\ USEPA. 2012. Recreational Water Quality Criteria. U.S. 
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. 
Office of Water 820-F-12-058. Section 6.2.
    \99\ Id., Section 6.2.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Maine DEP also objected to EPA's proposal to apply the bacteria 
criteria year round, and requested that EPA exclude the period of 
October 1-May 14, similar to Maine's disapproved criteria. The state 
asserted that EPA had not demonstrated that recreational activities 
occur in this time frame. Other commenters supported the year round 
criteria. EPA disagrees with the state's characterization of the 
record. First, the activities cited by EPA in the proposal were merely 
examples of readily available information that recreation does occur 
during the period October 1 to May 14. The record also included 
information from one tribal member confirming that activities in and on 
the Penobscot River occur whenever the waters are ice free. In its 
comment supporting the proposed criteria, the Penobscot Nation 
specifically noted that the tribe engages in year round activities in 
and on the Penobscot River, including for paddling, fishing, and 
ceremonial uses. EPA had invited comment on whether a seasonal term 
shorter than October 1-May 14, during which the recreational bacteria 
criteria would not apply, would still adequately protect recreational 
uses. EPA received no comments that provided specific information that 
could support the establishment of a seasonal timeframe in which the 
absence of bacteria criteria would be protective of uses. Therefore, 
EPA has retained the year round applicability in the final rule.

IV. Economic Analysis

    EPA is not required under CWA section 303(c) or its implementing 
regulations at 40 CFR part 131 to conduct an economic analysis 
regarding implementation of these EPA-promulgated WQS. For the purpose 
of transparency, EPA conducted a cost analysis for the WQS in this 
final rule. Potential economic effects of this rule are presented here.
    These WQS may serve as a basis for development of NPDES permit 
limits. Maine has NPDES permitting authority and retains considerable 
discretion in implementing standards. EPA evaluated the potential costs 
to NPDES dischargers associated with state implementation of EPA's 
final criteria. This analysis is documented in ``Final Economic 
Analysis for Promulgation of Certain Federal Water Quality Criteria 
Applicable to Maine,'' which can be found in the docket for this 
rulemaking.
    Any NPDES-permitted facility that discharges pollutants for which 
the revised WQS are more stringent than the previously applicable WQS 
could potentially incur increased compliance costs. The types of 
affected facilities could include industrial facilities and POTWs 
discharging wastewater to surface waters (i.e., point sources). EPA did 
not attribute compliance with water quality-based effluent limitations 
(WQBELs) reflective of Maine's existing (hereafter ``baseline'') WQS to 
the final rule. Once in compliance with WQBELs reflective of baseline 
criteria, EPA expects that dischargers will continue to use the same 
types of controls to come into compliance with any revised WQBELs 
reflective of the more stringent WQS.
    The following final criteria are not expected to result in 
incremental costs to permitted dischargers: pH, temperature, ammonia, 
and all but one HHC (for waters in Indian lands); phenol (for state 
waters outside Indian lands); and dissolved oxygen (for all state 
waters). As described below, the cost analysis identifies potential 
costs of compliance with one HHC (bis(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate), 
bacteria, and the final mixing zone policy for waters in Indian lands.
    EPA did not fully evaluate the potential for costs to nonpoint 
sources. Very little data were available to assess the potential for 
the rule to result in WQS exceedances attributable to nonpoint sources. 
It is difficult to model and evaluate the potential cost impacts of 
this final rule to nonpoint sources because they are intermittent, 
variable, and occur under hydrologic or climatic conditions associated 
with precipitation events. Finally, legacy contamination (e.g., in 
sediment) may be a source of ongoing loading. Atmospheric deposition 
may also contribute loadings of the pollutants of concern (e.g., 
mercury). EPA did not estimate sediment remediation costs, or air 
pollution control costs, for this analysis.

A. Identifying Affected Entities

    EPA identified 33 facilities (major and non-major) that discharge 
to waters in Indian lands or their tributaries, two facilities that 
discharge phenol to other state waters, and 26 facilities that 
discharge to Class A waters throughout the state. EPA identified 16 
point source facilities that could incur additional costs as a result 
of this final rule. Of these potentially affected facilities, eight are 
major dischargers and eight are minor dischargers. Two are industrial 
dischargers and the remaining 14 are publicly owned treatment works 
(POTWs). EPA did not include general permit facilities in its analysis 
because data for such facilities are limited. EPA evaluated all of the 
potentially affected facilities.
    EPA does not agree with the comment that its economic analysis 
(``EA'') was deficient because uncertainty--including with respect to 
the geographic scope of the rule's applicability--constrained the 
Agency's ability to assess the economic impacts of the rule. Although 
the commenter is correct that the geographic extent of the waters 
covered by this promulgation could change due to litigation or other 
legal developments regarding Indian land status, EPA used an inclusive 
approach in its analysis that accounted for all facilities that could 
reasonably fall within the two general categories of waters to which 
the HHC may apply. If the geographic scope of waters to which the HHC 
apply is smaller, then fewer facilities will be affected by the rule 
and costs will be lower.

B. Method for Estimating Costs

    For the 16 facilities that may incur costs, EPA evaluated existing 
baseline permit conditions and the potential to exceed new effluent 
limits based on the

[[Page 92486]]

final rule. In instances of exceedances of projected effluent 
limitations under the final criteria, EPA determined the likely 
compliance scenarios and costs. Only compliance actions and costs that 
would be needed above the baseline level of controls are attributable 
to the rule.
    EPA assumed that dischargers will pursue the least cost means of 
compliance with WQBELs. Incremental compliance actions attributable to 
the rule may include pollution prevention, end-of-pipe treatment, and 
alternative compliance mechanisms (e.g., variances). EPA annualized 
capital costs, including study (e.g., variance) and program (e.g., 
pollution prevention) costs, over 20 years using a 3% discount rate to 
obtain total annual costs per facility.

C. Results

1. Costs From Final Human Health Criteria Applicable to Waters in 
Indian Lands
    Based on this approach, EPA identified one facility that has 
reasonable potential to exceed permit effluent limits based on one 
final criterion (bis(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate). EPA calculated a 
projected effluent limitation based on the same procedures utilized by 
Maine in its NPDES permitting practices. To estimate potential costs to 
this facility from meeting the projected effluent limits, EPA 
considered source controls, end-of-pipe treatments, and alternative 
compliance mechanisms (e.g. variances). For this provision, EPA 
estimated total annual compliance costs of $28,000 (for source 
controls) to $43,000 (for end-of-pipe treatments).
2. Costs From Final Recreational Bacteria Criteria for Waters in Indian 
Lands
    EPA does not expect the final recreational bacteria criteria to 
result in any new treatment processes being added to facilities, but 
does expect that 14 facilities with existing limitations for bacteria 
will need to operate their disinfection systems year-round, extending 
treatments for an additional 226 days per year. EPA estimated the costs 
of chemicals and monitoring during this extended period based on the 
facilities' effluent flow rate, type of treatment, and monitoring 
costs. For this provision, EPA estimated total annual compliance costs 
of $185,000 to $705,000.
3. Costs From Final Mixing Zone Policy
    EPA identified one facility with an existing permit that 
establishes a thermal mixing zone that may affect waters in Indian 
lands. It is unknown whether reductions in thermal loads will be 
necessary to reduce the mixing zone to a size and configuration that 
would meet the new mixing zone policy at this facility; possible 
outcomes include the need for facility-specific studies, revisions to 
permit conditions that could require recalculating thermal discharge 
limits, or changes in facility processes or operations to reduce the 
thermal load. To estimate the costs of this provision, EPA used as 
lower-bound the cost to conduct a study to characterize the 
discharger's existing thermal plume and support evaluation of whether 
the current mixing zone complies with the new mixing zone policy 
($1,000, annual cost for 20 years) and as upper-bound the potential 
cost impacts for installing new cooling towers at the facility 
($273,000, annualized over 30 years at a 3 percent discount rate).
4. Total Costs
    Table 3 summarizes the estimated point source compliance costs from 
the final WQS. EPA estimates that the total annual compliance costs for 
all provisions may be in the range of $214,000 to $1.0 million.

       Table 3--Summary of Estimated Point Source Compliance Costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        Annualized costs
                      Final WQS                           (thousands;
                                                           2014$) \1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Human health criteria for waters in Indian lands.....            $28-$43
Recreational bacteria criteria for waters in Indian              185-705
 lands...............................................
Mixing zone policy...................................              1-273
                                                      ------------------
    Total............................................          214-1,021
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ One-time costs are annualized over 20 years (30 years in the case of
  cooling towers under the mixing zone policy) using a 3% discount rate.

V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews

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

    This action is a significant regulatory action that was submitted 
to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review. Any changes 
made in response to OMB recommendations have been documented in the 
docket.
    EPA prepared an analysis of the potential costs and benefits 
associated with this action. This analysis is summarized in section IV 
of the preamble and is available in the docket.

B. Paperwork Reduction Act

    This action does not impose any direct new information collection 
burden under the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 
3501 et seq. Actions to implement these WQS could entail additional 
paperwork burden. Burden is defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b). This action 
does not include any information collection, reporting, or record-
keeping requirements.

C. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    I certify that this action will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. This 
action will not impose any requirements on small entities. Small 
entities, such as small businesses or small governmental jurisdictions, 
are not directly regulated by this rule. This rule will thus not impose 
any requirements on small entities.
    EPA-promulgated standards are implemented through various water 
quality control programs including the NPDES program, which limits 
discharges to navigable waters except in compliance with an NPDES 
permit. The CWA requires that all NPDES permits include any limits on 
discharges that are necessary to meet applicable WQS. Thus, under the 
CWA, EPA's promulgation of WQS establishes standards that the state 
implements through the NPDES permit process. The state has discretion 
in developing discharge limits, as needed to meet the standards. As a 
result of this action, the

[[Page 92487]]

State of Maine will need to issue permits that include limitations on 
discharges necessary to comply with the standards established in the 
final rule. In doing so, the state will have a number of approaches 
available to it associated with permit writing. While Maine's 
implementation of the rule may ultimately result in new or revised 
permit conditions for some dischargers, including small entities, EPA's 
action, by itself, does not directly impose any requirements on small 
entities. Any impact from EPA's action on small entities would 
therefore only be indirect because the requirements of this rule are 
not self-implementing.

D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    This action contains no federal mandates under the provisions of 
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2 U.S.C. 
1531-1538 for state, local, or tribal governments or the private 
sector. As these water quality criteria are not self-implementing, 
EPA's action imposes no enforceable duty on any state, local or tribal 
governments or the private sector. Therefore, this action is not 
subject to the requirements of sections 202 or 205 of the UMRA.
    This action is also not subject to the requirements of section 203 
of UMRA because it contains no regulatory requirements that could 
significantly or uniquely affect small governments.

E. Executive Order 13132

    This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have 
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between 
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities among the various levels of government. This rule 
does not alter Maine's considerable discretion in implementing these 
WQS, nor will it preclude Maine from adopting WQS in the future that 
EPA concludes meet the requirements of the CWA, which will eliminate 
the need for federal standards. Thus, Executive Order 13132 does not 
apply to this action.

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

    This action has tribal implications, however, it would neither 
impose substantial direct compliance costs on federally recognized 
tribal governments, nor preempt tribal law. Therefore, consultation is 
not required under the Executive Order. In the state of Maine, there 
are four federally recognized Indian tribes represented by five tribal 
governments. As a result of the unique jurisdictional provisions of the 
Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act, as described above, the state has 
jurisdiction for setting water quality standards for all waters in 
Indian lands in Maine. This rule will have no effect on that 
jurisdictional arrangement. This rule would affect federally recognized 
Indian tribes in Maine because the water quality standards will apply 
to all waters in Indian lands. Some will also apply to waters outside 
of Indian lands where the sustenance fishing designated use established 
by 30 M.R.S. 6207(4) and (9) applies. Finally, many of the final 
criteria for such waters are protective of the sustenance fishing 
designated use, which is based in the Indian settlement acts in Maine.
    The EPA consulted with tribal officials under the EPA Policy on 
Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribes early in the process 
of developing this rule to permit them to have meaningful and timely 
input into its development. Summaries of those consultations are 
provided in the following documents: ``Maine WQS Tribal Leaders 
Consultation 4-27-16;'' ``Maine WQS Technical Consultation 4-11-16;'' 
and ``Summary of Tribal Consultations Regarding Water Quality Standards 
Applicable to Waters in Indian Lands within the State of Maine,'' which 
are available in the docket for this rulemaking.

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

    The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying only to those 
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks 
that the EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect 
children, per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in 
section 2-202 of the Executive Order. This action is not subject to 
Executive Order 13045 because it does not concern an environmental 
health risk or safety risk that may disproportionately affect children.

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

    This action 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.

I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995

    This action does not involve technical standards.

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

    The human health or environmental risk addressed by this action 
will not have potential disproportionately high and adverse human 
health or environmental effects on minority, low-income or indigenous 
populations.
    Conversely, this action will increase protection for indigenous 
populations in Maine from disproportionately high and adverse human 
health effects. EPA developed the criteria included in this rule 
specifically to protect Maine's designated uses, using the most current 
science, including local and regional information on fish consumption. 
Applying these criteria to waters in the state of Maine will afford a 
greater level of protection to both human health and the environment.

K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)

    This action is subject to the CRA, and EPA will submit a rule 
report to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of 
the United States. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 
U.S.C. 804(2).

List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 131

    Environmental protection, Incorporation by reference, Indians--
lands, Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and recordkeeping 
requirements, Water pollution control.

    Dated: December 8, 2016.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, EPA amends 40 CFR part 
131 as follows:

PART 131--WATER QUALITY STANDARDS

0
1. The authority citation for part 131 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.

Subpart D--Federally Promulgated Water Quality Standards

0
2. Add Sec.  131.43 to read as follows:


Sec.  131.43   Maine.

    (a) Human health criteria for toxics for waters in Indian lands and 
for Waters outside of Indian lands where the sustenance fishing 
designated use established by 30 M.R.S. 6207(4) and (9) applies. The 
criteria for toxic pollutants for the protection of human health are 
set forth in the following table 1:

[[Page 92488]]



                                         Table 1--Human Health Criteria
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 Water and
                Chemical name                     CAS No.        organisms         Organisms only ([mu]g/L)
                                                                 ([mu]g/L)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. 1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane................         79-34-5            0.09  0.2
2. 1,1,2-Trichloroethane....................         79-00-5            0.31  0.66
3. 1,1-Dichloroethylene.....................         75-35-4             300  1000
4. 1,2,4,5-Tetrachlorobenzene...............         95-94-3           0.002  0.002
5. 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene...................        120-82-1          0.0056  0.0056
6. 1,2-Dichlorobenzene......................         95-50-1             200  300
7. 1,2-Dichloropropane......................         78-87-5  ..............  2.3
8. 1,2-Diphenylhydrazine....................        122-66-7            0.01  0.02
9. 1,2-Trans-Dichloroethylene...............        156-60-5              90  300
10. 1,3-Dichlorobenzene.....................        541-73-1               1  1
11. 1,3-Dichloropropene.....................        542-75-6            0.21  0.87
12. 1,4-Dichlorobenzene.....................        106-46-7  ..............  70
13. 2,4,5-Trichlorophenol...................         95-95-4              40  40
14. 2,4,6-Trichlorophenol...................         88-06-2            0.20  0.21
15. 2,4-Dichlorophenol......................        120-83-2               4  4
16. 2,4-Dimethylphenol......................        105-67-9              80  200
17. 2,4-Dinitrophenol.......................         51-28-5               9  30
18. 2,4-Dinitrotoluene......................        121-14-2           0.036  0.13
19. 2-Chloronaphthalene.....................         91-58-7              90  90
20. 2-Chlorophenol..........................         95-57-8              20  60
21. 2-Methyl-4,6-Dinitrophenol..............        534-52-1               1  2
22. 3,3'-Dichlorobenzidine..................         91-94-1          0.0096  0.011
23. 4,4'-DDD................................         72-54-8         9.3E-06  9.3E-06
24. 4,4'-DDE................................         72-55-9         1.3E-06  1.3E-06
25. 4,4'-DDT................................         50-29-3         2.2E-06  2.2E-06
26. Acenaphthene............................         83-32-9               6  7
27. Acrolein................................        107-02-8               3  ..................................
28. Aldrin..................................        309-00-2         5.8E-08  5.8E-08
29. alpha-BHC...............................        319-84-6         2.9E-05  2.9E-05
30. alpha-Endosulfan........................        959-98-8               2  2
31. Anthracene..............................        120-12-7              30  30
32. Antimony................................       7440-36-0               5  40
33. Benzene.................................         71-43-2            0.40  1.2
34. Benzo (a) Anthracene....................         56-55-3         9.8E-05  9.8E-05
35. Benzo (a) Pyrene........................         50-32-8         9.8E-06  9.8E-06
36. Benzo (b) Fluoranthene..................        205-99-2         9.8E-05  9.8E-05
37. Benzo (k) Fluoranthene..................        207-08-9         0.00098  0.00098
38. beta-BHC................................        319-85-7          0.0010  0.0011
39. beta-Endosulfan.........................      33213-65-9               3  3
40. Bis(2-Chloro-1-Methylethyl) Ether.......        108-60-1             100  300
41. Bis(2-Chloroethyl) Ether................        111-44-4           0.026  0.16
42. Bis(2-Ethylhexyl) Phthalate.............        117-81-7           0.028  0.028
43. Bromoform...............................         75-25-2             4.0  8.7
44. Butylbenzyl Phthalate...................         85-68-7          0.0077  0.0077
45. Carbon Tetrachloride....................         56-23-5             0.2  0.3
46. Chlordane...............................         57-74-9         2.4E-05  2.4E-05
47. Chlorobenzene...........................        108-90-7              40  60
48. Chlorodibromomethane....................        124-48-1  ..............  1.5
49. Chrysene................................        218-01-9  ..............  0.0098
50. Cyanide.................................         57-12-5               4  30
51. Dibenzo (a,h) Anthracene................         53-70-3         9.8E-06  9.8E-06
52. Dichlorobromomethane....................         75-27-4  ..............  2.0
53. Dieldrin................................         60-57-1         9.3E-08  9.3E-08
54. Diethyl Phthalate.......................         84-66-2              50  50
55. Dimethyl Phthalate......................        131-11-3             100  100
56. Di-n-Butyl Phthalate....................         84-74-2               2  2
57. Dinitrophenols..........................      25550-58-7              10  70
58. Endosulfan Sulfate......................       1031-07-8               3  3
59. Endrin..................................         72-20-8           0.002  0.002
60. Endrin Aldehyde.........................       7421-93-4            0.09  0.09
61. Ethylbenzene............................        100-41-4             8.9  9.5
62. Fluoranthene............................        206-44-0               1  1
63. Fluorene................................         86-73-7               5  5
64. gamma-BHC (Lindane).....................         58-89-9            0.33  ..................................
65. Heptachlor..............................         76-44-8         4.4E-07  4.4E-07
66. Heptachlor Epoxide......................       1024-57-3         2.4E-06  2.4E-06
67. Hexachlorobenzene.......................        118-74-1         5.9E-06  5.9E-06
68. Hexachlorobutadiene.....................         87-68-3          0.0007  0.0007
69. Hexachlorocyclohexane-Technical.........        608-73-1         0.00073  0.00076
70. Hexachlorocyclopentadiene...............         77-47-4             0.3  0.3

[[Page 92489]]

 
71. Hexachloroethane........................         67-72-1            0.01  0.01
72. Indeno (1,2,3-cd) Pyrene................        193-39-5         9.8E-05  9.8E-05
73. Isophorone..............................         78-59-1              28  140
74. Methoxychlor............................         72-43-5           0.001  ..................................
75. Methylene Chloride......................         75-09-2  ..............  90
76. Methylmercury...........................      22967-92-6  ..............  0.02 \a\ (mg/kg)
77. Nickel..................................       7440-02-0              20  20
78. Nitrobenzene............................         98-95-3              10  40
79. Nitrosamines............................  ..............         0.00075  0.032
80. N-Nitrosodibutylamine...................        924-16-3         0.00438  0.0152
81. N-Nitrosodiethylamine...................         55-18-5         0.00075  0.032
82. N-Nitrosodimethylamine..................         62-75-9         0.00065  0.21
83. N-Nitrosodi-n-propylamine...............        621-64-7          0.0042  0.035
84. N-Nitrosodiphenylamine..................         86-30-6            0.40  0.42
85. N-Nitrosopyrrolidine....................        930-55-2  ..............  2.4
86. Pentachlorobenzene......................        608-93-5           0.008  0.008
87. Pentachlorophenol.......................         87-86-5           0.003  0.003
88. Phenol..................................        108-95-2           3,000  20,000
89. Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs)........       1336-36-3       \b\ 4E-06  4E-06 \b\
90. Pyrene..................................        129-00-0               2  2
91. Selenium................................       7782-49-2              20  60
92. Toluene.................................        108-88-3              24  39
93. Toxaphene...............................       8001-35-2         5.3E-05  5.3E-05
94. Trichloroethylene.......................         79-01-6             0.3  0.5
95. Vinyl Chloride..........................         75-01-4           0.019  0.12
96. Zinc....................................       7440-66-6             300  400
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ This criterion is expressed as the fish tissue concentration of methylmercury (mg methylmercury/kg fish) and
  applies equally to fresh and marine waters.
\b\ This criterion applies to total PCBs (i.e., the sum of all congener or isomer or homolog or Aroclor
  analyses).

    (b) Bacteria criteria for waters in Indian lands. (1) The bacteria 
content of Class AA and Class A waters shall be as naturally occurs, 
and the minimum number of Escherichia coli bacteria shall not exceed a 
geometric mean of 100 colony-forming units per 100 milliliters (cfu/100 
ml) in any 30-day interval; nor shall 320 cfu/100 ml be exceeded more 
than 10% of the time in any 30-day interval.
    (2) In Class B, Class C, and Class GPA waters, the number of 
Escherichia coli bacteria shall not exceed a geometric mean of 100 
colony forming units per 100 milliliters (cfu/100 ml) in any 30- day 
interval; nor shall 320 cfu/100 ml be exceeded more than 10% of the 
time in any 30-day interval.
    (3) The bacteria content of Class SA waters shall be as naturally 
occurs, and the number of Enterococcus spp. bacteria shall not exceed a 
geometric mean of 30 cfu/100 ml in any 30-day interval, nor shall 110 
cfu/100 ml be exceeded more than 10% of the time in any 30-day 
interval.
    (4) In Class SA shellfish harvesting areas, the numbers of total 
coliform bacteria or other specified indicator organisms in samples 
representative of the waters in shellfish harvesting areas may not 
exceed the criteria recommended under the National Shellfish Sanitation 
Program, United States Food and Drug Administration, as set forth in 
the Guide for the Control of Molluscan Shellfish, 2015 Revision. The 
Director of the Federal Register approves this incorporation by 
reference in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. You may 
obtain a copy from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Center for 
Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, Shellfish and Aquaculture Policy 
Branch, 5100 Paint Branch Parkway (HFS-325), College Park, MD 20740 or 
http://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FederalStateFoodPrograms/ucm2006754.htm. You may inspect a copy at the U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency Docket Center Reading Room, William Jefferson Clinton 
West Building, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC 
20004, (202) 566-1744, or at the National Archives and Records 
Administration (NARA). For information on the availability of this 
material at NARA, call 202-741-6030, or go to: http://www.archives.gov/federal_register/code_of_federal_regulations/ibr_locations.html.
    (5) In Class SB and SC waters, the number of Enterococcus spp. 
bacteria shall not exceed a geometric mean of 30 cfu/100 ml in any 30-
day interval, nor shall 110 cfu/100 ml be exceeded more than 10% of the 
time in any 30-day interval.
    (c) Ammonia criteria for fresh waters in Indian lands. (1) The one-
hour average concentration of total ammonia nitrogen (in mg TAN/L) 
shall not exceed, more than once every three years, the criterion 
maximum concentration (i.e., the ``CMC,'' or ``acute criterion'') set 
forth in Tables 2 and 3 of this section.
    (2) The thirty-day average concentration of total ammonia nitrogen 
(in mg TAN/L) shall not exceed, more than once every three years, the 
criterion continuous concentration (i.e., the ``CCC,'' or ``chronic 
criterion'') set forth in Table 4.
    (3) In addition, the highest four-day average within the same 30-
day period as in (2) shall not exceed 2.5 times the CCC, more than once 
every three years.

[[Page 92490]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE16.007


[[Page 92491]]


[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE16.008


[[Page 92492]]


[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE16.009


[[Page 92493]]


    (d) pH Criteria for fresh waters in Indian lands. The pH of fresh 
waters shall fall within the range of 6.5 to 8.5.
    (e) Temperature criteria for tidal waters in Indian lands. (1) The 
maximum acceptable cumulative increase in the weekly average 
temperature resulting from all artificial sources is 1 [deg]C (1.8 
[deg]F) during all seasons of the year, provided that the summer 
maximum is not exceeded.
    (i) Weekly average temperature increase shall be compared to 
baseline thermal conditions and shall be calculated using the daily 
maxima averaged over a 7-day period.
    (ii) Baseline thermal conditions shall be measured at or modeled 
from a site where there is no artificial thermal addition from any 
source, and which is in reasonable proximity to the thermal discharge 
(within 5 miles), and which has similar hydrography to that of the 
receiving waters at the discharge.
    (2) Natural temperature cycles characteristic of the waterbody 
segment shall not be altered in amplitude or frequency.
    (3) During the summer months (for the period from May 15 through 
September 30), water temperatures shall not exceed a weekly average 
summer maximum threshold of 18 [deg]C (64.4 [deg]F) (calculated using 
the daily maxima averaged over a 7-day period).
    (f) Natural conditions provisions for waters in Indian lands. (1) 
The provision in Title 38 of Maine Revised Statutes 464(4.C) which 
reads: ``Where natural conditions, including, but not limited to, 
marshes, bogs and abnormal concentrations of wildlife cause the 
dissolved oxygen or other water quality criteria to fall below the 
minimum standards specified in section 465, 465-A and 465-B, those 
waters shall not be considered to be failing to attain their 
classification because of those natural conditions,'' does not apply to 
water quality criteria intended to protect human health.
    (2) The provision in Title 38 of Maine Revised Statutes 420(2.A) 
which reads ``Except as naturally occurs or as provided in paragraphs B 
and C, the board shall regulate toxic substances in the surface waters 
of the State at the levels set forth in federal water quality criteria 
as established by the United States Environmental Protection Agency 
pursuant to the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, Public Law 92-500, 
Section 304(a), as amended,'' does not apply to water quality criteria 
intended to protect human health.
    (g) Mixing zone policy for waters in Indian lands. (1) Establishing 
a mixing zone. (i) The Department of Environmental Protection 
(``department'') may establish a mixing zone for any discharge at the 
time of application for a waste discharge license if all of the 
requirements set forth in paragraphs (g)(2) and (3) of this section are 
satisfied. The department shall attach a description of the mixing zone 
as a condition of a license issued for that discharge. After 
opportunity for a hearing in accordance with 38 MRS section 345-A, the 
department may establish by order a mixing zone with respect to any 
discharge for which a license has been issued pursuant to section 414 
or for which an exemption has been granted by virtue of 38 MRS section 
413, subsection 2.
    (ii) The purpose of a mixing zone is to allow a reasonable 
opportunity for dilution, diffusion, or mixture of pollutants with the 
receiving waters such that an applicable criterion may be exceeded 
within a defined area of the waterbody while still protecting the 
designated use of the waterbody as a whole. In determining the extent 
of any mixing zone to be established under this section, the department 
will require from the applicant information concerning the nature and 
rate of the discharge; the nature and rate of existing discharges to 
the waterway; the size of the waterway and the rate of flow therein; 
any relevant seasonal, climatic, tidal, and natural variations in such 
size, flow, nature, and rate; the uses of the waterways that could be 
affected by the discharge, and such other and further evidence as in 
the department's judgment will enable it to establish a reasonable 
mixing zone for such discharge. An order establishing a mixing zone may 
provide that the extent thereof varies in order to take into account 
seasonal, climatic, tidal, and natural variations in the size and flow 
of, and the nature and rate of, discharges to the waterway.
    (2) Mixing zone information requirements. At a minimum, any request 
for a mixing zone must:
    (i) Describe the amount of dilution occurring at the boundaries of 
the proposed mixing zone and the size, shape, and location of the area 
of mixing, including the manner in which diffusion and dispersion 
occur;
    (ii) Define the location at which discharge-induced mixing ceases;
    (iii) Document the substrate character and geomorphology within the 
mixing zone;
    (iv) Document background water quality concentrations;
    (v) Address the following factors;
    (A) Whether adjacent mixing zones overlap;
    (B) Whether organisms would be attracted to the area of mixing as a 
result of the effluent character; and
    (C) Whether the habitat supports endemic or naturally occurring 
species.
    (vi) Provide all information necessary to demonstrate whether the 
requirements in paragraph (g)(3) of this section are satisfied.
    (3) Mixing zone requirements. (i) Mixing zones shall be established 
consistent with the methodologies in Sections 4.3 and 4.4 of the 
``Technical Support Document for Water Quality-based Toxics Control'' 
EPA/505/2-90-001, dated March 1991.
    (ii) The mixing zone demonstration shall be based on the assumption 
that a pollutant does not degrade within the proposed mixing zone, 
unless:
    (A) Scientifically valid field studies or other relevant 
information demonstrate that degradation of the pollutant is expected 
to occur under the full range of environmental conditions expected to 
be encountered; and
    (B) Scientifically valid field studies or other relevant 
information address other factors that affect the level of pollutants 
in the water column including, but not limited to, resuspension of 
sediments, chemical speciation, and biological and chemical 
transformation.
    (iii) Water quality within an authorized mixing zone is allowed to 
exceed chronic water quality criteria for those parameters approved by 
the department. Acute water quality criteria may be exceeded for such 
parameters within the zone of initial dilution inside the mixing zone. 
Acute criteria shall be met as close to the point of discharge as 
practicably attainable. Water quality criteria shall not be violated 
outside of the boundary of a mixing zone as a result of the discharge 
for which the mixing zone was authorized.
    (iv) Mixing zones shall be as small as practicable. The 
concentrations of pollutants present shall be minimized and shall 
reflect the best practicable engineering design of the outfall to 
maximize initial mixing. Mixing zones shall not be authorized for 
bioaccumulative pollutants (i.e., chemicals for which the 
bioconcentration factors (BCF) or bioaccumulation factors (BAF) are 
greater than 1,000) or bacteria.
    (v) In addition to the requirements above, the department may 
approve a mixing zone only if the mixing zone:
    (A) Is sized and located to ensure that there will be a continuous 
zone of passage that protects migrating, free-swimming, and drifting 
organisms;
    (B) Will not result in thermal shock or loss of cold water habitat 
or otherwise

[[Page 92494]]

interfere with biological communities or populations of indigenous 
species;
    (C) Is not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of any 
endangered or threatened species listed under section 4 of the 
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) or 
result in the destruction or adverse modification of such species' 
critical habitat;
    (D) Will not extend to drinking water intakes and sources;
    (E) Will not otherwise interfere with the designated or existing 
uses of the receiving water or downstream waters;
    (F) Will not promote undesirable aquatic life or result in a 
dominance of nuisance species;
    (G) Will not endanger critical areas such as breeding and spawning 
grounds, habitat for state-listed threatened or endangered species, 
areas with sensitive biota, shellfish beds, fisheries, and recreational 
areas;
    (H) Will not contain pollutant concentrations that are lethal to 
mobile, migrating, and drifting organisms passing through the mixing 
zone;
    (I) Will not contain pollutant concentrations that may cause 
significant human health risks considering likely pathways of exposure;
    (J) Will not result in an overlap with another mixing zone;
    (K) Will not attract aquatic life;
    (L) Will not result in a shore-hugging plume; and
    (M) Is free from:
    (1) Substances that settle to form objectionable deposits;
    (2) Floating debris, oil, scum, and other matter in concentrations 
that form nuisances; and
    (3) Objectionable color, odor, taste, or turbidity.
    (h) Dissolved oxygen criteria for class A waters throughout the 
State of Maine, including in Indian lands. The dissolved oxygen content 
of Class A waters shall not be less than 7 ppm (7 mg/L) or 75% of 
saturation, whichever is higher, year-round. For the period from 
October 1 through May 14, in fish spawning areas, the 7-day mean 
dissolved oxygen concentration shall not be less than 9.5 ppm (9.5 mg/
L), and the 1-day minimum dissolved oxygen concentration shall not be 
less than 8 ppm (8.0 mg/L).
    (i) Waiver or modification of protection and improvement laws for 
waters throughout the State of Maine, including in Indian lands. For 
all waters in Maine, the provisions in Title 38 of Maine Revised 
Statutes 363-D do not apply to state or federal water quality standards 
applicable to waters in Maine, including designated uses, criteria to 
protect existing and designated uses, and antidegradation policies.
    (j) Phenol criterion for the protection of human health for Maine 
waters outside of Indian lands. The phenol criterion to protect human 
health for the consumption of water and organisms is 4000 micrograms 
per liter.

