83_FR_24954 83 FR 24850 - Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act

83 FR 24850 - Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 104 (May 30, 2018)

Page Range24850-24883
FR Document2018-11059

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is requesting public comment on several proposed changes to the final Risk Management Program Amendments rule (Amendments rule) issued on January 13, 2017. EPA is proposing to rescind amendments relating to safer technology and alternatives analyses, third-party audits, incident investigations, information availability, and several other minor regulatory changes. EPA is also proposing to modify amendments relating to local emergency coordination and emergency exercises, and to change the compliance dates for these provisions.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 104 (Wednesday, May 30, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 104 (Wednesday, May 30, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 24850-24883]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-11059]



[[Page 24849]]

Vol. 83

Wednesday,

No. 104

May 30, 2018

Part II





Environmental Protection Agency





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





40 CFR Part 68





Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk Management Programs 
Under the Clean Air Act; Proposed Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / 
Proposed Rules

[[Page 24850]]


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

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Part 68

[EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725; FRL-9975-20-OLEM]
RIN 2050-AG95


Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk Management 
Programs Under the Clean Air Act

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Proposed rule.

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

SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is requesting public 
comment on several proposed changes to the final Risk Management 
Program Amendments rule (Amendments rule) issued on January 13, 2017. 
EPA is proposing to rescind amendments relating to safer technology and 
alternatives analyses, third-party audits, incident investigations, 
information availability, and several other minor regulatory changes. 
EPA is also proposing to modify amendments relating to local emergency 
coordination and emergency exercises, and to change the compliance 
dates for these provisions.

DATES: Comments. Comments and additional material must be received on 
or before July 30, 2018. Under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 
comments on the information collection provisions are best assured of 
consideration if the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) receives a 
copy of your comments on or before June 29, 2018.
    Public testimony: Send requests to present oral testimony by June 
8, 2018.
    Public Hearing. The EPA will hold a public hearing on this proposed 
rule on June 14, 2018 in Washington, DC.

ADDRESSES: Comments. Submit comments and additional materials, 
identified by docket EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725 to the Federal eRulemaking 
Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for 
submitting comments. Once submitted, comments cannot be edited or 
removed from Regulations.gov. The EPA may publish any comment received 
to its public docket. Do not submit electronically any information you 
consider to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other 
information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Multimedia 
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be accompanied by a written 
comment. The written comment is considered the official comment and 
should include discussion of all points you wish to make. The EPA will 
generally not consider comments or comment contents located outside of 
the primary submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or other file sharing 
system). For additional submission methods, the full EPA public comment 
policy, information about CBI or multimedia submissions, and general 
guidance on making effective comments, please visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
    Public Hearing. A public hearing will be held in Washington, DC on 
June 14, 2018 at William J. Clinton East Building Room 1153 (Map Room), 
1201 Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460. The hearing will 
convene at 9:00 a.m. through 8:00 p.m. The sessions will run from 9:00 
a.m. to 12:00 p.m., with a break between 12:00 p.m. and 1:00 p.m., 
continuing from 1:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., with a break from 4:30 to 5:30 
p.m., and continuing from 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. Persons wishing to 
preregister may be assigned a time according to this schedule. The 
evening session beginning at 5:30 p.m. will be extended one hour after 
all scheduled comments have been heard to accommodate those wishing to 
make a comment as a walk-in registrant. Please register at https://www.epa.gov/rmp/public-hearing-proposed-changes-risk-management-program-rmp-rule to speak at the hearing. The last day to preregister 
in advance to speak at the hearing is June 8, 2018. Additionally, 
requests to speak will be taken the day of the hearing at the hearing 
registration desk, although preferences on speaking times may not be 
able to be fulfilled. If you require the service of a translator or 
special accommodations such as audio description, we ask that you pre-
register for the hearing, on or before June 8, 2018 to allow sufficient 
time to arrange such accommodations.
    The hearing will provide interested parties the opportunity to 
present data, views or arguments concerning the proposed action. The 
EPA will make every effort to accommodate all speakers who arrive and 
register. Because this hearing is being held at a U.S. government 
facility, individuals planning to attend the hearing should be prepared 
to show valid picture identification to the security staff in order to 
gain access to the meeting room. Please note that the REAL ID Act, 
passed by Congress in 2005, established new requirements for entering 
Federal facilities. If your driver's license is issued by Alaska, 
American Samoa, Arizona, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, 
Minnesota, Montana, New York, Oklahoma or the state of Washington, you 
must present an additional form of identification to enter the Federal 
building. Acceptable alternative forms of identification include: 
Federal employee badges, passports, enhanced driver's licenses and 
military identification cards. In addition, you will need to obtain a 
property pass for any personal belongings you bring with you. Upon 
leaving the building, you will be required to return this property pass 
to the security desk. No large signs will be allowed in the building, 
cameras may only be used outside of the building and demonstrations 
will not be allowed on Federal property for security reasons.
    The EPA may ask clarifying questions during the oral presentations, 
but will not respond to the presentations at that time. Written 
statements and supporting information submitted during the comment 
period will be considered with the same weight as oral comments and 
supporting information presented at the public hearing. Verbatim 
transcripts of the hearing and written statements will be included in 
the docket for the rulemaking. The EPA will make every effort to follow 
the schedule as closely as possible on the day of the hearing; however, 
please plan for the hearing to run either ahead of schedule or behind 
schedule.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James Belke, United States 
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Land and Emergency 
Management, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW (Mail Code 5104A), Washington, DC 
20460; telephone number: (202) 564-8023; email address: 
belke.jim@epa.gov, or Kathy Franklin, United States Environmental 
Protection Agency, Office of Land and Emergency Management, 1200 
Pennsylvania Ave. NW (Mail Code 5104A), Washington, DC 20460; telephone 
number: (202) 564-7987; email address: franklin.kathy@epa.gov.
    Electronic copies of this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) and 
related news releases are available on EPA's website at http://www.epa.gov/rmp. Copies of this NPRM are also available at http://www.regulations.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Acronyms and Abbreviations. We use multiple 
acronyms and terms in this preamble. While this list may not be 
exhaustive, to ease the reading of this preamble and for reference 
purposes, the EPA defines the following terms and acronyms here:

ACC American Chemistry Council
AFPM American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers
BATF Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives
CAA Clean Air Act

[[Page 24851]]

CAAA Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990
CBI confidential business information
CFATS Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Standards
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CSAG Chemical Safety Advocacy Group
CSISSFRRA Chemical Safety Information, Site Security and Fuels 
Regulatory Relief Act
CVI Chemical-terrorism Vulnerability Information
DHS Department of Homeland Security
E.O. Executive Order
DOT Department of Transportation
EPA Environmental Protection Agency
EPCRA Emergency Planning & Community Right-To-Know Act
FOIA Freedom of Information Act
FR Federal Register
ICR Information Collection Request
ISD inherently safer design
IST inherently safer technology
LEPC local emergency planning committee
NAICS North American Industrial Classification System
NPRM Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
OCA offsite consequences analysis
OMB Office of Management and Budget
OSHA Occupational Safety and Health Administration
PHA process hazard analysis
PRA Paperwork Reduction Act
PSI process safety information
PSM Process Safety Management
RIA Regulatory Impact Analysis
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
RFI request for information
RMP Risk Management Program
RTC Response to Comments
SBAR Small Business Advocacy Review
SBREFA Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
SDS safety data sheet
SER small entity representative
SERC state emergency response commission
STAA safer technology and alternatives analysis
TQ threshold quantity
U.S.C. United States Code
UMRA Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    Organization of this Document. The contents of this preamble are:

I. General Information
    A. Does this action apply to me?
    B. What action is the Agency taking?
    C. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
    D. What are the incremental costs and benefits of this action?
II. Background
    A. Events Leading to This Action
    B. EPA Authority to Reconsider and Revise the RMP Rule
    C. Overview of EPA's Risk Management Program Regulations
III. Proposed Changes
    A. Rescind incident investigation, third-party audit, safer 
technology and alternatives analysis (STAA), and other prevention 
program amendments
    B. Rescind information availability amendments
    C. Modify local coordination amendments
    D. Modify exercise amendments
    E. Revise emergency response contacts provided in RMP
    F. Revise compliance dates
    G. Corrections to cross referenced CFR sections
IV. Rationale for Rescissions and Modifications
    A. Maintain consistency in accident prevention requirements
    B. Address security concerns
    C. Address BATF finding on West Fertilizer incident
    D. Reduce unnecessary regulations and regulatory costs
    E. Revise compliance dates to provide necessary time for program 
changes
    F. Other issues raised by petitioners
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
    A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and 
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
    B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulation and Controlling 
Regulatory Costs
    C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
    D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
    E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
    F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
    G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination with 
Indian Tribal Governments
    H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children from 
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
    I. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect 
Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
    J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)
    K. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address 
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income 
Populations

I. General Information

A. Does this action apply to me?

    This rule applies to those facilities (referred to as ``stationary 
sources'' under the CAA) that are subject to the chemical accident 
prevention requirements at 40 CFR part 68. This includes stationary 
sources holding more than a threshold quantity (TQ) of a regulated 
substance in a process. Table 1 provides industrial sectors and the 
associated NAICS codes for entities potentially affected by this 
action. The Agency's goal is to provide a guide for readers to consider 
regarding entities that potentially could be affected by this action. 
However, this action may affect other entities not listed in this 
table. If you have questions regarding the applicability of this action 
to a particular entity, consult the person(s) listed in the 
introductory section of this action under the heading entitled FOR 
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.

   Table 1--Industrial Sectors and Associated NAICS Codes for Entities
                   Potentially Affected by This Action
------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Sector                             NAICS code
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Administration of              924
 Environmental Quality
 Programs.
Agricultural Chemical
 Distributors.
Crop Production..............  111
Animal Production and          112
 Aquaculture.
Support Activities for         115
 Agriculture and Forestry.
Farm Supplies Merchant         42491
 Wholesalers.
Chemical Manufacturing.......  325
Chemical and Allied Products   4246
 Merchant Wholesalers.
Food Manufacturing...........  311
Beverage Manufacturing.......  3121
Oil and Gas Extraction.......  211
Other \1\....................  44, 45, 48, 54, 56, 61, 72
Other manufacturing..........  313, 326, 327, 33
Other Wholesale..............
Merchant Wholesalers, Durable  423
 Goods.
Merchant Wholesalers,          424
 Nondurable Goods.
Paper Manufacturing..........  322
Petroleum and Coal Products    324
 Manufacturing.
Petroleum and Petroleum        4247
 Products Merchant
 Wholesalers.
Utilities....................  221

[[Page 24852]]

 
Warehousing and Storage......  493
------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. What action is the Agency taking?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ For descriptions of NAICS codes, see https://www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
    The purpose of this action is to propose changes to the Risk 
Management Program Amendments final rule in order to address issues 
raised in three petitions for reconsideration received by EPA, as well 
as other issues that EPA believes warrant reconsideration.
    On January 13, 2017, the EPA issued a final rule (82 FR 4594) 
amending 40 CFR part 68, the chemical accident prevention provisions 
under section 112(r) of the CAA (42 U.S.C. 7412(r)). The amendments 
addressed various aspects of risk management programs, including 
prevention programs at stationary sources, emergency response 
preparedness requirements, information availability, and various other 
changes to streamline, clarify, and otherwise technically correct the 
underlying rules. Prior to the rule taking effect, EPA received three 
petitions for reconsideration of the rule under CAA section 
307(d)(7)(B), two from industry groups \2\ and one from a group of 
states.\3\ Under that provision, the Administrator is to commence a 
reconsideration proceeding if, in the Administrator's judgement, the 
petitioner raises an objection to a rule that was impracticable to 
raise during the comment period or if the grounds for the objection 
arose after the comment period but within the period for judicial 
review. In either case, the Administrator must also conclude that the 
objection is of central relevance to the outcome of the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ RMP Coalition's Petition for Reconsideration and Request for 
Agency Stay Pending Reconsideration of Final RMP rule (82 FR 4594, 
January 13, 2017), February 28, 2017. Hogan Lovells US LLP, 
Washington, DC. Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0759 and
    Chemical Safety Advocacy Group (CSAG)'s Petition and 
Reconsideration and Stay Request of the Final RMP rule (82 FR 4594, 
January 13, 2017) March 13, 2017, Hunton & Williams, San Francisco, 
CA, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0766 and EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0765 
(supplemental petition).
    \3\ Petition for Reconsideration and Stay on behalf of States of 
Louisiana, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma, 
South Carolina, Wisconsin, West Virginia, and the Commonwealth of 
Kentucky with respect to Risk Management Program Final Rule, (82 FR 
4594, January 13, 2017), March 14, 2017. State of Louisiana, 
Department of Justice, Attorney General. EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0762.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In a letter dated March 13, 2017, the Administrator responded to 
the first of the reconsideration petitions received by announcing the 
convening of a proceeding for reconsideration of the Risk Management 
Program Amendments.\4\ As explained in that letter, having considered 
the objections raised in the petition, the Administrator determined 
that the criteria for reconsideration have been met for at least one of 
the objections. This proposal addresses the issues raised in all three 
petitions for reconsideration, as well as other issues that EPA 
believes warrant reconsideration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0762.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Summary of the Provisions of the Regulatory Action
    EPA proposes to rescind almost all the requirements added to the 
accident prevention provisions program of Subparts C (for Program 2 
processes) and D (for Program 3 processes). These include rescission of 
all requirements for third-party compliance audits (Sec. Sec.  68.58, 
68.59, 68.79 and 68.80), safer technology and alternatives analysis 
(Sec.  68.67(c)(8)) for facilities with Program 3 regulated processes 
in North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) codes 322 
(paper manufacturing), 324 (petroleum and coal products manufacturing), 
and 325 (chemical manufacturing) and rescinding the words ``for each 
covered process'' from the compliance audit provisions in Sec. Sec.  
68.58 and 68.79. EPA also proposes to rescind in Sec.  68.50(a)(2), the 
requirement for the hazard review to include findings from incident 
investigations. For incident investigations (Sec. Sec.  68.60 and 
68.81), EPA proposes to rescind: Requirements for conducting root cause 
analysis for incident investigations; for the incident investigation 
report to have specified added data elements, a schedule to address 
recommendations, a 12-month completion deadline, and for Sec.  68.60 
only, a five-year record retention (EPA notes that the existing rule's 
five-year record retention requirement at Sec.  68.200 will still 
apply); and for investigating any incident resulting in catastrophic 
releases that also results in the affected process being decommissioned 
or destroyed. In Sec. Sec.  68.60 and 68.81, EPA also proposes to 
rescind clarifying text ``(i.e., a near miss)'' that was added to 
describe an incident that could reasonably have resulted in a 
catastrophic release. In Sec.  68.60, EPA proposes to change the term 
investigation ``report(s)'' to ``summary(ies)'' and rescind the 
requirement for Program 2 processes to establish an incident 
investigation team consisting of at least one person knowledgeable in 
the process involved and other persons with experience to investigate 
an incident.
    EPA proposes to rescind employee training requirements (Sec. Sec.  
68.54 and 68.71) that would apply to supervisors responsible for 
process operations as well as rescind minor wording changes involving 
description of employees operating a process in Sec.  68.54. EPA 
proposes to rescind the requirement in Sec.  68.65 for the owner or 
operator to keep process safety information up-to-date and the 
requirement in Sec.  68.67(c)(2) for the process hazard analysis to 
address the findings from all incident investigations required under 
Sec.  68.81, as well as any other potential failure scenarios. EPA will 
retain two changes that would revise the term ``Material Safety Data 
Sheets'' to ``Safety Data Sheets (SDS)'' in Sec. Sec.  68.48 and 68.65.
    Alternatively, EPA proposes to rescind all of the above changes to 
Subparts C and D except for the requirement in Sec.  68.50(a)(2) for 
the hazard review to include findings from incident investigations, the 
term ``report(s)'' in place of the word ``summary(ies)'' in Sec.  
68.60, the requirement in Sec.  68.60 for Program 2 processes to 
establish an incident investigation team consisting of at least one 
person knowledgeable in the process involved and other persons with 
experience to investigate an incident, the requirements in Sec. Sec.  
68.54 and 68.71 for training requirements to apply to supervisors 
responsible for process operations and minor wording changes involving 
the description of employees operating a process in Sec.  68.54, and 
the two changes that would revise the term ``Material Safety Data 
Sheets'' to ``Safety Data Sheets (SDS)'' in Sec. Sec.  68.48 and 68.65.
    EPA proposes to rescind the following definitions in Sec.  68.3: 
active measures,

[[Page 24853]]

inherently safer technology or design, passive measures, 
practicability, and procedural measures related to amendments to 
requirements in Sec.  68.67; root cause related to amendments to 
requirements in Sec.  68.60 and Sec.  68.81, and third-party audit 
related to amendments to requirements in Sec. Sec.  68.58 and 68.79 and 
added Sec. Sec.  68.59 and 68.80.
    EPA proposes to modify the local emergency response coordination 
amendments by deleting the phrase in Sec.  68.93(b), ``. . . and any 
other information that local emergency planning and response 
organizations identify as relevant to local emergency response 
planning'' or alternatively replace it with the phrase ``. . . and 
other information necessary for developing and implementing the local 
emergency response plan.'' EPA would retain the requirement for owners 
or operators to provide the local emergency planning and response 
organizations with the stationary source's emergency response plan if 
one exists, emergency action plan, and updated emergency contact 
information, as well as the requirement for the owner or operator to 
request an opportunity to meet with the local emergency planning 
committee (or equivalent) and/or local fire department as appropriate 
to review and discuss these materials. EPA also proposes to incorporate 
appropriate classified information and CBI protections to regulated 
substance and stationary source information required to be provided 
under Sec.  68.93.
    EPA is proposing to modify the exercise program provisions of Sec.  
68.96(b), by removing the minimum frequency requirement for field 
exercises. EPA proposes to establish more flexible scope and 
documentation provisions for both field and tabletop exercises by only 
recommending, and not requiring, items specified for inclusion in 
exercises and exercise evaluation reports, while still requiring 
documentation of both types of exercises. EPA would retain the 
notification exercise requirement of Sec.  68.96(a) and the provision 
for alternative means of meeting exercise requirements of Sec.  
68.96(c).
    Alternatively, EPA is considering whether to fully rescind the 
field and tabletop exercise provisions of Sec.  68.96(b). Under this 
alternative proposal, EPA would retain the notification exercise 
provision of Sec.  68.96(a), but revise it and Sec.  68.93(b) to remove 
any reference to tabletop and field exercises, while also modifying the 
provision in Sec.  68.96(c) for alternative means of meeting exercise 
requirements so that it applies only to notification exercises.
    EPA proposes to rescind the requirements for providing to the 
public upon request, chemical hazard information and access to 
community emergency preparedness information in Sec.  68.210 (b) 
through (d), as well as rescind the requirement to provide the ``other 
chemical hazard information such as that described in paragraph (b) of 
this section'' at public meetings required under Sec.  68.210 (e). EPA 
will retain the requirement in Sec.  68.210 (e) for owner/operator of a 
stationary source to hold a public meeting to provide accident 
information required under Sec.  68.42 (b) no later than 90 days after 
any accident subject to reporting under Sec.  68.42. EPA will retain 
the change to Sec.  68.210 (a) which added 40 CFR part 1400 as a 
limitation on RMP availability (addresses restrictions on disclosing 
RMP offsite consequence analysis under CSISSFRRA),\5\ and the provision 
for control of classified information in Sec.  68.210 (f). EPA proposes 
to delete the provision for CBI in Sec.  68.210 (g), because the only 
remaining information required to be provided at the public meeting is 
the source's five-year accident history, which Sec.  68.151(b)(3) 
prohibits the owner or operator from claiming as CBI.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ Chemical Safety Chemical Safety Information, Site Security 
and Fuels Regulatory Relief Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA proposes to rescind requirements to report in the risk 
management plan any information associated with the rescinded 
provisions of third-party audits, incident investigation, safer 
technology and alternatives analysis, and information availability to 
the public. EPA proposed to slightly modify the emergency response 
contact information required by Sec.  68.180(a)(1) to be provided in a 
facility's RMP.
    EPA proposes to delay the rule's compliance dates in Sec.  68.10 to 
one year after the effective date of a final rule for the emergency 
coordination provisions, four years after the effective date of a final 
rule for emergency exercises, two years after the effective date for 
the public meeting provision and five years after the effective date of 
the final rule for those remaining risk management plan provisions 
added as the result of the Amendments rule or changed by the 
Reconsideration rule. Under the current proposal, owners and operators 
would be still be required to have exercise plans and schedules meeting 
the requirements of Sec.  68.96 in place within four years of the 
effective date of a final rule, but would have up to one additional 
year to perform their first notification drill, up to three additional 
years to conduct their first tabletop exercise and no specified 
deadline for the first field exercise, other than that established by 
the owner or operator's exercise schedule in coordination with local 
response agencies.
    The CFR amendatory language that appears at the end of this Federal 
Register notice (see PART 68--CHEMICAL ACCIDENT PREVENTION PROVISIONS) 
proposes changes to the regulatory text that would have included 
changes from the final RMP Amendments rule if it was in effect. For 
easier review of the proposed changes, EPA has provided a copy of 40 
CFR part 68 with the Amendments rule regulatory text changes in 
redline/strikeout format, which is available in the rulemaking 
docket.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ Regulatory Text Redline/Strikeout Changes for Proposed RMP 
Reconsideration Rule, April 26, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

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

    The Agency's procedures in this rulemaking are controlled by CAA 
section 307(d). The statutory authority for this action is provided by 
section 112(r) of the CAA as amended (42 U.S.C. 7412(r)). Each of the 
portions of the Risk Management Program rule we propose to modify in 
this document are based on section 112(r) of the CAA as amended (42 
U.S.C. 7412(r)). EPA's authority for convening a reconsideration 
proceeding for certain issues is found under CAA section 307(d)(7)(B) 
or 42 U.S.C. 7607(d)(7)(B). A more detailed explanation of these 
authorities can be found in Section II.B. of this preamble, EPA 
Authority to Reconsider and Revise the RMP Rule.

D. What are the incremental costs and benefits of this action?

1. Summary of Potential Cost Savings
    Approximately 12,500 facilities have filed current RMPs with EPA 
and are potentially affected by the proposed rule changes. These 
facilities range from petroleum refineries and large chemical 
manufacturers to water and wastewater treatment systems; chemical and 
petroleum wholesalers and terminals; food manufacturers, packing 
plants, and other cold storage facilities with ammonia refrigeration 
systems; agricultural chemical distributors; midstream gas plants; and 
a limited number of other sources, including Federal installations, 
that use RMP-regulated substances. Table 2 presents the number of 
facilities according to the

[[Page 24854]]

RMP reporting as of February 2015 by industrial sector and chemical 
use.

                                Table 2--Number of Affected Facilities by Sector
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                   Total
             Sector                              NAICS codes                    facilities       Chemical uses
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Administration of environmental  924........................................           1,923  Use chlorine and
 quality programs (i.e.,                                                                       other chemicals
 governments).                                                                                 for treatment.
Agricultural chemical            111, 112, 115, 42491.......................           3,667  Store ammonia for
 distributors/wholesalers.                                                                     sale; some in
                                                                                               NAICS 111 and 115
                                                                                               use ammonia as a
                                                                                               refrigerant.
Chemical manufacturing.........  325........................................           1,466  Manufacture,
                                                                                               process, store.
Chemical wholesalers...........  4246.......................................             333  Store for sale.
Food and beverage manufacturing  311, 312...................................           1,476  Use--mostly
                                                                                               ammonia as a
                                                                                               refrigerant.
Oil and gas extraction.........  211........................................             741  Intermediate
                                                                                               processing
                                                                                               (mostly regulated
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               substances and
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               mixtures).
Other..........................  44, 45, 48, 54, 56, 61, 72.................             248  Use chemicals for
                                                                                               wastewater
                                                                                               treatment,
                                                                                               refrigeration,
                                                                                               store chemicals
                                                                                               for sale.
Other manufacturing............  313, 326, 327, 33..........................             384  Use various
                                                                                               chemicals in
                                                                                               manufacturing
                                                                                               process, waste
                                                                                               treatment.
Other wholesale................  423, 424...................................             302  Use (mostly
                                                                                               ammonia as a
                                                                                               refrigerant).
Paper manufacturing............  322........................................              70  Use various
                                                                                               chemicals in pulp
                                                                                               and paper
                                                                                               manufacturing.
Petroleum and coal products      324........................................             156  Manufacture,
 manufacturing.                                                                                process, store
                                                                                               (mostly regulated
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               substances and
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               mixtures).
Petroleum wholesalers..........  4247.......................................             276  Store for sale
                                                                                               (mostly regulated
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               substances and
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               mixtures).
Utilities......................  221 (except 22131, 22132)..................             343  Use chlorine
                                                                                               (mostly for water
                                                                                               treatment).
Warehousing and storage........  493........................................           1,056  Use mostly ammonia
                                                                                               as a refrigerant.
Water/wastewater Treatment       22131, 22132...............................             102  Use chlorine and
 Systems.                                                                                      other chemicals.
                                                                             ----------------
    Total......................  ...........................................          12,542  ..................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Table 3 presents a summary of the annualized cost savings estimated 
in the regulatory impact analysis.\7\ In total, EPA estimates 
annualized cost savings of $87.9 million at a 3% discount rate and 
$88.4 million at a 7% discount rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \7\ A full description of costs and benefits for this proposed 
rule can be found in the ``Regulatory Impact Analysis, 
Reconsideration of the 2017 Amendments to the Accidental Release 
Prevention Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under the Clean 
Air Act, Section 112(r)(7).'' This document is available in the 
docket for this rulemaking (Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725).

               Table 3--Summary of Annualized Cost Savings
                        [Millions, 2015 dollars]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Provision                       3%              7%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third-party Audits......................           (9.8)           (9.8)
Incident Investigation/Root Cause.......           (1.8)           (1.8)
STAA....................................          (70.0)          (70.0)
Information Availability................           (3.1)           (3.1)
Rule Familiarization (net)..............           (3.2)           (3.7)
                                         -------------------------------
    Total Cost Savings*.................          (87.9)          (88.4)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Values may not sum due to rounding.

    Most of the annual cost savings under the proposed rule are due to 
the repeal of the STAA provision (annual savings of $70 million), 
followed by third-party audits (annual savings of $9.8 million), rule 
familiarization (annual net savings of $3.7 million), information 
availability (annual savings of $3.1 million), and root-cause incident 
investigation (annual savings of $1.8 million).
2. Summary of Potential Benefits and Benefit Reductions
    The RMP Amendments Rule produced a variety of benefits from 
prevention and mitigation of future RMP and non-RMP accidents at RMP 
facilities, avoided catastrophes at RMP facilities, and easier access 
to facility chemical hazard information. The proposed Reconsideration 
rule would largely retain the revised local emergency coordination and 
exercise provisions of the 2017 Amendments final rule, which convey 
mitigation benefits. The proposed rescission of the prevention program 
requirements (i.e., third-party audits, incident investigation, STAA), 
would result in a reduction in the magnitude of these benefits. The 
proposed rescission of the chemical hazard information availability 
provision would result in a reduction of the information sharing 
benefit, although a portion of this benefit from the Amendments rule 
would still be conveyed by the public meeting, emergency coordination 
and exercise provisions. The proposed

[[Page 24855]]

rulemaking would also convey the benefit of improved chemical site 
security, by modifying previously open-ended information sharing 
provisions of the Amendments rule that might have resulted in an 
increased risk of terrorism against regulated sources. See the RIA for 
additional information on benefits and benefit reductions.

II. Background

A. Events Leading to This Action

    On January 13, 2017, the EPA issued a final rule amending 40 CFR 
part 68, the chemical accident prevention provisions under section 
112(r) of the CAA (42 U.S.C. 7412(r)). The amendments addressed various 
aspects of risk management programs, including prevention programs at 
stationary sources, emergency response preparedness requirements, 
information availability, and various other changes to streamline, 
clarify, and otherwise technically correct the underlying rules. This 
rulemaking is known as the ``Risk Management Program Amendments'' or 
``RMP Amendments'' rule. For further information on the Risk Management 
Program Amendments, see 82 FR 4594 (January 13, 2017).
    On January 26, 2017, the EPA published a final rule delaying the 
effective date of the Risk Management Program Amendments from March 14, 
2017 to March 21, 2017, see 82 FR 8499. This revision to the effective 
date of the Risk Management Program Amendments was part of an EPA final 
rule implementing a memorandum dated January 20, 2017, from the 
Assistant to the President and Chief of Staff, entitled ``Regulatory 
Freeze Pending Review.'' This memorandum directed the heads of agencies 
to postpone, until 60 days after the date of its issuance, the 
effective date of rules that were published prior to January 20, 2017, 
but which had not yet become effective.
    In a letter dated February 28, 2017, a group known as the ``RMP 
Coalition,'' submitted a petition for reconsideration of the Risk 
Management Program Amendments (``RMP Coalition Petition'') as provided 
for in CAA section 307(d)(7)(B) (42 U.S.C. 7607(d)(7)(B)).\8\ Under 
that provision, the Administrator is to commence a reconsideration 
proceeding if, in the Administrator's judgement, the petitioner raises 
an objection to a rule that was impracticable to raise during the 
comment period or if the grounds for the objection arose after the 
comment period but within the period for judicial review and if the 
objection is of central relevance to the outcome of the rule. The 
Administrator may stay the effective date of the rule for up to three 
months during such reconsideration. On March 13, 2017, the Chemical 
Safety Advocacy Group (``CSAG'') also submitted a petition (``CSAG 
Petition'') for reconsideration and stay (including a March 14, 2017 
supplement to the CSAG Petition).\9\ On March 14, 2017, the EPA 
received a third petition for reconsideration and stay from the States 
of Louisiana, joined by Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Kansas, Oklahoma, 
South Carolina, Texas, Wisconsin, West Virginia, and the Commonwealth 
of Kentucky (the ``States Petition'').\10\ The Petitioners CSAG and 
States also requested that EPA delay the various compliance dates of 
the Risk Management Program Amendments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ RMP Coalition's Petition for Reconsideration and Request for 
Agency Stay Pending Reconsideration of Final RMP rule (82 FR 4594, 
January 13, 2017), February 28, 2017. Hogan Lovells US LLP, 
Washington, DC. Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0759.
    \9\ Chemical Safety Advocacy Group (CSAG)'s Petition and 
Reconsideration and Stay Request of the Final RMP rule (82 FR 4594, 
January 13, 2017) March 13, 2017, Hunton & Williams, San Francisco, 
CA, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0766 and EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0765 
(supplemental petition).
    \10\ Petition for Reconsideration and Stay on behalf of States 
of Louisiana, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma, 
South Carolina, Wisconsin, West Virginia, and the Commonwealth of 
Kentucky with respect to Risk Management Program Final Rule, (82 FR 
4594, January 13, 2017), March 14, 2017. State of Louisiana, 
Department of Justice, Attorney General. EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0762.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In a letter dated March 13, 2017, the Administrator announced the 
convening of a proceeding for reconsideration of the Risk Management 
Program Amendments (a copy of this letter is included in the docket for 
this rule, Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725).\11\ As explained in 
that letter, having considered the objections raised in the RMP 
Coalition Petition, the Administrator determined that the criteria for 
reconsideration have been met for at least one of the objections. EPA 
issued a three-month (90-day) administrative stay of the effective date 
of the Risk Management Program Amendments until June 19, 2017 (82 FR 
13968, March 16, 2017). EPA subsequently further delayed the effective 
date of the Risk Management Program Amendments until February 19, 2019, 
via notice and comment rulemaking (82 FR 27133, June 14, 2017). The 
purpose of this Delay Rule was to allow EPA to conduct a 
reconsideration proceeding and to consider other issues that may 
benefit from additional comment. This proposed rulemaking is the next 
step in EPA's reconsideration of the Risk Management Program 
Amendments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0758
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. EPA Authority To Reconsider and Revise the RMP Rule

1. What are the procedural requirements for reconsidering the RMP 
Amendments?
    Congress granted the EPA the authority for rulemaking on the 
prevention of chemical accidental releases as well as the correction or 
response to such releases in subparagraphs (A) and (B) of CAA section 
112(r)(7). The scope of this authority is discussed in more detail 
below. The EPA has used its authority under CAA section 112(r)(7) to 
issue the RMP Rule (61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996), the 2017 RMP 
Amendments, and this reconsideration document and proposed rulemaking.
    When promulgating rules under CAA section 112(r)(7)(A) and (B), the 
EPA must follow the procedures for rulemaking set out in CAA section 
307(d). See CAA sections 112(r)(7)(E) and 307(d)(1)(C). Among other 
things, section 307(d) sets out requirements for the content of 
proposed and final rules, the docket for rulemakings, requirement to 
provide an opportunity for oral testimony on the proposed rulemaking, 
the length of time for comments, and judicial review. Only objections 
raised with reasonable specificity during the public comment period may 
be raised during judicial review.
    Section 307(d) has a provision that requires the EPA to convene a 
reconsideration proceeding when the person makes an objection that 
meets specific criteria set out in CAA section 307(d)(7)(B). The 
statute provides:

    If the person raising an objection can demonstrate to the 
Administrator that it was impracticable to raise such objection 
within [the comment period] or if the grounds for such objection 
arose after the period for public comment (but within the time 
period specified for judicial review) and if such objection is of 
central relevance to the outcome of the rule, the Administrator 
shall convene a proceeding for reconsideration of the rule and 
provide the same procedural rights as would have been afforded had 
the information been available at the time the rule was proposed.

    As noted in the Background section above, when several parties 
petitioned for reconsideration of the 2017 RMP Amendments, the 
Administrator found that at least one objection the petitioners raised 
met the specific criteria for mandatory reconsideration and therefore 
he convened a proceeding for reconsideration under CAA section

[[Page 24856]]

307(d)(7)(B). While section 307(d)(7)(B) sets out criteria for when the 
Agency must conduct a reconsideration, the Agency has the discretion to 
reopen, revisit, amend and revise a rule under the rulemaking authority 
granted in CAA section 112(r)(7) by following the procedures of CAA 
307(d) at any time, including while it conducts a reconsideration 
proceeding required by CAA section 307(d)(7)(B). In light of the fact 
that EPA must already grant petitioners ``the same procedural rights as 
would have been afforded had the information been available at the time 
the rule was proposed,'' it is efficient to conduct a discretionary 
amendment proceeding simultaneously with the reconsideration 
proceeding.
2. What is EPA's substantive authority under Clean Air Act section 
112(r)(7)?
    Congress granted EPA authority for accident prevention rules under 
two provisions in CAA section 112(r)(7). Under subparagraph (A) of CAA 
section 112(r)(7), EPA may set rules addressing the prevention, 
detection, and correction of accidental releases of substances listed 
by EPA by rule (``regulated substances'' listed in the tables in 40 CFR 
68.130). Such rules may include data collection, training, design, 
equipment, work practice, and operational requirements. EPA has wide 
discretion regarding the effective date (``as determined by the 
Administrator, assuring compliance as expeditiously as practicable'').
    Under subparagraph (B) of CAA section 112(r)(7), Congress 
authorized EPA to develop ``reasonable regulations and appropriate 
guidance'' that provide for the prevention and detection of accidental 
releases and the response to such releases, ``to the greatest extent 
practicable.'' Congress required an initial rulemaking under this 
subparagraph by November 15, 1993. Subparagraph (B) sets out a series 
of mandatory subjects to address, interagency consultation 
requirements, and discretionary provisions that allowed EPA to tailor 
requirements to make them reasonable and practicable. For example, the 
regulations needed to address ``storage, as well as operations'' and 
``emergency response after accidental releases;'' EPA was to use the 
expertise of the Secretaries of Labor and Transportation in 
promulgating the regulations; and EPA had the discretion (``shall, as 
appropriate'') to recognize differences in ``size, operations, 
processes . . . and the voluntary actions'' of regulated sources to 
prevent and respond to accidental releases (CAA section 
112(r)(7)(B)(i)). At a minimum, the regulations had to require 
stationary sources with more than a ``threshold quantity to prepare and 
implement a risk management plan.'' Such plans needed to provide for 
compliance with rule requirements under CAA section 112(r) and include 
a hazard assessment with release scenarios and an accident history, a 
release prevention program, and a response program (CAA section 
112(r)(7)(B)(ii)). Plans were to be registered with EPA and submitted 
to various planning entities (CAA section 112(r)(7)(B)(iii)). The rules 
would apply to sources three years after promulgation or three years 
after a substance was first listed for regulation under CAA section 
112(r). (CAA section 112(r)(7)(B)(i)).
    In addition to the direction to use the expertise of the 
Secretaries of Labor and Transportation in subparagraph (B) of CAA 
section 112(r)(7), the statute required EPA to consult with these 
secretaries when carrying out the authority of CAA section 112(r)(7) 
and to ``coordinate any requirements under [CAA section 112(r)(7)] with 
any requirements established for comparable purposes by'' OSHA. (CAA 
section 112(r)(7)(D)). This consultation and coordination language 
derives from and expands upon provisions on hazard assessments in the 
bill that eventually passed the Senate as its version of the 1990 CAAA, 
section 129(e)(4) of S. 1630. The Senate committee report on this 
language notes that the purpose of the coordination requirement is to 
ensure that ``requirements imposed by both agencies to accomplish the 
same purpose are not unduly burdensome or duplicative.'' Senate Report 
at 244.\12\ The mandate for coordination in the area of safer chemical 
processes was incorporated into the CAA in section 112(r)(7)(D) in the 
same legislation that Congress directed OSHA to promulgate a process 
safety standard that became the PSM standard. See CAAA of 1990 section 
304.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ Clean Air Act Amendments of 1989, Report of the Committee 
on Environment and Public Works, U.S. Senate together with 
Additional and Minority Views to Accompany S. 1630. S. Report No. 
101-228. 101st Congress, 1st Session, December 20, 1989.--``Senate 
Report'' EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0645.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The RMP Amendments and this reconsideration address three aspects 
of the Risk Management Program: Requirements for prevention programs, 
emergency response provisions, and information disclosure. The 
prevention program provisions proposed to be rescinded in this document 
(auditing, incident investigation, and safer technologies and 
alternatives analysis) address the ``prevention and detection of 
accidental releases.'' The emergency coordination and exercises 
provisions in this rule modify existing provisions that provide for 
``response to such releases by the owners or operators of the sources 
of such releases.'' The information disclosure provisions proposed to 
be rescinded or modified in this document are related to the 
development of ``procedures and measures for emergency response after 
an accidental release of a regulated substance in order to protect 
human health and the environment.'' \13\ (CAA section 112(r)(7)(B)(i)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ Incident investigation, compliance auditing, and STAA are 
also authorized as release prevention requirements pertaining to 
stationary source ``design, equipment . . . and work practice'' as 
well as ``record-keeping [and] reporting.'' Information disclosure 
is also authorized as ``reporting.'' CAA section 112(r)(7)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In considering whether it is legally permissible for the Agency to 
rescind and/or modify provisions of the RMP Amendments rule while 
continuing to meet EPA's obligations under CAA section 112(r), EPA 
notes that the CAA did not require EPA to promulgate the RMP Amendments 
rule. There are four provisions of CAA section 112(r) that require or 
authorize the Administrator to promulgate regulations. The first two 
relate to the list of regulated substances and their threshold 
quantities. CAA section 112(r)(3) required EPA to promulgate a list of 
at least 100 regulated substances. Section 112(r)(5) required EPA to 
establish, by rule, a threshold quantity for each listed substance. EPA 
met these obligations in 1994 with the publication of the list of 
regulated substances and threshold quantities (59 FR 4493, January 31, 
1994). Section 112(r)(7) contains the other two regulatory provisions. 
Section 112(r)(7)(B) required EPA to publish accidental release 
prevention, detection, and response requirements and guidance (``. . . 
the Administrator shall promulgate reasonable regulations and 
appropriate guidance to provide, to the greatest extent practicable, 
for the prevention and detection of accidental releases of regulated 
substances and for response to such releases by the owners or operators 
of the sources of such releases''). EPA met this obligation in 1996 
with the publication of the original RMP rule (61 FR 31668, June 20, 
1996), and associated guidance documents published in the late 1990s. 
The other regulatory promulgation provision of section 112(r)(7)--
section 112(r)(7)(A)--is permissive. Subparagraph (A) authorizes EPA to 
promulgate regulations but does not require it.
    Therefore, EPA had met all of its regulatory obligations under 
section 112(r) prior to promulgating the RMP

[[Page 24857]]

Amendments rule. In promulgating the RMP Amendments rule, EPA took a 
discretionary regulatory action in response to Executive Order 13650, 
``Improving Chemical Safety and Security.'' \14\ We have made 
discretionary amendments to the RMP rule several times without a 
dispute over our authority to issue discretionary amendments. See 64 FR 
964 (January 6, 1999); 64 FR 28696 (May 26, 1999); 69 FR 18819 (April 
9, 2004). As EPA's action in the RMP Amendments rule was discretionary, 
the Agency may take additional action to rescind or modify provisions 
of the RMP Amendments rule if the Agency finds that it is reasonable to 
do so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ See 82 FR 4594, January 13, 2017: ``Section 6(c) of 
Executive Order 13650 requires the Administrator of EPA to review 
the chemical hazards covered by the Risk Management Program and 
expand, implement and enforce the Risk Management Program to address 
any additional hazards.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Overview of EPA's Risk Management Program Regulations

    EPA's existing RMP regulation was published in two stages. The 
Agency published the list of regulated substances and TQs in 1994 (59 
FR 4478, January 31, 1994) (the ``list rule'') \15\ and published the 
RMP final regulation, containing risk management requirements for 
covered sources, in 1996 (61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996) (the ``RMP 
rule'').16 17 Subsequent modifications to the list rule and 
RMP rule were made as discussed in the Amendments Rule (82 FR 4594, 
January 13, 2017 at 4600). Prior to development of EPA's 1996 RMP rule, 
OSHA published their Process Safety Management (PSM) standard in 1992 
(57 FR 6356, February 24, 1992), as required by section 304 of the 1990 
CAAA, using its authority under 29 U.S.C. 653. The OSHA PSM standard 
can be found in 29 CFR 1910.119. Both the OSHA PSM standard and the EPA 
RMP rule aim to prevent or minimize the consequences of accidental 
chemical releases through implementation of management program elements 
that integrate technologies, procedures, and management practices. In 
addition to requiring implementation of management program elements, 
the RMP rule requires covered sources to submit (to EPA) a document 
summarizing the source's risk management program--called a Risk 
Management Plan (or RMP).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ Documents and information related to development of the 
list rule can be found in the EPA docket for the rulemaking, docket 
number A-91-74.
    \16\ Documents and information related to development of the RMP 
rule can be found in EPA docket number A-91-73.
    \17\ 40 CFR part 68 applies to owners and operators of 
stationary sources that have more than a TQ of a regulated substance 
within a process. The regulations do not apply to chemical hazards 
other than listed substances held above a TQ within a regulated 
process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EPA's risk management program requirements include conducting a 
worst-case scenario analysis and a review of accident history, 
coordinating emergency response procedures with local response 
organizations, conducting a hazard assessment, documenting a management 
system, implementing a prevention program and an emergency response 
program, and submitting a risk management plan that addresses all 
aspects of the risk management program for all covered processes and 
chemicals. A process at a source is covered under one of three 
different prevention programs (Program 1, Program 2 or Program 3) based 
on the threat posed to the community and the environment. Program 1 has 
minimal requirements and is for processes not classified in industrial 
sectors \18\ specified for Program 3, that have not had an accidental 
release with offsite consequences in the last five years prior to 
submission of the source's risk management plan, and that have no 
public receptors within the worst case release scenario vulnerable zone 
for the process. Program 3 has the most requirements and applies to 
processes covered by the OSHA PSM standard (but not eligible for RMP 
Program 1) or classified in specified industrial sectors. Program 2 has 
fewer requirements than Program 3, and applies to any process not 
covered under Programs 1 or 3. Programs 2 and 3 both require a hazard 
assessment, a prevention program and an emergency response program, 
although Program 2 requirements are less extensive and more 
streamlined. For example, the Program 2 prevention program was intended 
to cover simpler processes located at smaller businesses and does not 
require the following process safety elements: management of change, 
pre-startup review, contractors, employee participation and hot work 
permits. The Program 3 prevention program is fundamentally identical to 
the OSHA PSM standard and designed to cover those processes in the 
chemical industry. For further explanation and comparison of the PSM 
standard and RMP requirements, see the ``Process Safety Management and 
Risk Management Plan Comparison Tool'' published by OSHA and EPA in 
October 2016.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ See ten industry NAICS codes listed at Sec.  68.10(d)(1) 
representing pulp mills, petroleum refineries, petrochemical 
manufacturing, alkalies and chlorine manufacturing, all other basic 
inorganic chemical manufacturing, cyclic crude and intermediates 
manufacturing, all other basic chemical manufacturing, plastic 
material and resin manufacturing, nitrogenous fertilizer 
manufacturing and pesticide and other agricultural chemicals 
manufacturing.
    \19\ Available at https://www.osha.gov/chemicalexecutiveorder/psm_terminology.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Proposed Changes

A. Rescind Incident Investigation, Third-Party Audit, Safer Technology 
and Alternatives Analysis (STAA), and Other Prevention Program 
Amendments

    In this section, EPA discusses the proposed changes to the RMP 
Amendments rule, but explanations of the rationale for most changes are 
discussed later in Section IV. Rationale for Rescissions and 
Modifications. Because many of the changes are being proposed for the 
same reason, presenting the rationale separately eliminates redundant 
discussion and allows rationale discussion to be organized by topic 
(i.e. OSHA coordination, security risks, cost reduction).
    In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA added three major provisions to the 
accident prevention program of Subparts C (for Program 2 processes) and 
D (for Program 3 processes). These included:
    (1) A requirement in Sec.  68.60 and Sec.  68.81 for all facilities 
with Program 2 or 3 processes to conduct a root cause analysis using a 
recognized method as part of an incident investigation of a 
catastrophic release or an incident that could have reasonably resulted 
in a catastrophic release (i.e., a near-miss).
    (2) Requirements in Sec.  68.58 and Sec.  68.79 for regulated 
facilities with Program 2 or Program 3 processes to contract with an 
independent third-party, or assemble an audit team led by an 
independent third-party, to perform a compliance audit after the 
facility has an RMP reportable accident or when an implementing agency 
requires a third-party audit due to conditions at the stationary source 
that could lead to an accidental release of a regulated substance, or 
when a previous third-party audit failed to meet the specified 
competency or independence criteria. Requirements were established in 
new Sec.  68.59 and Sec.  68.80 for third-party auditor competency, 
independence, and responsibilities and for third-party audit reports 
and audit findings response reports.
    (3) A requirement in Sec.  68.67(c)(8) for facilities with Program 
3 regulated processes in North American Industrial Classification 
System (NAICS) codes 322 (paper manufacturing), 324

[[Page 24858]]

(petroleum and coal products manufacturing), and 325 (chemical 
manufacturing) to conduct a safer technology and alternatives analysis 
(STAA) as part of their process hazard analysis (PHA). This required 
the owner or operator to address safer technology and alternative risk 
management measures applicable to eliminating or reducing risk from 
process hazards; to consider, in the following order or preference, 
inherently safer technologies, passive measures, active measures and 
procedural measures while using any combination of risk management 
measures to achieve the desired risk reduction; and to evaluate the 
practicability of any inherently safer technologies and designs 
considered.
    (4) The RMP Amendments rule also made several other minor changes 
to the Subparts C and D prevention program requirements. These included 
the following:
     Sec.  68.48 Safety information--changed requirement in 
subparagraph (a)(1) to maintain Safety Data Sheets (SDS) in lieu of 
Material Safety Data Sheets.
     Sec.  68.50 Hazard review--added language to existing 
subparagraph (a)(2) to require hazard reviews to include findings from 
incident investigations when identifying opportunities for equipment 
malfunctions or human errors that could cause an accidental release.
     Sec. Sec.  68.54 and 68.71 Training--changed description 
of employee(s) ``operating a process'' to ``involved in operating a 
process'' in Sec.  68.54 paragraphs (a) and (b), and changed 
``operators'' to ``employees involved in operating a process'' in Sec.  
68.54 (d). EPA also added paragraph (e) in Sec.  68.54 and paragraph 
(d) in Sec.  68.71 to make employee training requirements also apply to 
supervisors responsible for directing process operations (under Sec.  
68.54) and supervisors with process operational responsibilities (under 
Sec.  68.71).
     Sec. Sec.  68.58 and 68.79 Compliance audits--changes to 
paragraph (a) for Program 2 and Program 3 provisions added language to 
clarify that the owner or operator must evaluate compliance with each 
covered process every three years.
     Sec. Sec.  68.60 and 68.81 Incident investigation--made 
the following changes: Revised paragraph (a) in both sections by adding 
clarifying text ``(i.e., a near miss)'' to describe an incident that 
could reasonably have resulted in a catastrophic release; revised 
paragraph (a) in both sections to require investigation when an 
incident resulting in catastrophic releases also results in the 
affected process being decommissioned or destroyed; added paragraph (c) 
to Sec.  68.60 to require for Program 2 processes, incident 
investigation teams to be established and consist of at least one 
person knowledgeable in the process involved and other persons with 
appropriate knowledge and experience to thoroughly investigate and 
analyze the incident; redesignated paragraphs (c) through (f) in Sec.  
68.60 as paragraphs (d) through (g); revised redesignated paragraph (d) 
in Sec.  68.60 and paragraph (d) in Sec.  68.81 to require an incident 
investigation report to be prepared and completed within 12 months of 
the incident, unless the implementing agency approves, in writing, an 
extension of time, and added paragraph (g) in Sec.  68.60 to require 
investigation reports to be retained for five years; and in Sec.  68.60 
replaced the word ``summary'' in redesignated paragraph (d) with 
``report.'' The following changes were made in both paragraph (d) of 
Sec.  68.81 and redesignated paragraph (d) of Sec.  68.60 to specify 
additional required contents of the investigation report: revised 
paragraph (d)(1) to include time and location of the incident; revised 
paragraph (d)(3) to require that description of incident be in 
chronological order, with all relevant facts provided; redesignated and 
revised paragraph (d)(4) into paragraph (d)(7) to require that the 
factors that contributed to the incident include the initiating event, 
direct and indirect contributing; added new paragraph (d)(4) to require 
the name and amount of the regulated substance involved in the release 
(e.g. fire, explosion, toxic gas loss of containment) or near miss and 
the duration of the event; added new paragraph (d)(5) to require the 
consequences, if any, of the incident including, but not limited to: 
injuries, fatalities, the number of people evacuated, the number of 
people sheltered in place, and the impact on the environment; added new 
paragraph (d)(6) to require the emergency response actions taken; and 
redesignated and revised paragraph (d)(5) of Sec.  68.81 and paragraph 
(c)(5) of Sec.  68.60 into paragraphs (d)(8) of both sections to 
require that the investigation recommendations have a schedule for 
being addressed.
     Sec.  68.65 Process safety information--change to 
paragraph (a) required the owner or operator to keep process safety 
information up-to-date; change to Note to paragraph (b) revised the 
term ``Material Safety Data Sheets'' to ``Safety Data Sheets (SDS).''
     Sec.  68.67 Process hazard analysis--change to 
subparagraph (c)(2) added requirement for PHA to address the findings 
from all incident investigations required under Sec.  68.81, as well as 
any other potential failure scenarios.
     Sec.  68.3 Definitions--added definitions for terms active 
measures, inherently safer technology or design, passive measures, 
practicability, and procedural measures related to amendments to 
requirements in Sec.  68.67. Added definition of root cause related to 
amendments to requirements in Sec.  68.60 and Sec.  68.81. Added 
definition for term third-party audit related to amendments to 
requirements in Sec.  68.58 and added Sec.  68.59.
    EPA now proposes to rescind all of the above changes, with the 
exception of the two changes that would revise the term ``Material 
Safety Data Sheets'' to ``Safety Data Sheets (SDS)'' in Sec. Sec.  
68.48 and 68.65. This includes deleting the words ``for each covered 
process'' from the compliance audit provisions in Sec.  68.58 and Sec.  
68.79, which apply to RMP Program 2 and Program 3, respectively. EPA 
proposes to rescind the requirements to report the following data 
elements in the risk management plan: in Sec.  68.170 (i), whether the 
most recent compliance audit was a third-party audit, pursuant to 
Sec. Sec.  68.58 and 68.59; in Sec.  68.175 (k), whether the most 
recent compliance audit was a third-party audit, pursuant to Sec. Sec.  
68.79 and 68.80; and in Sec.  68.175 (e)(7), inherently safer 
technology or design measures implemented since the last PHA, if any, 
and the technology category (substitution, minimization, simplification 
and/or moderation). In Sec.  68.175(e), EPA proposes to rescind the 
Amendments rule's deletion of the expected date of completion of any 
changes resulting from the PHA for program 3 facilities. Adding back 
this requirement would revert reporting of the PHA information in the 
risk management plan to what is currently required by the existing in-
effect rule. This would also be consistent with the similar Sec.  
68.170 (e) requirement for Program 2 facilities to report the expected 
date of completion of any changes resulting from the hazard review, a 
requirement that was not deleted in the Amendments rule. EPA also 
proposes to rescind the requirement in Sec.  68.190 (c), that prior to 
de-registration, the owner or operator shall meet applicable reporting 
and incident investigation requirements in accordance with Sec. Sec.  
68.42, 68.60 and/or 68.81.
    Alternatively, EPA proposes to rescind all of the above changes, 
except for the following:

[[Page 24859]]

     Requirement in Sec.  68.50(a)(2) for the hazard review to 
include findings from incident investigations;
     Retain the term ``report(s)'' in place of the word 
``summary(ies)'' in Sec.  68.60;
     Requirement in Sec.  68.60 for Program 2 processes to 
establish an incident investigation team consisting of at least one 
person knowledgeable in the process involved and other persons with 
experience to investigate an incident;
     Requirements in Sec. Sec.  68.54 and 68.71 for training 
requirements to apply to supervisors responsible for process operations 
and minor wording changes involving the description of employees 
operating a process in Sec.  68.54; and,
     Retain the two changes that would revise the term 
``Material Safety Data Sheets'' to ``Safety Data Sheets (SDS)'' in 
Sec. Sec.  68.48 and 68.65.
    EPA requests public comment on the Agency's proposal to rescind and 
modify the prevention requirements of the RMP Amendments rule, as well 
as the alternatives described above.