[FR Doc. 2016-30331 Filed 12-16-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6560-50-P



                                               92466                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION                                         documents in the docket are listed on                   A. Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory
                                               AGENCY                                                           the http://www.regulations.gov Web                         Planning and Review) and Executive
                                                                                                                site. Although listed in the index, some                   Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and
                                               40 CFR Part 131                                                                                                             Regulatory Review)
                                                                                                                information is not publicly available,
                                                                                                                                                                        B. Paperwork Reduction Act
                                               [EPA–HQ–OW–2015–0804; FRL–9952–99–                               e.g., CBI or other information whose                    C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                               OW]                                                              disclosure is restricted by statute.                    D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                                                                                Certain other material, such as                         E. Executive Order 13132
                                               RIN 2040–AF59                                                    copyrighted material, is not placed on                  F. Executive Order 13175 (Consultation
                                                                                                                the Internet and will be publicly                          and Coordination With Indian Tribal
                                               Promulgation of Certain Federal Water                                                                                       Governments)
                                                                                                                available only in hard copy form.
                                               Quality Standards Applicable to Maine                                                                                    G. Executive Order 13045 (Protection of
                                                                                                                Publicly available docket materials are
                                               AGENCY:  Environmental Protection                                available electronically through http://                   Children From Environmental Health
                                                                                                                                                                           and Safety Risks)
                                               Agency (EPA).                                                    www.regulations.gov.
                                                                                                                                                                        H. Executive Order 13211 (Actions That
                                               ACTION: Final rule.                                                                                                         Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
                                                                                                                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                                                                                           Distribution, or Use)
                                               SUMMARY:   The Environmental Protection                          Jennifer Brundage, Office of Water,
                                                                                                                                                                        I. National Technology Transfer and
                                               Agency (EPA) is finalizing federal Clean                         Standards and Health Protection                            Advancement Act of 1995
                                               Water Act (CWA) water quality                                    Division (4305T), Environmental                         J. Executive Order 12898 (Federal Actions
                                               standards (WQS) for certain waters                               Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania                       To Address Environmental Justice in
                                               under the state of Maine’s jurisdiction,                         Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20460;                          Minority Populations and Low-Income
                                               including human health criteria (HHC)                            telephone number: (202) 566–1265;                          Populations)
                                               to protect the sustenance fishing                                email address: Brundage.jennifer@                       K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
                                               designated use in waters in Indian lands                         epa.gov.                                              I. General Information
                                               and in waters subject to sustenance
                                               fishing rights under the Maine                                   SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:               This final   A. Does this action apply to me?
                                               Implementing Act (MIA). EPA is                                   rule is organized as follows:
                                                                                                                                                                         Entities such as industries,
                                               promulgating these WQS to address                                I. General Information                                stormwater management districts, or
                                               various disapprovals of Maine’s                                     A. Does this action apply to me?                   publicly owned treatment works
                                               standards that EPA issued in February,                              B. How did EPA develop this final rule?
                                                                                                                                                                      (POTWs) that discharge pollutants to
                                               March, and June 2015, and to address                             II. Background and Summary
                                                                                                                   A. Statutory and Regulatory Background             waters of the United States in Maine
                                               the Administrator’s determination that                                                                                 could be indirectly affected by this
                                                                                                                   B. Description of Final Rule
                                               Maine’s HHC are not adequate to protect                          III. Summary of Major Comments Received               rulemaking, because federal WQS
                                               the designated use of sustenance fishing                               and EPA’s Response                              promulgated by EPA are applicable to
                                               for certain waters.                                                 A. Overview of Comments                            CWA regulatory programs, such as
                                               DATES: This final rule is effective on                              B. Maine Indian Settlement Acts                    National Pollutant Discharge
                                               January 18, 2017. The incorporation by                              C. Sustenance Fishing Designated Use               Elimination System (NPDES)
                                               reference of certain publications listed                            D. Human Health Criteria for Toxics for            permitting. Citizens concerned with
                                               in the rule is approved by the Director                                Waters in Indian Lands
                                                                                                                                                                      water quality in Maine, including
                                               of the Federal Register as of January 18,                           E. Other Water Quality Standards
                                                                                                                IV. Economic Analysis                                 members of the federally recognized
                                               2017.                                                               A. Identifying Affected Entities                   Indian tribes in Maine, could also be
                                               ADDRESSES: EPA has established a                                    B. Method for Estimated Costs                      interested in this rulemaking.
                                               docket for this action under Docket ID                              C. Results                                         Dischargers that could potentially be
                                               No. EPA–HQ–OW–2015–0804. All                                     V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews              affected include the following:

                                                                                          TABLE 1—DISCHARGERS POTENTIALLY AFFECTED BY THIS RULEMAKING
                                                                  Category                                                               Examples of potentially affected entities

                                               Industry ...........................................   Industries discharging pollutants to waters of the United States in Maine.
                                               Municipalities ...................................     Publicly owned treatment works or other facilities discharging pollutants to waters of the United States in
                                                                                                        Maine.
                                               Stormwater Management Districts ..                     Entities responsible for managing stormwater runoff in the state of Maine.



                                               This table is not intended to be                                 can be found in the FOR FURTHER                       addition, EPA held two virtual public
                                               exhaustive, but rather provides a guide                          INFORMATION section above.                            hearings on June 7 and 9, 2016, to
                                               for readers regarding entities that could                        B. How did EPA develop this final rule?               discuss the contents of the proposed
                                               be indirectly affected by this action.                                                                                 rule and accept verbal public comments.
                                               Any parties or entities who depend                                 In developing this final rule, EPA                    Over 100 organizations and
                                               upon or contribute to the quality of                             carefully considered the public                       individuals submitted comments on a
                                               Maine’s waters could be affected by this                         comments and feedback received from
                                                                                                                                                                      range of issues. Some comments
                                                                                                                interested parties. EPA provided a 60-
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                                               rule. To determine whether your facility                                                                               addressed issues beyond the scope of
                                               or activities could be affected by this                          day public comment period after
                                                                                                                                                                      the rulemaking, and thus EPA did not
                                               action, you should carefully examine                             publishing the proposed rule in the
                                                                                                                Federal Register on April 20, 2016.1 In               consider them in finalizing this rule. In
                                               this rule. If you have questions                                                                                       section III of this preamble, EPA
                                               regarding the applicability of this action                                                                             discusses certain public comments so
                                                                                                                  1 See Proposal of Certain Federal Water Quality
                                               to a particular entity, consult Jennifer                                                                               that the public is aware of the Agency’s
                                                                                                                Standards Applicable to Maine, 81 FR 23239, April
                                               Brundage, whose contact information                              20, 2016.                                             position. For a full response to these


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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         92467

                                               and all other comments, see EPA’s                       unless EPA approves a state                           Passamaquoddy Tribe together as the
                                               Response to Comments (RTC) document                     replacement WQS first (CWA section                    ‘‘Southern Tribes’’ and the Houlton
                                               in the official public docket.                          303(c)(3) and (c)(4)(A)). If the state                Band of Maliseet Indians and Aroostook
                                                                                                       adopts and EPA approves a state                       Band of Micmacs as the ‘‘Northern
                                               II. Background and Summary
                                                                                                       replacement WQS after EPA                             Tribes.’’ EPA acknowledges that these
                                               A. Statutory and Regulatory Background                  promulgates a standard, EPA then                      are collective appellations the tribes
                                                                                                       withdraws its promulgation. CWA                       themselves have not adopted, and the
                                               1. Clean Water Act (CWA)
                                                                                                       section 303(c)(4)(B) authorizes the                   Agency uses them solely to simplify this
                                                  CWA section 101(a)(2) establishes as                 Administrator to determine, even in the
                                               a national goal ‘‘water quality which                                                                         discussion.
                                                                                                       absence of a state submission, that a
                                               provides for the protection and                         new or revised standard is necessary to                  In 1980, Congress passed the Maine
                                               propagation of fish, shellfish, and                     meet CWA requirements. Upon making                    Indian Claims Settlement Act (MICSA)
                                               wildlife, and recreation in and on the                  such a determination, EPA shall                       that resolved litigation in which the
                                               water, wherever attainable.’’ These are                 promptly propose, and then within                     Southern Tribes asserted land claims to
                                               commonly referred to as the ‘‘fishable/                 ninety days promulgate, any such new                  a large portion of the state of Maine.
                                               swimmable’’ goals of the CWA. EPA                       or revised standard unless prior to such              Public Law 96–420, 94 Stat. 1785.
                                               interprets ‘‘fishable’’ uses to include, at             promulgation, the state has adopted a                 MICSA ratified a state statute passed in
                                               a minimum, designated uses providing                    revised or new WQS that EPA approves                  1979, the Maine Implementing Act
                                               for the protection of aquatic                           as being in accordance with the CWA.                  (MIA, 30 M.R.S. 6201, et seq.), which
                                               communities and human health related                       Under CWA section 304(a), EPA                      was designed to embody the agreement
                                               to consumption of fish and shellfish.2                  periodically publishes water quality                  reached between the state and the
                                                  CWA section 303(c) (33 U.S.C.                        criteria recommendations for states to                Southern Tribes. In 1981, MIA was
                                               1313(c)) directs states to adopt water                  consider when adopting water quality
                                               quality standards (WQS) for waters                                                                            amended to include provisions for land
                                                                                                       criteria for particular pollutants to                 to be taken into trust for the Houlton
                                               under their jurisdiction subject to the                 protect the CWA section 101(a)(2) goal
                                               CWA. CWA section 303(c)(2)(A) and                                                                             Band of Maliseet Indians, as provided
                                                                                                       uses. For example, in 2015, EPA                       for in MICSA. Public Law 96–420, 94
                                               EPA’s implementing regulations at 40                    updated its CWA section 304(a)
                                               CFR part 131 require, among other                                                                             Stat. 1785 section 5(d)(1); 30 M.R.S.
                                                                                                       recommended criteria for human health
                                               things, that a state’s WQS specify                                                                            6205–A. Since it is Congress that has
                                                                                                       for 94 pollutants (the 2015 criteria
                                               appropriate designated uses of the                                                                            plenary authority as to federally
                                                                                                       update).3 Where EPA has published
                                               waters, and water quality criteria to                   recommended criteria, states should                   recognized Indian tribes, MIA’s
                                               protect those uses that are based on                    adopt water quality criteria based on                 provisions concerning jurisdiction and
                                               sound scientific rationale. EPA’s                       EPA’s CWA section 304(a) criteria,                    the status of the tribes are effective as a
                                               regulations at 40 CFR 131.11(a)(1)                      section 304(a) criteria modified to                   result of, and consistent with, the
                                               provide that such criteria ‘‘must be                    reflect site-specific conditions, or other            Congressional ratification in MICSA.
                                               based on sound scientific rationale and                 scientifically defensible methods (40                    In 1989, the Maine legislature passed
                                               must contain sufficient parameters or
                                                                                                       CFR 131.11(b)(1)). CWA section                        the Micmac Settlement Act (MSA) to
                                               constituents to protect the designated
                                                                                                       303(c)(2)(B) requires states to adopt                 embody an agreement as to the status of
                                               use.’’ In addition, 40 CFR 131.10(b)
                                                                                                       numeric criteria for all toxic pollutants             the Aroostook Band of Micmacs. 30
                                               provides that ‘‘[i]n designating uses of a
                                                                                                       listed pursuant to CWA section                        M.R.S. 7201, et seq. In 1991, Congress
                                               waterbody and the appropriate criteria
                                                                                                       307(a)(1) for which EPA has published                 passed the Aroostook Band of Micmacs
                                               for those uses, the state shall take into
                                                                                                       CWA section 304(a) criteria, as                       Settlement Act (ABMSA), which ratified
                                               consideration the water quality
                                                                                                       necessary to support the states’                      the MSA. Act of Nov. 26, 1991, Public
                                               standards of downstream waters and
                                                                                                       designated uses.                                      Law 102–171, 105 Stat. 1143. One
                                               ensure that its water quality standards
                                               provide for the attainment and                          2. Maine Indian Settlement Acts                       principal purpose of both statutes was
                                               maintenance of the water quality                                                                              to give the Micmacs the same settlement
                                                                                                          There are four federally recognized
                                               standards of downstream waters.’’                                                                             that had been provided to the Maliseets
                                                                                                       Indian tribes in Maine represented by
                                                  States are required to review                        five governing bodies. The Penobscot                  in MICSA. See ABMSA 2(a)(4) and (5).
                                               applicable WQS at least once every                                                                            In 2007, the U.S. Court of Appeals for
                                                                                                       Nation and the Passamaquoddy Tribe
                                               three years and, if appropriate, revise or                                                                    the First Circuit confirmed that the
                                                                                                       have reservations and trust land
                                               adopt new standards (CWA section                                                                              Micmacs and Maliseets are subject to
                                                                                                       holdings in central and coastal Maine.
                                               303(c)(1)). Any new or revised WQS                                                                            the same jurisdictional provisions in
                                                                                                       The Passamaquoddy Tribe has two
                                               must be submitted to EPA for review, to                                                                       MICSA. Aroostook Band of Micmacs v.
                                                                                                       governing bodies, one on the Pleasant
                                               determine whether it meets the CWA’s                                                                          Ryan, 484 F.3d 41 (1st Cir. 2007). Where
                                                                                                       Point Reservation and another on the
                                               requirements, and for approval or                                                                             appropriate, this preamble discussion
                                                                                                       Indian Township Reservation. The
                                               disapproval (CWA section 303(c)(2)(A)                                                                         will refer to the combination of MICSA,
                                                                                                       Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians and
                                               and (c)(3)). If EPA disapproves a state’s                                                                     MIA, ABMSA, and MSA as the ‘‘Indian
                                                                                                       the Aroostook Band of Micmacs have
                                               new or revised WQS, the CWA provides                                                                          settlement acts’’ or ‘‘settlement acts.’’
                                               the state ninety days to adopt a revised                trust lands farther north in the state. To
                                               WQS that meets CWA requirements,                        simplify the discussion, EPA will refer               3. EPA’s Disapprovals of Portions of
                                               and if it fails to do so, EPA shall                     to the Penobscot Nation and the
                                                                                                                                                             Maine’s Water Quality Standards
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                                               promptly propose and then within                          3 Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria
                                               ninety days promulgate such standard                                                                            On February 2, March 16, and June 5,
                                                                                                       for the Protection of Human Health, (80 FR 36986,
                                                                                                       June 29, 2015). See also: USEPA. 2015. Final 2015     2015, EPA disapproved a number of
                                                 2 USEPA. 2000. Memorandum #WQSP–00–03.                Updated National Recommended Human Health             Maine’s new and revised WQS. These
                                               U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of         Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,       decision letters are available in the
                                               Water, Washington, DC. https://www.epa.gov/sites/       Office of Water, Washington, DC. http://
                                               production/files/2015-01/documents/standards-           water.epa.gov/scitech/swguidance/standards/
                                                                                                                                                             docket for this rulemaking. They were
                                               shellfish.pdf.                                          criteria/current/hhfinal.cfm.                         prompted by an ongoing lawsuit


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                                               92468            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               initiated by Maine against EPA.4 As                       section II.B.1.a and two small changes                 5. Applicability of Water Quality
                                               discussed in the preamble to the                          discussed in section II.B.2, EPA’s final               Standards
                                               proposed rule (see 81 FR 23239, 23241–                    rule is identical to the proposed rule.                   These water quality standards apply
                                               23242), some of the disapprovals                                                                                 to the categories of waters for CWA
                                                                                                         4. Scope of Action
                                               applied only to waters in Indian lands                                                                           purposes, as described in II.B below.
                                               in Maine, while others applied to waters                  a. Scope of Promulgation Related to                    Although EPA is finalizing WQS to
                                               throughout the state or to waters in the                  Disapprovals                                           address the standards that it
                                               state outside of Indian lands.5 EPA                          To address the disapprovals discussed               disapproved or for which it has made a
                                               concluded that the disapproved WQS                        in section II.A.3, EPA is promulgating                 determination, Maine continues to have
                                               did not adequately protect designated                     human health criteria (HHC) for toxic                  the option to adopt and submit to EPA
                                               uses related to the protection of human                   pollutants and six other WQS that apply                new or revised WQS that remedy the
                                               health and/or aquatic life.6 EPA                          only to waters in Indian lands; two                    issues identified in the disapprovals and
                                               requested the state to revise its WQS to                  WQS for all waters in Maine including                  determination, consistent with CWA
                                               address the issues identified in the                      waters in Indian lands; and one WQS                    section 303(c) and EPA’s implementing
                                               disapprovals. The statutory 90-day                        for waters in Maine outside of Indian                  regulations at 40 CFR part 131.
                                               timeframe provided to the state to revise                 lands. For the purpose of this                            Some commenters urged EPA to
                                               its WQS has passed with respect to all                    rulemaking, ‘‘waters in Indian lands’’                 finalize its rule without any further
                                               of the disapproved WQS. EPA is                            are those waters in the tribes’                        delay. Conversely, the state noted that
                                               required by the CWA to promptly                           reservations and trust lands as provided               EPA should give it additional time to
                                               propose and then, within 90 days of                       for in the settlement acts.                            adopt and submit its own WQS to
                                               proposal, to promulgate federal                                                                                  address EPA’s disapprovals. EPA
                                               standards unless, in the meantime, the                    b. Scope of Promulgation Related to the
                                                                                                         Administrator’s Determination                          acknowledges the perspectives of all of
                                               state adopts and EPA approves state                                                                              these commenters. EPA agrees that there
                                               replacement WQS that address EPA’s                           On April 20, 2016, EPA made a CWA                   is a compelling need to finalize the
                                               disapproval. The state has not adopted                    section 303(c)(4)(B) determination that,               WQS, particularly in waters in Indian
                                               WQS revisions to address the                              for any waters in Maine where there is                 lands in Maine. For many pollutants,
                                               disapprovals. Having published the                        a sustenance fishing designated use and                there are no criteria in effect for CWA
                                               proposed rule on April 20, 2016, EPA is                   Maine’s existing HHC are in effect, new                purposes in waters in Indian lands,
                                               today finalizing the rule. With the                       or revised HHC for the protection of                   including most human health criteria,
                                               exception of minor revisions to several                   human health in Maine are necessary to                 and it is important to remedy this gap
                                               human health criteria as noted in                         meet the requirements of the CWA. EPA                  in protection without further delay
                                                                                                         proposed (see 81 FR 23239, 23242–                      where possible. Further, the tribes have
                                                  4 The state has filed an amended complaint in          23243), and is now finalizing, HHC for                 repeatedly expressed their desire for,
                                               that lawsuit, challenging, among other things, EPA’s      toxic pollutants, in accordance with the               and the importance of, their right to a
                                               February 2, 2015 approval of certain designated           CWA section 303(c)(4)(B)
                                               uses and disapprovals of Maine’s HHC.                                                                            sustenance fishing way of life, reserved
                                                  5 As discussed in the proposal for this rule, unlike   determination, for the following waters:               for them under the settlement acts, to be
                                               in most other states, Maine has the authority to          (1) Waters in Indian lands in the event                protected. EPA, as a federal government
                                               promulgate WQS for waters in Indian lands in              that a court determines that EPA’s                     agency, is taking action to protect that
                                               Maine, as a result of the settlement acts.                disapprovals of HHC for such waters
                                                  6 After further consideration, by letter of January
                                                                                                                                                                right, consistent with the settlement acts
                                                                                                         were unauthorized and that Maine’s                     and CWA, as described further below.
                                               19, 2016, EPA withdrew its February 2, 2015,
                                               disapprovals of Maine’s HHC for six pollutants            existing HHC are in effect; 7 and (2)                     EPA also agrees that the CWA is
                                               (copper, asbestos, barium, iron, manganese and            waters where there is a sustenance                     intended to protect the Nation’s waters
                                               nitrates) and instead approved them. EPA                  fishing designated use outside of waters               through a system of cooperative
                                               concluded that those criteria were not calculated         in Indian lands.8
                                               using a fish consumption rate, and therefore the                                                                 federalism, with states having the
                                               basis for EPA’s disapprovals of the HHC in the                                                                   primary responsibility of establishing
                                                                                                            7 Maine has challenged EPA’s disapprovals in
                                               February 2, 2015, decision letter did not apply. EPA                                                             protective WQS for waters under their
                                               approved them as being consistent with EPA’s              federal district court, asserting that EPA did not
                                                                                                         have the authority to disapprove the HHC in waters     jurisdiction. However, Maine is
                                               recommended CWA section 304(a) criteria. In
                                               addition, by letter of April 11, 2016, EPA withdrew       in Indian lands. While EPA’s position is that the      challenging EPA’s disapproval of the
                                               its February 2, 2015, disapprovals of Maine’s HHC         disapprovals were authorized and Maine’s existing
                                               for the following HHC and instead approved them:          HHC are not in effect, this determination ensures      district court recently held that the Penobscot
                                               (1) For the consumption of water plus organisms for       that EPA has the authority to promulgate the           Nation’s ‘‘reservation’’ for sustenance fishing
                                               1,2-dichloropropane, 1,4-dichlorobenzene,                 proposed HHC, and that the tribes’ sustenance          purposes, as contained in MIA section 6207(4), is
                                               dichlorobromomethane, chlorodibromomethane,               fishing use would be protected, even if Maine were     broader in scope than its ‘‘reservation’’ under MIA
                                               chrysene, methylene chloride, chlorophenoxy               to prevail in its challenge to EPA’s disapproval       section 6203(8). Penobscot Nation v. Mills, 151 F.
                                               herbicide (2, 4, 5-TP), chlorophenoxy herbicide           authority.                                             Supp. 3d 181 (D. Maine Dec. 16, 2015) (formerly,
                                                                                                            8 In its February 2015 Decision, EPA concluded
                                               (2,4-D), and Nnitrosopyrrolidine; (2) for the                                                                    Penobscot v. Schneider), appeal docketed, No. 16–
                                               consumption of organisms alone for acrolein and           that section 6207(4) and (9) of MIA constituted a      1435 (1st Cir. April 26, 2016). The court held that
                                               gamma-BHC (Lindane); and (3) for both the                 new or revised water quality standard and approved     the Penobscot Nation has a right to sustenance fish
                                               consumption of water plus organisms and for the           the provision as a designated use of sustenance        throughout the main stem of the Penobscot River
                                               consumption of organisms alone for 1,2-                   fishing applicable to all inland waters of the         (from Indian Island to the confluence of the East
                                               dichloroethane, acrylonitrile, benzidine,                 Southern Tribes’ reservations in which populations     and West Branches of the Penobscot River), though
                                               bis(chloromethyl) ether, chloroform, methyl               of fish are or may be found. Accordingly, EPA’s        its reservation under section 6203(8) consists solely
                                               bromide, and tetrachloroethylene. EPA calculated          approval of MIA section 6207(4) and (9) as a           of the islands in that stretch of the river. The
                                               the HHC for these pollutants using the best science       designated use of sustenance fishing applies to all    determination and corresponding final HHC apply
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                                               reflected in the 2015 criteria updates (which were        waters where the Southern Tribes have a right to       to any water that is beyond the scope of ‘‘waters in
                                               finalized after the disapprovals), along with a fish      sustenance fish, irrespective of whether such waters   Indian lands’’ and to which the sustenance fishing
                                               consumption rate (FCR) of 286 g/day to protect the        are determined to be outside of the scope of their     designated use based on MIA section 6207(4) and
                                               sustenance fishing use, and concluded that the            reservation for purposes other than sustenance         (9) applies. For a more detailed discussion, see
                                               resulting HHC were either the same or less stringent      fishing.                                               section III.D.5 of this preamble, and also Topic 5 in
                                               than Maine’s HHC that EPA had disapproved.                   EPA notes that there may be one or more waters      EPA’s Response to Comments document and the
                                               Accordingly, EPA withdrew the disapprovals and            where the sustenance fishing designated use based      ‘‘Scope of Waters’’ Technical Support Document;
                                               approved these HHC based on their being adequate          on MIA section 6207(4) and (9) extends beyond          both documents are in the docket for this
                                               to protect the sustenance fishing use.                    ‘‘waters in Indian lands.’’ For example, a federal     rulemaking.