B. Rescind Information Availability Amendments

    In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA added several new provisions to 
Sec.  68.210--Availability of information to the public. These 
included:
    (1) A requirement for the owner or operator to provide, upon 
request by any member of the public, specified chemical hazard 
information for all regulated processes, as applicable, including:
     Names of regulated substances held in a process,
     SDSs for all regulated substances located at the facility,
     Accident history information required to be reported under 
Sec.  68.42,
     Emergency response program information, including whether 
or not the source responds to releases of regulated substances, name 
and phone number of local emergency response organizations, and 
procedures for informing the public and local emergency response 
agencies about accidental releases,
     A list of scheduled exercises required under Sec.  68.96 
(i.e., new emergency exercise provisions of the RMP Amendments rule), 
and;
     Local Emergency Planning Committees (LEPC) contact 
information;
    (2) A requirement for the owner or operator to provide ongoing 
notification on a company website, social media platforms, or through 
other publicly accessible means that the above information is available 
to the public upon request, along with the information elements that 
may be requested and instructions for how to request the information, 
as well as information on where members of the public may access 
information on community preparedness, including shelter-in-place and 
evacuation procedures;
    (3) A requirement for the owner or operator to provide the 
requested chemical hazard information within 45 days of receiving a 
request from any member of the public, and;
    (4) A requirement to hold a public meeting to provide accident 
information required under Sec.  68.42 as well as other relevant 
chemical hazard information, no later than 90 days after any accident 
subject to reporting under Sec.  68.42.
    Additionally, the RMP Amendments rule added provisions to Sec.  
68.210 to address classified information and confidential business 
information (CBI) claims for information required to be provided to the 
public, and made a minor change to the existing paragraph (a) RMP 
availability, to add a reference to 40 CFR part 1400 for controlling 
public access to RMPs.
    EPA now proposes for security reasons to rescind the requirements 
for providing to the public upon request, chemical hazard information 
and access to community emergency preparedness information in Sec.  
68.210 (b) through (d), as well as rescind the requirement to provide 
the ``other chemical hazard information such as that described in 
paragraph (b) of this section'' at public meetings required under Sec.  
68.210(e). Alternatively, EPA proposes to rescind all of the 
information elements in Sec.  68.210 (b) through (d), as well as 
rescind the requirement to provide the ``other chemical hazard 
information such as that described in paragraph (b) of this section'' 
at public meetings required under Sec.  68.210(e), except for the 
requirement in Sec.  68.210(b)(5) for the owner or operator to provide 
a list of scheduled exercises required under Sec.  68.96. EPA will 
retain the requirement in Sec.  68.210(e) for owner/operator of a 
stationary source to hold a public meeting to provide accident 
information required under Sec.  68.42 no later than 90 days after any 
accident subject to reporting under Sec.  68.42, but clarifying that 
the information to be provided is the data listed in Sec.  68.42(b). 
This data would be provided for only the most recent accident, and not 
for previous accidents covered by the 5-year accident history 
requirement of Sec.  68.42(a). EPA will retain the change to paragraph 
(a) ``RMP availability'' which added availability under 40 CFR part 
1400 (addresses restrictions on disclosing RMP offsite consequence 
analysis under the Chemical Safety Information, Site Security and Fuels 
Regulatory Relief Act (CSISSFRRA).\20\ The provisions for classified 
information in Sec.  68.210(f) will also be retained but are separately 
proposed to be incorporated into the emergency response coordination 
section of the rule. EPA proposes to delete the provision for CBI in 
Sec.  68.210(g), because the only remaining provision for public 
information availability in this section (other than the provision for 
RMP availability) is the requirement to provide at a public meeting, 
the information required in the source's five-year accident history, 
which Sec.  68.151(b)(3) prohibits the owner or operator from claiming 
as CBI. EPA proposes to rescind the requirements in Sec.  68.160(b)(21) 
to report in the risk management plan, the method of communication and 
location of the notification that hazard information is available to 
the public, pursuant to Sec.  68.210(c). EPA requests public comment on 
the Agency's proposal to rescind and modify the public information 
availability requirements of the RMP Amendments rule, as well as the 
alternatives described above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0135.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Modify Local Coordination Amendments

    In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA required owners or operators of 
``responding'' and ``non-responding'' stationary sources to perform 
emergency response coordination activities required under new Sec.  
68.93. These activities included coordinating response needs at least 
annually with local emergency planning and response organizations, as 
well as documenting these coordination activities. The RMP Amendments 
rule required coordination to include providing to the local emergency 
planning and response organizations the stationary source's emergency 
response plan if one exists, emergency action plan, updated emergency 
contact information, and any other information that local emergency 
planning and response organizations identify as relevant to local 
emergency response planning. For responding stationary sources, 
coordination must also include consulting with local emergency response 
officials to establish appropriate schedules and plans for field and 
tabletop exercises required under Sec.  68.96(b). Owners or operators 
of responding and non-responding sources are required to request an 
opportunity to meet with the local emergency planning committee (or 
equivalent) and/or local fire department as appropriate to review and 
discuss these materials.

[[Page 24860]]

    EPA now proposes to modify the local coordination amendments by 
deleting the phrase in Sec.  68.93(b), ``. . . and any other 
information that local emergency planning and response organizations 
identify as relevant to local emergency response planning.'' 
Alternatively, EPA proposes to change this phrase to read: ``other 
information necessary for developing and implementing the local 
emergency response plan.'' Under both alternatives, EPA also proposes 
to incorporate appropriate classified information and CBI protections 
to regulated substance and stationary source information required to be 
provided under Sec.  68.93.
    EPA is retaining the requirement in Sec.  68.95(a)(1)(i) for 
responding facilities to update their facility emergency response plans 
to include appropriate changes based on information obtained from 
coordination activities, emergency response exercises, incident 
investigations or other information. In addition, EPA will retain the 
requirement in Sec.  68.95(4) that emergency response plan notification 
procedures must inform appropriate Federal and state emergency response 
agencies, as well as local agencies and the public.
    EPA proposes to retain language in Sec.  68.93(b) referring to 
field and tabletop exercise schedules and plans with a proposal to 
retain some form of field and tabletop exercise requirement. 
Alternatively, in conjunction with an alternative proposal to rescind 
field and tabletop exercise requirements (see ``Modify exercise 
amendments'' below), the Agency also proposes to rescind this language.
    EPA is proposing no other changes to the local coordination 
requirements of the RMP Amendments rule. Under either alternative 
proposed above, the following provisions would remain unchanged: The 
provisions of paragraph (b) requiring coordination to include providing 
to the local emergency planning and response organizations the 
stationary source's emergency response plan if one exists, emergency 
action plan, and updated emergency contact information, as well as the 
requirement for the owner or operator to request an opportunity to meet 
with the local emergency planning committee (or equivalent) and/or 
local fire department as appropriate to review and discuss these 
materials. For provisions of the RMP Amendments that we propose to 
retain, we continue to rely on the rationale and responses we provided 
when we promulgated the Amendments. See 81 FR 13671-74 (proposed RMP 
Amendments rule), March 14, 2016, 82 FR 4653-58 (final RMP Amendments 
rule), January 13, 2017. EPA requests public comment on the Agency's 
proposal to modify the local coordination requirements of the RMP 
Amendments rule, as well as the alternatives described above.

D. Modify Exercise Amendments

    In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA added a new section entitled Sec.  
68.96 Emergency response exercises. This section contained several new 
provisions, including:
     Notification exercises: At least once each calendar year, 
the owner or operator of a stationary source with any Program 2 or 
Program 3 process must conduct an exercise of the stationary source's 
emergency response notification mechanisms.
    [cir] Owners or operators of responding stationary sources are 
allowed to perform the notification exercise as part of the tabletop 
and field exercises required in new Sec.  68.96(b).
    [cir] The owner/operator must maintain a written record of each 
notification exercise conducted over the last five years.
     Emergency response exercise program: The owner or operator 
of a responding stationary source must develop and implement an 
exercise program for its emergency response program.
    [cir] Exercises must involve facility emergency response personnel 
and, as appropriate, emergency response contractors.
    [cir] The emergency response exercise program must include field 
and tabletop exercises involving the simulated accidental release of a 
regulated substance.
    [cir] Under the RMP Amendments rule, the owner or operator is 
required to consult with local emergency response officials to 
establish an appropriate frequency for exercises, but at a minimum, the 
owner or operator must hold a tabletop exercise at least once every 
three years, and a field exercise at least once every ten years.
    [cir] Field exercises must include tests of procedures to notify 
the public and the appropriate Federal, state, and local emergency 
response agencies about an accidental release; tests of procedures and 
measures for emergency response actions including evacuations and 
medical treatment; tests of communications systems; mobilization of 
facility emergency response personnel, including contractors, as 
appropriate; coordination with local emergency responders; emergency 
response equipment deployment; and any other action identified in the 
emergency response program, as appropriate.
    [cir] Tabletop exercises must include discussions of procedures to 
notify the public and the appropriate Federal, state, and local 
emergency response agencies; procedures and measures for emergency 
response including evacuations and medical treatment; identification of 
facility emergency response personnel and/or contractors and their 
responsibilities; coordination with local emergency responders; 
procedures for emergency response equipment deployment; and any other 
action identified in the emergency response plan, as appropriate.
     For both field and tabletop exercises, the RMP Amendments 
rule requires the owner or operator to prepare an evaluation report 
within 90 days of each exercise. The report must include a description 
of the exercise scenario, names and organizations of each participant, 
an evaluation of the exercise results including lessons learned, 
recommendations for improvement or revisions to the emergency response 
exercise program and emergency response program, and a schedule to 
promptly address and resolve recommendations.
     The RMP Amendments rule also contains a provision for 
alternative means of meeting exercise requirements, which allows the 
owner or operator to satisfy the requirement to conduct notification, 
field and/or tabletop exercises through exercises conducted to meet 
other Federal, state or local exercise requirements, or by responding 
to an actual accidental release.
    EPA is now proposing to modify the exercise program provisions of 
Sec.  68.96(b), as requested by state and local response officials, by 
removing the minimum frequency requirement for field exercises and 
establishing more flexible scope and documentation provisions for both 
field and tabletop exercises. Under this proposal, EPA would retain the 
final RMP Amendments rule requirement for the owner or operator to 
attempt to consult with local response officials to establish 
appropriate frequencies and plans for field and tabletop exercises. The 
minimum frequency for tabletop exercises would remain at three years. 
However, there would be no minimum frequency specified for field 
exercises in order to reduce burden on regulated facilities and local 
responders as explained in rationale section IV. D. 5. Costs of Field 
and Tabletop Exercises. Documentation of both types of exercises would 
still be required, but the items specified for inclusion in exercises 
and exercise evaluation

[[Page 24861]]

reports under the RMP Amendments rule would be recommended, and not 
required. The content of exercise evaluation reports would be left to 
the reasonable judgement of stationary source owners or operators and 
local emergency response officials. As described in the RMP Amendments 
rule, if local emergency response officials declined the owner or 
operator's request for consultation on and/or participation in 
exercises, the owner or operator would be allowed to unilaterally 
establish appropriate frequencies and plans for the exercises (provided 
that the frequency for tabletop exercises does not exceed three years), 
and conduct exercises without the participation of local emergency 
response officials. Likewise, if local emergency response officials and 
the facility owner or operator cannot agree on the appropriate 
frequency and plan for an exercise, owners and operators must still 
ensure that exercises occur and should establish plans to execute the 
exercises on their own. The RMP Amendments rule does not require local 
responders to participate in any of these activities, nor would this 
proposal.
    This proposal would not alter the notification exercise requirement 
of Sec.  68.96(a) or the provision for alternative means of meeting 
exercise requirements of Sec.  68.96(c). EPA proposes to correct an 
error in Sec.  68.96(b)(2)(i) related to the frequency of tabletop 
exercises by proposing to replace the phrase ``shall conduct a field 
exercise every three years'' with ``shall conduct a tabletop exercise 
every three years.'' For provisions of the RMP Amendments that we 
propose to retain, we continue to rely on the rationale and responses 
we provided when we promulgated the Amendments. See 81 FR 13674-76 
(proposed RMP Amendments rule), March 16, 2016 and 82 FR 4659-67 (final 
RMP Amendments rule), January 13, 2017. In summary, EPA found that 
exercising an emergency response plan is critical to ensure that 
response personnel understand their roles, that local emergency 
responders are familiar with the hazards at the facility, and that the 
emergency response plan is appropriate and up-to-date. Exercises also 
ensure that personnel are properly trained and lessons learned from 
exercises can be used to identify future training needs. Poor emergency 
response procedures during some recent accidents have highlighted the 
need for facilities to conduct periodic emergency response exercises. 
Other EPA and federal agency programs and some state and local 
regulations require emergency response exercises.
    Alternatively, EPA is considering whether to fully rescind the 
field and tabletop exercise provisions of Sec.  68.96(b). Under this 
alternative proposal, EPA would retain the notification exercise 
provision of Sec.  68.96(a), but revise it and Sec.  68.93(b) to remove 
any reference to tabletop and field exercises, while also modifying the 
provision in Sec.  68.96(c) for alternative means of meeting exercise 
requirements so that it applies only to notification exercises.
    EPA is also considering another alternative--to remove the minimum 
frequency requirement for field exercises, but retain all remaining 
provisions of the RMP Amendments rule regarding field and tabletop 
exercises, including the RMP Amendments rule requirements for exercise 
scope and documentation.
    EPA requests public comment on the Agency's proposal to modify the 
exercise requirements of the RMP Amendments rule, as well as the 
alternatives described above.

E. Revise Emergency Response Contacts Provided in RMP

    EPA proposes to modify the emergency response contact information 
required to be provided in a facility's RMP. In Sec.  68.180(a)(1) of 
the Amendments rule, EPA required the owner or operator to provide the 
name, organizational affiliation, phone number, and email address of 
local emergency planning and response organizations with which the 
stationary source last coordinated emergency response efforts. EPA now 
proposes to modify this requirement to read: ``Name, phone number, and 
email address of local emergency planning and response organizations. . 
. .''

F. Revise Compliance Dates

    In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA required compliance with the new 
provisions as follows:
     Required compliance with emergency response coordination 
activities by March 14, 2018;
     Required compliance with the emergency response program 
requirements of Sec.  68.95 within three years of when the owner or 
operator initially determines that the stationary source is subject to 
those requirements;
     Required compliance with other major provisions (i.e., 
third-party compliance audits, root cause analyses and other added 
requirements to incident investigations, STAA, emergency response 
exercises, and information availability provisions), unless otherwise 
stated, by March 15, 2021; and;
     Required the owner or operator to correct or resubmit 
their RMP to reflect new and revised data elements promulgated in the 
RMP Amendments rule by March 14, 2022.
    EPA did not specify compliance dates for the other minor changes to 
the Subpart C and D prevention program requirements. Therefore, under 
the RMP Amendments rule, compliance with these provisions was required 
on the effective date of the RMP Amendments rule. EPA now proposes to 
extend compliance dates as follows:
     For emergency response coordination activities, EPA 
proposes to require compliance by one year after the effective date of 
a final rule.
     For emergency response exercises, EPA proposes to require 
owners and operators to have exercise plans and schedules meeting the 
requirements of Sec.  68.96 in place by four years after the effective 
date of a final rule. EPA also proposes to require owners and operators 
to have completed their first notification drill by five years after 
the effective date of a final rule, and to have completed their first 
tabletop exercise by 7 years after the effective date of a final rule. 
Under this proposal, there would be no specific compliance date 
specified for field exercises, because field exercises would be 
conducted according to a schedule developed by the owner or operator in 
consultation with local emergency responders.
     For corrections or resubmissions of RMPs to reflect 
reporting on new and revised data elements (public meeting information 
and emergency response program and exercises), EPA proposes to require 
compliance by five years after the effective date of a final rule.
     For third-party audits, STAA, root cause analyses and 
other new provisions of the RMP Amendments rule for incident 
investigations and chemical hazard information availability and notice 
of availability of information, as well as other minor changes to the 
Subpart C and D prevention program requirements (except for the two 
changes that would revise the term ``Material Safety Data Sheets'' to 
``Safety Data Sheets (SDS)'' in Sec. Sec.  68.48 and 68.65), EPA is 
proposing to rescind these provisions. However, if a final rule does 
not rescind these provisions, EPA proposes to require compliance with 
any of these provisions that are not rescinded, by four years after the 
effective date of a final rule.
     For the public meeting requirement in Sec.  68.210(b), EPA 
proposes to require compliance by two years after the effective date of 
a final rule.

[[Page 24862]]

     EPA is retaining the requirement to comply with the 
emergency response program requirements of Sec.  68.95 within three 
years of when the owner or operator initially determines that the 
stationary source is subject to those requirements.
    For provisions of the RMP Amendments that we propose to retain, we 
continue to rely on the rationale and responses we provided when we 
promulgated the Amendments. See 81 FR 13686-91 proposed RMP Amendments 
rule), March 14, 2016 and 82 FR 4675-80 (final RMP Amendments rule), 
January 13, 2017. In summary, EPA found that one year was sufficient to 
arrange and document coordination activities, three years was needed to 
comply with emergency response program requirements, four years was 
necessary to comply with exercise provisions, and five years was 
necessary to update risk management plans.
    Three years to develop an emergency response program is necessary 
for facility owners and operators to understand the requirements, 
arrange for emergency response resources and train personnel to respond 
to an accidental release. Compliance with emergency coordination 
requirements could require up to one year because some facilities who 
have not been regularly coordinating will need time to get familiar 
with the new requirements, while having some flexibility in scheduling 
and preparing for coordination meetings with local emergency response 
organizations whose resources and time for coordination may be limited. 
A shorter timeframe may be difficult to comply with, especially for RMP 
sources whose local emergency organization has many RMP sources in 
their jurisdiction who are trying to schedule coordination meetings 
with local responders at the same time.
    For the emergency exercises, EPA is proposing a four year 
compliance time for developing exercise plans and schedules, an 
additional year for conducting the first notification exercise, and an 
additional three years for conducting the first tabletop exercise, 
because EPA believes that additional time is necessary for sources to 
understand the new requirements for notification, field and tabletop 
exercises, train facility personnel on how to plan and conduct these 
exercises, coordinate with local responders to plan and schedule 
exercises, and carry out the exercises. Additional time will also 
provide owners and operators with flexibility to plan, schedule, and 
conduct exercises in a manner which is least burdensome for facilities 
and local response agencies. Also, EPA plans to publish guidance for 
emergency response exercises and once these materials are complete, 
owners and operators will need time to familiarize themselves with the 
materials and use them to plan and develop their exercises. If local 
emergency response organizations are to be able to participate in the 
field and tabletop exercises, sufficient time is needed to accommodate 
any time or resource limitations local responders might have not only 
for participating in exercises, but for helping to plan them.
    For the public meeting requirement in Sec.  68.210(b), EPA proposes 
to require compliance by two years after the effective date of a final 
rule. The RMP Amendments rule allows four years for compliance for the 
public meeting which was consistent with the compliance date for other 
information to be required to the public by Sec.  68.210. However, EPA 
is proposing to remove the requirement to provide to the public the 
chemical hazard information in Sec.  68.210 (b), the notice of 
availability of information in Sec.  68.210(c) and the timeframe for 
providing information 68.210(d) as well proposing to remove the 
requirement to provide the chemical hazard information in Sec.  68.210 
(b) at the public meeting. The stationary source would be required to 
provide the chemical accident data elements specified in Sec.  68.42, 
data which should already be familiar to the source because this 
information is currently required to be reported in their risk 
management plan. Thus, two years should be enough time for facilities 
to be prepared to provide the required information at a public meeting 
after an RMP reportable accident. EPA seeks comment on whether a sooner 
compliance date is more appropriate.
    With regard to the five-year compliance date for updating RMPs with 
newly-required information, EPA is proposing this time frame because 
EPA will need time to revise its RMP submission guidance for any 
provisions finalized and also to revise its risk management plan 
submission system, RMP*eSubmit, to include additional data elements. 
Sources will not be able to update risk management plans until the 
revised RMP*eSubmit system is ready. Also, once the software is ready, 
some additional time is needed to allow sources to update their risk 
management plans while preventing potential problems with thousands of 
sources submitting updated risk management plans on the same day.

G. Corrections to Cross Referenced CFR Sections

    EPA proposes to correct CFR section numbers that are cross 
referenced in certain sections of the rule because these were changes 
necessitated by addition and redesignation of paragraphs pertaining to 
provisions in the Amendments rule but were overlooked at the time. 
Table 4 contains a list of these corrections.

        Table 4--Corrections to Cross Referenced Section Numbers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                In section:                  Change in section reference
------------------------------------------------------------------------
68.12(b)..................................  68.10(b) should be 68.10(g).
68.12(c)..................................  68.10(c) should be 68.10(h).
68.12(d)..................................  68.10(d) should be 68.10(i).
68.12(b)(4)...............................  68.10(b)(1) should be
                                             68.10(g)(1).
68.96(a)..................................  68.90(a)(2) should be
                                             68.90(b)(3).
68.180(a)(1)..............................  68.10(f)(3) should be
                                             68.10(g)(3).
68.215(a)(2)(i)...........................  68.10(a) should be 69.10(a)
                                             through (f).
------------------------------------------------------------------------

IV. Rationale for Rescissions and Modifications

A. Maintain Consistency in Accident Prevention Requirements

    In both the RMP Coalition Petition and the CSAG Petition, the 
petitioners seek reconsideration of the RMP Amendments based on what 
they view as either EPA's failure to coordinate with OSHA and DOT as 
required by paragraph (D) of CAA section 112(r)(7) or at least 
inadequate coordination. For example, CSAG's petition comments: \21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \21\ CSAG Petition, pg. 25, document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-
0766.

    Stakeholders have repeatedly asked EPA why it is pursuing this 
effort in isolation when Congress directed it to coordinate any 
requirements under Clean Air Act Section 112(r) with certain 
industry standards, and with those issued for comparable purposes by 
OSHA and U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT). This directive to 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
coordinate was repeated in E.O. 13650 (footnotes omitted).

The RMP Coalition notes that OSHA had been reexamining the PSM standard 
under E.O. 13650 but ``ha[d] yet to complete the PSM standard 
rulemaking process and the timeframe for that regulation is unclear.'' 
\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 19, Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-
2015-0725-0759.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. What was EPA's approach to coordination with other agencies prior to 
E.O. 13650?
    Both EPA's 40 CFR part 68 RMP regulation and OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.119

[[Page 24863]]

PSM standard were authorized under the Clean Air Act Amendments of 
1990. Both the OSHA PSM standard and the EPA RMP rule aim to prevent or 
minimize the consequences of accidental chemical releases and protect 
workers, the community and the environment through implementation of 
management program elements that integrate technologies, procedures and 
management practices. EPA's RMP regulation has a large overlap with the 
PSM standard and both were written to complement each other in 
accomplishing these Congressional goals.
    The 1996 Risk Management Program rule and the related notice and 
supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking (60 FR 13526, March 13, 
1995) not only mention and reflect consultations with both DOT and DOL-
OSHA, but also show close coordination between the PSM standard and the 
EPA program. In the proposed Risk Management Program rule, EPA proposed 
that all sources subject to EPA's rules comply with a prevention 
program based on the PSM standard. See 58 FR 54190, 54195-96 (October 
20, 1993). The preamble to the proposed rulemaking contained an 
explanation of the differences between PSM standard and the Risk 
Management Program and a section-by-section comparison. Id. at 54203-
05. In EPA's view, ``[e]xcept for the management system requirement . . 
. , the proposed EPA prevention program covers the same elements as 
OSHA's [PSM standard] and generally uses identical language except 
where the statutory mandates of the two agencies dictate differences.'' 
Id. at 54204. EPA retained a PSM standard-based prevention program 
(tier) in its supplemental proposal. See 60 FR 13526, March 13, 1995 at 
13529. In the 1996 final rule, EPA placed all PSM standard-covered 
processes that were subject to EPA's Risk Management Program in program 
3 for prevention (unless the process was eligible for Program 1), and 
adopted language in program 3 that even more closely tracked PSM than 
had the proposal. See 61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996 at 31672-3, 31677, 
31686-8, 31692-3, 31696-7, 31708 and 31711-12. Those differences in 
provisions between program 3 and the PSM standard that did exist were 
driven by statutory terms. See 61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996 at 31672, 
31687, and 31696.
    Measures taken by sources to comply with the OSHA PSM standard for 
any process that meets OSHA's PSM standard are sufficient to comply 
with the prevention program requirements of all three Programs.\23\ The 
Program 3 prevention program finalized in 1996 includes requirements of 
the OSHA PSM standard 29 CFR 1910.119 (c) through (m) and (o), with 
minor wording changes to address statutory differences. This makes it 
clear that one accident prevention program to protect workers, the 
general public, and the environment will satisfy both OSHA and EPA.\24\ 
These prevention program requirements in Program 3 cover employee 
participation, process safety information, process hazard analysis, 
operating procedures, training, contractors, pre-startup safety review, 
mechanical integrity, hot work permits, management of change, incident 
investigation, and compliance audits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ 61 FR 31671, June 20, 1996. EPA final rule for Accidental 
Release Prevention Requirements: Risk Management Programs under the 
CAA, Section 112(r)(7).
    \24\ 61 FR 31672, June 20, 1996.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Other provisions of the 1996 rule as well as subsequent amendments 
to the Risk Management Program reflect coordination with DOT. EPA has 
relied on DOT definitions for key terms and allowed compliance with the 
hazardous material regulations to satisfy requirements of EPA's 
program. See 61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996 at 31700, 63 FR 640, January 6, 
1998, and 64 FR 28696, May 26, 1999 at 28698. The coordination with 
other agencies in the Risk Management Program helped to minimize burden 
and avoided requiring unduly duplicative and distinct compliance 
programs addressing the same matters. In short, whenever possible, 
compliance with one agency's program was compliance with all.
2. What was EPA's approach to coordination under E.O. 13650 during the 
development of the RMP Amendments?
    EPA adopted a somewhat inconsistent approach to the consultation 
and coordination requirement in developing the Risk Management Program 
Amendments of 2017. After the West Fertilizer fire and explosion on 
April 17, 2013, EPA and OSHA, (along with DHS) as members of the 
Chemical Facility Safety and Security Working Groups established by 
Executive Order 13650, continued to consult with each other on their 
overlapping programs as they considered changes to existing chemical 
safety and security regulations. EPA and OSHA discussed options for 
changes to the RMP regulations and the OSHA PSM standard, respectively, 
in the May 2014 document entitled ``Executive Order 13650 Report to the 
President--Actions to Improve Chemical Facility Safety and Security--A 
Shared Commitment.'' \25\ In justifying its pre-regulatory ``Request 
for Information'' notice that raised for discussion potential 
amendments to the risk management program, EPA noted that E.O. 13650 
had directed OSHA to publish an RFI on potentially amending the PSM 
standard, cited the coordination requirement of CAA section 
112(r)(7)(D), and found that ``[t]his RFI will allow EPA to evaluate 
any potential updates to the RMP regulation in parallel to OSHA's 
evaluation of potential updates to the PSM standard.'' 79 FR 44604, 
July 31, 2014 at 44605 (emphasis added). Nevertheless, when EPA 
proceeded to rulemaking, we pushed forward with finalizing amendments 
to the Risk Management Program before OSHA had evaluated all of the 
information before it and before EPA had an understanding of OSHA's 
future actions. In other words, when EPA proceeded with its rulemaking, 
we no longer emphasized proceeding in parallel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \25\ Chemical Facility Safety and Security Working Group. May 
2014. E. O. 13650 Report to the President--Actions to Improve 
Chemical Facility Safety and Security--A Shared Commitment. EPA, 
Department of Labor, Department of Homeland Security, Department of 
Justice, Department of Agriculture and Department of Transportation 
(DOT). Washington, DC, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0246.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Several commenters were critical about EPA's approach to 
coordination with OSHA and other agencies during the development of the 
RMP Amendments. Many advanced theories of OSHA ``primacy'' in the area 
of process safety and that EPA had impermissibly regulated workplace 
safety in violation of the statute. See Amendments RTC at 15-16,\26\ 
see also id. for EPA's responses. Others claimed EPA failed to 
coordinate with OSHA and should cease its rulemaking until it did so. 
See Amendments RTC at 249-51. Generally, EPA responded by providing 
information on meetings and other interactions with OSHA during the 
rule development. Id.; see 82 FR 4594, January 13, 2017 at 4601. 
However, some commenters made the more specific criticism that EPA 
should have deferred proceeding with the RMP Amendments until OSHA had 
a parallel proposed rule amending the PSM standard available. 
Amendments RTC at 249-50. In response, EPA noted that each agency had 
distinct rulemaking procedures and that the 1990 CAA Amendments allowed 
for and contemplated each agency to proceed with rulemaking on 
different schedules. Id. at 251. Furthermore, EPA noted that OSHA had 
completed an advisory small