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                92469

                                               HHC for waters in Indian lands in                       adopted by the state would have to be                 B. Description of Final Rule
                                               federal court, and it commented                         at least as stringent as the federally
                                                                                                                                                             1. Final WQS for Waters in Indian
                                               adversely on EPA’s proposed HHC, pH,                    proposed WQS for EPA to approve and                   Lands in Maine and for Waters outside
                                               bacteria, and tidal temperature criteria                make the state WQS effective for CWA                  of Indian Lands in Maine Where the
                                               for waters in Indian lands.                             purposes.                                             Sustenance Fishing Designated Use
                                               Consequently, EPA has no assurance
                                                                                                          Upon consideration of comments                     Established by 30 M.R.S. 6207(4) and (9)
                                               that Maine will develop WQS that EPA
                                                                                                       received on its proposed rule, EPA                    Applies
                                               can approve as scientifically defensible
                                               and protective of Maine’s designated                    decided not to finalize the above                     a. Human Health Criteria for Toxic
                                               uses.                                                   proposed approach. Consistent with 40                 Pollutants
                                                  Having considered these comments,                    CFR 131.21(c), EPA’s federally
                                                                                                       promulgated WQS are and will be                          After consideration of all comments
                                               EPA, in keeping with its statutory                                                                            received on EPA’s proposed rule, EPA is
                                               obligation to promulgate WQS within 90                  applicable for purposes of the CWA
                                                                                                       until EPA withdraws those federally                   finalizing the proposed criteria for 96
                                               days after proposing them and the need                                                                        toxic pollutants in this rule applicable
                                               for these WQS to meet the requirements                  promulgated WQS. EPA would
                                                                                                                                                             to waters in Indian lands.9 Table 2
                                               of the CWA, is finalizing the WQS.                      undertake a rulemaking to withdraw the
                                                                                                                                                             provides the criteria for each pollutant
                                                  In the April 20, 2016, Federal                       federal WQS if and when Maine adopts                  as well as the HHC inputs used to derive
                                               Register notice, EPA proposed that if                   and EPA approves corresponding WQS                    each one. These criteria also apply to
                                               Maine adopted and submitted WQS that                    that meet the requirements of section                 any waters that are covered by the
                                               meet CWA requirements after EPA                         303(c) of the CWA and EPA’s                           determination referenced in section
                                               finalized its proposed rule, they would                 implementing regulations at 40 CFR part               II.A.4.
                                               become effective for CWA purposes                       131.
                                               upon EPA approval and EPA’s                                                                                     9 Final human health criteria for antimony,

                                               corresponding promulgated WQS would                                                                           dichlorobromomethane, nickel, nitrosamines, N-
                                               no longer apply. No commenters                                                                                nitrosodibutylamine, N-nitrosodiethylamine, PCBs,
                                               supported this proposal. Two                                                                                  selenium, and zinc have been modified slightly
                                               commenters objected to it, and one                                                                            from the criteria as proposed to better reflect the
                                                                                                                                                             appropriate number of significant figures (i.e.,
                                               asked that EPA specify that WQS
                                                                                                                                                             precision) in the value.
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                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   22:19 Dec 16, 2016   Jkt 241001   PO 00000   Frm 00005   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\19DER9.SGM   19DER9


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                                                                                                    TABLE 2—FINAL HHC AND KEY PARAMETERS USED IN THEIR DERIVATION
                                                                                                                                                                                       Bioaccumu-                   Bioaccumu-                   Bioaccumu-
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            92470

                                                                                                       Cancer slope             Relative source               Reference                                                                                                       Bioconcen-                  Water &                  Organisms
                                                                                                                                                                                    lation factor for            lation factor for            lation factor for
                                          Chemical name                                   CAS No.       factor, CSF              contribution                 dose, RfD                                                                                                      tration factor              organisms                    only
                                                                                                                                                                                     trophic level 2              trophic level 3              trophic level 4
                                                                                                       (per mg/kg·d)               RSC (-)                    (mg/kg·d)                                                                                                     (L/kg tissue) e                (μg/L)                    (μg/L)




VerDate Sep<11>2014
                                                                                                                                                                                      (L/kg tissue)                (L/kg tissue)                (L/kg tissue)

                      1    1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane .....................                   79–34–5                    0.2     ..........................   ....................                        5.7                          7.4                          8.4     ..........................                0.09                           0.2
                      2    1,1,2-Trichloroethane ............................                79–00–5                0.057       ..........................   ....................                        6.0                          7.8                          8.9     ..........................                0.31                         0.66
                      3    1,1-Dichloroethylene .............................                75–35–4   ......................                      0.20                   0.05                           2.0                          2.4                          2.6     ..........................                 300                        1000
                      4    1,2,4,5-Tetrachlorobenzene ..................                     95–94–3   ......................                      0.20               0.0003                       17,000                         2,900                        1,500       ..........................              0.002                        0.002
                      5    1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene .........................                 120–82–1                0.029       ..........................   ....................                    2,800                        1,500                           430      ..........................            0.0056                       0.0056
                      6    1,2-Dichlorobenzene .............................                 95–50–1   ......................                      0.20                     0.3                           52                           71                           82     ..........................                 200                          300
                      7    1,2-Dichloropropane ..............................                78–87–5                0.036       ..........................   ....................                        2.9                          3.5                          3.9     ..........................   ....................                        2.3




22:19 Dec 16, 2016
                      8    1,2-Diphenylhydrazine ...........................                122–66–7                    0.8     ..........................   ....................                         18                           24                           27     ..........................                0.01                         0.02
                      9    1,2-Trans-Dichloroethylene ...................                   156–60–5   ......................                      0.20                   0.02                           3.3                          4.2                          4.7     ..........................                   90                         300
                      10   1,3-Dichlorobenzene .............................                541–73–1   ......................                      0.20                 0.002                             31                         120                          190      ..........................                     1                            1
                      11   1,3-Dichloropropene .............................                542–75–6                0.122       ..........................   ....................                        2.3                          2.7                          3.0     ..........................                0.21                         0.87




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                      12   1,4-Dichlorobenzene .............................                106–46–7   ......................                      0.20                   0.07                            28                           66                           84     ..........................   ....................                         70
                      13   2,4,5-Trichlorophenol ............................                95–95–4   ......................                      0.20                     0.1                         100                          140                          160      ..........................                   40                           40
                      14   2,4,6-Trichlorophenol ............................                88–06–2                0.011       ..........................   ....................                         94                         130                          150      ..........................                0.20                         0.21
                      15   2,4-Dichlorophenol ................................              120–83–2   ......................                      0.20                 0.003                             31                           42                           48     ..........................                     4                            4
                      16   2,4-Dimethylphenol ...............................               105–67–9   ......................                      0.20                   0.02                           4.8                          6.2                          7.0     ..........................                   80                         200




PO 00000
                      17   2,4-Dinitrophenol ...................................             51–28–5   ......................                      0.20                 0.002                          a 4.4                        a 4.4                        a 4.4     ..........................                     9                          30
                      18   2,4-Dinitrotoluene ..................................            121–14–2                0.667       ..........................   ....................                        2.8                          3.5                          3.9     ..........................              0.036                          0.13
                      19   2-Chloronaphthalene ............................                  91–58–7   ......................                      0.80                   0.08                          150                          210                          240      ..........................                   90                           90
                      20   2-Chlorophenol .....................................              95–57–8   ......................                      0.20                 0.005                            3.8                          4.8                          5.4     ..........................                   20                           60
                      21   2-Methyl-4,6-Dinitrophenol ....................                  534–52–1   ......................                      0.20               0.0003                             6.8                          8.9                           10     ..........................                     1                            2




Frm 00006
                      22   3,3′-Dichlorobenzidine ..........................                 91–94–1                  0.45      ..........................   ....................                         44                           60                           69     ..........................            0.0096                         0.011
                      23   4,4′-DDD ...............................................          72–54–8                  0.24      ..........................   ....................                  33,000                     140,000                      240,000         ..........................          9.3E–06                      9.3E–06
                      24   4,4′-DDE ...............................................          72–55–9                0.167       ..........................   ....................                270,000                   1,100,000                    3,100,000          ..........................          1.3E–06                      1.3E–06
                      25   4,4’-DDT ................................................         50–29–3                  0.34      ..........................   ....................                  35,000                     240,000                   1,100,000          ..........................          2.2E–06                      2.2E–06




Fmt 4701
                      26   Acenaphthene .......................................              83–32–9   ......................                      0.20                   0.06                        a 510                        a 510                        a 510      ..........................                     6                            7
                      27   Acrolein .................................................       107–02–8   ......................                      0.20               0.0005                             1.0                          1.0                          1.0     ..........................                     3    ..........................
                      28   Aldrin .....................................................     309–00–2                     17     ..........................   ....................                  18,000                     310,000                      650,000         ..........................          5.8E–08                      5.8E–08
                      29   alpha-BHC ............................................           319–84–6                    6.3     ..........................   ....................                    1,700                        1,400                        1,500       ..........................          2.9E–05                      2.9E–05
                      30   alpha-Endosulfan ..................................              959–98–8   ......................                      0.20                 0.006                           130                          180                          200      ..........................                     2                            2




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                      31   Anthracene ............................................          120–12–7   ......................                      0.20                     0.3                       a 610                        a 610                        a 610      ..........................                   30                           30
                      32   Antimony ...............................................        7440–36–0   ......................                      0.40               0.0004        ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                           1                      5                          40
                      33   Benzene ................................................          71–43–2              b 0.055       ..........................   ....................                        3.6                          4.5                          5.0     ..........................                0.40                           1.2
                      34   Benzo (a) Anthracene ...........................                  56–55–3                  0.73      ..........................   ....................                  a 3,900                      a 3,900                      a 3,900       ..........................          9.8E–05                      9.8E–05
                      35   Benzo (a) Pyrene ..................................               50–32–8                    7.3     ..........................   ....................                  a 3,900                      a 3,900                      a 3,900       ..........................          9.8E–06                      9.8E–06
                      36   Benzo (b) Fluoranthene ........................                  205–99–2                  0.73      ..........................   ....................                  a 3,900                      a 3,900                      a 3,900       ..........................          9.8E–05                      9.8E–05
                      37   Benzo (k) Fluoranthene ........................                  207–08–9                0.073       ..........................   ....................                  a 3,900                      a 3,900                      a 3,900       ..........................          0.00098                      0.00098
                      38   beta-BHC ..............................................          319–85–7                    1.8     ..........................   ....................                       110                          160                          180      ..........................            0.0010                       0.0011
                      39   beta-Endosulfan ....................................           33213–65–9   ......................                      0.20                 0.006                             80                         110                          130      ..........................                     3                            3
                      40   Bis(2-Chloro-1-Methylethyl) Ether .........                      108–60–1   ......................                      0.20                   0.04                           6.7                          8.8                           10     ..........................                 100                          300




E:\FR\FM\19DER9.SGM
                      41   Bis(2-Chloroethyl) Ether ........................                111–44–4                    1.1     ..........................   ....................                        1.4                          1.6                          1.7     ..........................              0.026                          0.16
                      42   Bis(2-Ethylhexyl) Phthalate ...................                  117–81–7                0.014       ..........................   ....................                     a 710                        a 710                        a 710      ..........................              0.028                        0.028
                      43   Bromoform ............................................            75–25–2              0.0045        ..........................   ....................                        5.8                          7.5                          8.5     ..........................                  4.0                          8.7
                      44   Butylbenzyl Phthalate ...........................                 85–68–7              0.0019        ..........................   ....................                a 19,000                     a 19,000                     a 19,000        ..........................            0.0077                       0.0077




19DER9
                      45   Carbon Tetrachloride ............................                 56–23–5                  0.07      ..........................   ....................                        9.3                           12                           14     ..........................                  0.2                          0.3
                      46   Chlordane .............................................           57–74–9                  0.35      ..........................   ....................                    5,300                      44,000                       60,000        ..........................          2.4E–05                      2.4E–05
                      47   Chlorobenzene ......................................             108–90–7   ......................                      0.20                   0.02                            14                           19                           22     ..........................                   40                           60
                      48   Chlorodibromomethane ........................                    124–48–1                0.040       ..........................   ....................                        3.7                          4.8                          5.3     ..........................   ....................                        1.5
                      49   Chrysene ...............................................         218–01–9              0.0073        ..........................   ....................                  a 3,900                      a 3,900                      a 3,900       ..........................   ....................                  0.0098
                      50   Cyanide .................................................         57–12–5   ......................                      0.20               0.0006        ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                           1                      4                          30
                      51   Dibenzo (a,h) Anthracene .....................                    53–70–3                    7.3     ..........................   ....................                  a 3,900                      a 3,900                      a 3,900       ..........................          9.8E–06                      9.8E–06
                      52   Dichlorobromomethane .........................                    75–27–4                0.034       ..........................   ....................                        3.4                          4.3                          4.8     ..........................   ....................                        2.0
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations




                      53   Dieldrin ..................................................       60–57–1                     16     ..........................   ....................                  14,000                     210,000                      410,000         ..........................          9.3E–08                      9.3E–08
                      54   Diethyl Phthalate ...................................             84–66–2   ......................                      0.20                     0.8                       a 920                        a 920                        a 920      ..........................                   50                           50
                      55   Dimethyl Phthalate ................................              131–11–3   ......................                      0.20                      10                    a 4,000                      a 4,000                      a 4,000       ..........................                 100                          100
                      56   Di-n-Butyl Phthalate ..............................               84–74–2   ......................                      0.20                     0.1                    a 2,900                      a 2,900                      a 2,900       ..........................                     2                            2
                      57   Dinitrophenols .......................................         25550–58–7   ......................                      0.20                 0.002       ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                      1.51                      10                           70
                      58   Endosulfan Sulfate ................................             1031–07–8   ......................                      0.20                 0.006                             88                         120                          140      ..........................                     3                            3
                      59   Endrin ....................................................       72–20–8   ......................                      0.80               0.0003                         4,600                      36,000                       46,000        ..........................              0.002                        0.002


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                      60   Endrin Aldehyde ...................................                7421–93–4            ......................                      0.80               0.0003                           440                          920                          850       ..........................                0.09                         0.09
                      61   Ethylbenzene ........................................                100–41–4           ......................                      0.20                 0.022                          100                          140                          160       ..........................                  8.9                          9.5
                      62   Fluoranthene .........................................               206–44–0           ......................                      0.20                   0.04                    a 1,500                      a 1,500                      a 1,500        ..........................                     1                            1
                      63   Fluorene ................................................              86–73–7          ......................                      0.20                   0.04                          230                          450                          710      ..........................                     5                            5
                      64   gamma-BHC (Lindane) .........................                          58–89–9          ......................                      0.50               0.0047                         1,200                        2,400                        2,500       ..........................                0.33      ..........................




VerDate Sep<11>2014
                      65   Heptachlor .............................................               76–44–8                           4.1     ..........................   ....................                  12,000                     180,000                      330,000         ..........................          4.4E–07                      4.4E–07
                      66   Heptachlor Epoxide ..............................                  1024–57–3                             5.5     ..........................   ....................                    4,000                      28,000                       35,000        ..........................          2.4E–06                      2.4E–06
                      67   Hexachlorobenzene ..............................                     118–74–1                          1.02      ..........................   ....................                  18,000                       46,000                       90,000        ..........................          5.9E–06                      5.9E–06
                      68   Hexachlorobutadiene ............................                       87–68–3                         0.04      ..........................   ....................                  23,000                         2,800                        1,100       ..........................            0.0007                       0.0007
                      69   Hexachlorocyclohexane-Technical .......                              608–73–1                            1.8     ..........................   ....................                       160                          220                          250      ..........................          0.00073                      0.00076
                      70   Hexachlorocyclopentadiene ..................                           77–47–4          ......................                      0.20                 0.006                           620                       1,500                        1,300       ..........................                  0.3                          0.3
                      71   Hexachloroethane .................................                     67–72–1                         0.04      ..........................   ....................                    1,200                           280                          600      ..........................                0.01                         0.01




22:19 Dec 16, 2016
                      72   Indeno (1,2,3-cd) Pyrene ......................                      193–39–5                          0.73      ..........................   ....................                  a 3,900                      a 3,900                      a 3,900       ..........................          9.8E–05                      9.8E–05
                      73   Isophorone ............................................                78–59–1                   0.00095         ..........................   ....................                        1.9                          2.2                          2.4     ..........................                   28                         140
                      74   Methoxychlor .........................................                 72–43–5          ......................                      0.80                2E–05                         1,400                        4,800                        4,400       ..........................              0.001       ..........................
                      75   Methylene Chloride ...............................                     75–09–2                       0.002       ..........................   ....................                        1.4                          1.5                          1.6     ..........................   ....................                         90
                      76   Methylmercury ......................................             22967–92–6             ......................              2.70E–05                   0.0001        ..........................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................   ....................       c 0.02 (mg/kg)




Jkt 241001
                      77   Nickel ....................................................        7440–02–0            ......................                      0.20                   0.02      ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                         47                     20                           20
                      78   Nitrobenzene .........................................                 98–95–3          ......................                      0.20                 0.002                            2.3                          2.8                          3.1     ..........................                   10                           40
                      79   Nitrosamines .........................................         ......................                43.46       ..........................   ....................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                      0.20             0.00075                          0.032
                      80   N-Nitrosodibutylamine ...........................                    924–16–3                          5.43      ..........................   ....................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                      3.38             0.00438                        0.0152




PO 00000
                      81   N-Nitrosodiethylamine ...........................                      55–18–5                       43.46       ..........................   ....................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                      0.20             0.00075                          0.032
                      82   N-Nitrosodimethylamine ........................                        62–75–9                            51     ..........................   ....................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                    0.026              0.00065                            0.21
                      83   N-Nitrosodi-n-propylamine ....................                       621–64–7                            7.0     ..........................   ....................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                      1.13               0.0042                         0.035
                      84   N-Nitrosodiphenylamine ........................                        86–30–6                     0.0049        ..........................   ....................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                       136                   0.40                         0.42




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                      85   N-Nitrosopyrrolidine ..............................                  930–55–2                          2.13      ..........................   ....................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                    0.055       ....................                        2.4
                      86   Pentachlorobenzene .............................                     608–93–5           ......................                      0.20               0.0008                         3,500                        4,500                      10,000        ..........................              0.008                        0.008
                      87   Pentachlorophenol ................................                     87–86–5                           0.4     ..........................   ....................                         44                         290                          520      ..........................              0.003                        0.003
                      88   Phenol ...................................................           108–95–2           ......................                      0.20                     0.6                          1.5                          1.7                          1.9     ..........................              3,000                      20,000




Fmt 4701
                      89   Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) ........                          1336–36–3                                2    ..........................   ....................   ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                  31,200               d 4E–06                      d 4E–06

                      90   Pyrene ...................................................           129–00–0           ......................                      0.20                   0.03                        a 860                        a 860                        a 860      ..........................                     2                            2
                      91   Selenium ...............................................           7782–49–2            ......................                      0.20                 0.005       ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                        4.8                     20                           60
                      92   Toluene .................................................            108–88–3           ......................                      0.20               0.0097                              11                           15                           17     ..........................                   24                           39




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                      93   Toxaphene ............................................             8001–35–2                             1.1     ..........................   ....................                    1,700                        6,600                        6,300       ..........................          5.3E–05                      5.3E–05
                      94   Trichloroethylene ..................................                   79–01–6                         0.05      ..........................   ....................                        8.7                           12                           13     ..........................                  0.3                          0.5
                      95   Vinyl Chloride ........................................                75–01–4                           1.5     ..........................   ....................                        1.4                          1.6                          1.7     ..........................              0.019                          0.12
                      96   Zinc .......................................................       7440–66–6            ......................                      0.20                     0.3     ..........................   ..........................   ..........................                         47                   300                          400
                        a This bioaccumulation factor was estimated from laboratory-measured bioconcentration factors; EPA multiplied this bioaccumulation factor by the overall fish consumption rate of 286 g/day to calculate the human
                      health criteria.
                        b EPA’s CWA section 304(a) HHC for benzene use a CSF range of 0.015 to 0.055 per mg/kg-day. EPA used the higher end of the CSF range (0.055 per mg/kg-day) to derive the final benzene criteria.
                        c This criterion is expressed as the fish tissue concentration of methylmercury (mg methylmercury/kg fish) and applies equally to fresh and marine waters. See Water Quality Criterion for the Protection of Human
                      Health: Methylmercury (EPA–823–R–01–001, January 3, 2001) for how this value is calculated using the criterion equation in EPA’s 2000 Methodology rearranged to solve for a protective concentration in fish tissue




E:\FR\FM\19DER9.SGM
                      rather than in water.
                        d This criterion applies to total PCBs (i.e., the sum of all congener or isomer or homolog or Aroclor analyses).
                        e EPA multiplied this bioconcentration factor by the overall fish consumption rate of 286 g/day to calculate the human health criteria.




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                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        92471


                                               92472            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               i. Sustenance Fishing Designated Use                    section 304(a) HHC for the combined                    developing cancer from the exposure as
                                               and Tribal Target Population                            activities of drinking water and                       described would be a one in a million
                                                  In its February 2015 decision, EPA                   consuming fish/shellfish obtained from                 increment above the background risk of
                                               concluded that MICSA granted the state                  inland and nearshore waters, and                       developing cancer from all other
                                               authority to set WQS in waters in Indian                separate CWA section 304(a) HHC for                    exposures.11
                                                                                                       consuming only fish/shellfish                             In this rule, EPA derived the final
                                               lands. EPA also concluded that in
                                                                                                       originating from inland and nearshore                  HHC for carcinogens using a 10¥6 CRL,
                                               assessing whether the state’s WQS were
                                                                                                       waters. The latter criteria apply in cases             consistent with EPA’s 2000
                                               approvable for waters in Indian lands,
                                                                                                       where the designated uses of a                         Methodology and with Maine
                                               EPA must effectuate the CWA
                                                                                                       waterbody include supporting fish/                     Department of Environmental Protection
                                               requirement that WQS must protect
                                                                                                       shellfish for human consumption but                    (DEP) Rule Chapter 584, which specifies
                                               applicable designated uses and be based
                                                                                                       not drinking water supply sources (e.g.,               that water quality criteria for
                                               on sound science in consideration of the
                                                                                                       in non-potable estuarine waters).                      carcinogens must be based on a 10¥6
                                               fundamental purpose for which land                                                                             CRL, and which EPA approved for
                                               was set aside for the tribes under the                     The criteria are based on two types of
                                                                                                       biological endpoints: (1) Carcinogenicity              waters in Indian lands on February 2,
                                               Indian settlement acts in Maine. EPA                                                                           2015.12 The HHC provide the tribes
                                               found that those settlement acts provide                and (2) systemic toxicity (i.e., all
                                                                                                       adverse effects other than cancer). EPA                engaged in sustenance fishing in waters
                                               for land to be set aside as a permanent                                                                        in Indian lands in Maine with an
                                               land base for the Indian tribes in Maine,               takes an integrated approach and
                                                                                                       considers both cancer and non-cancer                   equivalent level of cancer risk
                                               in order for the tribes to be able to                                                                          protection (i.e., 10¥6) as is afforded to
                                               continue their unique cultural practices,               effects when deriving HHC. Where
                                                                                                       sufficient data are available, EPA                     the general population in Maine outside
                                               including the ability to exercise                                                                              of waters in Indian lands.
                                               sustenance fishing practices.                           derives criteria using both carcinogenic
                                                                                                       and non-carcinogenic toxicity endpoints                   EPA received comments in favor of
                                               Accordingly, EPA interpreted the state’s                                                                       using the proposed 10¥6 CRL level as
                                               ‘‘fishing’’ designated use, as applied to               and recommends the lower value. HHC
                                                                                                       for carcinogenic effects are typically                 well as recommendations for higher and
                                               waters in Indian lands, to mean                                                                                lower CRLs. Responses to those
                                               ‘‘sustenance fishing’’ and approved it as               calculated using the following input
                                                                                                       parameters: Cancer slope factor, excess                comments are summarized in section
                                               such. EPA also approved a specific                                                                             III.D.5.
                                               sustenance fishing right reserved in MIA                lifetime cancer risk level, body weight,
                                                                                                       drinking water intake rate, fish                          II. Cancer Slope Factor and Reference
                                               sections 6207(4) and (9) as a designated                                                                       Dose. For noncarcinogenic toxicological
                                               use for all inland waters of the Southern               consumption rate(s), and
                                                                                                       bioaccumulation factor(s). HHC for                     effects, EPA uses a chronic-duration oral
                                               Tribes’ reservations. Against this                                                                             reference dose (RfD) to derive HHC. An
                                               backdrop, EPA approved or disapproved                   noncarcinogenic and nonlinear
                                                                                                       carcinogenic effects are typically                     RfD is an estimate (with uncertainty
                                               all of Maine’s HHC for toxic pollutants                                                                        spanning perhaps an order of
                                               as applied to waters in Indian lands                    calculated using reference dose, relative
                                                                                                       source contribution (RSC), body weight,                magnitude) of a daily oral exposure of
                                               after evaluating whether they satisfied                                                                        an individual to a substance that is
                                               CWA requirements.                                       drinking water intake rate, fish
                                                                                                       consumption rate(s) and                                likely to be without an appreciable risk
                                                  EPA determined that the tribal                                                                              of deleterious effects during a lifetime.
                                               populations must be treated as the                      bioaccumulation factor(s). EPA selects a
                                                                                                       mixture of high-end and central (mean)                 For carcinogenic toxicological effects,
                                               general target population in waters in                                                                         EPA uses an oral cancer slope factor
                                               Indian lands. EPA disapproved many of                   tendency inputs to the equation in order
                                                                                                       to derive recommended criteria that                    (CSF) to derive HHC. The oral CSF is an
                                               Maine’s HHC for toxic pollutants based                                                                         upper bound, approximating a 95%
                                               on EPA’s conclusion that they do not                    ‘‘afford an overall level of protection
                                                                                                       targeted at the high end of the general                confidence limit, on the increased
                                               adequately protect the health of tribal                                                                        cancer risk from a lifetime oral exposure
                                               sustenance fishers in waters in Indian                  population (i.e., the target population or
                                                                                                       the criteria-basis population).’’ 10                   to a stressor.
                                               lands. EPA concluded that the                                                                                     EPA did not receive any comments on
                                               disapproved HHC did not support the                        EPA received comments supporting
                                                                                                                                                              the pollutant-specific RfDs or CSFs used
                                               designated use of sustenance fishing in                 and opposing specific input parameters
                                                                                                                                                              in the derivation of the proposed
                                               such waters because they were not                       EPA used to derive the proposed HHC.
                                                                                                                                                              criteria, which were based on EPA’s
                                               based on the higher, unsuppressed fish                  The specific input parameters used are
                                                                                                                                                              National Recommended Water Quality
                                               consumption rates that reflect the tribes’              explained in the following paragraphs.
                                                                                                                                                              Criteria.13 EPA has used the same values
                                               sustenance fishing practices.                           iii. Maine-Specific HHC Inputs                         to derive the final HHC.
                                               Accordingly, EPA proposed, and is now                                                                             III. Body Weight. The final HHC were
                                               finalizing, HHC that EPA has                              I. Cancer Risk Level. As set forth in
                                                                                                                                                              calculated using the proposed body
                                               determined will protect the sustenance                  EPA’s 2000 Methodology for Deriving
                                                                                                                                                              weight of 80 kilograms (kg), consistent
                                               fishing designated use, based on sound                  Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the
                                                                                                                                                              with the default body weight used in
                                               science and consistent with the CWA                     Protection of Human Health (the ‘‘2000
                                                                                                                                                              EPA’s most recent National
                                               and EPA regulations and policy.                         Methodology’’), EPA calculates its CWA
                                                                                                       section 304(a) HHC at concentrations                     11 Id., p. 2–6.
                                               ii. General Recommended Approach for                    corresponding to a 10¥6 cancer risk                      12 The  only exception from the requirement to use
                                               Deriving HHC                                            level (CRL), meaning that if exposure                  a CRL of 10¥6 in Chapter 584 is for arsenic, for
                                                  HHC for toxic pollutants are designed                were to occur as set forth in the CWA                  which a CRL of 10¥4 is required. EPA disapproved
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                                                                                                       section 304(a) methodology at the                      the arsenic CRL for waters in Indian lands.
                                               to minimize the risk of adverse cancer                                                                            13 Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria
                                               and non-cancer effects occurring from                   prescribed concentration over the
                                                                                                                                                              for the Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986
                                               lifetime exposure to pollutants through                 course of one’s lifetime, then the risk of             (June 29, 2015). See also: USEPA. 2015. Final 2015
                                               the ingestion of drinking water and                                                                            Updated National Recommended Human Health
                                                                                                        10 United States Environmental Protection             Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
                                               consumption of fish/shellfish obtained                  Agency (U.S. EPA). 2000. Methodology for Deriving      Office of Water, Washington, DC. https://
                                               from inland and nearshore waters.                       Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection of   www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-
                                               EPA’s practice is to establish CWA                      Human Health. EPA–822–B–00–004, p. 2–1.                criteria.



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                92473

                                               Recommended Water Quality Criteria.14                   not receive any comments regarding                    been considered in developing HHC.21
                                               This body weight is the average weight                  specific proposed BAFs or BCFs.                       In these situations, HHC are derived
                                               of a U.S. adult age 21 and older, based                    VI. Fish Consumption Rate (FCR). In                with respect to the incremental lifetime
                                               on National Health and Nutrition                        finalizing the HHC, EPA used the                      cancer risk posed by the presence of a
                                               Examination Survey (‘‘NHANES’’) data                    proposed FCR of 286 g/day to represent                substance in water, rather than an
                                               from 1999 to 2006.15 EPA received one                   present day sustenance level fish                     individual’s total risk from all sources of
                                               comment regarding body weight, which                    consumption for waters in Indian lands.               exposure.
                                               requested that EPA use a body weight of                 This FCR supports the designated use of                 As in the proposed HHC, for the
                                               70 kg. However, the commenter did not                   sustenance fishing. EPA selected this                 pollutants included in EPA’s 2015
                                               present a sound scientific rationale to                 consumption rate based on information                 criteria update, EPA used the same
                                               support the use of a different body                     contained in an historical/                           RSCs in the final HHC as were used in
                                               weight. See Topic 6 of the RTC                          anthropological study, entitled the                   the criteria update. Also as in the
                                               document for a more detailed response.                  Wabanaki Cultural Lifeways Exposure                   proposed HHC, for pollutants where
                                                                                                       Scenario 19 (‘‘Wabanaki Study’’), which               EPA did not update the section 304(a)
                                                  IV. Drinking water intake. The final                 was completed in 2009. EPA also                       HHC in 2015, EPA used a default RSC
                                               HHC were calculated using the                           consulted with the tribes in Maine about              of 0.20 to derive the final HHC except
                                               proposed drinking water intake rate of                  the Wabanaki Study and their                          for antimony, for which EPA used an
                                               2.4 liters per day (L/day), consistent                  sustenance fishing uses of the waters in              RSC of 0.40 consistent with the RSC
                                               with the default drinking water intake                  Indian lands. There has been no                       value used the last time the Agency
                                               rate used in EPA’s most recent National                 contemporary local survey of current                  updated this criterion. EPA did not
                                               Recommended Water Quality Criteria.16                   fish consumption that documents fish                  receive any comments on specific RSCs
                                               This rate represents the per capita                     consumption rates for sustenance                      used in the derivation of the proposed
                                               estimate of combined direct and indirect                fishing in the waters in Indian lands in              criteria.
                                               community water ingestion at the 90th                   Maine. In the absence of such                         2. Final WQS for Waters in Indian Lands
                                               percentile for adults ages 21 and older.17              information, EPA concluded that the                   in Maine
                                               EPA did not receive any comments                        Wabanaki Study contains the best
                                               regarding the proposed drinking water                   currently available estimate for                      a. Bacteria Criteria
                                               intake rate.                                            contemporary tribal sustenance level                  i. Recreational Bacteria Criteria
                                                 V. Bioaccumulation Factors (BAFs)                     fish consumption for waters where the
                                                                                                                                                                EPA is finalizing the proposed year-
                                               and Bioconcentration Factors (BCFs).                    sustenance fishing designated use
                                                                                                                                                             round recreational bacteria criteria for
                                               The final HHC were calculated using the                 applies.
                                                                                                          EPA received many comments that                    Class AA, A, B, C, GPA, SA, SB and SC
                                               proposed pollutant-specific BAFs or                                                                           waters in Indian lands. The magnitude
                                               BCFs, consistent with the factors used                  agreed and some that disagreed with
                                                                                                       EPA’s selection of the proposed FCR of                criteria are expressed in terms of
                                               in EPA’s most recent National                                                                                 Escherichia coli colony forming units
                                               Recommended Water Quality Criteria.18                   286 g/day. Responses to those
                                                                                                       comments can be found in section III.D                per 100 milliliters (cfu/100 ml) for fresh
                                               These factors are used to relate aqueous                                                                      waters and Enterococcus spp. colony
                                                                                                       of this preamble and, in further detail,
                                               pollutant concentrations to predicted                                                                         forming units per 100 milliliters (cfu/
                                                                                                       in Topic 3 of the RTC document.
                                               pollutant concentrations in the edible                                                                        100 ml) for marine waters and are based
                                                                                                          VII. Relative Source Contribution
                                               portions of ingested species. EPA did                   (RSC). For pollutants that exhibit a                  on EPA’s 2012 Recreational Water
                                                                                                       threshold of exposure before deleterious              Quality Criteria (RWQC)
                                                  14 Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria
                                                                                                       effects occur, as is the case for                     recommendations.22
                                               for the Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986                                                                  Several comments supported EPA’s
                                               (June 29, 2015). See also: USEPA. 2015. Final 2015      noncarcinogens and nonlinear
                                               Updated National Recommended Human Health               carcinogens, EPA applied a RSC to                     proposed rule and the year round
                                               Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,         account for other potential human                     applicability of the criteria. Maine DEP
                                               Office of Water, Washington, DC. https://
                                                                                                       exposures to the pollutant.20 Other                   objected to EPA’s inclusion of wildlife
                                               www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-                                                                   sources in the scope of the bacteria
                                               criteria.                                               sources of exposure might include, but
                                                  15 USEPA. 2011. EPA Exposure Factors                 are not limited to, exposure to a                     criteria and requested that the criteria
                                               Handbook. United States Environmental Protection        particular pollutant from non-fish food               not be applicable from October 1–May
                                               Agency, Washington, DC EPA 600/R–090/052F.              consumption (e.g., consumption of                     14, similar to Maine’s disapproved
                                               http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/
                                                                                                       fruits, vegetables, grains, meats, or                 criteria. For the reasons discussed in
                                               recordisplay.cfm?deid=236252.                                                                                 section III.E.2., EPA has determined
                                                  16 Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria      poultry), dermal exposure, and
                                               for the Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986         inhalation exposure. For substances for               that, based on best available
                                               (June 29, 2015). See also: USEPA. 2015. Final 2015      which the toxicity endpoint is                        information, it is necessary to include
                                               Updated National Recommended Human Health
                                                                                                       carcinogenicity based on a linear low-                wildlife sources in the scope of the
                                               Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,                                                               criteria, and to apply the criteria year
                                               Office of Water, Washington, DC. https://               dose extrapolation, only the exposures
                                               www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-             from drinking water and fish ingestion                round, in order to protect human health
                                               criteria.                                               are reflected in HHC; no other potential              and the designated use of recreation in
                                                  17 USEPA. 2011. EPA Exposure Factors
                                                                                                       sources of exposure to pollutants or                  and on the water.
                                               Handbook. United States Environmental Protection
                                               Agency, Washington, DC. EPA 600/R–090/052F.             other potential exposure pathways have                ii. Shellfishing Bacteria Criteria
                                               http://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/                                                                                  EPA’s final bacteria rule for Class SA
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                                               recordisplay.cfm?deid=236252.                             19 Harper, B., Ranco, D., et al. 2009. Wabanaki
                                                  18 Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria      Traditional Cultural Lifeways Exposure Scenario.      shellfish harvesting areas for waters in
                                               for the Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986         https://www.epa.gov/tribal/wabanaki-traditional-
                                               (June 29, 2015). See also: USEPA. 2015. Final 2015      cultural-lifeways-exposure-scenario.                    21 Id.