[[Page 24864]]

business panel proceeding on its potential PSM standard amendments, and 
we expressed the belief that the two agencies did not need to proceed 
on identical timelines. Id. at 232. Our responses were generally 
focused on the legal permissibility of proceeding on separate schedules 
rather than the policy wisdom of doing so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0729 in the docket.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. What is EPA's proposed approach to ``coordination'' in this 
reconsideration?
    Under Clean Air Act section 112(r)(7)(D), although Congress has 
conveyed to EPA discretion regarding how it should coordinate with 
OSHA, Congress's intent is clear that EPA coordinate its program with 
the other agencies' where possible. Accordingly, although at times 
divergence between the RMP rule and the PSM standard may make sense 
given the agencies' different missions, both agencies generally have 
tried to minimize confusion and burden on the regulated community by 
minimizing divergence. The RMP Amendments constitute a divergence from 
that longstanding practice: Although EPA has regularly communicated and 
coordinated with OSHA on its prevention program and process safety 
efforts so far, EPA proceeded to promulgate the RMP Amendments before 
understanding OSHA's path forward in this area and before understanding 
whether any divergence is reasonable for EPA.
    After further consideration, EPA believes it did not give 
sufficient weight to the value of coordination with OSHA and focused 
too much on its legal authority to proceed independently. EPA now 
proposes to determine that a more sensible approach would be to have a 
better understanding of what OSHA will be doing in this area before 
revising the RMP accident prevention program. Thus, EPA proposes to 
rescind the RMP accident prevention amendments pending further action 
by OSHA. This approach would allow the two programs' process safety 
requirements to remain aligned as much as possible so that the 
regulated community may have a better understanding of what to do to 
comply while reducing unnecessary complexity and cost. Having 
consistency between required safe practices and common understanding of 
requirements should help industry to comply with the PSM standard and 
RMP rule and improve the effectiveness of accident prevention efforts.
    This approach would better fulfill the Congressional purpose of 
coordination between the two agencies while maximizing consistency and 
ease of implementation of regulatory requirements. It is also 
responsive to concerns from stakeholders about our approach to 
coordination under the Amendments rule. We intend to allow for a better 
understanding of OSHA's plan for changes to the PSM standard before 
proposing any future changes to our rule.
    While EPA has amended the Risk Management Program several times 
after 1996 without corresponding OSHA amendments to its PSM standard, 
these changes did not involve the prevention program provisions, thus 
precluding any need for coordination with OSHA. The Risk Management 
Program Amendments of 2017 were the first time we had issued post-1996 
amendments that were significant due to costs and deemed major for 
purposes of the Congressional Review Act. Under these circumstances, we 
think that our approach to the 1996 RMP rule, where we attempted to 
either maintain consistent language with the PSM standard or carefully 
justify our departure, is a better approach. Our record shows the 2017 
Amendments have significant costs and are discretionary. Given the 
flexibility in CAA section 112(r)(7), EPA may thus make a policy choice 
to conduct EPA's rulemaking proceedings to improve the RMP program 
after we have a better understanding of OSHA's timing of comment 
opportunities, content of amendments, and implementation schedules. EPA 
proposes to place greater weight than it did in promulgating the 
Amendments on the policy importance of coordinating with OSHA and not 
adopting significant changes to the risk prevention aspects of the RMP 
rule that diverge from OSHA's requirements until we have a better 
understanding of OSHA's path forward.
    The reasonableness of this approach to coordination can be seen in 
both EPA's and OSHA's experiences conducting outreach to small entities 
as both agencies prepared to develop amendments to the RMP rule and the 
PSM standard. For EPA, we must ``take into consideration the concerns 
of small business in promulgating regulations under [CAA section 
112(r)].'' CAA section 112(r)(7)(C). During the fall/winter of 2015, 
EPA convened an Small Business Advocacy Review (SBAR) panel to obtain 
advice and recommendations from Small Entity Representatives (SERs) 
that were potentially subject to the proposed RMP amendments. The SBAR 
panel report on the proposed RMP amendments under consideration 
contains the small entity comments and recommendations to the EPA 
Administrator from the three panel members (EPA, Small Business 
Administration Office of Advocacy, and the OMB Office of Information 
and Regulatory Affairs).\27\ EPA published its proposed rulemaking on 
the RMP amendments on March 14, 2016 (81 FR 13638).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \27\ EPA/OMB/SBA. February 19, 2016. Small Business Advocacy 
Review Panel Report on EPA's Planned Proposed Rule: Risk Management 
Modernization Rule. Letter to EPA Administrator with Executive 
Summary (EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0030), Final Report (EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-
0725-0032), and Appendix B Written Comments Submitted by SERs (EPA-
HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0031).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    During the summer of 2016, OSHA initiated a Small Business Advocacy 
Review Panel in order to get feedback on several potential revisions to 
OSHA's Process Safety Management Program (PSM) standard. Some potential 
revisions tracked EPA's RMP Amendments, which were in the proposed rule 
stage, while others were not included in the Amendments. OSHA also 
considered a number of minor modifications which largely codify 
existing OSHA interpretations of the PSM standard. OSHA completed their 
SBAR Panel Final Report in August 2016.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ OSHA. August 1, 2016. Process Safety Management (PSM) 
SBREFA Panel Final Report. OSHA-2013-0020-0116.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    OSHA may or may not adopt amendments discussed in the SBAR Panel 
Report. EPA believes it would be prudent to understand OSHA's path 
forward in this area before owners and operators are required to 
implement changes under the RMP rule in order to decide whether any 
divergence from OSHA's PSM standard is reasonable for EPA. One example 
of potential divergence between the OSHA PSM standard and the RMP rule 
would be in the requirement for third-party audits. The August 2016 
OSHA SBAR panel report did not fully support third-party audits. 
Instead the SBAR panel recommended further review of the need and 
benefits of third-party audits; the sufficient availability, adequate 
process knowledge and degree of independence needed of third-party 
auditors; and whether facilities should decide the best type of audit 
appropriate for their process.
    EPA believes that we should not retain and put into effect changes 
to the prevention aspects of the Risk Management Program until we have 
a better understanding of OSHA's plans for the PSM standard changes so 
that we may move forward in a more coordinated fashion with regulatory 
changes that improve process safety performance and reduce accidents 
without causing undue burden and regulatory conflicts. Therefore, EPA 
is

[[Page 24865]]

proposing to rescind the prevention requirements of the RMP Amendments 
rule applicable to both Program 2 and Program 3 processes in order to 
better understand OSHA's path forward for similar issues our sister 
agency is still evaluating. We propose to rescind the RMP Amendment 
provisions for incident investigation, third-party compliance audits, 
STAA, and various minor changes impacting subpart C and D of the RMP 
rule. Although the pre-amendment RMP Program 3 requirements were 
consistent with OSHA PSM standard, the RMP Program 2 regulations were 
slightly different by design, as explained earlier, providing less 
rigorous requirements and recordkeeping for Program 2 facilities. In 
contrast to Program 3 processes, small businesses make up a greater 
percentage of the processes subject to Program 2. Therefore, EPA also 
proposes to rescind any changes made to Program 2 prevention program 
elements to keep the Program 2 requirements less burdensome than those 
of Program 3, maintaining the pre-amendment RMP requirements for 
Program 2 facilities and the pre-amendment balance of burdens on 
smaller entities. EPA also proposes to rescind the words ``for each 
covered process'' from the compliance audit provisions in Sec. Sec.  
68.58 and 68.79, which apply to RMP Program 2 and Program 3, 
respectively, in order to prevent unnecessary divergence from language 
in compliance audits in the OSHA PSM standard.
    As an alternative to rescinding the Amendments rule changes to the 
Program 2 and Program 3 prevention program provisions as proposed 
above, EPA is considering rescinding all of the above changes except 
for the requirement in Sec.  68.50(a)(2) for the hazard review to 
include findings from incident investigations, the term ``report(s)'' 
in place of the word ``summary(ies)'' in Sec.  68.60, the requirement 
in Sec.  68.60 for Program 2 processes to establish an incident 
investigation team consisting of at least one person knowledgeable in 
the process involved and other persons with experience to investigate 
an incident, the requirements in Sec. Sec.  68.54 and 68.71 for 
training requirements to apply to supervisors responsible for process 
operations and minor wording changes involving the description of 
employees operating a process in Sec.  68.54, and the two changes that 
would revise the term ``Material Safety Data Sheets'' to ``Safety Data 
Sheets (SDS)'' in Sec. Sec.  68.48 and 68.65.
    The reason that EPA is considering this alternative is that these 
changes would not affect the consistency of the Program 3 prevention 
program requirements with the OSHA PSM standard. With the exception of 
the amendment to the training requirements (and the SDS provisions, 
which are minor terminology changes), these provisions would affect 
only the Program 2 prevention requirements. Also, retaining these 
changes would not make these Program 2 provisions more rigorous than 
their Program 3 counterparts, thus maintaining the rule's current model 
where Program 2 requirements are generally more streamlined than the 
comparable Program 3 requirements. Regarding the change to the Program 
3 training requirement, as EPA noted in the proposed Amendments rule, 
EPA has traditionally interpreted the training provisions of Sec. Sec.  
68.54 and 68.71 to apply to any worker that is involved in operating a 
process, including supervisors. This is consistent with the OSHA 
definition of employee set forth at 29 CFR 1910.2(d) (see 81 FR 13686, 
Monday, March 14, 2016). Therefore, retaining this change may make the 
RMP Program 3 training provision even more consistent with the 
comparable provision of the PSM standard.
    EPA requests comments on its proposal to rescind the changes made 
in the Program 2 and Program 3 prevention program provisions of the 
final RMP Amendments rule, including the alternative described above. 
Should investigation of Program 2 processes be required to have a team 
(of at least two people) with expertise in the process and 
investigation methods in order to thoroughly investigate and analyze 
the causes of incidents, even if the requirement to specifically 
conduct a root causes analysis is rescinded? Should Program 2 process 
investigations at least require investigation be performed by someone 
with expertise in the process?

B. Address Security Concerns

1. Emergency Response Coordination
    EPA discussed the need for enhanced RMP local coordination 
provisions in the proposed Amendments rule. See 81 FR 13671, March 14, 
2016. In summary, although there is substantial overlap between EPCRA 
requirements and RMP local coordination requirements, EPA found that 
some facilities who had indicated they do not have an RMP emergency 
response plan had not properly coordinated response actions with local 
authorities. State and local officials echoed these same concerns. In 
the final rule, EPA finalized enhanced local coordination provisions to 
address these concerns, while clarifying source's obligations for 
coordination, including specific information that must be communicated 
to local responders during annual coordination activities. In addition, 
EPA finalized the requirements to conduct field and tabletop exercises 
and stipulations for scope, frequency and documentation of exercises. 
Facilities must consult with local emergency response officials to 
establish appropriate schedules and plans for these exercises. EPA 
proposes to retain these requirements while addressing security 
concerns raised by petitioners. In all three petitions requesting 
reconsideration of the RMP Amendments rule, petitioners objected to the 
rule language in Sec.  68.93(b) requiring local emergency response 
coordination to include providing to the local emergency planning and 
response organizations ``. . . any other information that local 
emergency planning and response organizations identify as relevant to 
local emergency response planning.'' All Petitioners noted that the 
language was new to the final rule (i.e., it was not contained in the 
Amendments as proposed), broad, and posed potential security concerns. 
Petitioner CSAG identified a particular problem with the new disclosure 
provision: By relocating the disclosure provision from section Sec.  
68.205 in the proposal to section Sec.  68.93, EPA had moved it to a 
section of the RMP rule that did not have specific procedures for 
handling CBI claims, and, CSAG argued, the protection in the RMP rule 
for classified information in section 68.210(f) did not clearly apply 
to disclosures under section 68.93(b).
    Petitioners have correctly noted that EPA incorporated the language 
at issue in order to address concerns, including security concerns, 
raised by various commenters over EPA's proposed RMP Amendments rule 
(81 FR 13638, March 14, 2016), which among other things proposed to add 
new Sec.  68.205 to require owners and operators of all RMP-regulated 
facilities to provide certain information to Local Emergency Planning 
Committees (LEPCs) or local emergency response officials upon request. 
In response to these concerns, EPA, without acknowledging any 
inconsistency with the Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Standard or 
other regulatory structure, did not finalize Sec.  68.205 of the 
proposed rulemaking in the final Amendments rule. Instead we required 
that the owner or operator to provide ``any other information that 
local emergency planning and response organizations identify as 
relevant to local emergency

[[Page 24866]]

planning'' in Sec.  68.93. Any claims for Chemical-terrorism 
Vulnerability Information (CVI) could then be handled on a case-by-case 
basis by the stationary source, the LEPC, DHS and others, as 
appropriate.
    In effect, petitioners are saying not only that EPA's final rule 
solution to the security concerns created by proposed Sec.  68.205 did 
not fix the problem--it actually made it worse. After further review, 
EPA acknowledges that the petitioners' concerns have merit. Section 
68.205 from the proposed RMP Amendments rule listed specific items of 
information that the owner or operator must provide to the LEPC or 
local emergency response officials upon request, but it did not include 
an open-ended provision for ``any other information that local 
emergency planning and response organizations identify as relevant to 
local emergency response planning.'' By including such a provision in 
the final RMP Amendments rule, EPA may have inadvertently opened the 
door to local emergency officials requesting and receiving security-
sensitive information even beyond the specific items included in Sec.  
68.205 of the proposed RMP Amendments about which petitioners and 
others had raised concerns.
    Petitioners have also correctly noted that by locating the final 
rule's local responder information availability provision in Sec.  
68.93, EPA removed any protections for CBI. Items requested under the 
proposed amendment to Sec.  68.205 (but not included in final 
Amendments rule) would have benefited from the inclusion in that 
section of paragraphs (d) Classified information, and (e) CBI, but 
these paragraphs do not appear in Sec.  68.93 of the final rule. EPA 
did not intend to eliminate CBI protection--it was an inadvertent 
consequence of relocating the local responder information availability 
provision to Sec.  68.93.
    EPA disagrees with the Petitioners' assertion that the protection 
for classified information in Sec.  68.210(f) would not apply to all 
provisions of the RMP rule, including disclosures under Sec.  68.93(b). 
This provision, which is simply a recodification of former Sec.  
68.210(b), has always applied to all provisions under the RMP rule 
since it was adopted in 1996. Nevertheless, EPA proposes removal of the 
new broad information disclosure provision in Sec.  68.93(b) as 
proposed to avoid any unnecessary disputes between LEPCs and holders of 
classified information over the scope of Sec.  68.210(f) (to be 
redesignated Sec.  68.210(b)).
    EPA's proposed deletion of the phrase in Sec.  68.93(b), ``. . . 
any other information that local emergency planning and response 
organizations identify as relevant to local emergency response 
planning'' would solve the problem with the open-ended disclosure 
provision. This is EPA's preferred option, as the Agency believes that 
the remaining language in Sec.  68.93 will still ensure that local 
responders obtain the information they need while avoiding potential 
security concerns associated with the deleted provision. Even with this 
change, Sec.  68.93 still requires the owner and operator to provide 
local responders with the names and quantities of regulated substances 
at the stationary source, the risks presented by covered processes, and 
the resources and capabilities at the stationary source to respond to 
an accidental release of a regulated substance, as well as the 
stationary source's emergency response plan if one exists; emergency 
action plan; and updated emergency contact information. Responding 
stationary sources would still be required to consult with local 
emergency response officials to establish appropriate schedules and 
plans for field and tabletop exercises required under Sec.  68.96(b), 
and all stationary source owners or operators would still be required 
to request an opportunity to meet with the LEPC (or equivalent) and/or 
local fire department as appropriate to review and discuss the 
information.
    EPA's alternative proposal--to replace the phrase ``. . . any other 
information that local emergency planning and response organizations 
identify as relevant to local emergency response planning'' with the 
phrase, ``other information necessary for developing and implementing 
the local emergency response plan,'' opts to use language virtually 
identical to that used in Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-
Know Act (EPCRA) section 303(d)(3), [42 U.S.C. 11003(d)(3)]. That 
provision of EPCRA states: ``Upon request from the emergency planning 
committee, the owner or operator of the facility shall promptly provide 
information to such committee necessary for developing and implementing 
the emergency plan.'' This language also appears in Sec.  68.95(c) of 
the version of the RMP rule currently in effect, which applies to 
facilities with Program 2 and Program 3 processes whose employees 
respond to accidental releases of regulated substances. Therefore, as a 
result of either the EPCRA section 303(d)(3) provision or the provision 
in Sec.  68.95(c), most RMP facilities have long been subject to this 
requirement, and applying it to the relatively few RMP facilities that 
are not already subject to it under EPCRA section 303(d)(3) or Sec.  
68.95(c) should not create any security vulnerabilities.
    Under both alternatives, EPA's proposal to incorporate CBI and 
classified information protections to regulated substance and 
stationary source information provided under Sec.  68.93 is intended to 
address petitioners' concerns regarding these issues. Incorporating a 
CBI provision in this section of the rule will emphasize the facility 
owner or operator's right to protect CBI. EPA notes that the RMP rule 
already authorizes the owner or operator of an RMP-regulated facility 
to assert CBI claims for information submitted in the RMP required 
under subpart G that meets the requirements of 40 CFR 2.301, with some 
limitations (e.g. five-year accident history information and emergency 
response program information required to be reported in source's RMP 
cannot be claimed as CBI). EPA's proposal would relocate the CBI 
provision of Sec.  68.210(g) of the final RMP Amendments rule to Sec.  
68.93, which would allow CBI claims for emergency response coordination 
information in the same manner as required in Sec. Sec.  68.151 and 
68.152 for information contained in the RMP. EPA's proposal would also 
replicate the classified information provisions of Sec.  68.210(f) of 
the final RMP Amendments rule in Sec.  68.93, which would require that 
the disclosure of emergency response coordination information 
classified by the Department of Defense or other Federal agencies or 
contractors of such agencies be controlled by applicable laws, 
regulations, or executive orders concerning the release of classified 
information.\29\ While the provision in Sec.  68.210 (to be restored to 
Sec.  68.210(b)) protects classified information for all information 
disclosure under the RMP rule, we believe replicating this language in 
Sec.  68.93 will avoid unnecessary disputes between LEPCs and holders 
of classified information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ The classified information provisions of Sec.  68.210(f) 
would also remain within Sec.  68.210, but be renumbered to Sec.  
68.210(b), which is where they appear within the currently-in-effect 
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA requests public comments on its proposed changes to the 
emergency response coordination activities section of the RMP 
Amendments final rule. Does deleting the phrase in Sec.  68.93(b) ``. . 
. any other information that local emergency planning and response 
organizations identify as relevant to local emergency response 
planning'' resolve petitioners' security concerns without denying 
important emergency

[[Page 24867]]

planning information to local emergency responders?
    Would EPA's alternate proposal, which replaces this language with, 
``other information necessary for developing and implementing the local 
emergency response plan'' better resolve the issue by limiting 
additional information to that necessary for developing the local 
response plan?
    If stakeholders believe the alternative language also presents new 
security concerns, how is it that this language has not caused such 
concerns in relation to its presence in EPCRA section 303(d)(3) or in 
Sec.  68.95(c) of the currently in-effect RMP rule? Does EPA's proposal 
to incorporate the classified information provision of Sec.  68.210(f) 
into Sec.  68.93 limit the potential for disputes between holders of 
classified information and LEPCs over the scope of the general 
protection against disclosure of classified information in section 
68.210? Does EPA's proposal to incorporate the CBI provisions of Sec.  
68.210(g) into Sec.  68.93 appropriately address petitioners' concerns 
that these issues were not addressed in the emergency response 
coordination provisions of the final RMP Amendments rule?
2. Information Availability
    Notwithstanding EPA efforts to address security concerns raised in 
public comments on the RMP Amendments, petitioners remain concerned 
about the potential for the information made available under Sec.  
68.210 of the RMP Amendments rule to be used by criminals or terrorists 
to target facilities for attack. Petitioner CSAG stated, ``By providing 
unfettered access to information by local response organizations 
without safeguards, and by requiring disclosure of extensive facility 
information to the public upon request, EPA has done nothing to protect 
sensitive facility information.'' \30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ CSAG Petition, pgs. 6-7. Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-
0766.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The States Petition enumerates the States' specific concerns with 
public information availability provisions, including that there is no 
screening process for requesters or limitations on the use or 
distribution of information, and that the provisions potentially 
conflict with other anti-terrorism laws, and others.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \31\ States Petition, pgs. 3-4. Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-
0725-0762.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Linking its objection to the BATF finding that the West Fertilizer 
incident was due to criminal conduct, Petitioner RMP Coalition 
suggests: \32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \32\ RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 16, Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-
2015-0725-0759.

    For example, EPA might have focused its proposal on enhanced 
security measures for facilities, strict scrutiny of the type of 
information that should be disclosed to LEPCs or the public, 
protections for that information, prohibitions against using any 
sensitive information from these facilities to cause harm to the 
public or the environment, or screening measures for third parties 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
with access to the facility and its sensitive information.

    In the proposed RMP Amendments rule, under Sec.  68.210 EPA 
proposed to require the owner or operator to distribute to the public 
in an easily accessible manner, such as on a company website, the 
following information:
     Names of regulated substances held in a process;
     SDSs for all regulated substances at the facility;
     The facility's five-year accident history required under 
Sec.  68.42;
     Emergency response program information concerning the 
source's compliance with Sec.  68.10(b)(3) or the emergency response 
provisions of subpart E, including:
    [cir] Whether the source is a responding stationary source or a 
non-responding stationary source;
    [cir] Name and phone number of local emergency response 
organizations with which the source last coordinated emergency response 
efforts, pursuant to Sec.  68.180; and
    [cir] For sources subject to Sec.  68.95, procedures for informing 
the public and local emergency response agencies about accidental 
releases.
     Information on emergency response exercises required under 
Sec.  68.96, including schedules for upcoming exercises, reports for 
completed exercises as described in Sec.  68.96(b)(3), and any other 
related information; and
     LEPC contact information, including LEPC name, phone 
number, and website address as available.
    In the final Amendments rule, EPA made only one change to this 
list--EPA revised the exercise information element to require the owner 
or operator to provide a list of scheduled exercises required under 
Sec.  68.96, rather than the additional exercise information that was 
proposed. In so doing, EPA noted that, ``The information required to be 
disclosed by this rule largely draws on information otherwise in the 
public domain and simplified the public's access to it.'' EPA further 
stated, ``Other statutes and regulatory programs, or other provisions 
of the risk management program, require the stationary source to 
assemble the information that the rule would make available upon 
request (e.g., accident history, SDSs, and aspects of the emergency 
response program).'' (82 FR 4668, January 13, 2017).
    Noting that many commenters on the proposed RMP Amendments rule had 
objected to the proposed public information availability provisions 
because, they argued, those provisions had the potential to create a 
security risk, EPA's primary method of addressing commenters' concerns 
was to require facility owners and operators to notify the public that 
certain information is available upon request, and only provide the 
information after receiving such a request. EPA indicated that this 
would ``allow community members an opportunity to request chemical 
hazard information from a facility, so they can take measures to 
protect themselves in the event of an accidental release, while 
allowing facility owners and operators to identify who is requesting 
the information.'' (82 FR 4668, January 13, 2017).
    Petitioners' comments summarized above indicate that EPA in the 
final amendments may not have struck the appropriate balance between 
various relevant policy concerns, including information availability, 
community right to know, minimizing facility burden, and minimizing 
information security risks. EPA agrees with petitioners that requiring 
unlimited disclosure of the chemical hazard information elements 
required under the RMP Amendments may create additional policy 
concerns, particularly with regard to the potential security risks 
created by disclosing such information.
    A related concern not specifically raised by petitioners, but which 
EPA is now considering, is whether the synthesis of the required 
information disclosure elements could create an additional security 
risk for facilities. EPA had not previously considered that the 
combination of mandatory disclosure elements as required under the 
Amendments is generally not already available to the public from any 
single source. EPA believes that the synthesis of the required chemical 
hazard and facility information may present a more comprehensive 
picture of the vulnerabilities of a facility than would be apparent 
from any individual element, and that therefore requiring it to be made 
more easily available to the public from a single source (i.e., the 
facility itself) could increase the risk of a terrorist attack on some 
facilities. For example, if a facility is required to disclose in 
synthesis and in one public source that it has experienced frequent 
accidental releases involving large quantities of highly toxic or 
flammable chemicals, does not maintain an on-site

[[Page 24868]]

response capability, and is located a long distance away from the 
nearest public responders, the synthesis of this information might 
allow a criminal or terrorist to identify a relatively ``softer'' 
facility target for attack, or a target that if attacked could cause 
more damage to the facility and surrounding community due to a less 
timely response.
    EPA's proposal to rescind the public information availability 
provisions would address this concern, as well as petitioners' and 
other commenters concerns about the lack of any appeals or vetting 
process for members of the public requesting facility information. 
Information on most of the required disclosure elements would still be 
available via other means, such as through an LEPC, by visiting a 
Federal RMP reading room, or making a request under the Freedom of 
Information Act (FOIA). FOIA requests require a name and U.S. state or 
territory address to receive information.\33\ Federal Reading Rooms 
require photo identification issued by a Federal, state, or local 
government agency such as a driver's license or passport.\34\ These 
requirements to accurately identify the party requesting the 
information may provide a deterrent to those who seek to obtain 
chemical information for a facility for terrorist purposes without 
unduly impeding access to the information by those in the nearby 
community with a right-to-know. The current provisions in Sec.  68.210 
do not specify that requestors provide any particular identification. 
For example, if a facility is providing access to the required 
information by responding to email requests, requestors could receive 
information via email without verification of their true identity. 
While EPA's intent was to give the local community access to 
information ``by facilitating public participation at the local level'' 
and ``allow people that live and work near a regulated facility to 
improve their awareness of risks to the community and to be prepared to 
protect themselves in the event of an accidental release'' (82 FR 4668, 
January 13, 2017), the provisions have no limitation on the location or 
address of the requestors or whether the requestor must provide an 
accurate identification of their name and address. A justification 
cannot be made for those outside of the community to know, for example, 
a schedule of upcoming exercises, for the purpose intended.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \33\ https://foiaonline.regulations.gov/foia/action/public/request/createRequest.
    \34\ https://www.epa.gov/rmp/federal-reading-rooms-risk-management-plans-rmp.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA requests comments on its proposal to rescind the public 
information availability requirements of the final RMP Amendments rule. 
As an alternative to rescinding all of the public information elements, 
EPA request comments on rescinding all except the information on 
exercise schedules. If EPA maintains a field exercise requirement in 
the final rule, information on upcoming facility exercises would be the 
only item of information required to be disclosed in Sec.  68.210(b) 
that is not already available from another source, and EPA maintains 
that providing the local community with this information could avoid 
unnecessary public concerns or panic during facility exercises.
    Another element of publicly available information is the RMP 
information about local emergency response organizations. In Sec.  
68.180(a)(1) of the Amendments rule, EPA required the owner or operator 
to provide the name, organizational affiliation, phone number, and 
email address of local emergency planning and response organizations 
with which the stationary source last coordinated emergency response 
efforts. EPA now proposes to modify this requirement to read: ``Name, 
phone number, and email address of local emergency planning and 
response organizations . . . .'' This change would clarify that the 
Agency is only requiring organization-level information about local 
emergency planning and response organizations, and that facilities are 
not required to provide information about individual local emergency 
responders in order to reduce the amount of personally identifiable 
information available in facility RMPs. This could help avoid criminals 
or terrorists targeting individual emergency responders through 
identifying them using the publicly available portions of facility's 
RMPs.
3. Public Meeting After an Accident
    The public meeting requirement in Sec.  68.210(e) requires the 
owner/operator of a stationary source to ``hold a public meeting to 
provide accident information required under Sec.  68.42 as well as 
other relevant chemical hazard information, such as that described in 
paragraph (b) of this section, no later than 90 days after any accident 
subject to reporting under Sec.  68.42.'' The requirement to provide 
``other relevant chemical hazard information'' could be interpreted to 
be an overly broad requirement for information, similar to the 
requirement to provide ``any other information that local emergency 
planning and response organizations identify as relevant to local 
emergency response planning'' to LEPCs, which EPA is now proposing to 
rescind. ``Information, such as that described in paragraph (b) of this 
section'' is referring to the same chemical hazard information that is 
required to be provided upon request to the public. As discussed in 
section IV.B.2. of this preamble ``Information Availability'', all 
three of the petitioners had security concerns with providing this type 
of information with no screening process for requesters or limitations 
on the use or distribution of information. Based on the reasoning 
provided in sections IV.B.1 and 2 of this preamble, EPA proposes to 
rescind the requirement to provide at the public meeting ``other 
relevant chemical hazard information, such as that described in 
paragraph (b) of this section.''
    CSAG's petition \35\ cited additional concerns with the public 
meeting requirement:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \35\ CSAG Petition, pg. 21, Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-
0766.

    The requirement to hold a public meeting within 90 days after 
any reportable accident is overly broad. It is not necessary for 
facilities to hold a public meeting every time that a release 
occurs. EPA provided no evidence that public meetings were requested 
or needed and not held under pre-existing rules. Often a release 
does not warrant a public meeting and the expense should not be 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
imposed automatically. See CSAG Proposed Rule Comments, at pg. 17.

    A public meeting is not required under the 2017 Amendments every 
time that a release occurs, but only after an accident occurs that is 
subject to reporting under Sec.  68.42. Those are accidents that 
resulted in deaths, injuries, or significant property damage on site, 
or known offsite deaths, injuries, evacuations, sheltering in place, 
property damage, or environmental damage. EPA believes that having a 
public meeting so that community members may learn more about the 
causes of an accident that resulted in such impacts, and the facility's 
plans to address those causes is warranted. A public meeting also gives 
members of the community an opportunity to ask questions directly of 
the facility about issues that concern them. Therefore, EPA proposes to 
retain the public meeting requirement in Sec.  68.210(e), modified to 
require that the owner or operator provide only accident information 
required under Sec.  68.42(b) no later than 90 days after any 
reportable accident. However, EPA requests public comment on whether 
the Agency should further limit the public meeting requirement to apply

[[Page 24869]]

only after accidents that meet certain criteria, such as accidents with 
offsite impacts specified in Sec.  68.42(a) (i.e., known offsite 
deaths, injuries, evacuations, sheltering in place, property damage, or 
environmental damage)? In comments on the RMP Amendments rule, 
commenters stated that the public would not attend a meeting after a 
minor incident, but recommended holding a public meeting for an event 
with major offsite impacts.\36\ Would members of communities 
surrounding RMP facilities be less likely to attend post-accident 
public meetings if the accident had no offsite public or environmental 
impacts?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \36\ See document IDs EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0492, and EPA-HQ-OEM-
2015-0725-0542 in the docket.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, EPA requests public comment on the required time 
frame for public meetings. In the proposed Amendments rule, EPA had 
proposed that post-accident public meetings be required within 30 days. 
Several commenters claimed that this time frame was too short, and 
would cause owners and operators to divert resources away from post-
accident investigations.\37\ However, other commenters agreed with 
EPA's proposed 30-day time frame, and one commenter recommended that 
the meeting should occur within two weeks of the accident. Although the 
final Amendments rule required public meetings to occur within 90 days 
of an accident and this proposal would not change that time frame, EPA 
is again considering whether public meetings should be required sooner 
than 90 days after an accident. Would a shorter time frame, such as 30, 
45, or 60 days, be more useful to surrounding communities without 
unduly impeding facilities' post-accident recovery and investigation 
activities?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \37\ See Response to Comments on the 2016 Proposed Rule Amending 
EPA's Risk Management Program Regulations (March 14, 2016; 81 FR 
13637), EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0729, pgs. 207-209.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In establishing the requirement for the owner or operator to 
provide accident information required under Sec.  68.42 at public 
meetings, we have not previously specified whether it requires the 
owner or operator to provide at the meeting, accident information for 
only the accident triggering the public meeting, or, if the facility 
has multiple accidents in its five-year accident history, for all such 
accidents. EPA did not intend that the public meeting cover providing 
information for all reportable accidents over the last five years. EPA 
proposes to amend the public meeting provision to require the 
information listed in Sec.  68.42(b) for only the most recent accident, 
and not for previous accidents covered by the 5-year accident history 
requirement of Sec.  68.42(a). This proposed modification should 
provide clarity for the regulated community regarding the public 
meeting requirements. Nevertheless, EPA requests comments on this 
issue--should the public meeting provision require providing 
information on all accidents in a facility's five-year accident 
history?
    Because EPA proposes to rescind the requirements in Sec.  68.210(b) 
for the owner or operator to provide chemical hazard information to the 
public upon request and to provide ``other relevant chemical hazard 
information'' at public meetings after a reportable accident, EPA 
proposes to delete the provision for CBI in Sec.  68.210(g), as 
unnecessary. The proposed revised public meeting provision would only 
require the owner or operator to provide data specified in the source's 
five-year accident history (Sec.  68.42), which is not allowed to be 
claimed as CBI under Sec.  68.151(b)(3). The owner or operator may 
provide additional information during public meetings, but is not 
required to do so.

C. Address BATF Finding on West Fertilizer Incident

    Petitioner RMP Coalition asserted that it was impracticable for 
commenters to address in their comments the significance of the May 11, 
2016 determination by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and 
Explosives (BATF) that the fire and explosion at the West Fertilizer 
facility was caused by an intentional, criminal act. Petitioner further 
stated: \38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 16, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0759.

    As the primary driver behind the Executive Order that inspired 
this rule, and the focus of EPA's introduction to the Proposed Rule, 
the circumstances surrounding the West, Texas, incident highlight 
the risks central to the Final Rule. Knowing that the incident was 
intentional would could [sic] have impacted the scope of the 
Executive Order, certainly have changed the comments EPA received, 
and likely would have caused EPA to construct its proposed and final 
rules differently had it known of these circumstances at the time of 
the proposed rulemaking. For example, EPA might have focused its 
proposal on enhanced security measures for facilities, strict 
scrutiny of the type of information that should be disclosed to 
LEPCs or the public, protections for that information, prohibitions 
against using any sensitive information from these facilities to 
cause harm to the public or the environment, or screening measures 
for third parties with access to the facility and its sensitive 
information. Reliance on the E.O. as a predicate for this rule, 
combined with the West, Texas, investigation results further merits 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
reconsideration of the EPA's RMP Final Rule.

    In responding to this petition, EPA Administrator Pruitt agreed 
that the timing of the BATF finding was a valid basis for 
reconsideration of the RMP Amendments rule: \39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ March 13, 2017 letter from EPA Administrator E. Scott 
Pruitt to Justin Savage, Esq., Hogan Lovells US LLP. Letter 
available in the docket for this rulemaking. EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-
0758.

    Among the objections raised in the petition that meet the 
requirements for a petition for reconsideration under CAA section 
307(d)(7)(B), we believe the timing of the BATF finding on the West, 
Texas incident, which was announced just before the close of the 
public comment period, made it impracticable for many commenters to 
meaningfully address the significance of this finding in their 
comments on this multi-faceted rule. Prior to this finding, many 
parties had assumed that the cause of the incident was accidental. 
Additionally, the prominence of the incident in the policy decisions 
underlying the rule makes the BATF finding regarding the cause of 
the incident of central relevance to the Risk Management Program 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Amendments.

    EPA agrees that the West, Texas, incident was prominent in the 
issuance of Executive Order 13650 and the consideration for the final 
RMP Amendments rule. In the Executive Order 13650 Report for the 
President, the Chemical Facility Safety and Security Working Group, of 
which EPA serves as one of three tri-chairs, stated:\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ Executive Order 13650 Actions to Improve Chemical Safety 
and Security--a Shared Commitment, Report for the President, May 
2014, page 1, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0246.

    The West, Texas, disaster in which a fire involving ammonium 
nitrate at a fertilizer facility resulted in an explosion that 
killed 15 people, injured many others, and caused widespread damage, 
revealed a variety of issues related to chemical hazard awareness, 
regulatory coverage, and emergency response. The Working Group has 
outlined a suite of actions to address these issues, such as:
     Strengthening State and local capabilities
     Expanding tools to assist emergency responders
     Enhancing awareness and increasing information sharing 
with communities around chemical facilities
     Increasing awareness of chemical facility safety and 
security regulatory responsibilities
     Pursuing rulemaking options for changes to EPA, OSHA, 
and DHS standards to improve safety and security, including 
potential changes specific to ammonium nitrate.

    The ``changes to EPA . . . standards'' ultimately became the RMP 
Amendments final rule, where EPA

[[Page 24870]]

again acknowledged the prominence of the West Fertilizer incident: \41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \41\ 82 FR 4594, January 13, 2017.

    The purpose of this action is to improve safety at facilities 
that use and distribute hazardous chemicals. In response to 
catastrophic chemical facility incidents in the United States, 
including the explosion that occurred at the West Fertilizer 
facility in West, Texas, on April 17, 2013 that killed 15 people (on 
May 11, 2016, ATF ruled that the fire was intentionally set.) 
President Obama issued Executive Order 13650, ``Improving Chemical 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Facility Safety and Security,'' on August 1, 2013.

    As indicated above, the final RMP Amendments rule acknowledged the 
BATF finding concerning the cause of the West Fertilizer incident. 82 
FR at 4594, January 13, 2017. Notwithstanding this finding, EPA 
maintained that the incident still highlighted the need for better 
coordination between facility staff and local emergency responders. EPA 
also highlighted in the RMP Amendments Rule other incidents that 
further supported the need for better coordination between facility 
staff and local emergency responders (e.g., BP Refinery incident in 
Texas City, TX; Tesoro Refinery incident in Anacortes, WA). EPA 
reaffirms this view, and this proposal would preserve the emergency 
response coordination enhancements of the RMP Amendments rule with 
minor modifications to address valid security concerns raised by 
petitioners. Our proposal also would rescind virtually all changes to 
the accident prevention provisions of Subparts C and D made in the RMP 
Amendments rule, as well as the public information availability 
provisions (except for the requirement to hold a public meeting after 
an accident), and make modifications to the emergency exercise 
provisions. EPA primarily justifies herein these proposed rescissions 
and modifications on bases other than the BATF finding. However, the 
BATF finding informs EPA's concern, expressed above, that the 
Amendments may not have struck the appropriate balance between multiple 
policy considerations, including but not limited to information 
security and community right to know.
    The BATF finding was contrary to the widespread belief among the 
public and regulated community during development of the proposed RMP 
rule that the West incident was the result of an accident. Considering 
the timing of BATF's announcement, and that few commenters made 
reference to the finding in their comments on the proposed RMP 
Amendments rule, EPA is requesting further public comment on the 
significance of the BATF finding to the final RMP Amendments rule, and 
this proposal. When we solicited comment during the rulemaking to delay 
the effective date of the RMP Amendments to February 19, 2019, several 
commenters criticized the methodology used by BATF in support of its 
finding regarding the cause of the West Explosion. See 82 FR 27140, 
June 14, 2017. These commenters claimed the BATF used a process of 
elimination called ``negative corpus'' to develop its conclusion rather 
than a more sound investigative methodology.\42\ BATF provided EPA an 
explanation of methodology used in their investigation, which did not 
rely on ``negative corpus'' but relied on the scientific method as 
explained in the 2014 Edition of the NFPA 921 Guide for Fire and 
Explosion Investigations and by considering the significant evidence, 
artifacts, and information collected.\43\ BATF continues to have an 
award posted for information leading to an arrest of the person or 
persons responsible for the fire and subsequent explosion at the West 
Fertilizer facility. EPA defers to BATF expertise in determining the 
cause of the West Fertilizer fire and explosion and the validity of 
investigation methods. We also believe we should strike a different 
balance between security and safety with respect to information 
disclosure and security for the reasons stated above, and solicit 
comment on this view. Does the BATF finding provide additional 
justification for EPA rescinding the STAA, third-party audit, incident 
investigation, and information availability provisions of the RMP 
Amendments rule? Do EPA's proposed changes to the emergency response 
coordination provisions preserve the Agency's goal of better 
coordination between facility staff and local emergency responders that 
it sought in the final RMP Amendments rule while resolving petitioners' 
security concerns? Does the BATF finding have any significance for 
EPA's proposed revisions to the emergency exercise provisions, or 
alternatively, their rescission?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ See Response to Comments on the 2017 Proposed Rule Further 
Delaying the Effective Date of EPA's Risk Management Program 
Amendments (April 3, 2017; 82 FR 16146), EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0881, 
pgs. 32-33.
    \43\ BATF. 2016. Excerpt from West Fertilizer Investigation 
Report regarding investigation methodology. US Department of 
Justice, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Reduce Unnecessary Regulations and Regulatory Costs

1. Petitioners' Comments on Costs and EPA's Economic Analysis
    All three petitioners objected to the costs and burdens associated 
with the new provisions of the RMP Amendments rule, and claimed that 
EPA's economic analysis did not accurately assess the costs of new 
provisions and violated procedural requirements by not quantifying 
potential benefits or linking specific rule provisions to quantified 
benefits. Most of these objections were variations of the comments 
previously provided on issues raised in the proposed RMP Amendments 
rule.\44\ Without deciding whether reconsideration of any particular 
objection meets the standard of CAA section 307(d)(7)(B), EPA is using 
its discretion to reopen its consideration of regulatory costs of the 
Amendments in this reconsideration proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ Compare RMP Coalition Petition, pgs.8-10, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-
0725-0759 to American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM) May 
13, 2016 comments on RMP proposed rule (81 FR 13638, March 14, 
2016), part 1 of 2, pgs. 56-59, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0579.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In developing the 1996 RMP rule, the Agency addressed the 
reasonableness of its regulations in part by taking account of the 
costs and implementation burdens. See 61 FR 31668, 31717 (June 20, 
1996). For example, EPA shifted from an initially proposed approach of 
requiring all source prevention programs to be based on the PSM 
standard to requiring PSM standard-based prevention programs only for 
sources already subject to the PSM standard or in high-accident 
sectors; EPA allowed other sources subject to the risk management 
program to use more streamlined prevention requirements. Additionally, 
EPA developed tools and parameters to simplify offsite consequence 
analyses for release scenarios. The Agency also centralized risk 
management plan submissions, standardizing the format and establishing 
an electronically accessible database, in order to relieve multiple 
agencies of data management burdens and to simplify compliance for 
small businesses. While not explicitly adopting a requirement that 
costs exceed benefits in the 1996 rule, EPA helped justify the various 
modifications between the RMP proposal of 1993 and the final rule of 
1996 by noting large cost reductions relative to prior proposed 
approaches without significant loss of benefits. See, e.g., 60 FR 
13526, 13527, March 13, 1995 (prevention program); id. at 13533

[[Page 24871]]

(dispersion lookup tables); 61 FR at 31695, June 20, 1996 (burden 
reducing effect of electronic submission).
    In developing the RMP Amendments, EPA also considered costs and 
burdens in deciding not to propose certain options and to modify or not 
go forward with various provisions in the final rule. For example, EPA 
chose not to propose requiring all Program 2 and 3 facilities to 
implement an emergency response program; See 81 FR 13674 (March 14, 
2016), or perform emergency exercises. Id. at 13677. In the final 
Amendments rule, EPA chose not to incorporate commenters' suggestion 
that EPA require third-party audits for all RMP facilities with Program 
2 or 3 processes, see 82 FR 4617 (January 13, 2017); and EPA chose to 
reduce the required frequency of field and tabletop exercises from what 
had initially been proposed. Id. at 4662.
    While at the time we promulgated the final Amendments rule we 
believed the costs of the rule were reasonable in relation to its 
benefits, we are reexamining the reasonableness of the Amendments in 
light of three newly promulgated Executive Orders that require Agencies 
to place greater emphasis on reducing regulatory costs and burdens. 
These Executive Orders, and their relationship to this proposal, are 
discussed below. The agency acknowledges that the continual decrease in 
accidental releases under the existing RMP rule is evidence that the 
existing rule is working and that additional costs may not justify the 
additional requirements. EPA is uncertain about whether the additional 
requirements (i.e., third party audits, STAA, and root cause analysis) 
add environmental benefits beyond those provided by the existing 
requirements that are significant enough to justify their added costs. 
EPA will carefully examine the provisions of the RMP Amendments for 
their costs and benefits in implementing the statutory provisions of 
CAA section 112(r)(7).
2. New Executive Orders on Reducing Regulation, Regulatory Reform, and 
Promoting Energy Independence and Economic Growth
    In the final Delay Rule published June 14, 2017,\45\ EPA said the 
following: ``During the reconsideration, EPA may also consider other 
issues, beyond those raised by petitioners, that may benefit from 
additional comment, and take further regulatory action.'' One such 
issue that EPA believes it should consider is the policies of the 
President that are reflected in the new Executive Orders. Each of these 
Executive Orders was promulgated shortly after the final RMP Amendments 
rule was published.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ 82 FR 27133, June 14, 2017
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Executive Order 13771, ``Reducing Regulation and Controlling 
Regulatory Costs'' of January 30, 2017, says that any new incremental 
costs associated with new regulation shall, to the extent permitted by 
law, be offset by the elimination of existing costs associated with at 
least two prior regulations.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ See Executive Order 13771: ``Reducing Regulation and 
Controlling Regulatory Costs'' which was signed on January 30, 2017 
and published in the Federal Register on February 3, 2017 (82 FR 
9339).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Executive Order 13777, ``Enforcing the Regulatory Reform Agenda'' 
of February 24, 2017, calls for agency Regulatory Reform Task Forces to 
identify regulations that, among other things, impose costs that exceed 
benefits, evaluate these regulations and make recommendations to the 
agency head regarding their repeal, replacement, or modification, 
consistent with applicable law.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ See Executive Order 13777: ``Enforcing the Regulatory 
Reform Agenda'' which was signed on February 24, 2017 and published 
in the Federal Register on March 31, 2017 (82 FR 12285).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Executive Order 13783,'' Promoting Energy Independence and Economic 
Growth'' of March 28, 2017, directs executive departments and agencies 
to immediately review existing regulations that potentially burden the 
development or use of domestically produced energy resources and 
appropriately suspend, revise, or rescind those that unduly burden the 
development of domestic energy resources beyond the degree necessary to 
protect the public interest or otherwise comply with the law.\48\ This 
Executive Order also directs that environmental regulations have 
greater benefits than cost, when permissible under law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ See Executive Order 13783: ``Promoting Energy Independence 
and Economic Growth'' which was signed on March 28, 2017 and 
published in the Federal Register on March 31, 2017 (82 FR 16093).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition to the justifications discussed previously (i.e., to 
maintain consistency in accident prevention programs and address 
security concerns), an important factor in selecting the provisions of 
the final RMP Amendments rule that EPA seeks to rescind or modify with 
this proposal is that these provisions would otherwise place 
substantial economic burdens on regulated entities, potentially 
contravening the new policy direction set in these new Executive 
Orders. In addition, such burdens are directly relevant to whether the 
Amendments are ``practicable'' for sources, as that term is used in CAA 
section 112(r)(7). In deciding whether the Amendments are 
``reasonable,'' consistent with the President's policy direction, EPA 
is now placing greater weight on the uncertainty of the accident 
reduction benefits than we had when we promulgated the RMP Amendments, 
especially in contrast to the extensive record on the costs of the 
rule. In determining whether rescinding or modifying particular 
provisions is reasonable and practicable, we examined each on its 
merits and in the context of the policy direction reflected in the new 
Executive Orders. EPA notes that while further analysis of the 
reasonableness and practicability of the Amendments is in keeping with 
the principles articulated in the new Executive Orders, such an 
analysis would be appropriate even without the Executive Orders, and 
the Agency retained the discretion to do so prior to their 
promulgation.
3. Costs of STAA, Third-Party Audits, and Incident Investigation Root 
Cause Analysis
    STAA is by far the costliest provision of the RMP Amendments rule. 
EPA estimated that this provision would cost $70 million on an 
annualized basis. This represents over 53% of the total estimated costs 
of the rule ($131.8 million annualized at a 7% discount rate). EPA 
estimated that third-party audits would cost approximately $9.8 million 
on an annualized basis, and that incident investigation root-cause 
analysis would cost approximately $1.8 million on an annualized basis.
    Petitioners for reconsideration raised objections to the costs and 
other burdens of these provisions. For example, CSAG complained of 
``ill-defined and potentially expansive triggers for third party 
auditing,'' as well as reports from such audits and ``restrictive 
qualifications'' for auditors as imposing significant burdens beyond 
what we quantified. The RMP Coalition noted the potential need for 
sources to duplicate Process Hazard Analysis (PHAs) during the phase-in 
of STAA under the requirement to complete a PHA with STAA by 4 years 
after the promulgation of the Amendments.
    In the RMP Amendments, EPA had judged the costs of STAA to be 
reasonable based on two assumptions, one explicit and one implicit. 
First, we explicitly assumed that, whatever the cost of a new safer 
technology alternative, a company would incur such costs only if it 
were net beneficial to the company. Amendments RTC at 70. We then 
implicitly assumed that an unknown but sufficient fraction of the three 
affected industries would in fact implement changes as a result of 
having

[[Page 24872]]

performed STAA to make the requirement to conduct STAA assessments 
reasonable. Nevertheless, the Agency also acknowledged that no benefits 
would accrue from implementing STAA unless facilities subject to the 
requirement voluntarily elect to implement a safer technology. EPA did 
not account for the indirect costs of implementing safer technologies 
and alternatives in the RMP Amendments rule, but in the RIA provided 
examples of safer technologies that could cost as much as $500 million 
(converting hydrogen fluoride (HF) alkylation unit to sulfuric acid) or 
$1 billion (converting a paper mill from gaseous chlorine bleaching to 
chlorine dioxide). Therefore, not only are the known costs of complying 
with this provision high, indirect costs could also be incurred, if 
facilities take actions based on the results of their STAA (or based on 
external pressures to implement STAA recommendations regardless of 
whether they are necessary or practical). Lastly, given the application 
of the current requirements, the Agency now questions the implicit 
assumption that a sufficient number of sources would implement STAA 
improvements to offset the costs of the provision.
    Both the third-party auditing and the root cause incident 
investigation provisions trigger after one incident--either a 
reportable accident for third-party auditing or a catastrophic release 
for a root-cause investigation. Data analysis provided by the American 
Chemistry Council (ACC) to support the RMP Coalition Petition 
demonstrates that accidents, and especially patterns of multiple 
accidents, are concentrated in very few facilities. Of the 
approximately 1500 reportable accidents in EPA's RMP database from the 
years 2004 to 2013, only 8% of the 12,500 facilities subject to the RMP 
rule reported any accidental releases, while the less than 2% of 
facilities that reported multiple releases in that time frame were 
responsible for nearly half (48%) of reportable accidents from all 
types of facilities. Within NAICS code 325, the chemical manufacturing 
industry, of the 1465 facilities subject to the RMP rule, 99 facilities 
with multiple reportable accidents were responsible for approximately 
70% of all reportable accidents in the sector and more than one-third 
of all reportable accidents.\49\ Other studies have also found a 
history of past accidents is a strong predictor of future 
accidents.\50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \49\ EPA. March 9, 2017. Notes and Documentation Related to a 
March 9, 2017 Meeting between the RMP Coalition and EPA regarding a 
Petition for Reconsideration of the RMP Amendments rule (82 FR 4594, 
January 17, 2017). USEPA, Office of Emergency Management.
    \50\ Kleindorfer, P.R., Belke, J.C., Elliot, M.R, Lee, K., Lowe, 
R.A., and Feldman, H.I., 2003. Accident Epidemiology and the U.S. 
Chemical Industry: Accident History and Worst-Case Data from 
RMP*Info, Risk Analysis, Vol.23, No. 5, pgs. 865-881. See Table IV, 
pg. 872. https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/f0c9/f27d670a6ea77187aeb3f78ca0ced444db8b.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Several commenters during the rulemaking asked that EPA emphasize 
enforcement rather than amend the RMP rule. The data (as analyzed by 
ACC in its petition) tend to support the reasonableness of an 
enforcement-led approach to strengthening accident prevention that 
focuses on problematic facilities rather than broader regulatory 
mandates. Under the RMP rule as it existed before the RMP Amendments, 
EPA has required third-party audits in resolving enforcement actions 
not only after reported releases but also when inspections have 
indicated potentially weak prevention programs. By requiring third-
party audits after every reportable accident rather than using an 
enforcement-led approach, the RMP Amendments potentially burden more of 
the regulated community than is appropriate in light of new policy 
direction that we put more emphasis on regulatory burden reduction and 
improved net benefits. An enforcement-led approach allows the agency 
additional discretion to make a determination of the utility of a 
third-party audit or a root-cause analysis. While EPA believes an 
enforcement-led approach is preferable to a uniform regulatory standard 
for third party audits and root cause analyses, the Agency requests 
public comment on whether a third-party audit or root-cause analysis 
should be required under certain well-defined regulatory criteria. For 
third party audits, such criteria might include requiring audits 
following multiple RMP-reportable accidents, or multiple regulatory 
violations of a particular gravity. For root-cause analyses, EPA could 
consider requiring such analyses following incidents exceeding 
specified severity levels. Although it is not our intent at this time 
to adopt such provisions, we invite parties to suggest appropriate 
regulatory criteria for third party audits and root-cause analyses.
    For third party audits, while EPA cited a number of studies 
relating to the usefulness of such audits in various contexts,\51\ EPA 
is particularly interested in gaining additional information relating 
to third-party audit programs relevant to process safety auditing. The 
most directly analogous programs reviewed by EPA included programs 
relating to boiler safety, medical device safety, food and product 
safety, hazardous waste site cleanups, and compliance with waste 
treatment and underground storage tank regulations, but even these 
programs do not involve review of production processes as complex as 
modern refineries and chemical manufacturing plants. When EPA first 
took comment on third party oversight in 1995,\52\ we examined whether 
such oversight would be appropriate for sectors with simpler processes, 
and EPA's own RMP third party audit pilot project conducted with the 
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania involved simpler 
processes.\53\ Should EPA consider limiting third party audits to 
relatively simple or common processes where experts could apply 
transferable expertise more easily than in more complex processes? Are 
there other ways to more narrowly tailor applicability to appropriate 
RMP facilities without broadly burdening the RMP-regulated universe 
with a third-party audit requirement? Should third party audits only be 
mandated for facilities with multiple incidents? Some critics of the 
RMP Amendments have particular concerns about whether parties that meet 
the strict independence criteria of the RMP Amendments would be able to 
understand these complex processes enough to make strong 
recommendations in an audit. Should the agency consider modifying the 
independence criteria in any future third-party audit provision?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ See 81 FR 13656-58, March 14, 2016 and 82 FR 4620-25, 
January 13, 2017.
    \52\ See 60 FR 13530. March 13, 1995.
    \53\ EPA conducted a pilot study with the Wharton School of the 
University of Pennsylvania on the efficacy of voluntary third-party 
RMP audits. For relevant reports from this pilot, see R. Barrish, R. 
Antoff, & J. Brabson, Dep't of Natural Resources & Env. Control, 
Third Party Audit Pilot Project in the State of Delaware, Final 
Report (June 6, 2000) http://opim.wharton.upenn.edu/risk/library/2000, Document ID EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0658 and EPA Region 3, Third-
Party Pilot Project in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Final 
Report (February 2001), Document ID, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0651.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Likewise, by burdening whole sectors rather than facilities that 
have multiple accidents, the RMP Amendments missed an opportunity to 
better target the burdens of STAA to the specific facilities that are 
responsible for nearly half of the accidents associated with regulated 
substances at stationary sources subject to the RMP rule. EPA has also 
used an enforcement-led approach in some past CAA section 112(r) 
enforcement cases where facility owners or operators have entered into