                                               Updated National Recommended Human Health                 20 USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving              22 USEPA. 2012. Recreational Water Quality

                                               Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,         Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection     Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
                                               Office of Water, Washington, DC. https://               of Human Health. U.S. Environmental Protection        Office of Water, Washington, DC. Office of Water
                                               www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-             Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. EPA–         820–F–12–058. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/2012-
                                               criteria.                                               822–B–00–004.                                         recreational-water-quality-criteria.



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                                               92474            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               Indian lands differs slightly from the                  samples representative of the waters in               that 6.0 adequately protects aquatic life
                                               proposed numeric total coliform                         shellfish harvesting areas may not                    and notes in particular that pH values
                                               bacteria criteria, as a result of comments              exceed the criteria recommended under                 of 6.0 and lower have been shown to be
                                               from the state. Maine DEP requested                     the National Shellfish Sanitation                     detrimental to sensitive aquatic life,
                                               EPA to express the criteria in terms of                 Program, United States Food and Drug                  such as developing Atlantic salmon eggs
                                               fecal coliform bacteria rather than total               Administration as set forth in the Guide              and smolts.27 28 29 See Topic 11 of the
                                               coliform bacteria, noting that the                      for the Control of Molluscan Shellfish,               RTC document for more detailed
                                               National Shellfish Sanitation Program                   2015 Revision.’’ EPA has added a                      responses to comments.
                                               (NSSP) allows the use of either                         specific reference to the date of the
                                                                                                                                                             d. Temperature Criteria for Tidal Waters
                                               indicator, that Maine DEP sets permit                   NSSP recommendations because there
                                               limits on fecal coliform bacteria rather                are legal constraints on incorporating                   EPA is finalizing the proposed
                                               than total coliform, and that Maine                     future recommendations by reference.                  temperature criteria for tidal waters in
                                               Department of Marine Resources (DMR)                    The NSSP 2015 recommendations are                     Indian lands. The criteria will assure
                                               uses fecal coliform bacteria as its                     available online at: http://www.fda.gov/              protection of the indigenous marine
                                               indicator parameter when making                         Food/GuidanceRegulation/                              community characteristic of the
                                               shellfish area opening/closure                          FederalStateFoodPrograms/                             intertidal zone at Pleasant Point in
                                               decisions. Maine DMR requested EPA                      ucm2006754.htm. The                                   Passamaquoddy Bay, and are consistent
                                               not to specify a specific numeric                       recommendations are also included in                  with EPA’s CWA section 304(a)
                                               standard but rather to promulgate the                   the docket for this rulemaking, which is              recommended criteria for tidal waters.30
                                               same narrative criterion that applies to                available both online at regulations.gov              They include a maximum summer
                                               Class SB and SC waters. For those                       and in person at the EPA Docket Center                weekly average temperature and a
                                               classes of waters, Maine’s WQS provide                  Reading Room, William Jefferson                       maximum weekly average temperature
                                               that instream bacteria levels may not                   Clinton West Building, Room 3334,                     rise over reference site baseline
                                               exceed the criteria recommended under                   1301 Constitution Avenue NW.,                         conditions.
                                               the NSSP.                                               Washington, DC 20004, and (202) 566–                     Maine DEP commented with concerns
                                                  The NSSP is the federal/state                        1744. Finally, the 2015 NSSP                          about the difficulty of finding reference
                                               cooperative program recognized by the                   recommendations are obtainable from                   sites to determine baseline temperatures
                                               U.S. Food and Drug Administration                       the U.S. Food and Drug                                and a question about whether there
                                               (FDA) and the Interstate Shellfish                      Administration’s Center for Food Safety               should be a baseline established for
                                               Sanitation Conference (ISSC) for the                    and Applied Nutrition, Shellfish and                  each season. EPA is confident that
                                               sanitary control of shellfish produced                  Aquaculture Policy Branch, 5100 Paint                 reference sites will not be difficult to
                                               and sold for human consumption.                         Branch Parkway (HFS–325), College                     identify, and there is no need to
                                                  EPA agrees that the NSSP allows for                  Park, MD 20740.                                       establish separate baselines outside the
                                               the use of either fecal coliform bacteria                                                                     defined summer season. See Topic 12 of
                                               or total coliform bacteria as the                       b. Ammonia Criteria for Fresh Waters                  the RTC document for a more detailed
                                               indicator organism to protect shellfish                    EPA is finalizing the proposed                     response.
                                               harvesting. The current NSSP                            ammonia criteria for fresh waters in                  e. Natural Conditions Provisions
                                               recommendations 23 for those organisms                  Indian lands to protect aquatic life. The
                                               are consistent with EPA’s national                      criteria are based on EPA’s 2013                         EPA is finalizing the proposed rule for
                                               recommended water quality criteria.24                   updated CWA section 304(a)                            waters in Indian lands that stated that
                                               The NSSP recommendations for fecal                      recommended ammonia criteria.25 They                  Maine’s natural conditions provisions in
                                               coliform standards and sampling                         are expressed as functions of                         38 M.R.S. 420(2.A) and 464(4.C) do not
                                               protocols are set forth in Section II.                  temperature and pH, so the applicable                 apply to water quality criteria intended
                                               Model Ordinance Chapter IV. Growing                     criteria vary by waterbody, depending                 to protect public health. EPA received
                                               Areas .02 Microbial Standards (pages                    on the temperature and pH of those                    several comments in support of the
                                               51–54). The NSSP recommendations for                    waters. EPA received several comments                 proposed rule, and received no
                                               total coliform standards and sampling                   in support of the proposed ammonia                    comments requesting changes.
                                               protocols are set forth in Section IV,                  criteria, and received no comments                    f. Mixing Zone Policy
                                               Guidance Documents Chapter II.                          requesting changes.
                                               Growing Areas .01 Total Coliform                                                                                 EPA is finalizing the proposed mixing
                                                                                                       c. pH Criterion for Fresh Waters                      zone policy for waters in Indian lands
                                               Standards (pages 216–219). Both sets of
                                               recommendations apply to various types                     EPA is finalizing the proposed pH                  with one small change to the
                                               of shellfish growing areas including                    criterion of 6.5 to 8.5 to protect aquatic
                                                                                                                                                               27 Peterson, R.H., P.G. Daye, J.L. Metcalfe. 1980.
                                               remote status, areas affected by point                  life in fresh waters in Indian lands. The
                                                                                                                                                             Inhibition of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
                                               source pollution, and areas affected by                 criterion is based on EPA’s 1986                      hatching at low pH. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 37:
                                               nonpoint source pollution.                              national recommended criterion.26 EPA                 770–774.
                                                 In light of the state’s concerns and                  received comments from the state and                    28 Staurnes, M., F. Kroglund and B.O. Rosseland.

                                               suggestions, EPA’s final rule contains a                one industry, both requesting that                    1995. Water quality requirement of Atlantic salmon
                                                                                                                                                             (Salmo salar) in water undergoing acidification or
                                               narrative criterion similar to Maine’s                  Maine’s pH criterion of 6.0–8.5 be                    liming in Norway. Water, Air and Soil Pollution 85:
                                               approved criterion for Class SB and SC                  retained. However, EPA does not agree                 347–352.
                                               waters. The final rule provides ‘‘The                                                                           29 Staurnes, M., L.P. Hansen, K. Fugelli, R.

                                               numbers of total coliform bacteria or                     25 USEPA. 2013. Aquatic Life Ambient Water          Haraldstad. 1996. Short-term exposure to acid water
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                                                                                                       Quality Criteria for Ammonia-Freshwater 2013.         impairs osmoregulation, seawater tolerance, and
                                               other specified indicator organisms in                  United States Environmental Protection Agency,        subsequent marine survival of smolts of Atlantic
                                                                                                       Washington, DC. EPA 822–R–13–001. https://            salmon (Salmo salar L.) Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 53:
                                                 23 http://www.fda.gov/downloads/Food/Guidance         www.epa.gov/wqc/aquatic-life-criteria-ammonia.        1965–1704.
                                               Regulation/FederalStateFoodPrograms/                      26 USEPA. 1986. Quality Criteria for Water 1986,      30 USEPA. 1986. Quality Criteria for Water 1986,
                                               UCM505093.pdf.                                          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of       U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of
                                                 24 USEPA. 1986. Quality Criteria for Water 1986,      Water, Washington, DC. EPA 440/5–86–001. pH           Water, Washington, DC. EPA 440/5–86–001.
                                               United States Environmental Protection Agency,          section. https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/                   Temperature section. https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/
                                               Washington, DC. EPA 440/5–86–001.                       ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=00001MGA.txt.                        ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=00001MGA.txt.



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          92475

                                               prohibition of mixing zones for                         4. Final WQS for Waters in Maine                          EPA acknowledges that there are
                                               bioaccumulative pollutants.                             Outside of Indian Lands                                several steps in the Agency’s analysis of
                                               Specifically, in order to avoid confusion               a. Phenol HHC for Consumption of                       how Maine’s WQS must protect the uses
                                               over what is meant by ‘‘bioaccumulative                 Water Plus Organisms                                   of the waters in Indian lands, including
                                               pollutants’’ for the purpose of this rule,                                                                     application of the Agency’s expert
                                                                                                          EPA is finalizing the proposed phenol               scientific and policy judgment. The
                                               EPA has added a parenthetical
                                                                                                       HHC for consumption of water plus                      basic concepts are as follows:
                                               definition which specifies that
                                               bioaccumulative pollutants are those
                                                                                                       organisms of 4000 mg/L, for waters in                     • The Indian settlement acts provide
                                                                                                       Maine outside of Indian lands. The                     for the Indian tribes to fish for their
                                               ‘‘chemicals for which the                               criterion is consistent with EPA’s June                individual sustenance in waters in
                                               bioconcentration factors (BCF) or                       2015 national criteria                                 Indian lands and effectively establish a
                                               bioaccumulation factors (BAF) are                       recommendation,31 except that EPA                      sustenance fishing designated use
                                               greater than 1,000.’’ This definition is                used Maine’s default fish consumption                  cognizable under the CWA for such
                                               based on EPA’s definition of                            rate for the general population of 32.4                waters.
                                               bioaccumulation for chemical                            g/day, consistent with DEP Rule Chapter                   • The CWA and EPA’s regulations
                                               substances found at 64 FR 60194                         584.32 EPA received several comments                   mandate that water quality criteria must
                                               (November 4, 1999).                                     in support of the proposed rule, and                   protect designated uses of waters
                                                  EPA received several comments in                     received no comments requesting                        provided for in state law. Designated
                                               support of the mixing zone policy. One                  changes.                                               uses are use goals of a water, whether
                                               of those commenters added that a total                  III. Summary of Major Comments                         or not they are being attained.
                                                                                                       Received and EPA’s Response                               • When analyzing how water quality
                                               ban on mixing zones would be
                                                                                                                                                              criteria protect a designated use, an
                                               preferable. Two commenters asserted                     A. Overview of Comments                                agency must focus on the population
                                               that EPA does not have the legal                                                                               that is exercising that use, and must
                                               authority or the scientific basis to ban                   EPA received 104 total comments, 100
                                                                                                       of which are unique comments. The vast                 assess the full extent of that use’s goal,
                                               mixing zones for bioaccumulative                                                                               where data are available.
                                                                                                       majority of the comments were general
                                               pollutants outside the Great Lakes. EPA                                                                           The relevant explanatory details for
                                                                                                       statements of support for EPA’s
                                               disagrees, for the reasons discussed in                                                                        each step of this rationale are presented
                                                                                                       proposed rule from private citizens,
                                               section III.E.1 of this preamble. One                   including tribal members. Tribes and                   below. But the underlying structure of
                                               commenter raised comments about                         others provided substantive comments                   the analysis is straightforward and
                                               thermal mixing zones specific to its                    that also were generally supportive                    appropriate under and consistent with
                                               facility, and EPA’s response to those                   regarding the importance of protecting                 applicable law.
                                               comments are contained in the RTC                       the designated use of sustenance                          Another general comment EPA
                                               document at Topic 9.                                    fishing, identifying tribes as the target              received was that the agency’s approach
                                                                                                       population, and using a 286 g/day fish                 ‘‘would impermissibly give tribes in
                                               3. Final WQS for All Waters in Maine                                                                           Maine an enhanced status and greater
                                                                                                       consumption rate.
                                               a. Dissolved Oxygen for Class A Waters                     EPA also received comments critical                 rights with respect to water quality than
                                                                                                       of the proposal, principally from the                  the rest of Maine’s population.’’
                                                 EPA is finalizing the proposed                        Maine Attorney General and DEP, a                      Comments of Janet T. Mills, Maine
                                               dissolved oxygen criteria for all Class A               single discharger and a coalition of                   Attorney General, (page 2). EPA
                                               waters in Maine. The rule provides that                 dischargers, and two trade                             explains below why the analysis EPA
                                               dissolved oxygen shall not be less than                 organizations. The focus of the                        presented in its February 2015 decision
                                               7 ppm (7 mg/L) or 75% of saturation,                    remainder of this section III identifies               and the proposal for this action is not
                                               whichever is higher, year-round. For the                and responds to the major adverse                      only permissible, but also mandated by
                                               period from October 1 through May 14,                   comments. Additionally, a                              the CWA as informed by the Indian
                                               in fish spawning areas, the 7-day mean                  comprehensive RTC document                             settlement acts. But as a general matter
                                               dissolved oxygen concentration shall                    addressing all comments received is                    EPA disagrees that this action is
                                               not be less than 9.5 ppm (9.5 mg/L), and                included in the docket for this                        impermissible because it accords the
                                               the 1-day minimum dissolved oxygen                      rulemaking.                                            tribes in Maine ‘‘greater rights’’ or
                                                                                                                                                              somehow derogates the water quality
                                               concentration shall not be less than 8                  B. Maine Indian Settlement Acts                        protection provided to the rest of
                                               ppm (8.0 mg/L). EPA received several
                                                                                                         Before providing a more detailed                     Maine’s population.
                                               comments in support of the proposed                                                                               EPA is addressing the particular
                                                                                                       discussion of the rationale relating to
                                               criteria, and received no comments                      each element of EPA’s analysis                         sustenance fishing use provided for
                                               requesting changes.                                     supporting this promulgation, the                      these tribes under Maine law and
                                               b. Waiver or Modification of WQS                        Agency first addresses a general                       ratified by Congress. Because that use is
                                                                                                       complaint made by several commenters                   confirmed in provisions in the
                                                  EPA is finalizing the proposed rule                  that EPA has developed a complex                       settlement acts that pertain specifically
                                               stating that 38 M.R.S. 363–D, which                     rationale for its disapproval of Maine’s               and uniquely to the Indian tribes in
                                               allows waivers of state law in the event                HHC and corresponding promulgation.                    Maine, EPA’s analysis of the use and the
                                               of an oil spill, does not apply to state                                                                       protection of that use must necessarily
                                               or federal WQS applicable to waters in
                                                                                                          31 Final Updated Ambient Water Quality Criteria
                                                                                                                                                              focus on how the settlement acts intend
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                                                                                                       for the Protection of Human Health, 80 FR 36986        for the tribes to be able to use the waters
                                               Maine, including designated uses,                       (June 29, 2015). See also: USEPA. 2015. Final 2015
                                               criteria to protect designated uses, and                Updated National Recommended Human Health              at issue here. However, Maine’s claim
                                               antidegradation requirements. EPA                       Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,        that EPA is providing tribes in Maine
                                                                                                       Office of Water, Washington, DC. https://              ‘‘greater rights’’ than the general
                                               received several comments in support of                 www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-
                                               the proposed rule, and received no                      criteria.                                              population is incorrect. In this action,
                                               comments requesting changes.                               32 06–096 Code of Maine Rules, Chapter 584,         EPA is not granting ‘‘rights’’ to anyone.
                                                                                                       Surface Water Quality Criteria for Toxic Pollutants.   Rather, EPA is simply promulgating


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                                               92476            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               WQS in accordance with the                              conclusion that the Indian settlement                 their land base.38 MICSA combines with
                                               requirements of the CWA—i.e.,                           acts in Maine have the effect of                      MIA sections 6205 and 6205–A to
                                               identifying the designated use for waters               establishing a designated use that                    establish a framework for taking land
                                               in Indian lands, and establishing criteria              includes sustenance fishing. This                     into trust for those three Tribes, and
                                               to protect the target population                        section explains how the Indian                       laying out clear ground rules governing
                                               exercising that use. As explained above,                settlement acts provide for the Indian                any future alienation of that land and
                                               in light of the Indian settlement acts, the             tribes in Maine to fish for their                     the Southern Tribes’ reservations.
                                               designated use is sustenance fishing, the               sustenance, and responds to arguments                 Sections 4(a) and 5 of the ABMSA and
                                               tribes are the target population, and EPA               that this conclusion violates the                     section 7204 of the state MSA
                                               has selected the appropriate FCR of that                settlement acts. Section III.C explains               accomplish essentially the same result
                                               target population. This approach,                       how EPA, under the CWA, interprets                    for the Micmacs, consistent with the
                                               together with EPA’s selection of 10¥6                   those provisions of state law as a                    purpose of those statutes to put that
                                               CRL, is consistent with Maine’s                         sustenance fishing designated use                     tribe in the same position as the
                                               approach to protecting the target                       which must be protected by the WQS                    Maliseets.
                                               population in Maine waters outside of                   applicable to the waters where that use                  EPA has concluded that one of the
                                               Indian lands. EPA’s rule provides a                     applies.                                              overarching purposes of the
                                               comparable level of protection for the                     As explained in more detail in the                 establishment of this land base for the
                                               target population (sustenance fishers)                  RTC document, MICSA, MIA, ABMSA,                      tribes in Maine was to ensure their
                                               for the waters in Indian lands that                     and MSA include different provisions                  continued opportunity to engage in their
                                               Maine provides to the target population                 governing sustenance practices,                       unique cultural practices to maintain
                                               for its fishing designated use                          including fishing, depending on the                   their existence as a traditional culture.
                                               (recreational fishers) that applies to                  type of Indian lands involved. In the                 An important part of the tribes’
                                               waters outside Indian lands.33 Further,                 reservations of the Southern Tribes,                  traditional culture is their sustenance
                                               the resulting HHC that EPA is                           MIA explicitly reserves to the tribes the             lifeways. The legislative history for
                                               promulgating in this rule protect both                  right to fish for their individual                    MICSA makes it clear that one critical
                                               non-tribal members and tribal members                   sustenance.34 In the trust lands of the               purpose for assembling the land base for
                                               in Maine. The great majority of the                     Southern Tribes, MIA provides a                       the tribes in Maine was to preserve their
                                               waters subject to the HHC are rivers and                regulatory framework that requires                    culture. The Historical Background in
                                               streams that are shared in common with                  consideration of ‘‘the needs or desires of            the Senate Report for MICSA opens with
                                               non-Indians in the state or that flow into              the tribes to establish fishery practices             the observation that ‘‘All three Tribes
                                               or out of waters outside Indian lands. It               for the sustenance of the tribes,’’ among             [Penobscot, Passamaquoddy and
                                               is not just the members of the Indian                   other factors.35 Congress clearly                     Maliseet] are riverine in their land-
                                               tribes in Maine who will benefit from                   intended the Northern Tribes to be able               ownership orientation.’’ 39 Congress also
                                               EPA’s action today.                                     to sustain their culture on their trust               specifically noted that one purpose of
                                                  One striking aspect of the comments                  lands, consistent with Maine law, which               MICSA was to avoid acculturation of the
                                               EPA received on its proposal is that                    amply accommodates a sustenance                       tribes in Maine:
                                               every individual who commented                          fishing diet.36 Therefore, each of these
                                               supported EPA’s proposed action,                        provisions under the settlement acts in                 Nothing in the settlement provides for
                                               including many non-Indians. Nearly all                  its own way is designed to establish a                acculturation, nor is it the intent of Congress
                                                                                                                                                             to disturb the cultural integrity of the Indian
                                               of the comments were individualized                     land base for these tribes where they
                                                                                                                                                             people of Maine. To the contrary, the
                                               expressions of support, ranging from a                  may practice their sustenance lifeways.               Settlement offers protections against this
                                               profound recognition of the need to                     Indeed, EPA received an opinion from                  result being imposed by outside entities by
                                               honor commitments made to the tribes                    the Solicitor of the United States                    providing for tribal governments which are
                                               in the Indian settlement acts to an                     Department of the Interior (DOI), which               separate and apart from the towns and cities
                                               acknowledgement that everyone in                        analyzed the settlement acts and                      of the State of Maine and which control all
                                               Maine benefits from improved water                      concluded that the tribes in Maine                    such internal matters. The Settlement also
                                               quality. It is notable that the record for              ‘‘have fishing rights connected to the                clearly establishes that the Tribes in Maine
                                               this action shows that individuals in                   lands set aside for them under federal                will continue to be eligible for all federal
                                               Maine who commented did not express                     and state statutes.’’ 37                              Indian cultural programs.40
                                               concern that the tribes are being                          In its February 2015 decision, EPA                   As both the Penobscot and Maliseet
                                               accorded a special status or that this                  analyzed how the settlement acts                      extensively documented in their
                                               action will in any way disadvantage the                 include extensive provisions to confirm               comments on this action, their culture
                                               rest of Maine’s population.                             and expand the tribes’ land base. The                 relies heavily on sustenance practices,
                                                  As described in section II.B.1, EPA                  legislative record makes it clear that a              including sustenance fishing. So if a
                                               previously approved MIA sections                        key purpose behind that land base is to               purpose of MICSA is to avoid
                                               6207(4) and (9) as an explicit designated               preserve the tribes’ culture and support              acculturation and protect the tribes’
                                               use for the inland waters of the                        their sustenance practices. MICSA                     continued political and cultural
                                               reservations of the Southern Tribes and                 section 5 establishes a trust fund to                 existence on their land base, then a key
                                               interpreted and approved Maine’s                        allow the Southern Tribes and the                     purpose of that land base is to support
                                               designated use of ‘‘fishing’’ for all                   Maliseets to acquire land to be put into              those sustenance practices.
                                               waters in Indian lands to mean                          trust. In addition, the Southern Tribes’                Several comments dispute that the
                                               ‘‘sustenance fishing.’’ Several                         reservations are confirmed as part of                 settlement acts are intended to provide
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                                               commenters challenged EPA’s                                                                                   for the tribes’ sustenance lifeways, and
                                                                                                         34 30  M.R.S. section 6207(4).
                                                                                                         35 30
                                                                                                                                                             assert instead that their key purpose was
                                                 33 EPA  recognizes that the final HHC also reflect             M.R.S. section 6207(1), (3).
                                                                                                          36 102 S. Rpt. 136 (1991).
                                                                                                                                                             to subject the tribes to the jurisdictional
                                               inputs consistent with EPA’s 2015 section 304(a)
                                               recommendations, which are not currently reflected         37 Letter from Hilary C. Tompkins, Solicitor,
                                                                                                                                                               38 30  M.R.S. section 6205(1)(A) and (2)(A).
                                               in Maine’s HHC. EPA anticipates that Maine will         Department of Interior, to Avi S. Garbow, General
                                                                                                                                                               39 Sen.  Rep. No. 96–957, at 11.
                                               update its HHC consistent with these inputs in its      Counsel, EPA, January 30, 2015, a copy of which
                                               next triennial review.                                  is in the docket supporting this action.                40 Id. at 17.




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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                92477

                                               authority of the state and treat tribal                 This result does not violate the grant of             tribes and comments received by EPA
                                               members identically to all citizens in                  jurisdiction to the state. Rather, the state          on this point. In short, the settlement
                                               the state. These comments do not                        retains the authority to administer the               acts clearly codify a tribal right of
                                               dispute the evidence EPA relied on in                   WQS program throughout the state,                     sustenance fishing for inland,
                                               February 2015 to find that Congress                     subject to the same basic requirements                anadromous, and catadromous fish in
                                               intended to support the continuation of                 to protect designated uses of the waters              the inland waters of the Penobscot
                                               the tribes’ traditional culture. Rather,                as are applicable to all states.                      Nation’s and Passamaquoddy’s
                                               the commenters argue that the                              EPA also disagrees that promulgation               reservations.41 EPA approved this right,
                                               overriding purpose of the settlement                    of the HHC violates the so-called                     contained in state law, as an explicit
                                               acts was to impose state law, including                 savings clauses in MICSA, Pub. L. 96–                 designated use. The Southern Tribes
                                               state environmental law, on the tribes,                 420, 94 Stat. 1785 sections 6(h) and                  also have trust lands, to which the
                                               which the commenters believe the state                  16(b), which block the application of                 explicit sustenance fishing right in
                                               could do without regard to the                          federal law in Maine to the extent that               section 6207 of MIA does not apply, but
                                               settlement act provisions for sustenance                law ‘‘accords or relates to a special                 which are covered by a regulatory
                                               fishing. These assertions reflect an                    status or right of or to any Indian’’ or is           regime under MIA that specifically
                                               overly narrow interpretation of the                     ‘‘for the benefit of Indians’’ and ‘‘would            provides for the Southern Tribes to
                                               settlement acts, and EPA, with a                        affect or preempt’’ the application of                exercise their sustenance fishing
                                               supporting opinion from DOI, has                        state law. EPA has consistently been                  practices. The statutory framework for
                                               concluded that the settlement acts both                 clear that this action does not treat                 the Northern Tribes’ trust lands
                                               provide for the tribes’ sustenance                      tribes in Maine in a similar manner as
                                                                                                                                                             provides for more direct state regulation
                                               lifeways and subject the tribal lands to                a state (TAS) or in any way authorize
                                                                                                                                                             of those tribes’ fishing practices.
                                               state environmental regulation. Those                   any tribe in Maine to implement tribal
                                                                                                                                                             Nevertheless, as confirmed by an
                                               two purposes are not inconsistent, but                  WQS under the federal CWA. Therefore,
                                                                                                                                                             opinion from the U.S. Department of the
                                               rather support each other. It would be                  arguments about whether MICSA blocks
                                                                                                                                                             Interior,42 the Northern Tribes’ trust
                                               inconsistent for the state to codify                    the tribes from applying to EPA for TAS
                                                                                                       under CWA section 518(e) are outside                  lands include sustenance fishing rights
                                               provisions for tribal sustenance fishing                                                                      appurtenant to those land acquisitions,
                                               in one state law, which was                             the scope of, and entirely irrelevant to,
                                                                                                       EPA’s promulgation of federal WQS.                    subject to state regulation. Accordingly,
                                               congressionally ratified, and then in                                                                         EPA appropriately approved the
                                               another state law subject that practice to                 Additionally, EPA disagrees that its
                                                                                                       disapproval of certain WQS in tribal                  ‘‘fishing’’ designated use as ‘‘sustenance
                                               environmental conditions that render it                                                                       fishing’’ for all waters in Indian lands.
                                               unsafe.                                                 waters and this promulgation will
                                                                                                       ‘‘affect or preempt the application of the               Tribal representatives and members
                                                  EPA disagrees with the comment that                  laws of the State of Maine’’ using a                  commented that EPA’s promulgation of
                                               promulgation of the HHC violates the                    federal law that accords a special status             HHC is consistent with EPA’s trust
                                               jurisdictional arrangement in MICSA                     to Indians within the meaning of MICSA                responsibility to the Indian tribes in
                                               and MIA. The assertion appears to be                    section 6(h) or a federal law ‘‘for the               Maine, and some suggested that EPA’s
                                               that the grant of jurisdiction to the state             benefit of Indians’’ within the meaning               trust relationship with the tribes
                                               in the territories of the Indian tribes in              of section 16(b). With this promulgation,             compels EPA to take this action.
                                               Maine means that the tribes must                        EPA is developing WQS consistent with                 Conversely, one commenter argued that
                                               always be subject to the same                           the requirements of the CWA as applied                this action is not authorized because the
                                               environmental standards as any other                    to the legal framework and factual                    federal government has no obligation
                                               person in Maine. As EPA made clear in                   circumstances created by the Indian                   under the trust responsibility to take
                                               its February 2015 decision, the Agency                  settlement acts. EPA here is acting                   this action, and the Indian settlement
                                               agrees that MICSA grants the state the                  under CWA section 303, which was not                  acts create no specific trust obligation to
                                               authority to set WQS in Indian                          adopted ‘‘for the benefit of Indians,’’ but           protect the tribes’ ability to fish for their
                                               territories. Making that finding,                       rather sets up a system of cooperative
                                               however, does not then lead to the                                                                            sustenance. These comments raise
                                                                                                       federalism typical of federal                         questions about the nature and extent of
                                               conclusion that the state has unbounded                 environmental statutes, where states are
                                               authority to set WQS without regard to                                                                        the federal trust responsibility to the
                                                                                                       given the lead in establishing                        Indian tribes in Maine and the extent to
                                               the factual circumstances and legal                     environmental requirements for areas
                                               framework that apply to the tribes under                                                                      which the trust is related to this action.
                                                                                                       under their jurisdiction, but within                  EPA agrees that this action is consistent
                                               both the CWA and the Indian settlement                  bounds defined by the CWA and subject
                                               acts. No state has authority or                                                                               with the United States’ general trust
                                                                                                       to federal oversight. In this case, the
                                               jurisdiction to adopt WQS that do not                                                                         responsibility to the tribes in Maine.
                                                                                                       Indian settlement acts provide for the
                                               comply with the requirements of the                                                                           EPA also agrees that the trust
                                                                                                       tribes to fish for their sustenance in
                                               CWA. The state, like EPA and the tribes,                                                                      relationship does not create an
                                                                                                       waters in or adjacent to territories set
                                               is bound to honor the provisions of the                                                                       independent enforceable mandate or
                                                                                                       aside for them, which has the effect of
                                               Indian settlement acts. Here, the CWA,                                                                        specific trust requirement beyond the
                                                                                                       establishing a sustenance fishing use in
                                               as informed by and applied in light of                                                                        Agency’s obligation to comply with the
                                                                                                       those waters. Because that sustenance
                                               the requirements of the settlement acts,                                                                      legal requirements generally applicable
                                                                                                       fishing use applies in those waters,
                                               requires that WQS addressing fish                                                                             to this situation under federal law, in
                                                                                                       CWA section 303 requires Maine and
                                               consumption in these waters adequately                                                                        this case the CWA as applied to the
                                                                                                       EPA to ensure that use is protected. It
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                                               protect the sustenance fishing use                                                                            circumstances of the tribes in Maine
                                                                                                       cannot be the case that the savings
                                               applicable to the waters. Because this                                                                        under the settlement acts.
                                                                                                       clauses in MICSA are intended to block
                                               use applies only to particular waters                   implementation of the Indian settlement                 41 30 M.R.S. section 6207.
                                               that pertain to the tribes, the WQS                     acts or MICSA itself.                                   42 Letter from Hilary C. Tompkins, Solicitor,
                                               designed to protect the use will                           In the RTC document, EPA addresses                 Department of Interior, to Avi S. Garbow, General
                                               necessarily differ from WQS applicable                  in detail the distinctions contained in               Counsel, EPA, January 30, 2015, a copy of which
                                               to other waters generally in the state.                 the Indian settlement acts for the Maine              is in the docket supporting this action.