[[Page 24873]]

consent agreements involving implementation of safer alternatives as 
discussed in the proposed RMP Amendments rule. See 82 FR at 13664, 
March 16, 2016.
    Given the small numbers of problematic facilities, the 
reasonableness of an enforcement-led approach to the prevention 
programs under the RMP rule in lieu of the RMP Amendments leads us to 
believe that the prevention program provisions in the RMP Amendments 
place an unnecessary and undue burden on regulated entities. In lieu of 
broadly imposing STAA in particular on broad sectors, an enforcement-
led approach can retain much benefit of the RMP Amendments at a 
fraction of the cost. Such an approach would contain a compliance 
assistance element as well. Targeted compliance assistance could 
provide the benefit of independent assistance to sources that have had 
multiple releases with more flexibility than the third-party audit 
provisions of the RMP Amendments. Such a program would be consistent 
with a measure included in the President's proposed budget that would 
authorize a fee-based program allowing owners and operators to request 
EPA to conduct a walk-through of their facilities to assist in 
compliance. Another non-regulatory option to promote IST and ISD would 
be to encourage technology transfer, either through EPA-led forums or 
through non-governmental entities like industry associations or 
academic institutions. By not establishing any means for sharing IST 
and ISD beyond the facility, the RMP Amendments did little to promote 
technology-transfer. An approach that emphasizes voluntary technology-
transfer would be consistent with the statutory provision to 
``recognize . . . the voluntary actions of [facilities] to prevent . . 
. and respond to [accidental] releases.'' CAA section 112(r)(7)(B)(i). 
Emphasizing burden reduction while retaining benefits is consistent 
with the approach we took when we adopted the RMP rule in 1996.
    It is also possible that the existing rule's prevention program 
measures already encompass many of the benefits of the Amendments rule 
prevention provisions--some facilities may already be considering safer 
technologies in conjunction with their process hazard analysis, using 
root cause analysis for incident investigations, and/or hiring 
independent third parties to conduct audits. Considering the low and 
declining accident rate \54\ at RMP facilities under the existing RMP 
rule, the Agency believes it is likely that the costs associated with 
the prevention program provisions of the RMP Amendments exceed their 
benefits unless significant non-monetized benefits are assumed. Thus, 
we recommend rescinding them in accordance with the direction reflected 
in E.O. 13777. Rescinding these provisions would also allow EPA greater 
flexibility to offset the incremental costs associated with other new 
regulations in accordance with E.O. 13771.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \54\ See Reconsideration RIA, Exhibit 3-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, the STAA costs are concentrated on three industry 
sectors--petroleum and coal products manufacturing, chemical 
manufacturing, and paper manufacturing--which include a significant 
number of facilities that produce domestic energy resources. Therefore, 
this provision in particular appears to be a good candidate for 
rescission to achieve the policies reflected in E.O. 13783.
4. Costs of Information Availability
    For providing the public the means to access the available chemical 
hazard information in Sec.  68.210(b), as well as information on 
community preparedness, in the RMP Amendments rule EPA required the 
regulated facility to provide ongoing notification on a company 
website, social media platforms, or through other publicly accessible 
means for instructions on how to request the information (e.g. email, 
mailing address, and/or telephone or website request). The facility is 
required to identify this publicly accessible means in their RMP 
submission [Sec.  68.160 (b)(21)--``Method of communication and 
location of the notification that chemical hazard information is 
available to the public, pursuant to Sec.  68.210(c)'']. Unless a 
member of the public discovered the means to access the information 
through their own efforts or were notified by outreach efforts of the 
facility, they would need to access the facility's RMP submission to 
determine how to obtain the chemical hazard information available under 
Sec.  68.210(b). However, most of the Sec.  68.210(b) chemical hazard 
information elements are already in the RMP submission, as it already 
contains, among other information, the names of regulated substances 
held above threshold quantities, the facility's five-year accident 
history, whether the facility is a responding or non-responding 
stationary source, the name and phone number of the local response 
organization involved in emergency response coordination, and the LEPC 
name.
    One chemical hazard information item required to be provided under 
Sec.  68.210(b) that is not available in a facility's RMP is the Safety 
Data Sheet (SDS) for a regulated substance. However, SDSs are already 
widely available to the public by means of a basic internet search 
using the chemical name. Some chemical manufacturers provide access to 
SDSs for their specific products on the company's website. Hazardous 
chemical SDSs that are required to be submitted to State Emergency 
Response Commissions (SERCs) and LEPCs under Section 311 of EPCRA (42 
U.S.C. 11044) are available to the public upon request from the SERC or 
LEPC, except the identity of any chemical name meeting the criteria for 
trade secret protection provided by Section 322 of EPCRA (42 U.S.C. 
11042) may not be disclosed.
    In addition to chemical hazard information, Sec.  68.210(b) 
requires the facility to provide emergency response program information 
(including whether the stationary source is a responding stationary 
source or a non-responding stationary source, the name and phone number 
of local emergency response organizations with which the owner or 
operator last coordinated emergency response efforts, and for 
stationary sources subject to Sec.  68.95, procedures for informing the 
public and local emergency response agencies about accidental 
releases), LEPC contact information (including LEPC name, phone number, 
and web address as available), and a list of scheduled exercises 
required under Sec.  68.96. Most of this information is also already 
available in the facility's RMP. The only required item of emergency 
response program information that is not available in the facility's 
RMP is the facility's procedure for informing the public and local 
emergency response agencies about accidental releases. However, this 
information can be obtained by contacting the appropriate local 
response agencies. A member of the public living near a facility can 
identify their LEPC either by reviewing the facility's RMP, or by 
contacting their SERC. EPA maintains contact information for each SERC 
on its website.\55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ https://www.epa.gov/epcra/local-emergency-planning-committees Contains contact information for each SERC, names, 
address and websites for each SERC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Therefore, once a member of the public obtains a facility's RMP, 
the need to make a request to that facility for the elements contained 
in the RMP would be eliminated, and most other elements are available 
using the internet or by contacting local response agencies. In 
promulgating the Amendments, EPA

[[Page 24874]]

overlooked the apparent redundancy of requiring the public to obtain a 
facility's RMP in order to find out how to request the information 
authorized for disclosure under Sec.  68.210(b). For this reason, as 
well as the availability of information from other public data sources, 
EPA now believes that the additional burden for facilities to provide 
these information elements directly to the public is not justified and 
that these provisions are good candidates for rescission to further the 
policies reflected in Executive Orders 13771 and 13777.
    As indicated above, if EPA maintains a field exercise requirement 
in the final rule, information on upcoming facility exercises would be 
the only item of information required to be disclosed in Sec.  
68.210(b) that is not already available from another source. EPA 
nevertheless is proposing not to require disclosure of exercise 
schedules. As stated previously, there is no easy way to restrict that 
information to only members of the local public, and wider distribution 
of this information could carry security risks. Nevertheless, the 
Agency requests public comment on whether information on upcoming 
exercises should still be required to be provided to members of the 
public upon request.
5. Costs of Field and Tabletop Exercises
    After STAA, field and tabletop exercises were estimated to be the 
next costliest provision of the RMP Amendments rule, at $24.7 million 
per year. While the majority of these costs were projected to fall on 
regulated facilities, EPA also projected that a significant share of 
costs would fall on local emergency responders participating in field 
and tabletop exercises.\56\ Petitioner States indicated that emergency 
coordination and exercise costs would place significant burdens on 
state and local responders: \57\ Petitioner States also claimed that 
EPA understated costs for these provisions and did not show 
benefits.\58\ Petitioner CSAG made similar claims.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ See final rule RIA, page Exhibits 4-7 and 4-8, page 47.
    \57\ States Petition, pgs. 4-5, Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-
0725-0762.
    \58\ States Petition, pg. 5, Document ID: EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-
0762.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The agency is not certain that it properly assessed the actual 
demands of these provisions or the increased burden on LEPCs in the 
final rule. EPA agrees that these provisions, and particularly the 
emergency exercise provisions, would place substantial burdens on 
regulated facilities and local responders. Local responders with 
multiple facilities in their area are particularly impacted by the 
minimum exercise frequency requirement. EPA's proposal herein would 
retain the emergency response coordination provisions (with proposed 
modifications) and emergency notification drill provisions, and modify 
the field and tabletop exercise provisions by removing the minimum 
exercise frequency requirements for field exercises and modifying 
exercise scope and documentation requirements to provide more 
flexibility to regulated facilities. As alternatives to modifying the 
frequency, scope, and documentation requirements, EPA has considered 
either fully rescinding the emergency field and tabletop exercise 
provisions or modifying them by removing the minimum exercise frequency 
requirement for field exercises but retaining the existing requirements 
for scope and documentation of field and tabletop exercises. EPA 
believes that any of these alternatives would reduce the regulatory 
burden on both facilities and local responders.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \59\ Note, however, that the RIA for this rulemaking retains the 
cost estimate for exercises from the Amendments rule. See 
Reconsideration RIA, Ch. 4. EPA retained this estimate as a 
conservative approach to estimating exercise costs under this 
proposal. By removing the minimum frequency requirement for field 
exercises and encouraging facilities to conduct joint exercises and 
using exercises already conducted under other requirements to meet 
the requirements of the RMP rule, EPA expects that the total number, 
and therefore costs, of exercises held for compliance with the rule 
is likely to be lower than this estimate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA's proposed revisions to Sec.  68.96(b)(1)(ii) and Sec.  
68.96(b)(2)(ii)--the scope provisions for field and tabletop exercises, 
respectively--would provide the owner or operator with discretion to 
decide on an appropriate scope for exercises. In the RMP Amendments 
rule, EPA stated that field exercises shall include: Tests of 
procedures to notify the public and the appropriate Federal, state, and 
local emergency response agencies about an accidental release; tests of 
procedures and measures for emergency response actions including 
evacuations and medical treatment; tests of communications systems; 
mobilization of facility emergency response personnel, including 
contractors, as appropriate; coordination with local emergency 
responders; emergency response equipment deployment; and any other 
action identified in the emergency response program, as appropriate. 
For tabletop exercises, EPA stated that exercises shall include 
discussions of: Procedures to notify the public and the appropriate 
Federal, state, and local emergency response agencies; procedures and 
measures for emergency response including evacuations and medical 
treatment; identification of facility emergency response personnel and/
or contractors and their responsibilities; coordination with local 
emergency responders; procedures for emergency response equipment 
deployment; and any other action identified in the emergency response 
plan, as appropriate. EPA is proposing to replace ``shall'' with 
``should'' in both provisions. While EPA believes that these scope 
provisions are likely to be suitable guidelines for most facilities, 
the Agency believes that converting them to discretionary provisions 
(i.e., ``should'') will allow owners and operators to coordinate with 
local responders to design exercises that are most suitable for their 
own situations. Alternatively, EPA considered retaining the exercise 
scope provisions as stated in the final RMP Amendments rule. EPA 
requests comments on its proposed revisions to the field and tabletop 
scope provisions. Would EPA's proposed changes reduce the burden of the 
exercise requirements on owners and operators and local responders by 
allowing them to design exercises that are tailored to their own 
circumstances?
    EPA's proposed revisions to Sec.  68.96(b)(3) Documentation, would 
retain the RMP Amendments rule requirement that the owner/operator 
prepare an evaluation report within 90 days of each exercise. However, 
the contents of the report would be discretionary. In the RMP 
Amendments rule, EPA stated that the report shall include: A 
description of the exercise scenario; names and organizations of each 
participant; an evaluation of the exercise results including lessons 
learned; recommendations for improvement or revisions to the emergency 
response exercise program and emergency response program; and a 
schedule to promptly address and resolve recommendations. EPA is 
proposing to replace ``shall'' with ``should'' in this provision. While 
EPA continues to believe that it is important to prepare an evaluation 
report for each exercise in order to identify lessons learned and share 
results with others involved in responding to releases, the Agency 
believes it may be reasonable to allow owners and operators discretion 
on the contents of the report. Allowing such flexibility in documenting 
exercises would also allow owners and operators to create separate 
exercise documents and/or appendices in such documentation that clearly 
distinguish content that should be shared with local

[[Page 24875]]

emergency responders from security-sensitive content that should be 
closely held by the owner or operator. Alternatively, EPA considered 
retaining the exercise documentation requirement as stated in the final 
RMP Amendments rule. EPA requests comments on its proposed revision to 
the exercise documentation requirements. Should the requirement for 
exercise evaluation reports be retained, but altered to provide more 
flexibility to regulated facilities?
6. Stakeholder Input on Cost Reductions
    EPA requests public comment on the cost and burden reductions 
associated with the proposed rule. Would eliminating the STAA, third-
party audit, incident investigation, and information availability 
provisions and modifying or rescinding the field and tabletop exercise 
provisions contribute toward the goals of Executive Orders 13771, 
13777, and 13783 and address petitioners' and other commenters' 
concerns about excessive regulatory costs and unjustified burdens? Are 
there any data from chemical accident or toxic use reduction programs 
that demonstrates a substantially lower accident rate at existing 
facilities that already had successful accident prevention programs in 
place and then conducted Inherently Safer Technology or Design (IST/
ISD) reviews or otherwise conducted chemical substitution to lower 
chemical hazards? EPA's proposal to modify the emergency exercise 
provisions would retain the RMP Amendments rule requirement for 
regulated facilities to coordinate with local emergency responders to 
develop emergency exercise schedules, but would remove the minimum 
frequency requirement for field exercises, and allow facility owners to 
work with local responders to establish appropriate frequencies and 
plans for exercises. Would these changes help to address petitioners' 
and commenters' concerns about the excessive costs of the exercise 
provisions? Should EPA make other changes to these provisions, or fully 
rescind the field and tabletop exercise provisions in order to further 
reduce costs? If EPA were to fully rescind the exercise provisions, 
would the remaining requirements of the RMP Amendments rule for annual 
notification drills (Sec.  68.96(a)), enhanced emergency response 
coordination (Sec.  68.93--with proposed modifications), and enhanced 
emergency response program updates (Sec.  68.95(a)(4)) be sufficient to 
address the emergency response planning and coordination gaps 
highlighted by the West Fertilizer incident and other incidents noted 
by EPA in the proposed RMP Amendments rule, while reducing undue 
burdens on facilities and local emergency responders as much as 
reasonably possible? Are there additional modifications or rescissions 
that EPA should make in order to further reduce costs, without 
significantly impacting public health and environmental protection?

E. Revise Compliance Dates to Provide Necessary Time for Program 
Changes

    Petitioner CSAG recommended that EPA delay the compliance dates for 
the same period by which the effective date of the rule was 
extended.\60\ Petitioner States made the same recommendation.\61\ In 
the final rule to delay the effective date of the RMP Amendments, EPA 
did not adjust the rule's compliance dates, indicating that the Agency 
would propose to take such action as necessary when considering future 
regulatory action.\62\ EPA now proposes to delay the rule's compliance 
dates to one year after the effective date of a final rule for the 
emergency coordination provisions, two years after the effective date 
of a final rule for the public meeting provision, four years after the 
effective date of a final rule for the emergency exercise provisions, 
and five years after the effective date of a final rule for the risk 
management plan reporting provisions affected by new requirements. EPA 
is also retaining the requirement to comply with the emergency response 
program requirements of Sec.  68.95 within three years of when the 
owner or operator initially determines that the stationary source is 
subject to those requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \60\ CSAG Petition, pg. 1, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0766.
    \61\ States Petition, pg. 1, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0762.
    \62\ See 82 FR 27142, June 14, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Except for the new proposed compliance date for public meetings, 
these proposed compliance dates would toll the compliance dates 
established under the final Amendments rule, using the same one-year 
compliance interval for the emergency coordination provision, four-year 
compliance interval for the exercise provisions, and five-year 
compliance interval for new or modified risk management plan reporting 
provisions, that were used under the final Amendments rule, but 
establishing the new compliance dates relative to the future effective 
date of a final rule resulting from this proposal. In so doing, EPA is 
relying on the same rationale it used in establishing compliance dates 
under the final Amendments rule.\63\ We believe the guidances and 
outreach materials we had committed to developing in the final RMP 
Amendments will still be useful to sources seeking to comply with those 
portions of our rule that we do not rescind. EPA will need time to 
develop that material. EPA also agrees with CSAG and the States that 
regulated sources and local responders should not be expected to expend 
resources complying with rule provisions that may change, and that 
owners and operators will require this additional time to familiarize 
themselves with the revised rule and implement appropriate programmatic 
changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \63\ See 82 FR 4675-8, January 13, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA is proposing a different compliance date for public meetings 
than that established under the final Amendments rule because with the 
proposed rescission of the other information availability requirements 
of the final Amendments rule, EPA believes that sources would not 
require four years to prepare to conduct post-accident public meetings. 
See Section III.F--Revise compliance dates above for further discussion 
of this proposed change.
    EPA is also proposing one modification to the compliance date for 
emergency exercises. Under the final amendments rule, EPA required that 
owners and operators comply with the emergency exercise provisions by 
four years after the effective date of the final rule. As EPA explained 
in the final rule, this meant that the owner or operator must have 
completed a notification exercise, consulted with local emergency 
response officials to establish a schedule for conducting tabletop and 
field exercises, and completed at least one field or tabletop exercise 
by the compliance date. Under the current proposal, owners and 
operators would be still be required to have exercise programs and 
schedules meeting the requirements of Sec.  68.96 in place within four 
years of the effective date of a final rule. However, the owner or 
operator would not be required to have completed a notification and 
field or tabletop exercise by that date. Based on the schedule 
established by the owner or operator in coordination with local 
response agencies, the owner or operator would have up to one 
additional year to perform their first notification drill, and up to 
three additional years to conduct their first tabletop exercise. There 
would be no specified deadline date for the first field exercise, other 
than that established in the owner or operator's exercise schedule.
    EPA is proposing this change to avoid overburdening facilities and 
local responders in meeting exercise

[[Page 24876]]

requirements. Requiring every facility to complete notification and 
field or tabletop exercises by the compliance date would likely result 
in many exercises occurring at or near the compliance date. In 
communities with multiple RMP facilities, this could result in 
excessive demands on local responders to participate in notification 
drills and exercises, and be inconsistent with EPA's desire to give 
facilities and local responders more flexibility in scheduling and 
conducting exercises. EPA believes that a better approach would be to 
allow facilities and local responders to work together to establish an 
appropriate schedule by the compliance date. In communities with 
multiple RMP facilities, this should allow facilities and local 
responders to conduct required exercises at more appropriate intervals, 
avoid concentrating numerous exercises around one date, provide more 
regular training opportunities for facility and local responders, and 
take full advantage of opportunities to conduct joint exercises or 
combine RMP facility exercises with exercises conducted under other 
requirements. EPA requests public comment on its proposal to extend 
compliance dates, including the proposed new compliance date for public 
meetings and the proposed modification to the compliance date for 
exercises.
    In addition to recommending that EPA toll the rule's compliance 
dates, Petitioner CSAG indicated particular concern with the four-year 
compliance date for STAA: \64\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \64\ CSAG Petition, pg. 16, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0766.

    CSAG is concerned with the four-year compliance deadline 
provided in the rule for the STAA requirements. Such analysis is 
highly complex, and--given that the STAA would have to be part of 
the PHA for a covered process within four years--facilities will 
have to begin working immediately on incorporating this analysis 
without a commonly accepted methodology. In the RMP Rule preamble, 
EPA notes future ``guidance'' that will be developed for complying 
with RMP PHA and STAA requirements before sources must comply with 
the STAA provision and its plans to make draft guidance available 
for public comment.\42\ Without the benefit of this guidance to 
reflect its intentions with respect to enforcement of the STAA 
provision, complying with the new requirements within four years 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
will be extremely challenging.

\42\82 FR 4640, [January 13, 2017].

    If EPA finalizes its proposal to rescind the STAA provisions, 
CSAG's concern with the compliance date for STAA would be rendered 
moot. However, in the event that EPA does not rescind the STAA 
provisions, the Agency requests public comment on whether the 
compliance date for STAA should be further extended. For example, 
should EPA extend the STAA compliance date to 5 years or some longer 
interval, so that all facilities subject to it would have the 
opportunity to incorporate the STAA into their PHA during their regular 
PHA revalidation cycle? Alternatively, should EPA require STAA in PHAs 
performed after a certain date, such as 3 or 4 years after promulgation 
of a final rule?

F. Other Issues Raised by Petitioners

    In addition to the issues discussed previously, petitioners raised 
several other issues that EPA would like to address.
1. New Documents Entered in Docket After Close of Comment Period
    The RMP Coalition indicated that EPA added numerous documents to 
the rulemaking docket after the close of the comment period, that EPA 
used several of these to support core provisions of the final rule, and 
that members of the public were not able to submit comments on these 
documents.65 66
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \65\ RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 5, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0759.
    \66\ Ibid, pgs. 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA added 129 documents to the rulemaking docket after the end of 
the public comment period. Many of these documents (59 total) were 
documents that would normally be added after the comment period, such 
as final interagency review documents, final rule support documents 
(RIA, technical background document, EPA response to comments), 
documentation of tribal consultation, EPA responses to requests to 
extend the comment period, and documentation of post-proposal meetings 
or presentations of the proposed rulemaking that occurred after the end 
of the comment period. Also included were copies of laws, statutes, 
Federal or state regulations, Federal Register document that were 
mentioned in the final rule, RIA or Response to Comments, but not the 
proposed rulemaking or RIA. These were added for convenience although 
they are generally publicly available from internet sources. There were 
also a few documents that were cited in the final rule or RIA, but were 
published in 2016 after the close of comment period on May 13, 2016. Of 
the remaining 70 documents, some were technical articles, reports, 
studies (some mentioned by commenters), and EPA enforcement cases or 
press releases relevant to discussion of third party audits, STAA 
feasibility, near misses or root cause analysis that were added in the 
final rule and RIA or Response to Comments. Other documents were 
internal EPA email communications involving the development of the 
proposed RMP amendments provisions or estimating the rule's costs, and 
some EPA and OSHA documents related to RMP or PSM program guidance and 
enforcement.
    To the extent EPA may have relied on these documents to support the 
third-party audit and STAA provisions of the final RMP Amendments rule 
without providing the public with full opportunity for review and 
comment, this point will become moot if the Agency rescinds those 
provisions, as we have proposed herein. Nevertheless, the documents are 
now available for public review in the rulemaking docket. A list of 
these 129 rule support documents is also available in the rulemaking 
docket.\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \67\ List of 129 Supporting Documents for RMP Amendments Rule 
Added to Rulemaking Docket EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725 after Close of 
Comment Period (May 13, 2016). USEPA, Office of Emergency 
Management, April 25, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. New Third-Party Audit Trigger and New Legal Rationales for Third-
Party Audits and STAA
    The RMP Coalition stated that in the final RMP Amendments rule, EPA 
added a new trigger [criterion] for third-party audits \68\ as well as 
new legal rationales for third-party audits and STAA, and that members 
of the public did not have an opportunity to review and comment on the 
new provision or legal rationales:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \68\ RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 5, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0759.

    Though EPA claims that it only ``modifie[d] the criterion,'' the 
Final Rule provision transformed a predictable trigger (non-
compliance with specific regulations) into an unpredictable one that 
relies entirely on the implementing agency's discretion to determine 
which conditions ``could lead to an accidental release.'' [82 FR at 
4699.] The Proposed Rule had identified a specific condition EPA 
thought was problematic, namely noncompliance with the regulations. 
The Final Rule provision is unrelated to legal compliance and 
subject to the whims and imagination of the implementing agency. 
Commenters had no opportunity to object to the incredible breadth of 
a requirement that covers any conditions that could lead, no matter 
how remote the chance of the condition resulting an accidental 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
release. (footnote omitted)

    In the Proposed Rulemaking, EPA proposed changes to Sec. Sec.  
68.58 and 68.79 to require third-party compliance audits for both 
Program 2 and Program 3 processes, under certain conditions.

[[Page 24877]]

These proposed changes included adding paragraph (f) to Sec. Sec.  
68.58 and 68.79 which identified third-party audit applicability. EPA 
proposed that the next required compliance audit for an RMP facility 
would be a third-party audit when one of the following conditions 
apply: An accidental release meeting the criteria in Sec.  68.42(a) 
from a covered process has occurred; or an implementing agency requires 
a third-party audit based on non-compliance with the requirements of 
this subpart, including when a previous third-party audit failed to 
meet the competency, independence, or impartiality criteria, set forth 
in new paragraphs Sec. Sec.  68.59(b) or 68.80(b).
    After considering public comments received on the proposed 
conditions that would require a third-party audit, in the final 
Amendments Rule, EPA revised the applicability criteria for third-party 
audits required by implementing agencies from non-compliance to 
conditions that could lead to an accidental release of a regulated 
substance. EPA believed that having the implementing agency evaluate 
whether conditions exist at a stationary source that could lead to an 
accidental release better addressed the types of situations where a 
third-party audit would be most effective, and would minimize the 
potential for inconsistent or arbitrary decisions made by implementing 
agencies. This revised criterion responded to commenters' requests was 
not intended to be a new condition, but a narrowing of the 
applicability of these requirements. The criterion in the Final Rule 
focused on conditions with the potential to lead to accidental 
releases, rather than authorizing implementing agencies to require 
third-party audits under a potentially wide range of circumstances, 
including minor non-compliance. However, insofar as it is a change, the 
petitioner correctly notes that the public did not have a chance to 
comment on the new language.
    EPA is proposing to rescind the third-party audit requirements; 
however, if these requirements are not rescinded, EPA requests comment 
on the revised applicability criteria for third-party audits required 
by implementing agencies from non-compliance to conditions that could 
lead to an accidental release of a regulated substance.
3. Coordination and Emergency Response Provisions Constitute Unfunded 
Mandates on State and Local Responders
    Petitioners CSAG and the States argued that the coordination and 
emergency response provisions of the final rule constitute unfunded 
mandates and impose unjustified burdens on state and local emergency 
responders.\69\ As an initial matter, EPA notes that these objections 
would not meet the standard for reconsideration under CAA section 
307(d)(7)(B), because the same objections were raised during the 
comment period for the proposed RMP Amendments rule, and responded to 
by EPA in the Response to Comments document for the rule.\70\ However, 
EPA seeks comment on the Petitioners' claims that the coordination and 
emergency response provisions of the final rule constitute unfunded 
mandates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \69\ See CSAG Petition, pgs. 8-9 and States Petition, pgs. 4-6.
    \70\ See Response to Comments document, pgs. 165-167, 185-186, 
238, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0729. See also States Petition at pg. 5 
(``Various State and other entities raised these concerns during the 
comment period'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

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 a Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) of the 
potential costs and benefits associated with this action. This RIA is 
available in the docket and is summarized here (Docket ID Number EPA-
HQ-OEM-2015-0725).
1. Why EPA is Considering This Action
    This action addresses and responds to a number of issues related to 
the final RMP Amendments Rule, including those raised by petitioners, 
as well as other issues that EPA believes warrant reconsideration.
    As discussed above in section I of this preamble, prior to the rule 
taking effect, EPA received three petitions for reconsideration of the 
rule under CAA section 307(d)(7)(B), two from industry groups and one 
from a group of states. Under that provision, the Administrator is to 
commence a reconsideration proceeding if, in the Administrator's 
judgement, the petitioner raises an objection to a rule that was 
impracticable to raise during the comment period or if the grounds for 
the objection arose after the comment period but within the period for 
judicial review. In either case, the Administrator must also conclude 
that the objection is of central relevance to the outcome of the rule.
    In a letter dated March 13, 2017, the Administrator responded to 
the first of the reconsideration petitions received by announcing the 
convening of a proceeding for reconsideration of the Risk Management 
Program Amendments.\71\ As explained in that letter, having considered 
the objections raised in the petition, the Administrator determined 
that the criteria for reconsideration have been met for at least one of 
the objections. This proposal addresses the issues raised in all three 
petitions for reconsideration, as well as other issues that EPA 
believes warrant reconsideration. A detailed discussion of EPA's 
rationale for the rescissions and modifications to the rule is included 
above in section IV. of this preamble,
Rationale for Rescissions and Modifications
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \71\ EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0758.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As described in section IV. A. of this preamble, Maintain 
consistency in accident prevention requirements, this action addresses 
the issues raised by petitioners regarding several of the provisions of 
the final Amendments rule. Petitioners asserted that EPA failed to 
sufficiently coordinate the changes to the RMP regulations with OSHA 
and the PSM program, and that the regulations as revised by the Final 
Rule leave important gaps and create compliance uncertainties. Although 
EPA has regularly communicated and coordinated with OSHA on its efforts 
so far, EPA believes it is reasonable to develop a better understanding 
of OSHA's intentions regarding potential changes to the PSM standard 
before modifying the RMP rule. EPA has determined that a more sensible 
approach would be to rescind the RMP accident prevention amendments at 
this time and continue existing coordination with OSHA on any future 
regulatory changes.
    All three petitions requesting reconsideration of the RMP 
Amendments rule raised security concerns regarding provisions of the 
final Amendments rule, as discussed above in section IV. B. of this 
preamble, Address security concerns. These included objections, in all 
three petitions, regarding the rule language in Sec.  68.93(b) 
requiring local emergency response coordination to include providing to 
the local emergency planning and response organizations ``. . . any 
other information that local emergency planning and response 
organizations identify as relevant to

[[Page 24878]]

local emergency response planning.'' Petitioners claim that this 
language creates a security risk for regulated facilities. Petitioners 
have also noted concerns regarding the removal of protections for CBI 
and classified information that items proposed under Sec.  68.205 would 
have benefited from. Petitioners also raised concerns about the 
potential for the information made available under Sec.  68.210 of the 
RMP Amendments rule to be used by criminals or terrorists to target 
facilities for attack. EPA is also considering another security concern 
not specifically raised by petitioners, regarding whether the synthesis 
of the required information disclosure elements could create an 
additional security risk for facilities.
    As discussed in section IV.C. of this preamble, Address BATF 
finding on West Fertilizer incident, above, petitioners asserted that 
it was impracticable for commenters to address in their comments the 
significance of the May 11, 2016 determination by the Bureau of 
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (BATF) that the fire and 
explosion at the West Fertilizer facility was caused by an intentional, 
criminal act. In responding to this petition, EPA Administrator Pruitt 
agreed that the timing of the BATF finding was a valid basis for 
reconsideration of the RMP Amendments rule.\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \72\ March 13, 2017 letter from EPA Administrator E. Scott 
Pruitt to Justin Savage, Esq., Hogan Lovells US LLP. Letter 
available in the docket for this rulemaking. EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-
0758.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    All three petitioners objected to the costs and burdens associated 
with the new provisions of the RMP Amendments rule, and claimed that 
EPA's economic analysis did not accurately assess the costs of new 
provisions and violated procedural requirements by not properly 
quantifying potential benefits. Petitioners submitted extensive 
commentary on these issues (complete copies of each petition are 
available in the docket for this rulemaking). A discussion of this 
issue is included above in section IV.D. of this preamble, Reduce 
unnecessary regulations and regulatory costs.
    This action also considers and addresses several other issues 
raised by petitioners. One petitioner noted that EPA added numerous 
documents to the rulemaking docket after the close of the comment 
period, that EPA used several of these to support core provisions of 
the final rule, and that members of the public were not able to submit 
comments on these documents.73 74 Petitioner the RMP 
Coalition stated that in the final RMP Amendments rule, EPA added a new 
trigger for third-party audits as well as new legal rationales for 
third-party audits and STAA, and that members of the public did not 
have an opportunity to review and comment on the new provision or legal 
rationales. Petitioners CSAG and the States argued that the 
coordination and emergency response provisions of the final rule 
constitute unfunded mandates and impose unjustified burdens on state 
and local emergency responders. These issues are discussed in more 
detail in section IV. F. of this preamble, Other issues raised by 
petitioners.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \73\ RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 5, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725-0759.
    \74\ Ibid, pgs. 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Description of Alternatives to the Proposed Rule
    The RIA analyzed the proposed rescissions and changes to the 
requirements of the RMP Amendments rule, including one alternative 
option for emergency tabletop and field exercises. The proposed 
rulemaking would retain the requirement for tabletop and field 
exercises, but remove the minimum frequency requirement for field 
exercises and establish more flexible scope and documentation 
provisions for both field and tabletop exercises. Although these 
changes are intended to reduce the burden of and offer more flexibility 
to owners and local response agencies in meeting the exercise 
requirements, the RIA took the conservative approach of assuming that 
the cost of the provision as estimated under the Amendments final rule 
would not change. EPA is considering two alternatives to the proposed 
exercise provisions. One alternative would be similar to the proposed 
option--this alternative would remove the minimum frequency requirement 
for field exercises, but unlike the proposed option, the alternative 
would retain all remaining provisions of the RMP Amendments rule 
regarding field and tabletop exercises, including the RMP Amendments 
rule requirements for exercise scope and documentation. Like the 
proposed option, EPA assumes that the cost of the exercise provisions 
as estimated under the Amendments final rule would not change under 
this alternative. Another, lower-cost alternative to EPA's proposal 
would be to fully rescind the field and tabletop exercise provisions. 
This alternative would result in an additional annual cost savings of 
approximately $24.7 million (2015 dollars).
    EPA is also considering an alternative to the proposed modification 
to the emergency coordination provisions of the Amendments rule. EPA's 
proposed modification to the local emergency response coordination 
amendments would delete the phrase in Sec.  68.93(b), ``. . . and any 
other information that local emergency planning and response 
organizations identify as relevant to local emergency response 
planning.'' As an alternative to this proposal, EPA is considering 
replace this phrase with the phrase ``other information necessary for 
developing and implementing the local emergency response plan.'' 
However, EPA does not believe either its proposed option or the 
alternative phrasing would significantly affect the cost of complying 
with the emergency coordination provisions of the Amendments rule.
    Lastly, EPA is considering an alternative to rescinding the 
availability of all chemical hazard information to the public under the 
final Amendments rule. Under this alternative, EPA would rescind all 
elements required to be disclosed under Sec.  68.210(b) of the final 
Amendments rule except the information on exercise schedules. If EPA 
were to adopt this alternative, the annual net cost savings under the 
proposed rule would decline by up to $3.1 million.
3. Summary of Cost Savings
    Approximately 12,500 facilities have filed current RMPs with EPA 
and are potentially affected by the proposed rule changes. These 
facilities range from petroleum refineries and large chemical 
manufacturers to water and wastewater treatment systems; chemical and 
petroleum wholesalers and terminals; food manufacturers, packing 
plants, and other cold storage facilities with ammonia refrigeration 
systems; agricultural chemical distributors; midstream gas plants; and 
a limited number of other sources that use RMP-regulated substances.
    Table 5 presents the number of facilities according to the latest 
RMP reporting as of February 2015 by industrial sector and chemical 
use.

[[Page 24879]]



                                Table 5--Number of Affected Facilities by Sector
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                   Total
             Sector                              NAICS codes                    facilities       Chemical uses
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Administration of environmental  924........................................           1,923  Use chlorine and
 quality programs (i.e.,                                                                       other chemicals
 governments).                                                                                 for treatment.
Agricultural chemical            111, 112, 115, 42491.......................           3,667  Store ammonia for
 distributors/wholesalers.                                                                     sale; some in
                                                                                               NAICS 111 and 115
                                                                                               use ammonia as a
                                                                                               refrigerant.
Chemical manufacturing.........  325........................................           1,466  Manufacture,
                                                                                               process, store.
Chemical wholesalers...........  4246.......................................             333  Store for sale.
Food and beverage manufacturing  311, 312...................................           1,476  Use (mostly
                                                                                               ammonia as a
                                                                                               refrigerant).
Oil and gas extraction.........  211........................................             741  Intermediate
                                                                                               processing
                                                                                               (mostly regulated
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               substances and
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               mixtures).
Other..........................  44, 45, 48, 54, 56, 61, 72.................             248  Use chemicals for
                                                                                               wastewater
                                                                                               treatment,
                                                                                               refrigeration,
                                                                                               store chemicals
                                                                                               for sale.
Other manufacturing............  313, 326, 327, 33..........................             384  Use various
                                                                                               chemicals in
                                                                                               manufacturing
                                                                                               process, waste
                                                                                               treatment.
Other wholesale................  423, 424...................................             302  Use (mostly
                                                                                               ammonia as a
                                                                                               refrigerant).
Paper manufacturing............  322........................................              70  Use various
                                                                                               chemicals in pulp
                                                                                               and paper
                                                                                               manufacturing.
Petroleum and coal products      324........................................             156  Manufacture,
 manufacturing.                                                                                process, store
                                                                                               (mostly regulated
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               substances and
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               mixtures).
Petroleum wholesalers..........  4247.......................................             276  Store for sale
                                                                                               (mostly regulated
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               substances and
                                                                                               flammable
                                                                                               mixtures).
Utilities......................  221 (except 22131, 22132)..................             343  Use chlorine
                                                                                               (mostly for water
                                                                                               treatment).
Warehousing and storage........  493........................................           1,056  Use mostly ammonia
                                                                                               as a refrigerant.
Water/wastewater Treatment       22131, 22132...............................             102  Use chlorine and
 Systems.                                                                                      other chemicals.
                                                                             ----------------
    Total......................  ...........................................          12,542  ..................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Table 6 presents a summary of the annualized cost savings estimated 
in the regulatory impact analysis.\75\ In total, EPA estimates 
annualized cost savings of $87.9 million at a 3% discount rate and 
$88.4 million at a 7% discount rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \75\ A full description of costs and benefits for this proposed 
rule can be found in the Regulatory Impact Analysis; Reconsideration 
of the 2017 Amendments to the Accidental Release Prevention 
Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act, 
Section 112(r)(7). This document is available in the docket for this 
rulemaking (Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725).

               Table 6--Summary of Annualized Cost Savings
                        [Millions, 2015 dollars]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Provision                       3%              7%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Third-party Audits......................           (9.8)           (9.8)
Incident Investigation/Root Cause.......           (1.8)           (1.8)
STAA....................................          (70.0)          (70.0)
Information Availability................           (3.1)           (3.1)
Rule Familiarization....................           (3.2)           (3.7)
                                         -------------------------------
    Total Cost Savings..................          (87.9)          (88.4)
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Most of the annual cost savings under the proposed rulemaking are 
due to the repeal of the STAA provision (annual savings of $70 
million), followed by third party audits (annual savings of $9.8 
million), rule familiarization (annual net savings of $3.7 million), 
rule familiarization (annual net savings of $3.7 million), information 
availability (annual savings of $3.1 million), and root cause incident 
investigation (annual savings of $1.8 million). See the RIA for 
additional information on costs and cost savings.
4. Summary of Potential Benefits and Benefit Reductions
    The RMP Amendments Rule produced a variety of benefits from 
prevention and mitigation of future RMP and non-RMP accidents at RMP 
facilities, avoided catastrophes at RMP facilities, and easier access 
to facility chemical hazard information. The proposed Reconsideration 
rule would largely retain the revised local emergency coordination and 
exercise provisions of the 2017 Amendments final rule, which convey 
mitigation benefits. The proposed rescission of the prevention program 
requirements (i.e., third-party audits, incident investigation, STAA), 
would result in a reduction in the magnitude of these benefits. The 
proposed rescission of the chemical hazard information availability 
provision would result in a reduction of the information sharing 
benefit, although a portion of this benefit from the Amendments rule 
would still be conveyed by the public meeting, emergency coordination 
and exercise provisions. The proposed rule would also convey the 
benefit of improved chemical site security, by modifying previously 
open-ended information sharing provisions of the Amendments rule that 
might have resulted in an increased risk of terrorism against regulated 
sources. See the RIA

[[Page 24880]]

for additional information on benefits and benefit reductions.

B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulation and Controlling 
Regulatory Costs

    This action is expected to be an Executive Order 13771 deregulatory 
action. Details on the estimated cost savings of this proposed rule can 
be found in EPA's analysis of the potential costs and benefits 
associated with this action.\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \76\ See ``Regulatory Impact Analysis; Reconsideration of the 
2017 Amendments to the Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: 
Risk Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act, Section 
112(r)(7)'', in docket EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)

    The information collection activities in this proposed rule have 
been submitted for approval to the OMB under the PRA. The Information 
Collection Request (ICR) document that the EPA prepared has been 
assigned EPA ICR number 2537.03. You can find a copy of the ICR in the 
docket for this rule, and it is briefly summarized here.
    The ICR that covers the risk management program rule, promulgated 
on June 20, 1996; including previous amendments, codified as 40 CFR 
part 68, is ICR number 1656.15, OMB Control No. 2050-0144. This ICR 
(2537.03) addresses the following information requirements that were 
promulgated in the final RMP Amendments rule and not proposed to be 
rescinded by the proposed revision to the rule:
Improve Information Availability (Applies to all Facilities)
    1. Hold a public meeting within 90 days of an accident subject to 
reporting under Sec.  68.42 (i.e., an RMP reportable accident) and for 
this accident provide the accident information required under Sec.  
68.42 (b).
Improve Emergency Preparedness (Applies to P2 and P3 Facilities)
    2. Meet and coordinate with local responders annually to exchange 
emergency planning information and coordinate exercise schedules. 
Responding facilities' updates of their facility emergency response 
plans will include appropriate changes based on information obtained 
from coordination activities, emergency response exercises, incident 
investigations or other information. Emergency response plans will have 
procedures for informing appropriate Federal and state emergency 
response agencies, as well as local agencies and the public (informing 
local agencies and the public is already required under the original 
rule).
    3. Conduct an annual notification drill with emergency responders 
to verify emergency contact information.
    4. Responding facilities conduct and document emergency response 
exercises including:
    a. Field exercises according to a schedule established by the 
facility in consultation with local responders, and;
    b. A tabletop exercise at least every three years.
    Respondents/affected entities: Manufacturers, utilities, 
warehouses, wholesalers, food processors, ammonia retailers, and gas 
processors.
    Respondent's obligation to respond: Mandatory (CAA sections 
112(r)(7)(B)(i) and (ii), CAA section 112(r)(7)(B)(iii), 114(c), CAA 
114(a)(1)).
    Estimated number of respondents: 14,280
    Frequency of response: On occasion.
    Total estimated burden: 682,665 hours (per year). Burden is defined 
at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
    Total estimated cost: $44,712,465 (per year), includes $83,600 
annualized capital or operation & maintenance costs.
    An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required 
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a 
currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for the 
EPA's regulations in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
    Submit your comments on the Agency's need for this information, the 
accuracy of the provided burden estimates and any suggested methods for 
minimizing respondent burden to the EPA using the docket identified at 
the beginning of this rule. You may also send your ICR-related comments 
to OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs via email to 
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov, Attention: Desk Officer for the EPA. Since 
OMB is required to make a decision concerning the ICR between 30 and 60 
days after receipt, OMB must receive comments no later than June 29, 
2018. The EPA will respond to any ICR-related comments in the final 
rule.

D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)

    I certify that this action will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. In 
making this determination, the impact of concern is any significant 
adverse economic impact on small entities. An agency may certify that a 
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities if the rule relieves regulatory burden, has no 
net burden or otherwise has a positive economic effect on the small 
entities subject to the rule.
    The RMP Amendments final rule considered a broad range of costs on 
small entities based on facility type. As estimated in the 2017 
Amendments RIA, the provisions in that final rule had quantifiable 
impacts on small entities. This proposed rule largely repeals, or 
retains with slight modification, the provisions incurring costs on 
small entities. As a result, EPA expects the proposed rule to impose 
negative costs for all facilities, including small entities. The only 
new costs imposed on small entities would be rule familiarization with 
the proposed rule, but even that cost would be offset by savings 
associated with eliminating the larger costs associated with becoming 
familiar with the RMP Amendments final rule. The impact of this 
proposed rule on small entities is discussed further in the RIA, which 
is available in the rulemaking docket.\77\ We have therefore concluded 
that this action will relieve regulatory burden for all directly 
regulated small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \77\ See ``Regulatory Impact Analysis; Reconsideration of the 
2017 Amendments to the Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: 
Risk Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act, Section 
112(r)(7)'', Chapter 7, EPA-HQ-OEM-2015-0725.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)

    This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in 
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect 
small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state, 
local or tribal governments or the private sector.

F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism

    This action does not have Federalism implications. It will not have 
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between 
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.

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

    This action has tribal implications. However, it will neither 
impose substantial direct compliance costs on federally recognized 
tribal governments, nor preempt tribal law. EPA will be consulting with 
tribal officials as it develops this regulation to permit them to have 
meaningful and timely input into its development. Consultation will 
include conversations with interested

[[Page 24881]]

tribal representatives to ensure that their concerns are addressed 
before the rule is finalized. In the spirit of Executive Order 13175 
and consistent with EPA policy to promote communications between EPA 
and tribal governments, EPA specifically solicits comment on this 
proposed rule from tribal officials.

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

    This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it is 
not economically significant as defined in Executive Order 12866, and 
because the EPA does not believe the environmental health risks or 
safety risks addressed by this action present a disproportionate risk 
to children. This action's health and risk assessments are contained in 
the RIA for this proposed rule, available in the docket.

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

    This proposed 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. This proposed action is not anticipated 
to have notable impacts on emissions, costs or energy supply decisions 
for the affected electric utility industry.

J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)

    This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.

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

    The EPA believes that this action may have disproportionately high 
and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority 
populations, low-income populations and/or indigenous peoples, as 
specified in Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
    The documentation for this decision is contained in chapter 8 of 
the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA), a copy of which has been placed 
in the public docket for this action.

List of Subjects in 40 CFR part 68

    Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure, 
Air pollution control, Chemicals, Hazardous substances, 
Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

    Dated: May 17, 2018.
E. Scott Pruitt,
Administrator.
    For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 40, chapter I, part 
68, of the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended as 
follows:

PART 68--CHEMICAL ACCIDENT PREVENTION PROVISIONS

0
1. The authority citation for part 68 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  42 U.S.C. 7412(r), 7601(a)(1), 7661-7661f.


Sec.  68.3   [Amended]

0
2. Amend Sec.  68.3 by removing the definitions ``Active measures'', 
``Inherently safer technology or design'', ``Passives measures'', 
``Practicability'', ``Procedural measures'', ``Root cause'' and 
``Third-party audit''.
0
3. Amend Sec.  68.10 by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (b), (d), and (e);
0
b. Redesignating paragraphs (f) through (j) as paragraphs (g) through 
(k); and
0
c. Adding new paragraph (f).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  68.10  Applicability.

* * * * *
    (b) By [DATE 1 YEAR AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL RULE], 
the owner or operator of a stationary source shall comply with the 
emergency response coordination activities in Sec.  68.93.
* * * * *
    (d) By [DATE 4 YEARS AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL RULE], 
the owner or operator shall have developed plans for conducting 
emergency response exercises in accordance with provisions of Sec.  
68.96.
    (e) After [DATE 2 YEARS AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL RULE] 
the owner or operator of a stationary source shall comply with the 
public meeting requirement in Sec.  68.210(b) for any accident meeting 
the five-year accident history requirements of Sec.  68.42 that occurs 
after [DATE 2 YEARS AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL RULE].
    (f) By [DATE 5 YEARS AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL RULE], 
the owner or operator shall comply with Sec.  68.160 (b)(21) of the 
risk management plan provisions of subpart G of this part promulgated 
on [PUBLICATION DATE OF FINAL RULE] and with Sec.  68.180 of the risk 
management plan provisions of subpart G of this part promulgated on 
January 13, 2017.
* * * * *


Sec.  68.12   [Amended]

0
4. Amend Sec.  68.12 by:
0
a. In paragraph (b):
0
1. In the introductory text removing the text ``68.10(b)'' and adding 
``68.10(g)'' in its place;
0
2. In paragraph (4) second sentence, removing the text ``68.10(b)(1)'' 
and adding ``68.10(g)(1)'' in its place;
0
b. In paragraph (c) introductory text by removing the text ``68.10(c)'' 
and adding ``68.10(h)'' in its place;
0
c. In paragraph (d) introductory text by removing the text ``68.10(d)'' 
and adding ``68.10(i)'' in its place.
0
5. Amend Sec.  68.50 by revising paragraph (a)(2) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.50   Hazard review.

    (a) * * *
    (2) Opportunities for equipment malfunctions or human errors that 
could cause an accidental release;
* * * * *
0
6. Amend Sec.  68.54 by revising the first sentence in paragraphs (a) 
and (b), paragraph (d), and removing paragraph (e) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.54   Training.

    (a) The owner or operator shall ensure that each employee presently 
operating a process, and each employee newly assigned to a covered 
process have been trained or tested competent in the operating 
procedures provided in Sec.  68.52 that pertain to their duties. * * *
    (b) Refresher training. Refresher training shall be provided at 
least every three years, and more often if necessary, to each employee 
operating a process to ensure that the employee understands and adheres 
to the current operating procedures of the process. * * *
* * * * *
    (d) The owner or operator shall ensure that operators are trained 
in any updated or new procedures prior to startup of a process after a 
major change.
0
7. Amend Sec.  68.58 by revising paragraph (a) and removing paragraphs 
(f) through (h) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.58   Compliance audits.

    (a) The owner or operator shall certify that they have evaluated 
compliance with the provisions of this subpart at least every three 
years to verify that the procedures and practices developed under this 
subpart are adequate and are being followed.
* * * * *


Sec.  68.59   [Removed]

0
8. Remove Sec.  68.59.
0
9. Amend Sec.  68.60 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a);
0
b. Removing paragraph (c);

[[Page 24882]]

0
c. Redesignating paragraph (d) as paragraph (c)
0
d. In the newly designated paragraph (c):
0
1. Revising the paragraph introductory text, and paragraphs (1) and 
(3);
0
2. Removing paragraphs (4) through (6);
0
3. Redesignating paragraphs (7) and (8) as paragraphs (4) and (5); and
0
4. Revising the newly designated paragraphs (4) and (5);
0
e. Redesignating paragraphs (e) through (g) as paragraphs (d) through 
(f); and
0
f. Revising newly redesignated paragraph (f).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  68.60   Incident investigation.

    (a) The owner or operator shall investigate each incident which 
resulted in, or could reasonably have resulted in a catastrophic 
release.
* * * * *
    (c) A summary shall be prepared at the conclusion of the 
investigation which includes at a minimum:
    (1) Date of incident;
* * * * *
    (3) A description of the incident;
    (4) The factors that contributed to the incident; and,
    (5) Any recommendations resulting from the investigation.
* * * * *
    (f) Investigation summaries shall be retained for five years.
0
10. Amend Sec.  68.65 by revising the first sentence of paragraph (a) 
and revising the note to paragraph (b) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.65   Process safety information.

    (a) In accordance with the schedule set forth in Sec.  68.67, the 
owner or operator shall complete a compilation of written process 
safety information before conducting any process hazard analysis 
required by the rule. * * *
    (b) * * *

    Note to paragraph (b):  Safety Data Sheets (SDS) meeting the 
requirements of 29 CFR 1910.1200(g) may be used to comply with this 
requirement to the extent they contain the information required by 
paragraph (b) of this section.

0
11. Amend Sec.  68.67 by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (c)(2);
0
b. Amending (c)(6) by adding the word ``and'' at the end of the 
paragraph;
0
c. Amending paragraph (c)(7) by removing ``, and '' and adding a period 
at the end of the paragraph; and
0
d. Removing paragraph (c)(8).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  68.67   Process hazard analysis.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (2) The identification of any previous incident which had a likely 
potential for catastrophic consequences;
* * * * *


Sec.  68.71   [Amended]

0
12. Amend Sec.  68.71 by removing paragraph (d).
0
13. Amend Sec.  68.79 by revising paragraph (a) and removing paragraphs 
(f) through (h) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.79   Compliance audits.

    (a) The owner or operator shall certify that they have evaluated 
compliance with the provisions of this subpart at least every three 
years to verify that procedures and practices developed under this 
subpart are adequate and are being followed.
* * * * *


Sec.  68.80   [Removed]

0
14. Remove Sec.  68.80.
0
15. Amend Sec.  68.81 by revising paragraphs (a) and (d) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  68.81   Incident investigation.

    (a) The owner or operator shall investigate each incident which 
resulted in, or could reasonably have resulted in a catastrophic 
release.
* * * * *
    (d) A report shall be prepared at the conclusion of the 
investigation which includes at a minimum:
    (1) Date of incident;
    (2) Date investigation began;
    (3) A description of the incident;
    (4) The factors that contributed to the incident; and,
    (5) Any recommendations resulting from the investigation.
* * * * *
0
16. Amend Sec.  68.93 by revising paragraph (b) and adding paragraphs 
(d) and (e) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.93   Emergency response coordination activities.

* * * * *
    (b) Coordination shall include providing to the local emergency 
planning and response organizations: The stationary source's emergency 
response plan if one exists; emergency action plan; and updated 
emergency contact information. For responding stationary sources, 
coordination shall also include consulting with local emergency 
response officials to establish appropriate schedules and plans for 
field and tabletop exercises required under Sec.  68.96(b). The owner 
or operator shall request an opportunity to meet with the local 
emergency planning committee (or equivalent) and/or local fire 
department as appropriate to review and discuss those materials.
* * * * *
    (d) Classified information. The disclosure of information 
classified by the Department of Defense or other Federal agencies or 
contractors of such agencies shall be controlled by applicable laws, 
regulations, or executive orders concerning the release of classified 
information.
    (e) CBI. An owner or operator asserting CBI for information 
required under this section shall provide a sanitized version to the 
local emergency planning and response organizations. Assertion of 
claims of CBI and substantiation of CBI claims shall be in the same 
manner as required in Sec. Sec.  68.151 and 68.152 for information 
contained in the RMP required under subpart G. As provided under Sec.  
68.151(b)(3), an owner or operator of a stationary source may not claim 
five-year accident history information as CBI. As provided in Sec.  
68.151(c)(2), an owner or operator of a stationary source asserting 
that a chemical name is CBI shall provide a generic category or class 
name as a substitute.
0
17. Amend Sec.  68.96 by:
0
a. Revising the first sentence of paragraph (a);
0
b. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i) and (ii);
0
c. Revising paragraph (b)(2)(i) and (ii); and
0
d. Revising paragraph (b)(3).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  68.96   Emergency response exercises.

    (a) Notification exercises. At least once each calendar year, the 
owner or operator of a stationary source with any Program 2 or Program 
3 process shall conduct an exercise of the source's emergency response 
notification mechanisms required under Sec.  68.90(b)(3) or Sec.  
68.95(a)(1)(i), as appropriate, before [DATE 5 YEARS AFTER EFFECTIVE 
DATE OF FINAL RULE] and annually thereafter. * * *
    (b) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (i) Frequency. As part of coordination with local emergency 
response officials required by Sec.  [thinsp]68.93, the owner or 
operator shall consult with these officials to establish an appropriate 
frequency for field exercises.
    (ii) Scope. Field exercises should include: Tests of procedures to 
notify the public and the appropriate Federal, state, and local 
emergency response agencies about an accidental release; tests of 
procedures and measures for emergency response actions including 
evacuations and medical treatment; tests of communications systems; 
mobilization of facility emergency

[[Page 24883]]

response personnel, including contractors, as appropriate; coordination 
with local emergency responders; emergency response equipment 
deployment; and any other action identified in the emergency response 
program, as appropriate.
    (2) * * *
    (i) Frequency. As part of coordination with local emergency 
response officials required by Sec.  [thinsp]68.93, the owner or 
operator shall consult with these officials to establish an appropriate 
frequency for tabletop exercises, and shall conduct a tabletop exercise 
before [DATE 7 YEARS AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL RULE] and at 
a minimum of at least once every three years thereafter.
    (ii) Scope. The exercise should include discussions of: Procedures 
to notify the public and the appropriate Federal, state, and local 
emergency response agencies; procedures and measures for emergency 
response including evacuations and medical treatment; identification of 
facility emergency response personnel and/or contractors and their 
responsibilities; coordination with local emergency responders; 
procedures for emergency response equipment deployment; and any other 
action identified in the emergency response plan, as appropriate.
    (3) Documentation. The owner/operator shall prepare an evaluation 
report within 90 days of each exercise. The report should include: A 
description of the exercise scenario; names and organizations of each 
participant; an evaluation of the exercise results including lessons 
learned; recommendations for improvement or revisions to the emergency 
response exercise program and emergency response program, and a 
schedule to promptly address and resolve recommendations.
* * * * *
0
18. Amend Sec.  68.160 by revising paragraph (b)(21) and removing 
paragraph (b)(22) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.160   Registration.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (21) Whether a public meeting has been held following an RMP 
reportable accident, pursuant to Sec.  68.210(b).
0
19. Amend Sec.  68.170 by revising paragraph (i) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.170   Prevention program/Program 2.

* * * * *
    (i) The date of the most recent compliance audit, the expected date 
of completion of any changes resulting from the compliance audit.
* * * * *
0
20. Amend Sec.  68.175 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (e) introductory text and paragraphs (e)(1), (5) 
and (6);
0
b. Removing paragraph (e)(7); and
0
c. Revising paragraph (k).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  68.175   Prevention program/Program 3.

* * * * *
    (e) The date of completion of the most recent PHA or update and the 
technique used.
    (1) The expected date of completion of any changes resulting from 
the PHA;
     * * *
    (5) Monitoring and detection systems in use; and
    (6) Changes since the last PHA.
* * * * *
    (k) The date of the most recent compliance audit and the expected 
date of completion of any changes resulting from the compliance audit.
* * * * *
0
21. Amend Sec.  68.180 by revising paragraph (a)(1) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.180   Emergency response program and exercises.

    (a) * * *
    (1) Name, phone number and email address of local emergency 
planning and response organizations with which the stationary source 
last coordinated emergency response efforts, pursuant to Sec.  
68.10(g)(3) or Sec.  68.93.
* * * * *
0
22. Amend Sec.  68.190 by revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:


Sec.  68.190   Updates.

* * * * *
    (c) If a stationary source is no longer subject to this part, the 
owner or operator shall submit a de-registration to EPA within six 
months indicating that the stationary source is no longer covered.
0
23. Amend Sec.  68.210 by:
0
a. Removing paragraphs (b), (c), (d), and (g);
0
b. Redesignating paragraph (e) and (f) as paragraphs (b) and (c); and
0
c. Revising newly redesignated paragraph (b).
    The revision reads as follows:


Sec.  68.210   Availability of information to the public.