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                                               92478            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  Consulting with affected tribes before               1. EPA’s Approval of Certain Provisions                   to abide by any required procedures
                                               taking an action that affects their                     in MIA as a Designated Use of                             before approving the MIA provisions as
                                               interests is one of the cornerstones of                 Sustenance Fishing in Reservation                         a designated use. They were a ‘‘new’’
                                               the general trust relationship with                     Waters.                                                   WQS for the purpose of EPA review,
                                               tribes. EPA has fulfilled this                             State laws can operate as WQS when                     because EPA had never previously acted
                                               responsibility to the tribes in Maine.                  they affect, create or provide for, among                 on them. When EPA acts on any state’s
                                               EPA has consulted extensively with the                  other things, a use in particular waters,                 new or revised WQS, there are no
                                               tribes to understand their interests in                 even when the state has not specifically                  procedures necessary for EPA to
                                               this matter. EPA has also carefully                     identified that law as a WQS.43 EPA has                   undertake prior to approval.46 The
                                                                                                       the authority and duty to review and                      Maine state legislature, which has the
                                               weighed input from the tribes, as it has
                                                                                                       approve or disapprove such a state law                    authority to adopt designated uses, held
                                               all the comments the Agency received
                                                                                                       as a WQS for CWA purposes, even if the                    extensive hearings reviewing the
                                               on this action.                                                                                                   provisions of the MIA, including those
                                                                                                       state has not submitted the law to EPA
                                                  EPA does not agree that the substance                for approval.44 Indeed, EPA has                           regarding sustenance fishing.
                                               of this action is compelled or authorized               previously identified and disapproved a                   2. EPA’s Interpretation and Approval of
                                               by the federal trust relationship with the              Maine law as a ‘‘de facto’’ WQS despite                   Maine’s ‘‘Fishing’’ Designated Use To
                                               tribes in Maine independent of                          the fact that Maine did not label or                      Include Sustenance Fishing.
                                               generally applicable federal law. This                  present it as such.45
                                               action is anchored in two sets of legal                    The MIA is binding law in the state,                      In addition to approving certain
                                               requirements: First, the Indian                         and sections 6207(4) and (9) in that law                  provisions of MIA as a designated use
                                               settlement acts, which reserve the tribes’              clearly establish a right of sustenance                   in the Southern Tribes’ inland
                                                                                                       fishing in the inland reservation waters                  reservation waters, EPA also interpreted
                                               ability to engage in sustenance fishing;
                                                                                                       of the Southern Tribes. See Topic 3 of                    and approved Maine’s designated use of
                                               second, the CWA, which requires that
                                                                                                       the RTC document for a more detailed                      ‘‘fishing’’ to mean ‘‘sustenance fishing’’
                                               this use must be protected. The trust                                                                             for all waters in Indian lands. EPA
                                               responsibility does not enhance or                      discussion. In other words, the state law
                                                                                                       provides for a particular use in                          disagrees with comments that claim that
                                               augment these legal requirements, and                                                                             EPA had no authority to do so because
                                               EPA is not relying on the trust                         particular waters. It was therefore
                                                                                                       appropriate for EPA to recognize that                     EPA had previously approved that use
                                               responsibility as a separate legal basis                                                                          for all waters in Maine without such an
                                               for this action. The Indian settlement                  state law as a water quality standard,
                                                                                                       and more specifically, as a designated                    interpretation. While EPA approved the
                                               acts created a legal framework with                                                                               ‘‘fishing’’ designated use in 1986 for
                                                                                                       use. EPA’s approval of these MIA
                                               respect to these tribes that triggered an                                                                         other state waters, prior to its February
                                                                                                       provisions as a designated use of
                                               analysis under the CWA about how to                     sustenance fishing does not create a new                  2015 decision, EPA had not approved
                                               protect the sustenance fishing use                      federal designated use of tribal                          any of the state’s WQS, including the
                                               provided for under the settlement acts.                 ‘‘sustenance fishing,’’ but rather gives                  ‘‘fishing’’ designated use, as being
                                               This analysis necessarily involves                      effect to a WQS in state law for CWA                      applicable to waters in Indian lands.
                                               application of EPA’s WQS regulations,                                                                                Under basic principles of federal
                                                                                                       purposes in the same manner as other
                                               guidance, and science to yield a result                                                                           Indian law, states generally lack civil
                                                                                                       state WQS. Furthermore, contrary to
                                               that is specific to these tribes, but each                                                                        regulatory jurisdiction within Indian
                                                                                                       commenters’ assertions, EPA did not fail
                                               step of the analysis is founded in                                                                                country as defined in 18 U.S.C. 1151.47
                                                                                                                                                                 Thus, EPA cannot presume a state has
                                               generally applicable requirements under                    43 See Florida Pub. Interest Grp v. EPA, 386 F.3d

                                                                                                       1070, 1089–90 (11th Cir. 2004) (holding that in           authority to establish WQS or otherwise
                                               the CWA, not an independent specific
                                                                                                       order to determine whether a state law constitutes        regulate in Indian country. Instead, a
                                               trust mandate.                                          a WQS, a district court must ‘‘look beyond the            state must demonstrate its jurisdiction,
                                                                                                       [state’s] characterization of [the law]’’ and             and EPA must determine that the state
                                               C. Sustenance Fishing Designated Use                    ‘‘determine[ ] whether the practical impact of the
                                                                                                       [law] was to revise [the state’s WQS]’’ irrespective      has made the requisite demonstration
                                                  Several commenters challenged EPA’s                  of the state’s ‘‘decision not to describe its own         and has authority, before a state can
                                               approval, in its February 2015 Decision,                regulations as new or revised [WQS]’’); Pine Creek        implement a program in Indian country.
                                               of sections 6207(4) and (9) of the MIA                  Valley Watershed Ass’n v. United States, 137 F.           Accordingly, EPA cannot approve a
                                                                                                       Supp. 3d 767, 776 (E.D. Pa. 2015) (deferring to
                                               as a designated use of sustenance                       EPA’s determination on whether or not a state law         state WQS for a water in Indian lands
                                               fishing applicable to inland waters of                  constitutes a WQS).                                       if it has not first determined that the
                                               the Southern Tribes’ reservations.                         44 See EPA, What is a New or Revised Water             state has authority to do so.
                                               Several commenters also argued that                     Quality Standard Under CWA 303(c)(3)? Frequently             EPA first determined on February 2,
                                                                                                       Asked Questions, October 2012. See also, Friends          2015, that Maine has authority to
                                               EPA had no authority to approve                         of Merrymeeting Bay v. Olsen, 839 F. Supp. 2d 366,
                                               Maine’s ‘‘fishing’’ designated use with                 375 (D. Me. 2012) (‘‘The EPA is under an obligation       establish WQS for waters in Indian
                                               the interpretation that it means                        to review a law that changes a water quality              lands. Consistent with the principle
                                                                                                       standard regardless of whether a state presents it for    articulated above, it is EPA’s position
                                               ‘‘sustenance fishing’’ for waters in                    review.’’); Miccosukee Tribe of Indians v. EPA, 105       that all WQS approvals that occurred
                                               Indian lands. Related to both approvals,                F.3d 599, 602 (11th Cir. 1997) (‘‘Even if a state fails
                                                                                                       to submit new or revised standards, a change in           prior to this date were limited to state
                                               the commenters argued that Maine had
                                                                                                       state water quality standards could invoke the
                                               never adopted a designated use of                       mandatory duty imposed on the Administrator to              46 See  33 U.S.C. 1313(c)(3) and 40 CFR part 131.
                                               ‘‘sustenance fishing,’’ thus EPA could                  review new or revised standards.’’).                        47 Alaska   v. Native Vill. of Venetie Tribal Gov’t,
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                                               not approve such a use, and that EPA                       45 Letter from Stephen S. Perkins, Director of         522 U.S. 520, 527 n.1. (1998) (‘‘[g]enerally speaking,
                                               did not follow procedures required                      Office of Ecosystem Protection, EPA, to William J.        primary jurisdiction over land that is Indian
                                                                                                       Schneider, Maine Attorney General (July 9, 2012)          country rests with the Federal Government and the
                                               under the CWA in approving any                          (disapproving as a WQS a state law that required          Indian Tribe inhabiting it, and not with the
                                               ‘‘sustenance fishing’’ designated use.                  prevention of river herring passage on St. Croix          States.’’); see also Okla. Tax Comm’n v. Sac and
                                               EPA disagrees, as discussed in sections                 River); see Friends of Merrymeeting Bay, 839 F.           Fox Nation, 508 U.S. 114, 128 (1993) (‘‘[a]bsent
                                                                                                       Supp. 2d at 375 (indicating EPA must consider             explicit congressional direction to the contrary, we
                                               III.C.1 and 2.                                          whether such state law has the effect of changing         presume against a State’s having the jurisdiction to
                                                                                                       a WQS).                                                   tax within Indian Country . . . .’’).



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                    92479

                                               waters outside of waters in Indian lands.                 This is consistent with EPA’s recent                   limits and have no implications for the
                                               With regard to the ‘‘fishing’’ designated                 actions and positions regarding tribal                 WQS that apply to the waters where the
                                               use, Maine submitted revisions to its                     fishing rights and water quality                       tribes are meant to fish. EPA does not
                                               water quality standards program now                       standards in the State of Washington.49                agree with this narrow interpretation of
                                               codified at 38 M.R.S. section 464–470,                       In acting on the ‘‘fishing’’ designated             the relationship between the provisions
                                               to EPA in 1986. This submittal included                   use for waters in Indian lands for the                 for tribal sustenance practices on the
                                               Maine’s designated use of ‘‘fishing’’ for                 first time, it was reasonable and                      one hand and water quality on the
                                               all surface waters in the state. On July                  appropriate for EPA to explicitly                      other. Fundamentally, the tribes’ ability
                                               16, 1986, EPA approved most of the                        interpret and approve the use to include               to take fish for their sustenance under
                                               revised WQS, including the designated                     sustenance fishing for the waters in                   the settlement acts would be rendered
                                               uses for surface waters, without explicit                 Indian lands. This interpretation                      meaningless if it were not supported
                                               mention of the ‘‘fishing’’ designated use                 harmonized two applicable laws: The                    under the CWA by water quality
                                               or of the standards’ applicability to                     provision for sustenance fishing                       sufficient to ensure that tribal members
                                               waters in Indian lands. Maine did not                     contained in the Indian settlement acts,               can safely eat the fish for their own
                                               expressly assert its authority to establish               as explained above in section III.B, and               sustenance.
                                               WQS in Indian waters until its 2009                       the CWA. Indeed, where an action                          When Congress identifies and
                                               WQS submittal, and EPA did not                            required of EPA under the CWA                          provides for a particular purpose or use
                                               expressly determine that Maine has                        implicates another federal statute, such               of specific Indian lands, it is reasonable
                                               such authority until February 2015.                       as MICSA, EPA must harmonize the two                   and supported by precedent for an
                                               Therefore, EPA did not approve Maine’s                    statutes to the extent possible.50 This is             agency to consider whether its actions
                                               designated use of ‘‘fishing’’ to apply in                 consistent with circumstances where                    have an impact on a tribe’s exercise of
                                               Indian waters in 1986, and EPA’s                          federal Indian laws are implicated and                 that purpose or use and to ensure
                                               approval of that use for other waters in                  the Indian canons of statutory                         through exercise of its authorities that
                                               Maine at that time was not applicable to                  construction apply.51 Because the                      its actions protect that purpose or use.
                                               Indian waters in Maine.                                   Indian settlement acts provide for                     For example, the Ninth Circuit Court of
                                                  EPA acknowledges the comment that,                     sustenance fishing in waters in Indian                 Appeals recently determined that the
                                               prior to February 2015, EPA had not                       lands, and EPA has authority to                        right of tribes in the State of Washington
                                               previously taken the position that                        reasonably interpret state WQS when                    to fish for their subsistence in their
                                               Maine’s designated use of ‘‘fishing’’                     taking action on them, EPA necessarily                 ‘‘usual and accustomed’’ places
                                               included a designated use of                              interpreted the ‘‘fishing’’ use as                     necessarily included the right to an
                                               ‘‘sustenance fishing.’’ As explained                      ‘‘sustenance fishing’’ for these waters,               adequate supply of fish, despite the
                                               herein, it was not until February 2,                      lest its CWA approval action contradict                absence of any explicit language in the
                                               2015, that EPA determined that Maine’s                    and, as a practical matter, effectively                applicable treaties to that effect.53
                                               WQS were applicable to waters in                          limit or abrogate the Indian settlement                Specifically, the Court held that ‘‘the
                                               Indian lands, so it was not until then                    acts (a power that would be beyond                     Tribes’ right of access to their usual and
                                               that EPA reviewed Maine’s ‘‘fishing’’                     EPA’s authority).52 Accordingly, EPA’s                 accustomed fishing places would be
                                               designated use for those waters and                       interpretation of Maine’s ‘‘fishing’’                  worthless without harvestable fish.’’ 54
                                               concluded that, in light of the                           designated use reasonably and                          Similarly, it would defeat the purpose of
                                               settlement acts, it must include                          appropriately harmonized the                           MIA, MICSA, MSA, and ABMSA for the
                                               sustenance fishing as applied to waters                   intersecting provisions of the CWA and
                                               in Indian lands.                                          the Indian settlement acts.                               53 United States v. Washington, No. 13–35474,
                                                  EPA disagrees with comments that                          Finally, one commenter argued that                  2016 U.S. App. Lexis 11709 (9th Cir. June 27, 2016).
                                               asserted that EPA could not approve the                   the settlement acts’ provisions for                    See also United States v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371, 384
                                               ‘‘fishing’’ designated use as meaning                     sustenance fishing are merely                          (1905) (tribe must be allowed to cross private
                                                                                                         exceptions to otherwise applicable creel               property to access traditional fishing ground);
                                               ‘‘sustenance fishing’’ for waters in                                                                             Kittitas Reclamation District v. Sunnyside Valley
                                               Indian lands unless EPA first made a                                                                             Irrigation District, 763 F.2d 1032, 1033–34 (9th Cir.
                                               determination under CWA section                           WQS in the NPDES context is entitled to                1985) (tribe’s fishing right protected by enjoining
                                               303(c)(4)(B) that the ‘‘fishing’’                         ‘‘substantial deference’’).                            water withdrawals that would destroy salmon eggs
                                                                                                            49 See Revision of Certain Federal Water Quality
                                                                                                                                                                before they could hatch); Grand Traverse Band of
                                               designated use was inconsistent with                      Criteria Applicable to Washington: 81 FR 85417         Ottawa and Chippewa Indians v. Director, Mich.
                                               the CWA. Because EPA had not                              (November 28, 2016).                                   Dept of Nat. Resources, 141 F.3d 635 (6th Cir. 1989)
                                               previously approved the ‘‘fishing’’                          50 See Nat’l Ass’n of Home Builders v. Defenders    (treaty right to fish commercially in the Great Lakes
                                               designated use for waters in Indian                       of Wildlife, 551 U.S. 644, 664 (2007)                  found to include a right to temporary mooring of
                                                                                                         (acknowledging EPA’s duty to harmonize CWA and         treaty fishing vessels at municipal marinas because
                                               lands, EPA had the duty and authority                     Endangered Species Act to give effect to both          without such mooring the Indians could not fish
                                               to act on that use in its February 2015                   statutes where the Agency has discretion to do so);    commercially); Colville Confederated Tribes v.
                                               decision, and was not required to make                    see also United States v. Borden Co., 308 U.S. 188,    Walton, 647 F.2d 42, 47–48 (9th Cir. 1981)
                                               a determination under CWA section                         198 (1939) (‘‘When there are two acts upon the         (implying reservation of water to preserve tribe’s
                                                                                                         same subject, the rule is to give effect to both if    replacement fishing grounds); Winters v. United
                                               303(c)(4)(B) before it could interpret and                possible.’’).                                          States, 207 U.S. 564, 576 (1908) (express reservation
                                               approve the use for waters in Indian                         51 See Penobscot Nation v. Mills, 151 F. Supp. 3d   of land for reservation impliedly reserved sufficient
                                               lands. Additionally, because the term                     at 213–214 (applying the Indian canons of statutory    water from the river to fulfill the purposes of the
                                               ‘‘fishing’’ is ambiguous in Maine’s WQS,                  construction to MIA and MICSA); see also               reservation); Arizona v. California, 373 U.S. 546,
                                                                                                         Penobscot Nation v. Fellencer, 164, F.3d 706, 709      598–601 (1963) (creation of reservation implied
                                               even if EPA had previously approved it                    (1st Cir. 1999) (applying Indian cannon to MICSA       intent to reserve sufficient water to satisfy present
                                               for all waters in the state, it is
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                                                                                                         and citing to County of Oneida v. Oneida Indian        and future needs).
                                               reasonable for EPA to explicitly                          Nation, 470 U.S. 226, 247 (1985) (‘‘it is well            54 United States v. Washington, No. 13–35474,

                                               interpret the use to include sustenance                   established that treaties should be construed          2016 U.S. App. Lexis 11709 (9th Cir. June 27, 2016).
                                                                                                         liberally in favor of the Indians with ambiguous       The court also acknowledged that the fishing clause
                                               fishing for the waters in Indian lands in                 provisions interpreted for their benefit’’)).          of the Stevens Treaties could give rise to other
                                               light of the Indian settlement acts.48                       52 See Minn. v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa         environmental obligations, but that those would
                                                                                                         Indians, 526 U.S. 172, 202 (1999) (‘‘Congress may      need to be addressed on a case-by-case basis
                                                 48 See Arkansas v. Oklahoma, 503 U.S. 91, 110           abrogate Indian treaty rights, but it must clearly     depending on the precise nature of the action. Id.
                                               (1992) (holding that EPA’s interpretation of state        express its intent to do so.’’).                       at *18–19.



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                                               92480            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               tribes in Maine to be deprived of the                    as the target general population results              2. Wabanaki Study
                                               ability to safely consume fish from their                in HHC sufficient under the CWA to                       EPA received several comments that
                                               waters at sustenance levels. Consistent                  ensure that the tribes’ ability to exercise           the FCR of 286 g/day, derived to support
                                               with this case law, the Department of                    the designated use of sustenance                      the sustenance fishing use, and used in
                                               the Interior provided EPA with a legal                   fishing, as provided for in the settlement            the calculation of the promulgated HHC,
                                               opinion which concludes that                             acts, is not substantially affected or                is too high and not based on sound
                                               ‘‘fundamental, long-standing tenets of                   impaired. Therefore, the tribal                       science. In particular, commenters
                                               federal Indian law support the                           population must be the focus of the risk              asserted that it was improper for EPA to
                                               interpretation of tribal fishing rights to               assessment supporting HHC for the                     rely on the Wabanaki Study because it
                                               include the right to sufficient water                    waters to which the sustenance fishing                is irrelevant and aspirational. These
                                               quality to effectuate the fishing right.’’ 55
                                                                                                        use applies. To do otherwise risks                    commenters instead prefer the use of a
                                               If EPA were to ignore the impact that
                                                                                                        undermining the purpose for which                     1992 study conducted by McLaren/
                                               water quality, and specifically water
                                                                                                        Congress established and confirmed the                Hart—ChemRisk of Portland, Maine
                                               quality standards under the CWA, could
                                                                                                        tribes’ land base, as described more                  (‘‘the 1992 ChemRisk Study’’).60 EPA
                                               have on the tribes’ ability to safely
                                                                                                        fully in section III.B.                               disagrees for the following reasons.
                                               engage in their sustenance fishing
                                               practices on their lands, the Agency                        Contrary to the commenters’ claims,                   After considering other sources,
                                               would be contradicting the clear                                                                               including the 1992 ChemRisk Study (see
                                                                                                        EPA’s 2000 Methodology does not
                                               purpose for which Congress ratified the                                                                        discussion below), EPA derived the FCR
                                                                                                        mandate that the tribes be treated as a
                                               settlement acts in Maine and provided                                                                          from a peer-reviewed estimate of
                                                                                                        highly exposed subpopulation. EPA’s
                                               for the establishment of Indian lands in                                                                       traditional sustenance fish consumption
                                                                                                        general approach in the 2000
                                               the state. Therefore, it is incumbent                                                                          from the Wabanaki Study. EPA finds
                                                                                                        Methodology, and in deriving national                 that the Wabanaki Study used a sound
                                               upon EPA when applying the                               CWA section 304(a) recommended
                                               requirements of the CWA to harmonize                                                                           methodology (peer reviewed, written by
                                                                                                        criteria, is for HHC to provide a high                experts in risk assessment and
                                               those requirements with this                             level of protection for the general
                                               Congressional purpose.                                                                                         anthropology), and contains the best
                                                                                                        population, while recognizing that more               currently available information for the
                                               D. Human Health Criteria for Toxics for                  highly exposed ‘‘subpopulations’’ may                 purpose of deriving an FCR for HHC
                                               Waters in Indian Lands                                   face greater levels of risk.58 However, in            adequate to protect present day
                                               1. Target Population                                     addition to recommending protection of                sustenance fishing for such waters. It is
                                                                                                        the general population based on fish                  the only local study focused on the
                                                  EPA received two comments that it                     consumption rates designed to represent               tribal members and areas most heavily
                                               improperly and without justification                     ‘‘the general population of fish                      used by those members today. While it
                                               identified the tribes as the target                      consumers,’’ the 2000 Methodology                     relies on daily caloric and protein intake
                                               population, as opposed to a highly                       recommends that states assess whether                 to derive heritage FCRs, the FCR of 286
                                               exposed subpopulation, for the HHC for
                                                                                                        there might be more highly exposed                    g/day is also the best currently available
                                               waters in Indian lands. On the contrary,
                                                                                                        subpopulations or ‘‘population groups’’               estimate for contemporary tribal
                                               EPA’s approach is entirely consistent
                                                                                                        that require the use of a higher fish                 sustenance level fish consumption for
                                               with EPA regulations and policy, as
                                               informed by the settlement acts.                         consumption rate to protect them as the               waters where the sustenance fishing
                                                  Pursuant to 40 CFR 131.11(a)(1),                      ‘‘target population group(s).’’ 59 The                designated use applies.
                                               water quality criteria must be adequate                  2000 Methodology does not speak to or                    In addition, EPA consulted with tribal
                                               to protect the designated uses.                          expressly envision the unique situation               governments to obtain their views on
                                               Developing HHC to protect the                            of setting HHC for waters where there is              the suitability of the Wabanaki Study
                                               sustenance fishing designated use in                     a tribal sustenance fishing designated                and any additional relevant information
                                               waters in Indian lands necessarily                       use. Nevertheless, it is entirely                     to select a FCR for this final rulemaking.
                                               involves identifying the population                      consistent with the 2000 Methodology                  The tribes represented that the
                                               exercising that use as the target                        for EPA to identify the tribes as the                 Wabanaki study and corresponding rate
                                               population.56 The tribes are not a highly                target general population for protection,             of 286 g/day is an appropriate and
                                               exposed or high-consuming                                rather than as a highly exposed                       accurate portrayal of their present day
                                               subpopulation in their own lands; they                   subpopulation, and to apply the 2000                  sustenance fishing lifeway, absent
                                               are the general population for which the                 Methodology’s recommendations on                      significant improvement in the
                                               federal set-aside of these lands and their               exposure for the general population,                  availability of anadromous fish species,
                                               waters was designed.57 Treating tribes                                                                         and EPA gave significant weight to the
                                                                                                        including the FCR and CRL, to the tribal
                                                                                                                                                              tribes’ representations.61
                                                                                                        target population.
                                                  55 Letter from Hilary C. Tompkins, Solicitor,
                                                                                                                                                                60 ChemRisk, A Division of McLaren Hart, and
                                               Department of Interior, to Avi S. Garbow, General
                                               Counsel, EPA, January 30, 2015, a copy of which          waters. On major rivers such as the Penobscot         HBRS, Inc., Consumption of Freshwater Fish by
                                               is in the docket supporting this action.                 River, for example, the general population has the    Maine Anglers, as revised, July 24, 1992.
                                                  56 One of the commenters, Maine’s Attorney            right to pass through the waters in Indian lands.       61 Indeed, in developing its own 2014 tribal water

                                               General, concedes as much. Her objection to EPA’s        The presence of some nonmembers fishing on these      quality criteria, the Penobscot Nation used a FCR
                                               approach rests on her assertion that there is no         waters, however, does not change the fact that the    of 286 g/day. The Nation explained that it chose the
                                               designated use of sustenance fishing for the waters      resident population in the Indian lands is made up    inland non-anadromous total FCR of 286 g/day
                                               in Indian lands. But she recognizes that had the         of tribal members who expect to fish for their        presented in the Wabanaki Study because, although
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                                               Maine Legislature adopted proposed legislation for       sustenance in the waters in Indian lands pursuant     the Penobscot lands are in areas that would have
                                               a ‘‘subsistence fishing’’ designated use for a portion   to the settlement acts.                               historically supported an inland anadromous diet
                                                                                                           58 USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving
                                               of the Penobscot River, the adoption of that use                                                               (with total FCR of 514 g/day), the contemporary
                                               would have protected the subsistence fishers as the      Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection     populations of anadromous species in Penobscot
                                               target population for the stretch of the river to        of Human Health (2000). U.S. Environmental            waters are currently too low to be harvested in
                                               which the use applied. See Comments of Maine’s           Protection Agency, Office of Science and              significant quantities. Penobscot Nation,
                                               Attorney General at 11.                                  Technology, Washington, DC. EPA 822–B–00–004,         Department of Natural Resources, Response to
                                                  57 EPA recognizes that tribal members will not be     pp. 2–1 to 2–3.                                       Comments on Draft Water Quality Standards,
                                               the only population fishing from some of these              59 Id., pp. 4–24 to 4–25.                          September 23, 2014, p. 9.



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                              92481

                                                  As explained in EPA’s disapproval                    consumption for rivers and streams as well             organisms from the different trophic
                                               and preamble to the proposed rule, the                  as the inclusive ‘all waters’ categories are           levels 2 through 4 as is consumed by the
                                               data from the ChemRisk Study are not                    likely to have been affected to some degree.64         adult U.S. population. As identified in
                                               suitable as a source for deriving the FCR               3. Cancer Risk Level                                   the 2015 criteria update, the relative
                                               for waters in Indian lands in Maine.                                                                           percent of the total fish consumption
                                               That study was not a survey of tribal                      With respect to the cancer risk
                                                                                                                                                              rate for trophic levels 2 through 4 for the
                                               sustenance fishers in tribal waters.                    management value used in deriving the
                                                                                                       HHC of 10¥6, one commenter noted that                  adult U.S. population amounts to 36%,
                                               Rather, it was a statewide recreational                                                                        40%, and 24%.67 Accordingly, EPA
                                               angler survey that polled anglers with                  this value was unduly protective of
                                                                                                       public health while another implied the                adjusted the 286 g/day total tribal fish
                                               state fishing licenses and was not a                                                                           consumption rate by these same
                                               survey intended to characterize tribal                  Agency could adopt a more protective
                                                                                                       risk management level, and several                     percentages and arrived at trophic-
                                               fish consumption in tribal waters. As                                                                          specific fish consumption rates of 103
                                               explained by tribal representatives both                supported EPA’s use of 10¥6. In
                                                                                                       promulgating HHC for the tribes in                     g/day (trophic level 2), 114 g/day
                                               in comments on Maine’s 2012 revisions
                                                                                                       Maine, EPA incorporated an excess                      (trophic level 3), and 68.6 g/day (trophic
                                               and in comments on this rule, and by
                                               DEP in its response to comments on the                  cancer risk level of 10¥6 as the                       level 4). These trophic specific fish
                                               2012 revisions, tribal members are not                  appropriate target level for two reasons.              consumption rates were thus used in
                                               necessarily required to get state licenses              First, it is consistent with Maine DEP                 deriving the HHC for those compounds
                                               to fish and therefore were likely                       Rule 06–096, Chapter 584, which EPA                    for which the 2015 criteria update
                                               underrepresented in the survey.62                       approved for waters in Indian lands on                 included trophic level specific BAFs.
                                                  In addition, EPA disagrees with                      February 2, 2015, and which specifies                  For compounds where, in 2015, EPA
                                               commenters who assert that there were                   that water quality criteria for                        estimated BAFs from laboratory-
                                               no fish advisories or that there were an                carcinogens must be based on a 10¥6                    measured BCFs and therefore derived a
                                               insignificant number of river miles                     CRL.65 Second, it is consistent with EPA               single pollutant-specific BAF for all
                                               covered by fish advisories during the                   guidance that states, ‘‘For deriving CWA               trophic levels, and where EPA’s existing
                                               time of the ChemRisk Study. It is well                  section 304(a) criteria or promulgating                304(a) recommended human health
                                               documented that fish advisories were in                 water quality criteria for states and                  criteria for certain pollutants still
                                               place on some waters in Maine at the                    tribes under Section 303(c) based on the               incorporate a single BCF and those
                                               time of the ChemRisk Study. As                          2000 Human Health Methodology, EPA                     pollutants are included in this final
                                               documented by Maine’s Department of                     intends to use the 10¥6 risk level, which              rule, EPA derived the HHC using a total
                                               Health and Human Services in a 2008                     the Agency believes reflects an                        fish consumption rate of 286 g/day.
                                               history of dioxin fish consumption                      appropriate risk for the general
                                                                                                       population.’’ 66 As explained above,                      The Penobscot Nation requested EPA
                                               advisories in Maine,63 fish advisories
                                                                                                       EPA considers the tribes to be the                     use a slightly different weighting
                                               were first issued in Maine on the
                                                                                                       general target population for waters in                scheme when refining the fish
                                               Androscoggin River in 1985 and on the
                                               Kennebec and Penobscot River in 1987,                   Indian lands. In promulgating HHC that                 consumption rate based on the trophic
                                               before the ChemRisk Study survey was                    correspond to an excess cancer risk                    levels of the fish and shellfish species
                                               conducted. While relative to the state as               level of 10¥6 for tribes in Maine, not                 they consume. While EPA recommends
                                               a whole this may seem to be a small                     only is EPA acting consistent with both                the use of local data relevant to the
                                               portion of river miles that were affected               EPA guidance and Maine’s existing rule,                population of interest whenever
                                               by a fish consumption advisory, the                     but EPA is providing the tribes engaged                possible in deriving human health
                                               Penobscot River is a very large portion                 in sustenance fishing in waters in                     criteria, such data must be from a sound
                                               of the sustenance fishery for the                       Indian lands with an equivalent level of               scientific study before it can be utilized.
                                               Penobscot Indian Nation, and it is a                    cancer risk protection as is afforded to               The Penobscot Nation did not provided
                                               waterbody with a high profile and                       the general population in Maine outside                adequate information to support a
                                               symbolic significance in the Indian                     of waters in Indian lands.                             different trophic level weighting
                                               community.                                                                                                     scheme. See Topic 5 in the RTC
                                                                                                       4. Trophic Level Specific Fish
                                                  Further, as documented by DEP in its                                                                        document for a more detailed response.
                                                                                                       Consumption Rates
                                               response to comments on its 2012 WQS
                                                                                                         Since the Wabanaki Study presented                   5. Geographic Extent of Waters To
                                               revisions, during the time that the
                                                                                                       estimates of the total amount of fish and              Which the HHC Apply
                                               ChemRisk survey was conducted:
                                                 [P]ublic awareness of historical pollution
                                                                                                       aquatic organisms consumed but not the                    The HHC contained in the rule are
                                               in industrialized rivers can be expected to             amount consumed from each trophic                      designed to protect the designated use
                                               have suppressed fish consumption on a local             level, for the purpose of developing                   of sustenance fishing as exercised by the
                                               basis. The Department is unable to quantify             HHC for the Maine tribes, EPA assumed                  tribes in Maine. The HHC thus apply to
                                               the extent of suppression due to historical             that Maine tribes consume the same
                                               pollution in the major rivers or the dioxin                                                                    waters where that designated use is
                                                                                                       relative proportion of fish and aquatic
                                               advisories in place at the time of the                                                                         approved. EPA approved a sustenance
                                               ChemRisk study, but believes that the                     64 January 14, 2013, Letter from Patricia Aho, DEP   fishing designated use in two general
                                               ChemRisk (Ebert et al.) estimates of fish               to Curt Spalding, EPA, regarding ‘‘USEPA Review        categories of waters: (1) Waters in
                                                                                                       of P.L. 2011, Ch. 194 and revised 06–096 CMR 584’’,    Indian lands, and (2) waters outside
                                                  62 Id., Exhibit 8, pages 14 and 19; June 20, 2016,   Exhibit 8, pages 20–21.                                Indian lands where the sustenance
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                                               Letter from Chief Brenda Commander, Houlton               65 The only exception from the requirement to use

                                               Band of Maliseet Indians, to Gina McCarthy,             a CRL of 10¥6 in Chapter 584 is for arsenic, for
                                                                                                                                                              fishing right reserved in MIA section
                                               Administrator, EPA, page 15.                            which a CRL of 10¥4 is required. EPA disapproved
                                                  63 Smith, Andrew E., and Frohmberg, Eric,            the arsenic CRL for waters in Indian lands.               67 USEPA. 2014. Estimated Fish Consumption

                                               Evaluation of the Health Implications of Levels of        66 USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving             Rates for the U.S. Population and Selected
                                               Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-Dioxins (dioxins) and         Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection      Subpopulations (NHANES 2003–2010). EPA–820–
                                               Polychlorinated Dibenzofurans (furans) in Fish          of Human Health. U.S. Environmental Protection         R–14–002. https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/
                                               from Maine Rivers, Maine Department of Health and       Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. EPA–          files/2015-01/documents/fish-consumption-rates-
                                               Human Service, January, 2008, pages 2–3.                822–B–00–004, p. 2–6.                                  2014.pdf.



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                                               92482            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               6207(4) applies.68 The first category,                   described below, the extent of waters in               EPA took a conservative approach and
                                               ‘‘waters in Indian lands,’’ covers waters                Indian lands is largely established under              identified all discharges for which there
                                               within the tribes’ reservations and trust                the settlement acts and subsequent trust               is any reasonable potential that they
                                               lands as provided for under the                          conveyances that have occurred under                   discharge to waters in Indian lands or
                                               settlement acts. The second category                     the terms of those acts. But there are                 their tributaries. In doing so, EPA
                                               applies in the limited circumstances                     isolated disputes and one pending                      identified a total of only 33 facilities, a
                                               where it is determined that a Southern                   lawsuit regarding the boundaries of                    small subset of the 478 Maine Pollutant
                                               Tribe’s sustenance fishing right reserved                Indian lands and the geographic extent                 Discharge Elimination System
                                               in MIA section 6207(4) extends to a                      of tribal sustenance fishing rights. EPA’s             (MEPDES) permitted dischargers in the
                                               waterbody outside of its reservation as                  approach is designed to be responsive to               state.
                                               provided for under the settlement acts.                  the potential that these disputes could                   One commenter expressed concern
                                               As explained below, this situation                       result in clarifications of the particular             that the boundaries of the sustenance
                                               currently exists in only one waterbody,                  boundaries of the disputed waters,                     fishing designated use as it applies to
                                               a clearly delineated stretch of the                      while maintaining protection of the                    the tribes’ trust lands may expand if any
                                               Penobscot River.                                         tribes’ sustenance fishing use.69                      of the tribes exercise what remaining
                                                  The outer bounds of waters that may                                                                          authority they may have under the
                                               fall within the two categories of the rule               a. Adequate Notice                                     settlement acts to purchase and take
                                               are based on the settlement acts and are                    Although this rulemaking does not                   more land into trust outside the
                                               thereby generally identifiable. The rule,                identify the exact boundaries of each                  reservations. However, EPA did not
                                               however, does not identify the specific                  waterbody or portion thereof covered by                intend for its approval and disapproval
                                               boundaries of each waterbody or portion                  the rule, it nevertheless provides                     decisions on WQS for waters in Indian
                                               thereof to which the HHC apply.                          adequate notice to potentially regulated               lands, or for this rule, to apply to waters
                                               Whether a specific waterbody falls                       parties because the categories are clearly             that may be part of after-acquired trust
                                               within one of these categories will                      described, and waters that could                       lands. EPA’s promulgation of HHC to
                                               depend on the status of such water                       reasonably fall within these two                       address the disapprovals is thus limited
                                               under applicable federal and state law.                  categories are either precisely described              to waters in trust lands as of February
                                               The status of such a waterbody may                       in the settlement acts or, in                          2, 2015, and waters in the Southern
                                               therefore be determined as a result of                   circumstances where there are ongoing                  Tribes’ reservations. EPA’s
                                               litigation or other legal developments                   disputes or uncertainties, located in                  promulgation of HHC in accordance
                                               regarding that specific waterbody. The                   limited areas in Maine representing a                  with the Administrator’s determination
                                               two general categories of waters to                      small fraction of all waters within the                is likewise limited. The sustenance
                                               which the HHC apply, however, will                       state. In fact, any uncertainties as to the            fishing designated use and appropriate
                                               remain constant.                                         scope of waters in Indian lands largely                HHC would not apply to any waters in
                                                  Three commenters asserted that this                   pertain to particular stretches of the                 after-acquired trust lands until such
                                               approach is overly broad and vague.                      Penobscot and St. Croix Rivers. EPA                    time as the state or EPA took further
                                               EPA disagrees. Here, EPA has clearly                     anticipates that any existing uncertainty              action under the CWA. This step would
                                               described the specific categories of                     will be addressed by the current                       give interested parties an opportunity to
                                               waters to which this rule applies, which                 litigation regarding the Main Stem of the              comment on that action. EPA also notes
                                               flow directly from and are bounded by                    Penobscot River and DOI’s work with                    that where the settlement acts have not
                                               the express provisions of the settlement                 the Passamaquoddy Tribe to determine                   already specifically identified parcels
                                               acts. The purpose of the rule is to                      the status of the relevant stretch of the              that qualify to be taken into trust, they
                                               establish WQS that address EPA’s                         St. Croix River.                                       clearly provide for the state to receive
                                               disapprovals and necessity                                  The first category—‘‘waters in Indian               notice of any trust acquisition.70
                                               determination and adequately protect                     lands’’—covers waters within a tribe’s                    The second category is quite narrow,
                                               applicable designated uses. It is both                   reservation or trust lands. The tribes’                limited to waterbodies outside of Indian
                                               reasonable and appropriate, and                          trust lands are all the result of modern               lands where the Southern Tribes’
                                               consistent with prior practice under the                 conveyances recorded after the 1980                    sustenance fishing right reserved in MIA
                                               CWA, for EPA to promulgate these WQS                     settlements, the boundaries of which are               section 6207(4) applies. Currently, the
                                               without a final adjudication or                          described in the deeds for those parcels.              Main Stem of the Penobscot River is the
                                               determination of the precise boundaries                  Although there are ongoing disputes                    only waterbody in the state that has
                                               of each specific waterbody that falls                    over the extent of some of the                         been adjudicated to be a waterbody
                                               within each category, so long as the                     reservation lands, the Indian settlement               outside of Indian lands to which a tribe,
                                               WQS protect the uses and clearly apply                   acts identify the outer bounds of what                 the Penobscot Nation, has a right to
                                               only to waters subject to those uses. As                 could reasonably be identified as                      sustenance fish based in MIA.71 The
                                                                                                        reservation land. In the Economic                      ‘‘Main Stem’’ addressed by the court in
                                                  68 For ‘‘waters in Indian lands,’’ this final rule    Analysis conducted for this rulemaking,                the Mills litigation is clearly identified
                                               promulgates HHC as well as six other WQS
                                               (narrative and numeric bacteria criteria for the            69 It is important to note that EPA has expressly
                                                                                                                                                               as ‘‘a portion of the Penobscot River and
                                               protection of primary contact recreation and             answered the question of who has jurisdiction over     stretches from Indian Island north to the
                                               shellfishing; ammonia criteria for protection of         all the waters involved in this matter, irrespective   confluence of the East and West
                                               aquatic life in fresh waters; provisions that ensure     of which category they fall under or which use(s)      Branches of the Penobscot River.’’ 72
                                               that WQS apply to HHC even if they are naturally         and criteria apply. EPA did so in its February 2015
                                               occurring; a mixing zone policy; a pH criterion for      decision when it determined that the state has
                                                                                                                                                               Significantly, the court in Mills
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                                               fresh waters; and tidal temperature criteria). For the   jurisdiction to set WQS over all waterbodies in        concluded that the Penobscot Nation
                                               second category of waters, where there is a              Maine, including those within tribal reservations      has a sustenance fishery reservation,
                                               sustenance fishing designated use outside of waters      and trust lands. EPA is also determining that the      under MIA section 6207, in ‘‘the waters
                                               in Indian lands, the rule promulgates only the HHC.      HHC at issue will apply only where designated use
                                               This response focuses on the HHC because the HHC         of sustenance fishing applies. EPA is not, however,
                                                                                                                                                                 70 30  MRSA 6205–A(1); 30 MRSA 7204.
                                               apply to the broadest set of tribal-related waters and   making any determinations in this rulemaking on
                                                                                                                                                                 71 Penobscot   Nation v. Mills, 151 F. Supp. 3d at
                                               because the comments addressing the geographical         the narrower technical question regarding the full
                                               scope of the rule are largely framed in terms of         extent of precise waters to which that use, and thus   222–223.
                                               concerns about the HHC.                                  the HHC, apply.                                          72 Id. at 186.




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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                    92483

                                               adjacent to its island reservation,’’                    basis.75 Similarly, Maine’s WQS contain                primarily limited to stretches of two
                                               under MIA section 6203.73 Accordingly,                   certain natural conditions provisions                  waterbodies, as described above.
                                               in scenarios like the one addressed by                   that alter the way in which pollutants                 Therefore, EPA anticipates that the case-
                                               the court in Mills, waters that fall under               may be treated for WQS purposes if they                by-case identification of whether a
                                               this second category will likely share a                 are naturally occurring.76 The waters in               waterbody is covered by this rule will
                                               geographic nexus with the Southern                       which such conditions occur are not                    be straight-forward in most instances.
                                               Tribes’ reservations.                                    identified in the WQS themselves but
                                                                                                                                                               E. Other Water Quality Standards
                                                  This second category thus represents                  rather must be determined on a case-by-
                                               a limited universe of potential waters                   case basis.                                            1. Mixing Zone Policy for Waters in
                                               that fall outside the existing waters in                    There are numerous examples from                    Indian Lands
                                               Indian lands only to the extent the                      other states identifying general                          Two commenters asserted that EPA
                                               fishing right reserved in MIA section                    categories of waters to which certain                  does not have the legal authority or the
                                               6207(4) extends beyond the reservation                   standards apply. For example, the State                scientific basis to ban mixing zones for
                                               of a Southern Tribe under MIA section                    of Wisconsin has several narrative water               bioaccumulative pollutants outside the
                                               6203 under the reasoning of the U.S.                     quality criteria that apply to                         Great Lakes. EPA disagrees. EPA’s
                                               District Court in the Mills litigation. In               ‘‘wetlands,’’ defined as ‘‘an area where               authority to promulgate a mixing zone
                                               the event the law of the case in the Mills               water is at, near or above the land                    policy, and to prohibit its use for
                                               litigation changes, it is also possible that             surface long enough to be capable of                   bioaccumulative pollutants, derives
                                               no waters would fall within this second                  supporting aquatic or hydrophytic                      from section 303(c) of the CWA. While
                                               category. Accordingly, the waters                        vegetation and which has soils                         states are not required to adopt mixing
                                               covered by this rule are at most the                     indicative of wet conditions.’’ 77 Florida             zone policies, when a state includes a
                                               waters in Indian lands and the limited                   has promulgated numeric                                mixing zone policy in its water quality
                                               additional waters where a Southern                       interpretations of its narrative nutrient              standards, the policy is subject to EPA’s
                                               Tribe has a right to sustenance fish,                    criteria that apply to ‘‘streams,’’ defined            review and approval or disapproval. 40
                                               which will likely share a geographic                     as ‘‘a predominantly fresh surface                     CFR 131.13. Adoption of a mixing zone
                                               nexus with the tribes’ reservations.                     waterbody with perennial flow in a                     policy is necessary for a mixing zone to
                                                                                                        defined channel with banks during                      be authorized in the issuance of a CWA
                                               b. General Approach                                      typical climatic and hydrologic                        discharge permit. EPA disapproved
                                                  Under the CWA, it is not uncommon                     conditions for its region within the                   Maine’s mixing zone policy for waters
                                               for a state, authorized tribe, or EPA to                 state,’’ but excluding certain non-                    in Indian lands because it did not meet
                                               take an approach, when promulgating                      perennial stream segments, ditches,                    the requirements of the CWA.
                                               WQS (i.e., designated uses, water                        canals, and other conveyances that have                Recognizing that Maine intended to
                                               quality criteria, and antidegradation                    various characteristics as defined in the              authorize mixing zones as part of its
                                               policies), of identifying a category of                  regulation.78 Whether a specific                       water quality standards, EPA, pursuant
                                               waters to which the WQS apply, where                     discharge implicates a waterbody that                  to CWA section 303(c)(4)(A), is now
                                               additional information will need to be                   falls within these general categories, and             promulgating a mixing zone policy that
                                               gathered before the implementing                         thus whether the associated water                      includes protections that were missing
                                               agency can determine whether such                        quality criteria apply, is left to the                 from Maine’s policy that EPA
                                               WQS applies to any specific waterbody.                   implementing agency to determine by                    disapproved. EPA has determined that a
                                               For these WQS, any uncertainties                         applying the case-specific facts to the                ban on a mixing zone for
                                               regarding applicability to a specific                    general category definition.                           bioaccumulating pollutants is
                                               waterbody are appropriately resolved as                     EPA is taking a similar approach here,              reasonable and appropriate for the
                                               the standards are implemented through                    by defining two general categories of                  reasons discussed below, and nothing in
                                               various actions under the CWA, such as                   waters covered by this rule. The                       CWA section 303(c) or EPA’s
                                               NPDES permitting and listing of                          determination of whether a specific                    implementing regulations constrains
                                               impaired waters under section 303(d) of                  waterbody falls within one of these                    EPA’s legal authority to do so.
                                               the CWA, among others.                                   categories will be made, in the first                     EPA guidance has long cautioned
                                                  An example of this approach already                   instance, by the implementing (e.g.,                   states and tribes against mixing zone
                                               in effect in Maine involves the state’s                  permitting) authority. Determining                     policies that allow mixing zones for
                                               criteria for dissolved oxygen (DO).                      whether a waterbody is within one of                   discharges of bioaccumulative
                                               Maine’s longstanding DO criteria for                     the two categories covered by EPA’s rule               pollutants, since they may cause
                                               Class B and C waters include generally                   will require application of the facts                  significant ecological and human health
                                               applicable criteria as well as more                      relevant to that particular waterbody to               risks such that the designated use of the
                                               protective criteria that apply only to fish              the definition of the category. However,               waterbody as a whole may not be
                                               spawning areas in the colder months.74                   disputes regarding the extent of waters                protected.79 80 81 EPA’s WQS Handbook
                                                                                                        which may be subject to this rule are                  notes that this is particularly the case
                                               The DO criteria do not list each specific
                                               fish spawning area in Class B or C                                                                              where mixing zones may encroach on
                                                                                                           75 06–096–585 Code of Maine Rules, Chapter 584,
                                               waters, nor do the more general                          Surface Water Quality Criteria for Toxic Pollutants.     79 USEPA. 1991. Technical Support Document for
                                               classifications of fresh waters at 38                       76 This rule includes provisions to ensure that
                                                                                                                                                               Water Quality-based Toxics Control. US
                                               M.R.S. 467 and 468. Rather, Maine must                   these natural conditions WQS are not applied to        Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water,
                                               determine whether a spawning area is                     HHC.                                                   Washington, DC. Section 2.2.2, p. 34; Section 4.3.1,
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                                               implicated on a permit-by-permit
                                                                                                           77 Wis. Admin. Code NR section 103.03 (2016).       p. 71; Section 4.3.4, p. 72; Section 4.6.2, p. 87. EPA
                                                                                                        For additional examples of states with WQS for         505–290–001.
                                                                                                        ‘‘wetlands,’’ see 5 Colo. Code Regs. section 1002–       80 Final Rule to Amend the Final Water Quality
                                                 73 Id. at 221–222.                                     31.11 (LexisNexis 2016); Iowa Admin. Code r. 567–      Guidance for the Great Lakes System to Prohibit
                                                 74 38  M.R.S. sections 465.3.B and 465.4.B,            61.3 (2016); Minn. R. 7050.0186 (2016)l 117 Neb.       Mixing Zones for Bioaccumulative Chemicals of
                                               respectively. Note that as part of this rulemaking,      Admin. Code section 7–001 (2015); 15A N.C.             Concern, 65 FR 67638, 67641–42 (November 13,
                                               EPA is promulgating dissolved oxygen criteria for        Admin. Code 02B.0231 (2016); Ohio Admin Code           2000); 40 CFR part 132.
                                               Class A waters, also with specific criteria that apply   3475–1–50.                                               81 USEPA. 2014. Water Quality Standards

                                               to fish spawning areas.                                     78 Fla. Admin. Code. Ann. r. 62–302.200 (2016).     Handbook, Chapter 5 at 5–8. EPA 820–B–14–008.



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                                               92484            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               areas used for fish harvesting. The                     these comments provides a basis for                      Pathogens in Ambient Waters,90 and
                                               waters in Indian lands, to which this                   excluding wildlife sources from EPA’s                    determined that both human and animal
                                               mixing zone policy will apply, not only                 rule, which is based on the 2012                         feces, including feces from wildlife, in
                                               are used for fish harvesting but have a                 recommended RWQC.                                        recreational waters do pose potential
                                               designated use of sustenance fishing. By                   First, the CWA does not limit EPA to                  risks to human health. EPA again
                                               their very nature, bioaccumulative                      consideration of human causes of                         confirmed, in the development of the
                                               pollutants are those that accumulate in                 pollution when developing water                          2012 RWQC, that wildlife can carry both
                                               fish and shellfish and other organisms.                 quality criteria protective of human                     zoonotic pathogens capable of causing
                                               Moreover, as EPA has explained                          health. CWA section 502(23) defines                      illness in humans and fecal indicator
                                               elsewhere, the effects of such pollutants               ‘‘pathogen indicator’’ to mean ‘‘a                       bacteria, and these microbes can be
                                               are not short term, nor are they limited                substance that indicates the potential for               transmitted to surface waters.91
                                               to a localized zone of initial dilution.82              human infectious disease’’ with no                          Contrary to the commenter’s
                                               Since the effects could be persistent and               limitation on source. EPA’s                              assertion, EPA cited more than one
                                               occur well beyond the mixing zone,                      recommended RWQC identify levels of                      study in the RWQC that links potential
                                               there is no assurance that all designated               fecal indicator bacteria (which include                  human health risks with non-human
                                               uses would be protected. EPA is                         fecal coliforms, E.coli, enterococci or                  sources of fecal contamination.92
                                               particularly concerned about the                        Enterococcus spp.) that will be                          Furthermore, in the development of the
                                               potential adverse effects of such a                     protective of human health. Those                        RWQC, EPA did not, as the commenter
                                               mixing zone on the sustenance fishing                   pathogen indicators are not limited to                   claimed, equate bacteria from domestic
                                               use for those reasons. EPA also notes                   pathogens coming only from human                         animal sources to those of naturally
                                               that the state has not in the past granted              sources.84                                               occurring wildlife. On the contrary,
                                               mixing zones for bioaccumulative                                                                                 EPA’s research for the development of
                                                                                                          Second, E. coli are typically found in                the RWQC clearly recognized that there
                                               pollutants, and neither the state nor the
                                                                                                       the digestive systems of warm-blooded                    is a risk differential between human and
                                               regulated community in Maine have
                                                                                                       animals, and can be used to indicate the                 non-human animal sources, as well as
                                               raised a concern in their comments
                                                                                                       presence of fecal material in surface                    among non-human animal sources.93
                                               about EPA’s proposal that mixing zones
                                               cannot be authorized for                                waters regardless of their origin,                       Nevertheless, because zoonotic
                                               bioaccumulative pollutants. Therefore,                  whether from humans, domestic                            pathogens are present in animal
                                               EPA’s final rule includes the prohibition               animals, or wildlife. The literature                     (including wildlife) fecal matter,
                                               on a mixing zone for bioaccumulative                    provides many studies documenting                        creating a potential risk from
                                               pollutants.                                             wildlife as sources of E. coli.85 86 87 For              recreational exposure to zoonotic
                                                                                                       decades, EPA’s regulatory premise                        pathogens in animal-impacted waters,
                                               2. Bacteria Criteria for Waters in Indian               concerning recreational water quality                    EPA found no scientific basis on which
                                               Lands                                                   has been that nonhuman-derived human                     to exclude wildlife altogether from the
                                               a. Recreational Bacteria Criteria                       pathogens, including those from                          scope of the RWQC, nor has the
                                                                                                       wildlife, in fecally contaminated waters                 commenter provided any scientific basis
                                                  EPA received one comment in                          present a potential risk to human
                                               opposition to the proposed recreational                                                                          for excluding wildlife sources altogether
                                                                                                       health.88 EPA has investigated sources                   from the scope of the EPA’s rule for
                                               bacteria criteria. Maine DEP objected to
                                                                                                       of fecal contamination in its Review of                  waters in Indian lands in Maine.
                                               EPA’s inclusion of wildlife sources in
                                                                                                       Published Studies to Characterize                           Maine DEP commented that because
                                               the scope of the bacteria criteria for
                                                                                                       Relative Risks from Different Sources of                 bacteria from natural sources are likely
                                               several reasons. It argued that inclusion
                                                                                                       Fecal Contamination in Recreational                      to be ‘‘temporal,’’ removing a use
                                               of wildlife sources is beyond the scope
                                                                                                       Waters 89 and Review of Zoonotic                         (recreation in and on the water) simply
                                               of the CWA, which DEP asserts is only
                                               concerned with human pollution, and                                                                              due to a high level of E. coli where the
                                               that E.coli are used only as an indicator               bacteria. . . .’’ EPA did not cite to that guidance in   bacteria source is of natural origins ‘‘is,
                                                                                                       the context of the proposed bacteria criteria, and it    at best, unwise.’’ This circumstance is
                                               of human sewage. It also asserted that                  has no bearing on EPA’s decision to include
                                               EPA incorrectly ‘‘construed ‘animal                     wildlife sources in the scope of the criteria.
                                                                                                                                                                not a justification for excluding wildlife
                                               sources’ of bacteria from studies as                      84 USEPA. 2012. Recreational Water Quality             sources altogether from the scope of
                                               equivalent to naturally occurring                       Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,          recreational bacteria criteria. EPA
                                               ‘wildlife sources’ in the proposed rule’’;              Office of Water, Washington, DC. Office of Water         recognizes that health risks associated
                                                                                                       820–F–12–058, pages 1–9.                                 with exposure to waters impacted by
                                               that EPA cited to only one study in                       85 Levesque, B., P. Brousseau, P. Simard, E.
                                               EPA’s 2012 Recreational Water Quality                   Dewailly, M. Meisels, D. Ramsay, and J. Joly. 1993.
                                                                                                                                                                animal sources can vary substantially,
                                               Criteria (RWQC) that links potential                    Impact of the ring-billed gull (Larus delawarenesis)     depending on the animal source. In
                                               human health risks with non-human                       on the microbiological quality of recreational water.    some cases, these risks can be similar to
                                               sources of fecal contamination; and that
                                                                                                       Applied and Environmental Microbiology 59 (4)            exposure to human fecal contamination,
                                                                                                       1128–1230.                                               and in other cases, the risk is
                                               because bacteria from natural sources                     86 Center for Watershed Protection. 1999.

                                               are likely to be ‘‘temporal,’’ removing a               Microbes and urban watersheds: concentrations,
                                                                                                                                                                lower.94 95 96 97 In situations with
                                               use (recreation in and on the water)                    sources, and pathways. Watershed Protection
                                                                                                                                                                  90 USEPA. 2009. Review of Zoonotic Pathogens in
                                               simply due to a high level of E. coli                   Techniques. 3(1):554–565.
                                                                                                         87 Makino. S., H. Kobori, H. Asakura, M. Watarai,      Ambient Waters. U.S. Environmental Protection
                                               where the bacteria source is of natural                 T. Shirahata, T. Ikeda, K. Takeshi and T.                Agency, Office of Water, Health and Ecological
                                               origins ‘‘is, at best, unwise.’’ 83 None of             Tsukamoto. 2000. Detection and characterization of       Criteria Division. Washington, DC. EPA–822–R–09–
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                                                                                                       Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli from              002.
                                                                                                                                                                  91 USEPA. 2012. Recreational Water Quality
                                                 82 Id.                                                seagulls. Epidemiol. Infect. 125: 55–61.
                                                 83 The commenter also refers to the 1997                88 USEPA. 2009. Review of Published Studies to         Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
                                                                                                       Characterize Relative Risks from Different Sources       Office of Water, Washington, DC. Office of Water
                                               Guidance (‘‘Establishing Site Specific Aquatic Life
                                               Criteria Equal to Natural Background’’) ‘‘cited by      of Fecal Contamination in Recreational Water. U.S.       820–F–12–058.
                                                                                                                                                                  92 Id., pages 34–38.
                                               EPA,’’ and states that it ‘‘stands for possible         Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water,
                                               reevaluation of uses based on known background          Health and Ecological Criteria Division.                   93 Id., pages 36–38.

                                               concentrations not establishing criteria which          Washington, DC. EPA 822–R–09–001.                          94 Schoen, M.E. and N.J. Ashbolt. 2010. Assessing

                                               necessitates regulation of naturally occurring            89 Id.                                                 pathogen risk to swimmers at non-sewage impacted



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          92485

                                               non-human sources of fecal                              comment on whether a seasonal term                    final mixing zone policy for waters in
                                               contamination, the state may choose to                  shorter than October 1–May 14, during                 Indian lands.
                                               conduct sanitary surveys,                               which the recreational bacteria criteria                 EPA did not fully evaluate the
                                               epidemiological studies and/or a                        would not apply, would still adequately               potential for costs to nonpoint sources.
                                               Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment                  protect recreational uses. EPA received               Very little data were available to assess
                                               (QMRA). If sanitary surveys, water                      no comments that provided specific                    the potential for the rule to result in
                                               quality information, or health studies                  information that could support the                    WQS exceedances attributable to
                                               show the sources of fecal contamination                 establishment of a seasonal timeframe in              nonpoint sources. It is difficult to model
                                               to be non-human, and the indicator                      which the absence of bacteria criteria                and evaluate the potential cost impacts
                                               densities reflect a different risk profile,             would be protective of uses. Therefore,               of this final rule to nonpoint sources
                                               then the state has the option to develop                EPA has retained the year round                       because they are intermittent, variable,
                                               and adopt site-specific alternative                     applicability in the final rule.                      and occur under hydrologic or climatic
                                               recreational bacteria criteria to reflect                                                                     conditions associated with precipitation
                                               the local environmental conditions and                  IV. Economic Analysis                                 events. Finally, legacy contamination
                                               human exposure patterns.98 For                             EPA is not required under CWA                      (e.g., in sediment) may be a source of
                                               waterbodies where non-human fecal                       section 303(c) or its implementing                    ongoing loading. Atmospheric
                                               sources predominate, QMRA can be                        regulations at 40 CFR part 131 to                     deposition may also contribute loadings
                                               used to determine a different                           conduct an economic analysis regarding                of the pollutants of concern (e.g.,
                                               enterococci or E. coli criteria value that              implementation of these EPA-                          mercury). EPA did not estimate
                                               is equally protective as the criteria EPA               promulgated WQS. For the purpose of                   sediment remediation costs, or air
                                               is promulgating today.99                                transparency, EPA conducted a cost                    pollution control costs, for this analysis.
                                                  Maine DEP also objected to EPA’s                     analysis for the WQS in this final rule.              A. Identifying Affected Entities
                                               proposal to apply the bacteria criteria                 Potential economic effects of this rule
                                               year round, and requested that EPA                                                                              EPA identified 33 facilities (major and
                                                                                                       are presented here.
                                               exclude the period of October 1–May                                                                           non-major) that discharge to waters in
                                                                                                          These WQS may serve as a basis for                 Indian lands or their tributaries, two
                                               14, similar to Maine’s disapproved                      development of NPDES permit limits.
                                               criteria. The state asserted that EPA had                                                                     facilities that discharge phenol to other
                                                                                                       Maine has NPDES permitting authority                  state waters, and 26 facilities that
                                               not demonstrated that recreational                      and retains considerable discretion in
                                               activities occur in this time frame. Other                                                                    discharge to Class A waters throughout
                                                                                                       implementing standards. EPA evaluated                 the state. EPA identified 16 point source
                                               commenters supported the year round                     the potential costs to NPDES dischargers
                                               criteria. EPA disagrees with the state’s                                                                      facilities that could incur additional
                                                                                                       associated with state implementation of               costs as a result of this final rule. Of
                                               characterization of the record. First, the              EPA’s final criteria. This analysis is
                                               activities cited by EPA in the proposal                                                                       these potentially affected facilities, eight
                                                                                                       documented in ‘‘Final Economic                        are major dischargers and eight are
                                               were merely examples of readily
                                                                                                       Analysis for Promulgation of Certain                  minor dischargers. Two are industrial
                                               available information that recreation
                                                                                                       Federal Water Quality Criteria                        dischargers and the remaining 14 are
                                               does occur during the period October 1
                                                                                                       Applicable to Maine,’’ which can be                   publicly owned treatment works
                                               to May 14. The record also included
                                                                                                       found in the docket for this rulemaking.              (POTWs). EPA did not include general
                                               information from one tribal member
                                               confirming that activities in and on the                   Any NPDES-permitted facility that                  permit facilities in its analysis because
                                               Penobscot River occur whenever the                      discharges pollutants for which the                   data for such facilities are limited. EPA
                                               waters are ice free. In its comment                     revised WQS are more stringent than the               evaluated all of the potentially affected
                                               supporting the proposed criteria, the                   previously applicable WQS could                       facilities.
                                               Penobscot Nation specifically noted that                potentially incur increased compliance                  EPA does not agree with the comment
                                               the tribe engages in year round activities              costs. The types of affected facilities               that its economic analysis (‘‘EA’’) was
                                               in and on the Penobscot River,                          could include industrial facilities and               deficient because uncertainty—
                                               including for paddling, fishing, and                    POTWs discharging wastewater to                       including with respect to the geographic
                                               ceremonial uses. EPA had invited                        surface waters (i.e., point sources). EPA             scope of the rule’s applicability—
                                                                                                       did not attribute compliance with water               constrained the Agency’s ability to
                                               recreational beaches. Environmental Science and
                                                                                                       quality-based effluent limitations                    assess the economic impacts of the rule.
                                               Technology 44(7): 2286–2291.                            (WQBELs) reflective of Maine’s existing               Although the commenter is correct that
                                                 95 Soller, J.A., M.E. Schoen, T. Bartrand, J.E.       (hereafter ‘‘baseline’’) WQS to the final             the geographic extent of the waters
                                               Ravenscroft, N.J. Ashbolt. 2010. Estimated human        rule. Once in compliance with WQBELs                  covered by this promulgation could
                                               health risks from exposure too recreational waters      reflective of baseline criteria, EPA
                                               impacted by human and non-human sources of                                                                    change due to litigation or other legal
                                               faecal contamination. Water Research 44: 4674–          expects that dischargers will continue to             developments regarding Indian land
                                               4691.                                                   use the same types of controls to come                status, EPA used an inclusive approach
                                                 96 Soller, J.A., T. Bartrand, J. Ravenscroft, M.      into compliance with any revised                      in its analysis that accounted for all
                                               Molina, G. Whelan, M. Schoen, N. Ashbolt. 2015.         WQBELs reflective of the more stringent
                                               Estimated health risks from recreational exposures                                                            facilities that could reasonably fall
                                               to stormwater runoff containing animal faecal
                                                                                                       WQS.                                                  within the two general categories of
                                               material. Environmental Modelling and Software             The following final criteria are not               waters to which the HHC may apply. If
                                               72: 21–32.                                              expected to result in incremental costs               the geographic scope of waters to which
                                                 97 USEPA. 2010. Quantitative Microbial Risk
                                                                                                       to permitted dischargers: pH,                         the HHC apply is smaller, then fewer
                                               Assessment to Estimate Illness in Freshwater
                                                                                                       temperature, ammonia, and all but one                 facilities will be affected by the rule and
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                                               Impacted by Agricultural Animals Sources of Fecal
                                               Contamination. U.S. Environmental Protection            HHC (for waters in Indian lands);                     costs will be lower.
                                               Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. EPA 822–       phenol (for state waters outside Indian
                                               R–10–005.                                               lands); and dissolved oxygen (for all                 B. Method for Estimating Costs
                                                 98 USEPA. 2012. Recreational Water Quality
                                                                                                       state waters). As described below, the                  For the 16 facilities that may incur
                                               Criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
                                               Office of Water, Washington, DC. Office of Water        cost analysis identifies potential costs of           costs, EPA evaluated existing baseline
                                               820–F–12–058. Section 6.2.                              compliance with one HHC (bis(2-                       permit conditions and the potential to
                                                 99 Id., Section 6.2.2.                                ethylhexyl)phthalate), bacteria, and the              exceed new effluent limits based on the


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                                               92486                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               final rule. In instances of exceedances of                                  permitting practices. To estimate                                              thermal mixing zone that may affect
                                               projected effluent limitations under the                                    potential costs to this facility from                                          waters in Indian lands. It is unknown
                                               final criteria, EPA determined the likely                                   meeting the projected effluent limits,                                         whether reductions in thermal loads
                                               compliance scenarios and costs. Only                                        EPA considered source controls, end-of-                                        will be necessary to reduce the mixing
                                               compliance actions and costs that                                           pipe treatments, and alternative                                               zone to a size and configuration that
                                               would be needed above the baseline                                          compliance mechanisms (e.g.                                                    would meet the new mixing zone policy
                                               level of controls are attributable to the                                   variances). For this provision, EPA                                            at this facility; possible outcomes
                                               rule.                                                                       estimated total annual compliance costs                                        include the need for facility-specific
                                                  EPA assumed that dischargers will                                        of $28,000 (for source controls) to                                            studies, revisions to permit conditions
                                               pursue the least cost means of                                              $43,000 (for end-of-pipe treatments).                                          that could require recalculating thermal
                                               compliance with WQBELs. Incremental                                                                                                                        discharge limits, or changes in facility
                                               compliance actions attributable to the                                      2. Costs From Final Recreational
                                                                                                                           Bacteria Criteria for Waters in Indian                                         processes or operations to reduce the
                                               rule may include pollution prevention,
                                                                                                                           Lands                                                                          thermal load. To estimate the costs of
                                               end-of-pipe treatment, and alternative
                                                                                                                                                                                                          this provision, EPA used as lower-
                                               compliance mechanisms (e.g.,                                                   EPA does not expect the final                                               bound the cost to conduct a study to
                                               variances). EPA annualized capital                                          recreational bacteria criteria to result in
                                               costs, including study (e.g., variance)                                                                                                                    characterize the discharger’s existing
                                                                                                                           any new treatment processes being                                              thermal plume and support evaluation
                                               and program (e.g., pollution prevention)                                    added to facilities, but does expect that
                                               costs, over 20 years using a 3% discount                                                                                                                   of whether the current mixing zone
                                                                                                                           14 facilities with existing limitations for                                    complies with the new mixing zone
                                               rate to obtain total annual costs per                                       bacteria will need to operate their
                                               facility.                                                                                                                                                  policy ($1,000, annual cost for 20 years)
                                                                                                                           disinfection systems year-round,
                                                                                                                                                                                                          and as upper-bound the potential cost
                                               C. Results                                                                  extending treatments for an additional
                                                                                                                                                                                                          impacts for installing new cooling
                                                                                                                           226 days per year. EPA estimated the
                                               1. Costs From Final Human Health                                                                                                                           towers at the facility ($273,000,
                                                                                                                           costs of chemicals and monitoring
                                               Criteria Applicable to Waters in Indian                                                                                                                    annualized over 30 years at a 3 percent
                                                                                                                           during this extended period based on
                                               Lands                                                                       the facilities’ effluent flow rate, type of                                    discount rate).
                                                  Based on this approach, EPA                                              treatment, and monitoring costs. For                                           4. Total Costs
                                               identified one facility that has                                            this provision, EPA estimated total
                                               reasonable potential to exceed permit                                       annual compliance costs of $185,000 to                                            Table 3 summarizes the estimated
                                               effluent limits based on one final                                          $705,000.                                                                      point source compliance costs from the
                                               criterion (bis(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate).                                                                                                                    final WQS. EPA estimates that the total
                                                                                                                           3. Costs From Final Mixing Zone Policy                                         annual compliance costs for all
                                               EPA calculated a projected effluent
                                               limitation based on the same procedures                                       EPA identified one facility with an                                          provisions may be in the range of
                                               utilized by Maine in its NPDES                                              existing permit that establishes a                                             $214,000 to $1.0 million.

                                                                                            TABLE 3—SUMMARY OF ESTIMATED POINT SOURCE COMPLIANCE COSTS
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      Annualized costs
                                                                                                                                       Final WQS                                                                                                        (thousands;
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          2014$) 1

                                               Human health criteria for waters in Indian lands ..........................................................................................................................                                    $28–$43
                                               Recreational bacteria criteria for waters in Indian lands ...............................................................................................................                                      185–705
                                               Mixing zone policy .........................................................................................................................................................................                     1–273

                                                     Total ........................................................................................................................................................................................         214–1,021
                                                  1 One-time       costs are annualized over 20 years (30 years in the case of cooling towers under the mixing zone policy) using a 3% discount rate.


                                               V. Statutory and Executive Order                                            B. Paperwork Reduction Act                                                     jurisdictions, are not directly regulated
                                               Reviews                                                                                                                                                    by this rule. This rule will thus not
                                                                                                                             This action does not impose any
                                                                                                                                                                                                          impose any requirements on small
                                               A. Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory                                        direct new information collection
                                                                                                                                                                                                          entities.
                                               Planning and Review) and Executive                                          burden under the provisions of the
                                               Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and                                       Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.                                               EPA-promulgated standards are
                                               Regulatory Review)                                                          3501 et seq. Actions to implement these                                        implemented through various water
                                                                                                                           WQS could entail additional paperwork                                          quality control programs including the
                                                 This action is a significant regulatory                                   burden. Burden is defined at 5 CFR                                             NPDES program, which limits
                                               action that was submitted to the Office                                     1320.3(b). This action does not include                                        discharges to navigable waters except in
                                               of Management and Budget (OMB) for                                          any information collection, reporting, or                                      compliance with an NPDES permit. The
                                               review. Any changes made in response                                        record-keeping requirements.                                                   CWA requires that all NPDES permits
                                               to OMB recommendations have been                                                                                                                           include any limits on discharges that are
                                                                                                                           C. Regulatory Flexibility Act                                                  necessary to meet applicable WQS.
                                               documented in the docket.
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                                                                                                                              I certify that this action will not have                                    Thus, under the CWA, EPA’s
                                                 EPA prepared an analysis of the
                                                                                                                           a significant economic impact on a                                             promulgation of WQS establishes
                                               potential costs and benefits associated                                                                                                                    standards that the state implements
                                                                                                                           substantial number of small entities
                                               with this action. This analysis is                                          under the RFA. This action will not                                            through the NPDES permit process. The
                                               summarized in section IV of the                                             impose any requirements on small                                               state has discretion in developing
                                               preamble and is available in the docket.                                    entities. Small entities, such as small                                        discharge limits, as needed to meet the
                                                                                                                           businesses or small governmental                                               standards. As a result of this action, the


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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                              92487

                                               State of Maine will need to issue                       governments. As a result of the unique                J. Executive Order 12898 (Federal
                                               permits that include limitations on                     jurisdictional provisions of the Maine                Actions To Address Environmental
                                               discharges necessary to comply with the                 Indian Claims Settlement Act, as                      Justice in Minority Populations and
                                               standards established in the final rule.                described above, the state has                        Low-Income Populations)
                                               In doing so, the state will have a number               jurisdiction for setting water quality
                                               of approaches available to it associated                standards for all waters in Indian lands                 The human health or environmental
                                               with permit writing. While Maine’s                      in Maine. This rule will have no effect               risk addressed by this action will not
                                               implementation of the rule may                          on that jurisdictional arrangement. This              have potential disproportionately high
                                               ultimately result in new or revised                     rule would affect federally recognized                and adverse human health or
                                               permit conditions for some dischargers,                 Indian tribes in Maine because the water              environmental effects on minority, low-
                                               including small entities, EPA’s action,                 quality standards will apply to all                   income or indigenous populations.
                                               by itself, does not directly impose any                 waters in Indian lands. Some will also                   Conversely, this action will increase
                                               requirements on small entities. Any                     apply to waters outside of Indian lands               protection for indigenous populations in
                                               impact from EPA’s action on small                       where the sustenance fishing designated               Maine from disproportionately high and
                                               entities would therefore only be indirect               use established by 30 M.R.S. 6207(4)                  adverse human health effects. EPA
                                               because the requirements of this rule are               and (9) applies. Finally, many of the                 developed the criteria included in this
                                               not self-implementing.                                  final criteria for such waters are                    rule specifically to protect Maine’s
                                                                                                       protective of the sustenance fishing                  designated uses, using the most current
                                               D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                                                                               science, including local and regional
                                                                                                       designated use, which is based in the
                                                  This action contains no federal                      Indian settlement acts in Maine.                      information on fish consumption.
                                               mandates under the provisions of Title                     The EPA consulted with tribal                      Applying these criteria to waters in the
                                               II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform                      officials under the EPA Policy on                     state of Maine will afford a greater level
                                               Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2 U.S.C. 1531–                      Consultation and Coordination with                    of protection to both human health and
                                               1538 for state, local, or tribal                        Indian Tribes early in the process of                 the environment.
                                               governments or the private sector. As                   developing this rule to permit them to                K. Congressional Review Act (CRA)
                                               these water quality criteria are not self-              have meaningful and timely input into
                                               implementing, EPA’s action imposes no                   its development. Summaries of those                     This action is subject to the CRA, and
                                               enforceable duty on any state, local or                 consultations are provided in the                     EPA will submit a rule report to each
                                               tribal governments or the private sector.               following documents: ‘‘Maine WQS                      House of the Congress and to the
                                               Therefore, this action is not subject to                Tribal Leaders Consultation 4–27–16;’’                Comptroller General of the United
                                               the requirements of sections 202 or 205                 ‘‘Maine WQS Technical Consultation 4–                 States. This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’
                                               of the UMRA.                                            11–16;’’ and ‘‘Summary of Tribal                      as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
                                                  This action is also not subject to the               Consultations Regarding Water Quality                 List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 131
                                               requirements of section 203 of UMRA                     Standards Applicable to Waters in
                                               because it contains no regulatory                       Indian Lands within the State of                        Environmental protection,
                                               requirements that could significantly or                Maine,’’ which are available in the                   Incorporation by reference, Indians—
                                               uniquely affect small governments.                      docket for this rulemaking.                           lands, Intergovernmental relations,
                                               E. Executive Order 13132                                                                                      Reporting and recordkeeping
                                                                                                       G. Executive Order 13045 (Protection of               requirements, Water pollution control.
                                                  This action does not have federalism                 Children From Environmental Health
                                                                                                       and Safety Risks)                                       Dated: December 8, 2016.
                                               implications. It will not have substantial
                                               direct effects on the states, on the                                                                          Gina McCarthy,
                                                                                                         The EPA interprets Executive Order
                                               relationship between the national                                                                             Administrator.
                                                                                                       13045 as applying only to those
                                               government and the states, or on the                    regulatory actions that concern                         For the reasons set forth in the
                                               distribution of power and                               environmental health or safety risks that             preamble, EPA amends 40 CFR part 131
                                               responsibilities among the various                      the EPA has reason to believe may                     as follows:
                                               levels of government. This rule does not                disproportionately affect children, per
                                               alter Maine’s considerable discretion in                the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory                PART 131—WATER QUALITY
                                               implementing these WQS, nor will it                     action’’ in section 2–202 of the                      STANDARDS
                                               preclude Maine from adopting WQS in                     Executive Order. This action is not
                                               the future that EPA concludes meet the                  subject to Executive Order 13045                      ■ 1. The authority citation for part 131
                                               requirements of the CWA, which will                     because it does not concern an                        continues to read as follows:
                                               eliminate the need for federal standards.               environmental health risk or safety risk                  Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.
                                               Thus, Executive Order 13132 does not                    that may disproportionately affect
                                               apply to this action.                                   children.                                             Subpart D—Federally Promulgated
                                                                                                                                                             Water Quality Standards
                                               F. Executive Order 13175 (Consultation                  H. Executive Order 13211 (Actions That
                                               and Coordination With Indian Tribal                     Significantly Affect Energy Supply,                   ■   2. Add § 131.43 to read as follows:
                                               Governments)                                            Distribution, or Use)
                                                 This action has tribal implications,                                                                        § 131.43    Maine.
                                                                                                         This action is not a ‘‘significant
                                               however, it would neither impose                        energy action’’ because it is not likely to             (a) Human health criteria for toxics
                                               substantial direct compliance costs on                  have a significant adverse effect on the              for waters in Indian lands and for
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                                               federally recognized tribal governments,                supply, distribution or use of energy.                Waters outside of Indian lands where
                                               nor preempt tribal law. Therefore,                                                                            the sustenance fishing designated use
                                               consultation is not required under the                  I. National Technology Transfer and                   established by 30 M.R.S. 6207(4) and (9)
                                               Executive Order. In the state of Maine,                 Advancement Act of 1995                               applies. The criteria for toxic pollutants
                                               there are four federally recognized                        This action does not involve technical             for the protection of human health are
                                               Indian tribes represented by five tribal                standards.                                            set forth in the following table 1:



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                                               92488                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                                                                             TABLE 1—HUMAN HEALTH CRITERIA
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  Water and                Organisms
                                                                                                          Chemical name                                                                           CAS No.         organisms                   only
                                                                                                                                                                                                                    (μg/L)                   (μg/L)

                                               1. 1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane .......................................................................................................                  79–34–5                    0.09      0.2
                                               2. 1,1,2-Trichloroethane ..............................................................................................................               79–00–5                    0.31      0.66
                                               3. 1,1-Dichloroethylene ................................................................................................................              75–35–4                     300      1000
                                               4. 1,2,4,5-Tetrachlorobenzene ....................................................................................................                    95–94–3                  0.002       0.002
                                               5. 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene ............................................................................................................               120–82–1                0.0056        0.0056
                                               6. 1,2-Dichlorobenzene ...............................................................................................................                95–50–1                     200      300
                                               7. 1,2-Dichloropropane ................................................................................................................               78–87–5   ........................   2.3
                                               8. 1,2-Diphenylhydrazine .............................................................................................................               122–66–7                    0.01      0.02
                                               9. 1,2-Trans-Dichloroethylene .....................................................................................................                  156–60–5                       90     300
                                               10. 1,3-Dichlorobenzene .............................................................................................................                541–73–1                         1    1
                                               11. 1,3-Dichloropropene ..............................................................................................................               542–75–6                    0.21      0.87
                                               12. 1,4-Dichlorobenzene .............................................................................................................                106–46–7   ........................   70
                                               13. 2,4,5-Trichlorophenol .............................................................................................................               95–95–4                       40     40
                                               14. 2,4,6-Trichlorophenol .............................................................................................................               88–06–2                    0.20      0.21
                                               15. 2,4-Dichlorophenol ................................................................................................................              120–83–2                         4    4
                                               16. 2,4-Dimethylphenol ................................................................................................................              105–67–9                       80     200
                                               17. 2,4-Dinitrophenol ...................................................................................................................             51–28–5                         9    30
                                               18. 2,4-Dinitrotoluene ..................................................................................................................            121–14–2                  0.036       0.13
                                               19. 2-Chloronaphthalene .............................................................................................................                 91–58–7                       90     90
                                               20. 2-Chlorophenol ......................................................................................................................             95–57–8                       20     60
                                               21. 2-Methyl-4,6-Dinitrophenol ....................................................................................................                  534–52–1                         1    2
                                               22. 3,3′-Dichlorobenzidine ...........................................................................................................                91–94–1                0.0096        0.011
                                               23. 4,4′-DDD ................................................................................................................................         72–54–8              9.3E–06         9.3E–06
                                               24. 4,4′-DDE ................................................................................................................................         72–55–9              1.3E–06         1.3E–06
                                               25. 4,4′-DDT ................................................................................................................................         50–29–3              2.2E–06         2.2E–06
                                               26. Acenaphthene .......................................................................................................................              83–32–9                         6    7
                                               27. Acrolein ..................................................................................................................................      107–02–8                         3
                                               28. Aldrin .....................................................................................................................................     309–00–2              5.8E–08         5.8E–08
                                               29. alpha-BHC .............................................................................................................................          319–84–6              2.9E–05         2.9E–05
                                               30. alpha-Endosulfan ...................................................................................................................             959–98–8                         2    2
                                               31. Anthracene ............................................................................................................................          120–12–7                       30     30
                                               32. Antimony ................................................................................................................................       7440–36–0                         5    40
                                               33. Benzene ................................................................................................................................          71–43–2                    0.40      1.2
                                               34. Benzo (a) Anthracene ...........................................................................................................                  56–55–3              9.8E–05         9.8E–05
                                               35. Benzo (a) Pyrene ..................................................................................................................               50–32–8              9.8E–06         9.8E–06
                                               36. Benzo (b) Fluoranthene ........................................................................................................                  205–99–2              9.8E–05         9.8E–05
                                               37. Benzo (k) Fluoranthene .........................................................................................................                 207–08–9              0.00098         0.00098
                                               38. beta-BHC ...............................................................................................................................         319–85–7                0.0010        0.0011
                                               39. beta-Endosulfan ....................................................................................................................           33213–65–9                         3    3
                                               40. Bis(2-Chloro-1-Methylethyl) Ether .........................................................................................                      108–60–1                     100      300
                                               41. Bis(2-Chloroethyl) Ether ........................................................................................................                111–44–4                  0.026       0.16
                                               42. Bis(2-Ethylhexyl) Phthalate ...................................................................................................                  117–81–7                  0.028       0.028
                                               43. Bromoform .............................................................................................................................           75–25–2                      4.0     8.7
                                               44. Butylbenzyl Phthalate ............................................................................................................                85–68–7                0.0077        0.0077
                                               45. Carbon Tetrachloride .............................................................................................................                56–23–5                      0.2     0.3
                                               46. Chlordane ..............................................................................................................................          57–74–9              2.4E–05         2.4E–05
                                               47. Chlorobenzene ......................................................................................................................             108–90–7                       40     60
                                               48. Chlorodibromomethane .........................................................................................................                   124–48–1   ........................   1.5
                                               49. Chrysene ...............................................................................................................................         218–01–9   ........................   0.0098
                                               50. Cyanide .................................................................................................................................         57–12–5                         4    30
                                               51. Dibenzo (a,h) Anthracene .....................................................................................................                    53–70–3              9.8E–06         9.8E–06
                                               52. Dichlorobromomethane .........................................................................................................                    75–27–4   ........................   2.0
                                               53. Dieldrin ..................................................................................................................................       60–57–1              9.3E–08         9.3E–08
                                               54. Diethyl Phthalate ...................................................................................................................             84–66–2                       50     50
                                               55. Dimethyl Phthalate ................................................................................................................              131–11–3                     100      100
                                               56. Di-n-Butyl Phthalate ..............................................................................................................               84–74–2                         2    2
                                               57. Dinitrophenols ........................................................................................................................        25550–58–7                       10     70
                                               58. Endosulfan Sulfate ................................................................................................................             1031–07–8                         3    3
                                               59. Endrin ....................................................................................................................................       72–20–8                  0.002       0.002
                                               60. Endrin Aldehyde ....................................................................................................................            7421–93–4                    0.09      0.09
                                               61. Ethylbenzene .........................................................................................................................           100–41–4                      8.9     9.5
                                               62. Fluoranthene .........................................................................................................................           206–44–0                         1    1
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                                               63. Fluorene ................................................................................................................................         86–73–7                         5    5
                                               64. gamma-BHC (Lindane) .........................................................................................................                     58–89–9                    0.33
                                               65. Heptachlor .............................................................................................................................          76–44–8              4.4E–07         4.4E–07
                                               66. Heptachlor Epoxide ...............................................................................................................              1024–57–3              2.4E–06         2.4E–06
                                               67. Hexachlorobenzene ...............................................................................................................                118–74–1              5.9E–06         5.9E–06
                                               68. Hexachlorobutadiene .............................................................................................................                 87–68–3                0.0007        0.0007
                                               69. Hexachlorocyclohexane-Technical ........................................................................................                         608–73–1              0.00073         0.00076
                                               70. Hexachlorocyclopentadiene ..................................................................................................                      77–47–4                      0.3     0.3



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                                                                     92489

                                                                                                                   TABLE 1—HUMAN HEALTH CRITERIA—Continued
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Water and                 Organisms
                                                                                                            Chemical name                                                                                CAS No.                   organisms                    only
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     (μg/L)                    (μg/L)

                                               71.   Hexachloroethane .................................................................................................................                        67–72–1                           0.01      0.01
                                               72.   Indeno (1,2,3-cd) Pyrene ......................................................................................................                         193–39–5                      9.8E–05         9.8E–05
                                               73.   Isophorone .............................................................................................................................                  78–59–1                              28     140
                                               74.   Methoxychlor .........................................................................................................................                    72–43–5                         0.001
                                               75.   Methylene Chloride ...............................................................................................................                        75–09–2          ........................   90
                                               76.   Methylmercury .......................................................................................................................               22967–92–6             ........................   0.02 a (mg/kg)
                                               77.   Nickel .....................................................................................................................................          7440–02–0                                20     20
                                               78.   Nitrobenzene .........................................................................................................................                    98–95–3                              10     40
                                               79.   Nitrosamines ..........................................................................................................................         ........................              0.00075         0.032
                                               80.   N-Nitrosodibutylamine ...........................................................................................................                       924–16–3                      0.00438         0.0152
                                               81.   N-Nitrosodiethylamine ...........................................................................................................                         55–18–5                     0.00075         0.032
                                               82.   N-Nitrosodimethylamine ........................................................................................................                           62–75–9                     0.00065         0.21
                                               83.   N-Nitrosodi-n-propylamine .....................................................................................................                         621–64–7                        0.0042        0.035
                                               84.   N-Nitrosodiphenylamine ........................................................................................................                           86–30–6                           0.40      0.42
                                               85.   N-Nitrosopyrrolidine ...............................................................................................................                    930–55–2           ........................   2.4
                                               86.   Pentachlorobenzene ..............................................................................................................                       608–93–5                          0.008       0.008
                                               87.   Pentachlorophenol .................................................................................................................                       87–86–5                         0.003       0.003
                                               88.   Phenol ...................................................................................................................................              108–95–2                          3,000       20,000
                                               89.   Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) ........................................................................................                             1336–36–3                       b 4E–06         4E–06 b
                                               90.   Pyrene ...................................................................................................................................              129–00–0                                 2    2
                                               91.   Selenium ................................................................................................................................             7782–49–2                                20     60
                                               92.   Toluene ..................................................................................................................................              108–88–3                               24     39
                                               93.   Toxaphene .............................................................................................................................               8001–35–2                       5.3E–05         5.3E–05
                                               94.   Trichloroethylene ...................................................................................................................                     79–01–6                             0.3     0.5
                                               95.   Vinyl Chloride ........................................................................................................................                   75–01–4                         0.019       0.12
                                               96.   Zinc ........................................................................................................................................         7440–66–6                              300      400
                                                  a This criterion is expressed as the fish tissue concentration of methylmercury (mg methylmercury/kg fish) and applies equally to fresh and ma-
                                               rine waters.
                                                  b This criterion applies to total PCBs (i.e., the sum of all congener or isomer or homolog or Aroclor analyses).




                                                 (b) Bacteria criteria for waters in                                        organisms in samples representative of                                       or go to: http://www.archives.gov/
                                               Indian lands. (1) The bacteria content of                                    the waters in shellfish harvesting areas                                     federal_register/code_of_federal_
                                               Class AA and Class A waters shall be as                                      may not exceed the criteria                                                  regulations/ibr_locations.html.
                                               naturally occurs, and the minimum                                            recommended under the National                                                  (5) In Class SB and SC waters, the
                                               number of Escherichia coli bacteria                                          Shellfish Sanitation Program, United                                         number of Enterococcus spp. bacteria
                                               shall not exceed a geometric mean of                                         States Food and Drug Administration, as                                      shall not exceed a geometric mean of 30
                                               100 colony-forming units per 100                                             set forth in the Guide for the Control of                                    cfu/100 ml in any 30-day interval, nor
                                               milliliters (cfu/100 ml) in any 30-day                                       Molluscan Shellfish, 2015 Revision. The                                      shall 110 cfu/100 ml be exceeded more
                                               interval; nor shall 320 cfu/100 ml be                                        Director of the Federal Register                                             than 10% of the time in any 30-day
                                               exceeded more than 10% of the time in                                        approves this incorporation by reference                                     interval.
                                               any 30-day interval.                                                         in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and                                          (c) Ammonia criteria for fresh waters
                                                 (2) In Class B, Class C, and Class GPA                                     1 CFR part 51. You may obtain a copy                                         in Indian lands. (1) The one-hour
                                               waters, the number of Escherichia coli                                       from the U.S. Food and Drug                                                  average concentration of total ammonia
                                               bacteria shall not exceed a geometric                                        Administration Center for Food Safety                                        nitrogen (in mg TAN/L) shall not
                                               mean of 100 colony forming units per                                         and Applied Nutrition, Shellfish and                                         exceed, more than once every three
                                               100 milliliters (cfu/100 ml) in any 30-                                      Aquaculture Policy Branch, 5100 Paint                                        years, the criterion maximum
                                               day interval; nor shall 320 cfu/100 ml be                                    Branch Parkway (HFS–325), College                                            concentration (i.e., the ‘‘CMC,’’ or
                                               exceeded more than 10% of the time in                                        Park, MD 20740 or http://www.fda.gov/                                        ‘‘acute criterion’’) set forth in Tables 2
                                               any 30-day interval.                                                         Food/GuidanceRegulation/FederalState                                         and 3 of this section.
                                                 (3) The bacteria content of Class SA                                       FoodPrograms/ucm2006754.htm. You                                                (2) The thirty-day average
                                               waters shall be as naturally occurs, and                                     may inspect a copy at the U.S.                                               concentration of total ammonia nitrogen
                                               the number of Enterococcus spp.                                              Environmental Protection Agency                                              (in mg TAN/L) shall not exceed, more
                                               bacteria shall not exceed a geometric                                        Docket Center Reading Room, William                                          than once every three years, the
                                               mean of 30 cfu/100 ml in any 30-day                                          Jefferson Clinton West Building, Room                                        criterion continuous concentration (i.e.,
                                               interval, nor shall 110 cfu/100 ml be                                        3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue NW.,                                          the ‘‘CCC,’’ or ‘‘chronic criterion’’) set
                                               exceeded more than 10% of the time in                                        Washington, DC 20004, (202) 566–1744,                                        forth in Table 4.
                                               any 30-day interval.                                                         or at the National Archives and Records                                         (3) In addition, the highest four-day
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES9




                                                 (4) In Class SA shellfish harvesting                                       Administration (NARA). For                                                   average within the same 30-day period
                                               areas, the numbers of total coliform                                         information on the availability of this                                      as in (2) shall not exceed 2.5 times the
                                               bacteria or other specified indicator                                        material at NARA, call 202–741–6030,                                         CCC, more than once every three years.




                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014          22:19 Dec 16, 2016          Jkt 241001       PO 00000        Frm 00025        Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4700       E:\FR\FM\19DER9.SGM              19DER9


sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES9
VerDate Sep<11>2014




                                                                                                                                                                      92490
                          Table 2. Temperature and pH-Dependent Values ofthe CMC (Acute Criterion Magnitude}-Oncorhynchus spp. Present. (Figure Sa in
                          Aquatic Life Ambient Water Quality Criteria for Ammonia-Freshwater, EPA 822-R-13-001, April2013.)




                                                                                                                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
22:19 Dec 16, 2016




                                          Temperature ("C)
                            pH              0-14      15      16     17     18     19     20     21     22     23     24     25     26     27     28     29     30
                                 6.5         33       33      32     29     27     25     23     21     19     18     16     15     14     13     12     11     9.9
Jkt 241001




                                 6.6         31       31      30     28     26     24     22     20     18     17     16     14     13     12     11     10     9.5
                                 6.7         30       30      29     27     24     22     21     19     18     16     15     14     13     12     11     9.8    9.0
                                 6.8         28       28      27     25     23     21     20     18     17     15     14     13     12     11     10     9.2    8.5
PO 00000




                                 6.9         26       26      25     23     21     20     18     17     15     14     13     12     11     10     9.4    8.6    7.9
                                 7.0         24       24      23     21     20     18     17     15     14     13     12     11     10     9.4    8.6    8.0    7.3
Frm 00026




                                 7.1         22       22      21     20     18     17     15     14     13     12     11     10     9.3    8.5    7.9    7.2    6.7
                                 7.2         20       20      19     18     16     15     14     13     12     11     9.8    9.1    8.3    7.7    7.1    6.5    6.0
                                 7.3          18      18      17     16     14     13     12     11     10     9.5    8.7    8.0    7.4    6.8    6.3    5.8    5.3
Fmt 4701




                                 7.4          15      15      15     14     13     12     11     9.8    9.0    8.3    7.7    7.0    6.5    6.0    5.5    5.1    4.7
                                 7.5          13      13      13     12     11     10     9.2    8.5    7.8    7.2    6.6    6.1    5.6    5.2    4.8    4.4    4.0
Sfmt 4725




                                 7.6          11      11      11     10     9.3    8.6    7.9    7.3    6.7    6.2    5.7    5.2    4.8    4.4    4.1    3.8    3.5
                                 7.7         9.6     9.6      9.3    8.6    7.9    7.3    6.7    6.2    5.7    5.2    4.8    4.4    4.1    3.8    3.5    3.2    3.0
                                 7.8         8.1     8.1      7.9    7.2    6.7    6.1    5.6    5.2    4.8    4.4    4.0    3.7    3.4    3.2    2.9    2.7    2.5
E:\FR\FM\19DER9.SGM




                                 7.9         6.8     6.8      6.6    6.0    5.6    5.1    4.7    4.3    4.0    3.7    3.4    3.1    2.9    2.6    2.4    2.2    2.1
                                 8.0         5.6     5.6      5.4    5.0    4.6    4.2    3.9    3.6    3.3    3.0    2.8    2.6    2.4    2.2    2.0    1.9    1.7
                                 8.1         4.6     4.6      4.5    4.1    3.8    3.5    3.2    3.0    2.7    2.5    2.3    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.5    1.4
                                 8.2         3.8     3.8      3.7    3.5    3.1    2.9    2.7    2.4    2.3    2.1    1.9    1.8    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2
                                 8.3         3.1     3.1      3.1    2.8    2.6    2.4    2.2    2.0    1.9    1.7    1.6    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.96
19DER9




                                 8.4         2.6     2.6      2.5    2.3    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.93   0.86   0.79
                                 8.5         2.1     2.1      2.1    1.9    1.8    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1   0.98   0.90   0.83   0.77   0.71   0.65
                                 8.6         1.8     1.8      1.7    1.6    1.5    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.96   0.88   0.81   0.75   0.69   0.63   0.59   0.54
                                 8.7         1.5     1.5      1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.94   0.87   0.80   0.74   0.68   0.62   0.57   0.53   0.49   0.45
                                 8.8         1.2     1.2      1.2    1.1    1.0   0.93   0.86   0.79   0.73   0.67   0.62   0.57   0.52   0.48   0.44   0.41   0.37
                                 8.9         1.0     1.0      1.0   0.93   0.85   0.79   0.72   0.67   0.61   0.56   0.52   0.48   0.44   0.40   0.37   0.34   0.32
                                 9.0        0.88    0.88     0.86   0.79   0.73   0.67   0.62   0.57   0.52   0.48   0.44   0.41   0.37   0.34   0.32   0.29   0.27




ER19DE16.007</GPH>


sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES9
VerDate Sep<11>2014




                             Table 3. Temperature and pH-Dependent Values of the CMC (Acute Criterion Magnitude)-Oncorhynchus spp. Absent. (Figure 5b in
                             Aquatic Life Ambient Water Quality Criteria for Ammonia-Freshwater, EPA 822-R-13-001, April2013.)




                                                                                                                                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
22:19 Dec 16, 2016




                                          Temperature   ec)
                               pH         0-10   11    12     13    14     15     16     17     18     19     20     21     22     23     24     25     26     27     28     29     30
                                 6.5       51    48    44     41    37     34     32     29     27     25     23     21     19     18     16     15     14     13     12     11     9.9
Jkt 241001




                                 6.6       49    46    42     39    36     33     30     28     26     24     22     20     18     17     16     14     13     12     11     10     9.5
                                 6.7       46    44    40     37    34     31     29     27     24     22     21     19     18     16     15     14     13     12     11     9.8    9.0
                                 6.8       44    41    38     35    32     30     27     25     23     21     20     18     17     15     14     13     12     11     10     9.2    8.5
PO 00000




                                 6.9       41    38    35     32    30     28     25     23     21     20     18     17     15     14     13     12     11     10     9.4    8.6    7.9
                                 7.0       38    35    33     30    28     25     23     21     20     18     17     15     14     13     12     11     10     9.4    8.6    7.9    7.3
Frm 00027




                                 7.1       34    32    30     27    25     23     21     20     18     17     15     14      13    12     11      10    9.3    8.5    7.9    7.2    6.7
                                 7.2       31    29    27     25    23     21     19     18     16     15     14     13     12     11     9.8    9.1    8.3    7.7    7.1    6.5    6.0
                                 7.3       27    26    24     22    20     18     17     16     14     13     12     11     10     9.5    8.7    8.0    7.4    6.8    6.3    5.8    5.3
Fmt 4701




                                 7.4       24    22    21     19    18     16     15     14     13     12     11     9.8    9.0    8.3    7.7    7.0    6.5    6.0    5.5    5.1    4.7
                                 7.5       21    19    18     17    15     14     13     12     11     10     9.2    8.5    7.8    7.2    6.6    6.1    5.6    5.2    4.8    4.4    4.0
Sfmt 4725




                                 7.6        18   17    15     14    13     12     11     10     9.3    8.6    7.9    7.3    6.7    6.2    5.7    5.2    4.8    4.4    4.1    3.8    3.5
                                 7.7        15   14    13     12    11     10     9.3    8.6    7.9    7.3    6.7    6.2    5.7    5.2    4.8    4.4    4.1    3.8    3.5    3.2    2.9
                                 7.8        13   12    11     10    9.3    8.5    7.9    7.2    6.7    6.1    5.6    5.2    4.8    4.4    4.0    3.7    3.4    3.2    2.9    2.7    2.5
E:\FR\FM\19DER9.SGM




                                 7.9        11   9.9   9.1    8.4   7.7    7.1    6.6    3.0    5.6    5.1    4.7    4.3    4.0    3.7    3.4    3.1    2.9    2.6    2.4    2.2    2.1
                                 8.0       8.8   8.2   7.6    7.0   6.4    5.9    5.4    5.0    4.6    4.2    3.9    3.6    3.3    3.0    2.8    2.6    2.4    2.2    2.0    1.9    1.7
                                 8.1       7.2   6.8   6.3    5.8   5.3    4.9    4.5    4.1    3.8    3.5    3.2    3.0    2.7    2.5    2.3    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.5    1.4
                                 8.2       6.0   5.6   5.2    4.8   4.4    4.0    3.7    3.4    3.1    2.9    2.7    2.4    2.3    2.1    1.9    1.8    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2
                                 8.3       4.9   4.6   4.3    3.9   3.6    3.3    3.1    2.8    2.6    2.4    2.2    2.0    1.9    1.7    1.6    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.96
19DER9




                                 8.4       4.1   3.8   3.5    3.2   3.0    2.7    2.5    2.3    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.93   0.86   0.79
                                 8.5       3.3   3.1   2.9    2.7   2.4    2.3    2.1    1.9    1.8    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1   0.98   0.90   0.83   0.77   0.71   0.65
                                 8.6       2.8   2.6   2.4    2.2   2.0    1.9    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.96   0.88   0.81   0.75   0.69   0.63   0.58   0.54
                                 8.7       2.3   2.2   2.0    1.8   1.7    1.6    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.94   0.87   0.80   0.74   0.68   0.62   0.57   0.53   0.49   0.45
                                 8.8       1.9   1.8   1.7    1.5   1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.93   0.86   0.79   0.73   0.67   0.62   0.57   0.52   0.48   0.44   0.41   0.37
                                 8.9       1.6   1.5   1.4    1.3   1.2    1.1    1.0   0.93   0.85   0.79   0.72   0.67   0.61   0.56   0.52   0.48   0.44   0.40   0.37   0.34   0.32
                                 9.0       1.4   1.3   1.2    1.1   1.0   0.93   0.86   0.79   0.73   0.67   0.62   0.57   0.52   0.48   0.44   0.41   0.37   0.34   0.32   0.29   0.27




                                                                                                                                                                                          92491
ER19DE16.008</GPH>


sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES9
VerDate Sep<11>2014




                                                                                                                                                                                                            92492
                               Table 4. Temperature and pH-Dependent Values ofthe CCC (Chronic Criterion Magnitude). (Figure 6 in Aquatic Life Ambient Water




                                                                                                                                                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
22:19 Dec 16, 2016




                               Quality Criteria for Ammonia-Freshwater, EPA 822-R-13-001, April2013.)

                                   Temperature (°C)
                          pH        0-7     8      9      10     11     12     13     14     15     16     17     18     19     20     21     22     23     24     25     26     27     28     29     30
                           6.5       4.9    4.6    4.3    4.1    3.8    3.6    3.3    3.1    2.9    2.8    2.6    2.4    2.3    2.1    2.0    1.9    1.8    1.6    1.5    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1
Jkt 241001




                           6.6       4.8    4.5    4.3    4.0    3.8    3.5    3.3    3.1    2.9    2.7    2.5    2.4    2.2    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.3    1.2    1.1
                           6.7       4.8    4.5    4.2    3.9    3.7    3.5    3.2    3.0    2.8    2.7    2.5    2.3    2.2    2.1    1.9    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.2    1.1
                           6.8       4.6    4.4    4.1    3.8    3.6    3.4    3.2    3.0    2.8    2.6    2.4    2.3    2.1    2.0    1.9    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.1
PO 00000




                           6.9       4.5    4.2    4.0    3.7    3.5    3.3    3.1    2.9    2.7    2.5    2.4    2.2    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.2    1.1    1.0
                           7.0       4.4    4.1    3.8    3.6    3.4    3.2    3.0    2.8    2.6    2.4    2.3    2.2    2.0    1.9    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.1   0.99
Frm 00028




                           7.1       4.2    3.9    3.7    3.5    3.2    3.0    2.8    2.7    2.5    2.3    2.2    2.1    1.9    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.95
                           7.2       4.0    3.7    3.5    3.3    3.1    2.9    2.7    2.5    2.4    2.2    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.96   0.90
                           7.3       3.8    3.5    3.3    3.1    2.9    2.7    2.6    2.4    2.2    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.97   0.91   0.85
Fmt 4701




                           7.4       3.5    3.3    3.1    2.9    2.7    2.5    2.4    2.2    2.1    2.0    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.96   0.90   0.85   0.79
                           7.5       3.2    3.0    2.8    2.7    2.5    2.3    2.2    2.1    1.9    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.95   0.89   0.83   0.78   0.73
Sfmt 4725




                           7.6       2.9    2.8    2.6    2.4    2.3    2.1    2.0    1.9    1.8    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.1   0.98   0.92   0.86   0.81   0.76   0.71   0.67
                           7.7       2.6    2.4    2.3    2.2    2.0    1.9    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.1    1.0   0.94   0.88   0.83   0.78   0.73   0.68   0.64   0.60
                           7.8       2.3    2.2    2.1    1.9    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.95   0.89   0.84   0.79   0.74   0.69   0.65   0.61   0.57   0.53
E:\FR\FM\19DER9.SGM




                           7.9       2.1    1.9    1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.95   0.89   0.84   0.79   0.74   0.69   0.65   0.61   0.57   0.53   0.50   0.47
                           8.0       1.8    1.7    1.6    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.1    1.0   0.94   0.88   0.83   0.78   0.73   0.68   0.64   0.60   0.56   0.53   0.50   0.44   0.44   0.41
                           8.1       1.5    1.5    1.4    1.3    1.2    1.1    1.1   0.99   0.92   0.87   0.81   0.76   0.71   0.67   0.63   0.59   0.55   0.52   0.49   0.46   0.43   0.40   0.38   0.35
                           8.2       1.3    1.2    1.2    1.1    1.0   0.96   0.90   0.84   0.79   0.74   0.70   0.65   0.61   0.57   0.54   0.50   0.47   0.44   0.42   0.39   0.37   0.34   0.32   0.30
                           8.3       1.1    1.1   0.99   0.93   0.87   0.82   0.76   0.72   0.67   0.63   0.59   0.55   0.52   0.49   0.46   0.43   0.40   0.38   0.35   0.33   0.31   0.29   0.27   0.26
19DER9




                           8.4     0.95    0.89   0.84   0.79   0.74   0.69   0.65   0.61   0.57   0.53   0.50   0.47   0.44   0.41   0.39   0.36   0.34   0.32   0.30   0.28   0.26   0.25   0.23   0.22
                           8.5     0.80    0.75   0.71   0.67   0.62   0.58   0.55   0.51   0.48   0.45   0.42   0.40   0.37   0.35   0.33   0.31   0.29   0.27   0.25   0.24   0.22   0.21   0.20   0.18
                           8.6     0.68    0.64   0.60   0.56   0.53   0.49   0.46   0.43   0.41   0.38   0.36   0.33   0.31   0.29   0.28   0.26   0.24   0.23   0.21   0.20   0.19   0.18   0.16   0.15
                           8.7     0.57    0.54   0.51   0.47   0.44   0.42   0.39   0.37   0.34   0.32   0.30   0.28   0.27   0.25   0.23   0.22   0.21   0.19   0.18   0.17   0.16   0.15   0.14   0.13
                           8.8     0.49    0.46   0.43   0.40   0.38   0.35   0.33   0.31   0.29   0.27   0.26   0.24   0.23   0.21   0.20   0.19   0.17   0.16   0.15   0.14   0.13   0.13   0.12   0.11
                           8.9     0.42    0.39   0.37   0.34   0.32   0.30   0.28   0.27   0.25   0.23   0.22   0.21   0.19   0.18   0.17   0.16   0.15   0.14   0.13   0.12   0.12   0.11   0.10   0.09
                           9.0     0.36    0.34   0.32   0.30   0.28   0.26   0.24   0.23   0.21   0.20   0.19   0.18   0.17   0.16   0.15   0.14   0.13   0.12   0.11   0.11   0.10   0.09   0.09   0.08




ER19DE16.009</GPH>


                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          92493

                                                  (d) pH Criteria for fresh waters in                  (‘‘department’’) may establish a mixing                  (B) Whether organisms would be
                                               Indian lands. The pH of fresh waters                    zone for any discharge at the time of                 attracted to the area of mixing as a result
                                               shall fall within the range of 6.5 to 8.5.              application for a waste discharge license             of the effluent character; and
                                                  (e) Temperature criteria for tidal                   if all of the requirements set forth in                  (C) Whether the habitat supports
                                               waters in Indian lands. (1) The                         paragraphs (g)(2) and (3) of this section             endemic or naturally occurring species.
                                               maximum acceptable cumulative                           are satisfied. The department shall                      (vi) Provide all information necessary
                                               increase in the weekly average                          attach a description of the mixing zone               to demonstrate whether the
                                               temperature resulting from all artificial               as a condition of a license issued for                requirements in paragraph (g)(3) of this
                                               sources is 1 °C (1.8 °F) during all                     that discharge. After opportunity for a               section are satisfied.
                                               seasons of the year, provided that the                  hearing in accordance with 38 MRS                        (3) Mixing zone requirements. (i)
                                               summer maximum is not exceeded.                         section 345–A, the department may                     Mixing zones shall be established
                                                  (i) Weekly average temperature                       establish by order a mixing zone with                 consistent with the methodologies in
                                               increase shall be compared to baseline                  respect to any discharge for which a                  Sections 4.3 and 4.4 of the ‘‘Technical
                                               thermal conditions and shall be                         license has been issued pursuant to                   Support Document for Water Quality-
                                               calculated using the daily maxima                       section 414 or for which an exemption                 based Toxics Control’’ EPA/505/2–90–
                                               averaged over a 7-day period.                           has been granted by virtue of 38 MRS                  001, dated March 1991.
                                                  (ii) Baseline thermal conditions shall               section 413, subsection 2.                               (ii) The mixing zone demonstration
                                               be measured at or modeled from a site                                                                         shall be based on the assumption that a
                                                                                                          (ii) The purpose of a mixing zone is
                                               where there is no artificial thermal
                                                                                                       to allow a reasonable opportunity for                 pollutant does not degrade within the
                                               addition from any source, and which is
                                                                                                       dilution, diffusion, or mixture of                    proposed mixing zone, unless:
                                               in reasonable proximity to the thermal
                                                                                                       pollutants with the receiving waters                     (A) Scientifically valid field studies or
                                               discharge (within 5 miles), and which
                                                                                                       such that an applicable criterion may be              other relevant information demonstrate
                                               has similar hydrography to that of the
                                                                                                       exceeded within a defined area of the                 that degradation of the pollutant is
                                               receiving waters at the discharge.
                                                  (2) Natural temperature cycles                       waterbody while still protecting the                  expected to occur under the full range
                                               characteristic of the waterbody segment                 designated use of the waterbody as a                  of environmental conditions expected to
                                               shall not be altered in amplitude or                    whole. In determining the extent of any               be encountered; and
                                               frequency.                                              mixing zone to be established under this                 (B) Scientifically valid field studies or
                                                  (3) During the summer months (for                    section, the department will require                  other relevant information address other
                                               the period from May 15 through                          from the applicant information                        factors that affect the level of pollutants
                                               September 30), water temperatures shall                 concerning the nature and rate of the                 in the water column including, but not
                                               not exceed a weekly average summer                      discharge; the nature and rate of existing            limited to, resuspension of sediments,
                                               maximum threshold of 18 °C (64.4 °F)                    discharges to the waterway; the size of               chemical speciation, and biological and
                                               (calculated using the daily maxima                      the waterway and the rate of flow                     chemical transformation.
                                               averaged over a 7-day period).                          therein; any relevant seasonal, climatic,                (iii) Water quality within an
                                                  (f) Natural conditions provisions for                tidal, and natural variations in such                 authorized mixing zone is allowed to
                                               waters in Indian lands. (1) The                         size, flow, nature, and rate; the uses of             exceed chronic water quality criteria for
                                               provision in Title 38 of Maine Revised                  the waterways that could be affected by               those parameters approved by the
                                               Statutes 464(4.C) which reads: ‘‘Where                  the discharge, and such other and                     department. Acute water quality criteria
                                               natural conditions, including, but not                  further evidence as in the department’s               may be exceeded for such parameters
                                               limited to, marshes, bogs and abnormal                  judgment will enable it to establish a                within the zone of initial dilution inside
                                               concentrations of wildlife cause the                    reasonable mixing zone for such                       the mixing zone. Acute criteria shall be
                                               dissolved oxygen or other water quality                 discharge. An order establishing a                    met as close to the point of discharge as
                                               criteria to fall below the minimum                      mixing zone may provide that the extent               practicably attainable. Water quality
                                               standards specified in section 465, 465–                thereof varies in order to take into                  criteria shall not be violated outside of
                                               A and 465–B, those waters shall not be                  account seasonal, climatic, tidal, and                the boundary of a mixing zone as a
                                               considered to be failing to attain their                natural variations in the size and flow               result of the discharge for which the
                                               classification because of those natural                 of, and the nature and rate of, discharges            mixing zone was authorized.
                                               conditions,’’ does not apply to water                   to the waterway.                                         (iv) Mixing zones shall be as small as
                                               quality criteria intended to protect                       (2) Mixing zone information                        practicable. The concentrations of
                                               human health.                                           requirements. At a minimum, any                       pollutants present shall be minimized
                                                  (2) The provision in Title 38 of Maine               request for a mixing zone must:                       and shall reflect the best practicable
                                               Revised Statutes 420(2.A) which reads                      (i) Describe the amount of dilution                engineering design of the outfall to
                                               ‘‘Except as naturally occurs or as                      occurring at the boundaries of the                    maximize initial mixing. Mixing zones
                                               provided in paragraphs B and C, the                     proposed mixing zone and the size,                    shall not be authorized for
                                               board shall regulate toxic substances in                shape, and location of the area of                    bioaccumulative pollutants (i.e.,
                                               the surface waters of the State at the                  mixing, including the manner in which                 chemicals for which the
                                               levels set forth in federal water quality               diffusion and dispersion occur;                       bioconcentration factors (BCF) or
                                               criteria as established by the United                      (ii) Define the location at which                  bioaccumulation factors (BAF) are
                                               States Environmental Protection Agency                  discharge-induced mixing ceases;                      greater than 1,000) or bacteria.
                                               pursuant to the Federal Water Pollution                                                                          (v) In addition to the requirements
                                                                                                          (iii) Document the substrate character             above, the department may approve a
                                               Control Act, Public Law 92–500, Section
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                                                                                                       and geomorphology within the mixing                   mixing zone only if the mixing zone:
                                               304(a), as amended,’’ does not apply to
                                                                                                       zone;                                                    (A) Is sized and located to ensure that
                                               water quality criteria intended to protect
                                               human health.                                              (iv) Document background water                     there will be a continuous zone of
                                                  (g) Mixing zone policy for waters in                 quality concentrations;                               passage that protects migrating, free-
                                               Indian lands. (1) Establishing a mixing                    (v) Address the following factors;                 swimming, and drifting organisms;
                                               zone. (i) The Department of                                (A) Whether adjacent mixing zones                     (B) Will not result in thermal shock or
                                               Environmental Protection                                overlap;                                              loss of cold water habitat or otherwise


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                                               92494            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 243 / Monday, December 19, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                               interfere with biological communities or                migrating, and drifting organisms                     from October 1 through May 14, in fish
                                               populations of indigenous species;                      passing through the mixing zone;                      spawning areas, the 7-day mean
                                                 (C) Is not likely to jeopardize the                      (I) Will not contain pollutant                     dissolved oxygen concentration shall
                                               continued existence of any endangered                   concentrations that may cause                         not be less than 9.5 ppm (9.5 mg/L), and
                                               or threatened species listed under                      significant human health risks                        the 1-day minimum dissolved oxygen
                                               section 4 of the Endangered Species Act                 considering likely pathways of                        concentration shall not be less than 8
                                               of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et                  exposure;                                             ppm (8.0 mg/L).
                                               seq.) or result in the destruction or                      (J) Will not result in an overlap with                (i) Waiver or modification of
                                               adverse modification of such species’                   another mixing zone;                                  protection and improvement laws for
                                               critical habitat;                                          (K) Will not attract aquatic life;                 waters throughout the State of Maine,
                                                 (D) Will not extend to drinking water                    (L) Will not result in a shore-hugging             including in Indian lands. For all waters
                                               intakes and sources;                                    plume; and                                            in Maine, the provisions in Title 38 of
                                                                                                          (M) Is free from:                                  Maine Revised Statutes 363–D do not
                                                 (E) Will not otherwise interfere with                    (1) Substances that settle to form
                                               the designated or existing uses of the                                                                        apply to state or federal water quality
                                                                                                       objectionable deposits;                               standards applicable to waters in Maine,
                                               receiving water or downstream waters;                      (2) Floating debris, oil, scum, and
                                                 (F) Will not promote undesirable                                                                            including designated uses, criteria to
                                                                                                       other matter in concentrations that form
                                               aquatic life or result in a dominance of                                                                      protect existing and designated uses,
                                                                                                       nuisances; and
                                               nuisance species;                                          (3) Objectionable color, odor, taste, or           and antidegradation policies.
                                                 (G) Will not endanger critical areas                  turbidity.                                               (j) Phenol criterion for the protection
                                               such as breeding and spawning grounds,                     (h) Dissolved oxygen criteria for class            of human health for Maine waters
                                               habitat for state-listed threatened or                  A waters throughout the State of Maine,               outside of Indian lands. The phenol
                                               endangered species, areas with sensitive                including in Indian lands. The                        criterion to protect human health for the
                                               biota, shellfish beds, fisheries, and                   dissolved oxygen content of Class A                   consumption of water and organisms is
                                               recreational areas;                                     waters shall not be less than 7 ppm (7                4000 micrograms per liter.
                                                 (H) Will not contain pollutant                        mg/L) or 75% of saturation, whichever                 [FR Doc. 2016–30331 Filed 12–16–16; 8:45 am]
                                               concentrations that are lethal to mobile,               is higher, year-round. For the period                 BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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Document Created: 2016-12-17 03:15:54
Document Modified: 2016-12-17 03:15:54
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis final rule is effective on January 18, 2017. The incorporation by reference of certain publications listed in the rule is approved by the Director of the Federal Register as of January 18, 2017.
ContactJennifer Brundage, Office of Water, Standards and Health Protection Division (4305T), Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20460;
FR Citation81 FR 92466 
RIN Number2040-AF59
CFR AssociatedEnvironmental Protection; Incorporation by Reference; Indians-Lands; Intergovernmental Relations; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements and Water Pollution Control

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