* * * * *
    (b) Public meetings. The owner or operator of a stationary source 
shall hold a public meeting to provide information required under Sec.  
68.42 (b), no later than 90 days after any accident subject to 
reporting under Sec.  68.42.
* * * * *
0
24. Amend Sec.  68.215 by revising paragraph (a)(2)(i) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  68.215   Permit content and air permitting authority or 
designated agency requirements.

    (a) * * *
    (2) * * *
    (i) A compliance schedule for meeting the requirements of this part 
by the date provided in Sec.  68.10(a) through (f).
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2018-11059 Filed 5-29-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P



                                                   24850                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION                                you wish to make. The EPA will                        additional form of identification to enter
                                                   AGENCY                                                  generally not consider comments or                    the Federal building. Acceptable
                                                                                                           comment contents located outside of the               alternative forms of identification
                                                   40 CFR Part 68                                          primary submission (i.e., on the web,                 include: Federal employee badges,
                                                   [EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725; FRL–9975–20–                     cloud, or other file sharing system). For             passports, enhanced driver’s licenses
                                                   OLEM]                                                   additional submission methods, the full               and military identification cards. In
                                                                                                           EPA public comment policy,                            addition, you will need to obtain a
                                                   RIN 2050–AG95                                           information about CBI or multimedia                   property pass for any personal
                                                                                                           submissions, and general guidance on                  belongings you bring with you. Upon
                                                   Accidental Release Prevention                           making effective comments, please visit               leaving the building, you will be
                                                   Requirements: Risk Management                           https://www.epa.gov/dockets/                          required to return this property pass to
                                                   Programs Under the Clean Air Act                        commenting-epa-dockets.                               the security desk. No large signs will be
                                                   AGENCY:  Environmental Protection                          Public Hearing. A public hearing will              allowed in the building, cameras may
                                                   Agency (EPA).                                           be held in Washington, DC on June 14,                 only be used outside of the building and
                                                   ACTION: Proposed rule.
                                                                                                           2018 at William J. Clinton East Building              demonstrations will not be allowed on
                                                                                                           Room 1153 (Map Room), 1201                            Federal property for security reasons.
                                                   SUMMARY:   The Environmental Protection                 Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC                     The EPA may ask clarifying questions
                                                   Agency (EPA) is requesting public                       20460. The hearing will convene at 9:00               during the oral presentations, but will
                                                   comment on several proposed changes                     a.m. through 8:00 p.m. The sessions will              not respond to the presentations at that
                                                   to the final Risk Management Program                    run from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., with                time. Written statements and supporting
                                                   Amendments rule (Amendments rule)                       a break between 12:00 p.m. and 1:00                   information submitted during the
                                                   issued on January 13, 2017. EPA is                      p.m., continuing from 1:00 p.m. to 4:30               comment period will be considered
                                                   proposing to rescind amendments                         p.m., with a break from 4:30 to 5:30                  with the same weight as oral comments
                                                   relating to safer technology and                        p.m., and continuing from 5:30 p.m. to                and supporting information presented at
                                                   alternatives analyses, third-party audits,              8:00 p.m. Persons wishing to preregister              the public hearing. Verbatim transcripts
                                                   incident investigations, information                    may be assigned a time according to this              of the hearing and written statements
                                                   availability, and several other minor                   schedule. The evening session                         will be included in the docket for the
                                                   regulatory changes. EPA is also                         beginning at 5:30 p.m. will be extended               rulemaking. The EPA will make every
                                                   proposing to modify amendments                          one hour after all scheduled comments                 effort to follow the schedule as closely
                                                   relating to local emergency coordination                have been heard to accommodate those                  as possible on the day of the hearing;
                                                   and emergency exercises, and to change                  wishing to make a comment as a walk-                  however, please plan for the hearing to
                                                   the compliance dates for these                          in registrant. Please register at https://            run either ahead of schedule or behind
                                                   provisions.                                             www.epa.gov/rmp/public-hearing-                       schedule.
                                                                                                           proposed-changes-risk-management-
                                                   DATES: Comments. Comments and                                                                                 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                           program-rmp-rule to speak at the
                                                   additional material must be received on                 hearing. The last day to preregister in               James Belke, United States
                                                   or before July 30, 2018. Under the                      advance to speak at the hearing is June               Environmental Protection Agency,
                                                   Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA),                          8, 2018. Additionally, requests to speak              Office of Land and Emergency
                                                   comments on the information collection                  will be taken the day of the hearing at               Management, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave.
                                                   provisions are best assured of                          the hearing registration desk, although               NW (Mail Code 5104A), Washington,
                                                   consideration if the Office of                          preferences on speaking times may not                 DC 20460; telephone number: (202)
                                                   Management and Budget (OMB)                             be able to be fulfilled. If you require the           564–8023; email address: belke.jim@
                                                   receives a copy of your comments on or                  service of a translator or special                    epa.gov, or Kathy Franklin, United
                                                   before June 29, 2018.                                   accommodations such as audio                          States Environmental Protection
                                                      Public testimony: Send requests to                   description, we ask that you pre-register             Agency, Office of Land and Emergency
                                                   present oral testimony by June 8, 2018.                 for the hearing, on or before June 8,                 Management, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave.
                                                      Public Hearing. The EPA will hold a                  2018 to allow sufficient time to arrange              NW (Mail Code 5104A), Washington,
                                                   public hearing on this proposed rule on                 such accommodations.                                  DC 20460; telephone number: (202)
                                                   June 14, 2018 in Washington, DC.                           The hearing will provide interested                564–7987; email address:
                                                   ADDRESSES: Comments. Submit                             parties the opportunity to present data,              franklin.kathy@epa.gov.
                                                   comments and additional materials,                      views or arguments concerning the                       Electronic copies of this Notice of
                                                   identified by docket EPA–HQ–OEM–                        proposed action. The EPA will make                    Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) and
                                                   2015–0725 to the Federal eRulemaking                    every effort to accommodate all speakers              related news releases are available on
                                                   Portal: http://www.regulations.gov.                     who arrive and register. Because this                 EPA’s website at http://www.epa.gov/
                                                   Follow the online instructions for                      hearing is being held at a U.S.                       rmp. Copies of this NPRM are also
                                                   submitting comments. Once submitted,                    government facility, individuals                      available at http://www.regulations.gov.
                                                   comments cannot be edited or removed                    planning to attend the hearing should be              SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Acronyms
                                                   from Regulations.gov. The EPA may                       prepared to show valid picture                        and Abbreviations. We use multiple
                                                   publish any comment received to its                     identification to the security staff in               acronyms and terms in this preamble.
                                                   public docket. Do not submit                            order to gain access to the meeting                   While this list may not be exhaustive, to
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   electronically any information you                      room. Please note that the REAL ID Act,               ease the reading of this preamble and for
                                                   consider to be Confidential Business                    passed by Congress in 2005, established               reference purposes, the EPA defines the
                                                   Information (CBI) or other information                  new requirements for entering Federal                 following terms and acronyms here:
                                                   whose disclosure is restricted by statute.              facilities. If your driver’s license is
                                                                                                                                                                 ACC American Chemistry Council
                                                   Multimedia submissions (audio, video,                   issued by Alaska, American Samoa,                     AFPM American Fuel & Petrochemical
                                                   etc.) must be accompanied by a written                  Arizona, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine,                   Manufacturers
                                                   comment. The written comment is                         Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana,                    BATF Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
                                                   considered the official comment and                     New York, Oklahoma or the state of                     Firearms, and Explosives
                                                   should include discussion of all points                 Washington, you must present an                       CAA Clean Air Act



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00002   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                                                           24851

                                                   CAAA Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990                                          Organization of this Document. The                                              D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
                                                   CBI confidential business information                                        contents of this preamble are:                                                    E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                   CFATS Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism                                                                                                                            (UMRA)
                                                     Standards                                                                  I. General Information
                                                                                                                                   A. Does this action apply to me?                                               F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
                                                   CFR Code of Federal Regulations                                                                                                                                G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
                                                   CSAG Chemical Safety Advocacy Group                                             B. What action is the Agency taking?
                                                   CSISSFRRA Chemical Safety Information,                                          C. What is the Agency’s authority for                                             and Coordination with Indian Tribal
                                                     Site Security and Fuels Regulatory Relief                                        taking this action?                                                            Governments
                                                     Act                                                                           D. What are the incremental costs and                                          H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
                                                   CVI Chemical-terrorism Vulnerability                                               benefits of this action?                                                       Children from Environmental Health
                                                     Information                                                                II. Background                                                                       Risks and Safety Risks
                                                   DHS Department of Homeland Security                                             A. Events Leading to This Action                                               I. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
                                                   E.O. Executive Order                                                            B. EPA Authority to Reconsider and Revise
                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
                                                   DOT Department of Transportation                                                   the RMP Rule
                                                                                                                                   C. Overview of EPA’s Risk Management                                              Distribution or Use
                                                   EPA Environmental Protection Agency
                                                                                                                                      Program Regulations                                                         J. National Technology Transfer and
                                                   EPCRA Emergency Planning & Community
                                                     Right-To-Know Act                                                          III. Proposed Changes                                                                Advancement Act (NTTAA)
                                                   FOIA Freedom of Information Act                                                 A. Rescind incident investigation, third-                                      K. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
                                                   FR Federal Register                                                                party audit, safer technology and                                              to Address Environmental Justice in
                                                   ICR Information Collection Request                                                 alternatives analysis (STAA), and other                                        Minority Populations and Low-Income
                                                   ISD inherently safer design                                                        prevention program amendments                                                  Populations
                                                   IST inherently safer technology                                                 B. Rescind information availability
                                                   LEPC local emergency planning committee                                            amendments                                                              I. General Information
                                                   NAICS North American Industrial                                                 C. Modify local coordination amendments
                                                     Classification System                                                         D. Modify exercise amendments                                              A. Does this action apply to me?
                                                   NPRM Notice of Proposed Rulemaking                                              E. Revise emergency response contacts
                                                   OCA offsite consequences analysis                                                  provided in RMP                                                            This rule applies to those facilities
                                                   OMB Office of Management and Budget                                             F. Revise compliance dates                                                 (referred to as ‘‘stationary sources’’
                                                   OSHA Occupational Safety and Health                                             G. Corrections to cross referenced CFR                                     under the CAA) that are subject to the
                                                     Administration                                                                   sections                                                                chemical accident prevention
                                                   PHA process hazard analysis                                                  IV. Rationale for Rescissions and                                             requirements at 40 CFR part 68. This
                                                   PRA Paperwork Reduction Act                                                        Modifications
                                                                                                                                   A. Maintain consistency in accident
                                                                                                                                                                                                              includes stationary sources holding
                                                   PSI process safety information
                                                   PSM Process Safety Management                                                      prevention requirements                                                 more than a threshold quantity (TQ) of
                                                   RIA Regulatory Impact Analysis                                                  B. Address security concerns                                               a regulated substance in a process. Table
                                                   RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act                                                  C. Address BATF finding on West                                            1 provides industrial sectors and the
                                                   RFI request for information                                                        Fertilizer incident                                                     associated NAICS codes for entities
                                                   RMP Risk Management Program                                                     D. Reduce unnecessary regulations and                                      potentially affected by this action. The
                                                   RTC Response to Comments                                                           regulatory costs
                                                                                                                                                                                                              Agency’s goal is to provide a guide for
                                                   SBAR Small Business Advocacy Review                                             E. Revise compliance dates to provide
                                                   SBREFA Small Business Regulatory                                                   necessary time for program changes                                      readers to consider regarding entities
                                                     Enforcement Fairness Act                                                      F. Other issues raised by petitioners                                      that potentially could be affected by this
                                                   SDS safety data sheet                                                        V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews                                      action. However, this action may affect
                                                   SER small entity representative                                                 A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory                                       other entities not listed in this table. If
                                                   SERC state emergency response                                                      Planning and Review and Executive                                       you have questions regarding the
                                                     commission                                                                       Order 13563: Improving Regulation and                                   applicability of this action to a
                                                   STAA safer technology and alternatives                                             Regulatory Review
                                                     analysis                                                                      B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing                                         particular entity, consult the person(s)
                                                   TQ threshold quantity                                                              Regulation and Controlling Regulatory                                   listed in the introductory section of this
                                                   U.S.C. United States Code                                                          Costs                                                                   action under the heading entitled FOR
                                                   UMRA Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                                               C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)                                           FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.

                                                    TABLE 1—INDUSTRIAL SECTORS AND ASSOCIATED NAICS CODES FOR ENTITIES POTENTIALLY AFFECTED BY THIS ACTION
                                                                                                                                    Sector                                                                                                   NAICS code

                                                   Administration of Environmental Quality Programs ...............................................................................................                                924
                                                   Agricultural Chemical Distributors.
                                                   Crop Production .....................................................................................................................................................           111
                                                   Animal Production and Aquaculture ......................................................................................................................                        112
                                                   Support Activities for Agriculture and Forestry ......................................................................................................                          115
                                                   Farm Supplies Merchant Wholesalers ..................................................................................................................                           42491
                                                   Chemical Manufacturing ........................................................................................................................................                 325
                                                   Chemical and Allied Products Merchant Wholesalers ..........................................................................................                                    4246
                                                   Food Manufacturing ...............................................................................................................................................              311
                                                   Beverage Manufacturing ........................................................................................................................................                 3121
                                                   Oil and Gas Extraction ..........................................................................................................................................               211
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   Other 1 ....................................................................................................................................................................    44, 45, 48, 54, 56, 61, 72
                                                   Other manufacturing ..............................................................................................................................................              313, 326, 327, 33
                                                   Other Wholesale.
                                                   Merchant Wholesalers, Durable Goods ................................................................................................................                            423
                                                   Merchant Wholesalers, Nondurable Goods ..........................................................................................................                               424
                                                   Paper Manufacturing .............................................................................................................................................               322
                                                   Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing .......................................................................................................                               324
                                                   Petroleum and Petroleum Products Merchant Wholesalers .................................................................................                                         4247
                                                   Utilities ...................................................................................................................................................................   221



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014          17:34 May 29, 2018          Jkt 244001       PO 00000        Frm 00003        Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4702       E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM                30MYP2


                                                   24852                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                          TABLE 1—INDUSTRIAL SECTORS AND ASSOCIATED NAICS CODES FOR ENTITIES POTENTIALLY AFFECTED BY THIS
                                                                                                ACTION—Continued
                                                                                                                            Sector                                                                                       NAICS code

                                                   Warehousing and Storage .....................................................................................................................................   493



                                                   B. What action is the Agency taking?                                  of central relevance to the outcome of                                 destroyed. In §§ 68.60 and 68.81, EPA
                                                                                                                         the rule.                                                              also proposes to rescind clarifying text
                                                   1. Purpose of the Regulatory Action                                      In a letter dated March 13, 2017, the                               ‘‘(i.e., a near miss)’’ that was added to
                                                      The purpose of this action is to                                   Administrator responded to the first of                                describe an incident that could
                                                   propose changes to the Risk                                           the reconsideration petitions received                                 reasonably have resulted in a
                                                   Management Program Amendments                                         by announcing the convening of a                                       catastrophic release. In § 68.60, EPA
                                                   final rule in order to address issues                                 proceeding for reconsideration of the                                  proposes to change the term
                                                   raised in three petitions for                                         Risk Management Program                                                investigation ‘‘report(s)’’ to
                                                   reconsideration received by EPA, as                                   Amendments.4 As explained in that                                      ‘‘summary(ies)’’ and rescind the
                                                   well as other issues that EPA believes                                letter, having considered the objections                               requirement for Program 2 processes to
                                                   warrant reconsideration.                                              raised in the petition, the Administrator                              establish an incident investigation team
                                                      On January 13, 2017, the EPA issued                                determined that the criteria for                                       consisting of at least one person
                                                   a final rule (82 FR 4594) amending 40                                 reconsideration have been met for at                                   knowledgeable in the process involved
                                                   CFR part 68, the chemical accident                                    least one of the objections. This                                      and other persons with experience to
                                                   prevention provisions under section                                   proposal addresses the issues raised in                                investigate an incident.
                                                   112(r) of the CAA (42 U.S.C. 7412(r)).                                all three petitions for reconsideration, as                               EPA proposes to rescind employee
                                                   The amendments addressed various                                      well as other issues that EPA believes                                 training requirements (§§ 68.54 and
                                                   aspects of risk management programs,                                  warrant reconsideration.                                               68.71) that would apply to supervisors
                                                   including prevention programs at                                                                                                             responsible for process operations as
                                                   stationary sources, emergency response                                2. Summary of the Provisions of the
                                                                                                                         Regulatory Action                                                      well as rescind minor wording changes
                                                   preparedness requirements, information
                                                                                                                                                                                                involving description of employees
                                                   availability, and various other changes                                  EPA proposes to rescind almost all
                                                                                                                                                                                                operating a process in § 68.54. EPA
                                                   to streamline, clarify, and otherwise                                 the requirements added to the accident
                                                                                                                                                                                                proposes to rescind the requirement in
                                                   technically correct the underlying rules.                             prevention provisions program of
                                                                                                                                                                                                § 68.65 for the owner or operator to keep
                                                   Prior to the rule taking effect, EPA                                  Subparts C (for Program 2 processes)
                                                                                                                                                                                                process safety information up-to-date
                                                   received three petitions for                                          and D (for Program 3 processes). These
                                                                                                                                                                                                and the requirement in § 68.67(c)(2) for
                                                   reconsideration of the rule under CAA                                 include rescission of all requirements
                                                                                                                                                                                                the process hazard analysis to address
                                                   section 307(d)(7)(B), two from industry                               for third-party compliance audits
                                                                                                                                                                                                the findings from all incident
                                                   groups 2 and one from a group of states.3                             (§§ 68.58, 68.59, 68.79 and 68.80), safer
                                                   Under that provision, the Administrator                               technology and alternatives analysis                                   investigations required under § 68.81, as
                                                   is to commence a reconsideration                                      (§ 68.67(c)(8)) for facilities with Program                            well as any other potential failure
                                                   proceeding if, in the Administrator’s                                 3 regulated processes in North                                         scenarios. EPA will retain two changes
                                                   judgement, the petitioner raises an                                   American Industrial Classification                                     that would revise the term ‘‘Material
                                                   objection to a rule that was                                          System (NAICS) codes 322 (paper                                        Safety Data Sheets’’ to ‘‘Safety Data
                                                   impracticable to raise during the                                     manufacturing), 324 (petroleum and                                     Sheets (SDS)’’ in §§ 68.48 and 68.65.
                                                   comment period or if the grounds for                                  coal products manufacturing), and 325                                     Alternatively, EPA proposes to
                                                   the objection arose after the comment                                 (chemical manufacturing) and                                           rescind all of the above changes to
                                                   period but within the period for judicial                             rescinding the words ‘‘for each covered                                Subparts C and D except for the
                                                   review. In either case, the Administrator                             process’’ from the compliance audit                                    requirement in § 68.50(a)(2) for the
                                                   must also conclude that the objection is                              provisions in §§ 68.58 and 68.79. EPA                                  hazard review to include findings from
                                                                                                                         also proposes to rescind in § 68.50(a)(2),                             incident investigations, the term
                                                     1 For descriptions of NAICS codes, see https://                     the requirement for the hazard review to                               ‘‘report(s)’’ in place of the word
                                                   www.census.gov/cgi-bin/sssd/naics/naicsrch.                           include findings from incident                                         ‘‘summary(ies)’’ in § 68.60, the
                                                     2 RMP Coalition’s Petition for Reconsideration
                                                                                                                         investigations. For incident                                           requirement in § 68.60 for Program 2
                                                   and Request for Agency Stay Pending                                                                                                          processes to establish an incident
                                                   Reconsideration of Final RMP rule (82 FR 4594,
                                                                                                                         investigations (§§ 68.60 and 68.81), EPA
                                                   January 13, 2017), February 28, 2017. Hogan Lovells                   proposes to rescind: Requirements for                                  investigation team consisting of at least
                                                   US LLP, Washington, DC. Document ID: EPA–HQ–                          conducting root cause analysis for                                     one person knowledgeable in the
                                                   OEM–2015–0725–0759 and                                                incident investigations; for the incident                              process involved and other persons with
                                                     Chemical Safety Advocacy Group (CSAG)’s                             investigation report to have specified                                 experience to investigate an incident,
                                                   Petition and Reconsideration and Stay Request of                                                                                             the requirements in §§ 68.54 and 68.71
                                                   the Final RMP rule (82 FR 4594, January 13, 2017)                     added data elements, a schedule to
                                                   March 13, 2017, Hunton & Williams, San Francisco,                     address recommendations, a 12-month                                    for training requirements to apply to
                                                   CA, EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0766 and EPA–                                completion deadline, and for § 68.60                                   supervisors responsible for process
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0765 (supplemental                                   only, a five-year record retention (EPA                                operations and minor wording changes
                                                   petition).                                                                                                                                   involving the description of employees
                                                     3 Petition for Reconsideration and Stay on behalf
                                                                                                                         notes that the existing rule’s five-year
                                                   of States of Louisiana, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida,                   record retention requirement at § 68.200                               operating a process in § 68.54, and the
                                                   Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma, South Carolina,                              will still apply); and for investigating                               two changes that would revise the term
                                                   Wisconsin, West Virginia, and the Commonwealth                        any incident resulting in catastrophic                                 ‘‘Material Safety Data Sheets’’ to ‘‘Safety
                                                   of Kentucky with respect to Risk Management                           releases that also results in the affected                             Data Sheets (SDS)’’ in §§ 68.48 and
                                                   Program Final Rule, (82 FR 4594, January 13, 2017),
                                                   March 14, 2017. State of Louisiana, Department of                     process being decommissioned or                                        68.65.
                                                   Justice, Attorney General. EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–                                                                                                     EPA proposes to rescind the following
                                                   0725–0762.                                                               4 EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0762.                                        definitions in § 68.3: active measures,


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014       17:34 May 29, 2018        Jkt 244001      PO 00000      Frm 00004       Fmt 4701     Sfmt 4702      E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM            30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                            24853

                                                   inherently safer technology or design,                  provision in § 68.96(c) for alternative               rule, but would have up to one
                                                   passive measures, practicability, and                   means of meeting exercise requirements                additional year to perform their first
                                                   procedural measures related to                          so that it applies only to notification               notification drill, up to three additional
                                                   amendments to requirements in § 68.67;                  exercises.                                            years to conduct their first tabletop
                                                   root cause related to amendments to                        EPA proposes to rescind the                        exercise and no specified deadline for
                                                   requirements in § 68.60 and § 68.81, and                requirements for providing to the public              the first field exercise, other than that
                                                   third-party audit related to amendments                 upon request, chemical hazard                         established by the owner or operator’s
                                                   to requirements in §§ 68.58 and 68.79                   information and access to community                   exercise schedule in coordination with
                                                   and added §§ 68.59 and 68.80.                           emergency preparedness information in                 local response agencies.
                                                      EPA proposes to modify the local                     § 68.210 (b) through (d), as well as                     The CFR amendatory language that
                                                   emergency response coordination                         rescind the requirement to provide the                appears at the end of this Federal
                                                   amendments by deleting the phrase in                    ‘‘other chemical hazard information                   Register notice (see PART 68—
                                                   § 68.93(b), ‘‘. . . and any other                       such as that described in paragraph (b)               CHEMICAL ACCIDENT PREVENTION
                                                   information that local emergency                        of this section’’ at public meetings                  PROVISIONS) proposes changes to the
                                                   planning and response organizations                     required under § 68.210 (e). EPA will                 regulatory text that would have
                                                   identify as relevant to local emergency                 retain the requirement in § 68.210 (e) for            included changes from the final RMP
                                                   response planning’’ or alternatively                    owner/operator of a stationary source to              Amendments rule if it was in effect. For
                                                   replace it with the phrase ‘‘. . . and                  hold a public meeting to provide                      easier review of the proposed changes,
                                                   other information necessary for                         accident information required under                   EPA has provided a copy of 40 CFR part
                                                   developing and implementing the local                   § 68.42 (b) no later than 90 days after               68 with the Amendments rule
                                                   emergency response plan.’’ EPA would                    any accident subject to reporting under               regulatory text changes in redline/
                                                   retain the requirement for owners or                    § 68.42. EPA will retain the change to                strikeout format, which is available in
                                                   operators to provide the local                          § 68.210 (a) which added 40 CFR part                  the rulemaking docket.6
                                                   emergency planning and response                         1400 as a limitation on RMP availability              C. What is the Agency’s authority for
                                                   organizations with the stationary                       (addresses restrictions on disclosing                 taking this action?
                                                   source’s emergency response plan if one                 RMP offsite consequence analysis under
                                                   exists, emergency action plan, and                      CSISSFRRA),5 and the provision for                       The Agency’s procedures in this
                                                   updated emergency contact information,                  control of classified information in                  rulemaking are controlled by CAA
                                                   as well as the requirement for the owner                § 68.210 (f). EPA proposes to delete the              section 307(d). The statutory authority
                                                   or operator to request an opportunity to                provision for CBI in § 68.210 (g),                    for this action is provided by section
                                                   meet with the local emergency planning                  because the only remaining information                112(r) of the CAA as amended (42
                                                   committee (or equivalent) and/or local                  required to be provided at the public                 U.S.C. 7412(r)). Each of the portions of
                                                   fire department as appropriate to review                meeting is the source’s five-year                     the Risk Management Program rule we
                                                   and discuss these materials. EPA also                   accident history, which § 68.151(b)(3)                propose to modify in this document are
                                                   proposes to incorporate appropriate                     prohibits the owner or operator from                  based on section 112(r) of the CAA as
                                                   classified information and CBI                          claiming as CBI.                                      amended (42 U.S.C. 7412(r)). EPA’s
                                                   protections to regulated substance and                     EPA proposes to rescind requirements               authority for convening a
                                                   stationary source information required                  to report in the risk management plan                 reconsideration proceeding for certain
                                                   to be provided under § 68.93.                           any information associated with the                   issues is found under CAA section
                                                      EPA is proposing to modify the                       rescinded provisions of third-party                   307(d)(7)(B) or 42 U.S.C. 7607(d)(7)(B).
                                                   exercise program provisions of                          audits, incident investigation, safer                 A more detailed explanation of these
                                                   § 68.96(b), by removing the minimum                     technology and alternatives analysis,                 authorities can be found in Section II.B.
                                                   frequency requirement for field                         and information availability to the                   of this preamble, EPA Authority to
                                                   exercises. EPA proposes to establish                    public. EPA proposed to slightly modify               Reconsider and Revise the RMP Rule.
                                                   more flexible scope and documentation                   the emergency response contact                        D. What are the incremental costs and
                                                   provisions for both field and tabletop                  information required by § 68.180(a)(1) to             benefits of this action?
                                                   exercises by only recommending, and                     be provided in a facility’s RMP.
                                                   not requiring, items specified for                         EPA proposes to delay the rule’s                   1. Summary of Potential Cost Savings
                                                   inclusion in exercises and exercise                     compliance dates in § 68.10 to one year                  Approximately 12,500 facilities have
                                                   evaluation reports, while still requiring               after the effective date of a final rule for          filed current RMPs with EPA and are
                                                   documentation of both types of                          the emergency coordination provisions,                potentially affected by the proposed rule
                                                   exercises. EPA would retain the                         four years after the effective date of a              changes. These facilities range from
                                                   notification exercise requirement of                    final rule for emergency exercises, two               petroleum refineries and large chemical
                                                   § 68.96(a) and the provision for                        years after the effective date for the                manufacturers to water and wastewater
                                                   alternative means of meeting exercise                   public meeting provision and five years               treatment systems; chemical and
                                                   requirements of § 68.96(c).                             after the effective date of the final rule            petroleum wholesalers and terminals;
                                                      Alternatively, EPA is considering                    for those remaining risk management                   food manufacturers, packing plants, and
                                                   whether to fully rescind the field and                  plan provisions added as the result of                other cold storage facilities with
                                                   tabletop exercise provisions of                         the Amendments rule or changed by the                 ammonia refrigeration systems;
                                                   § 68.96(b). Under this alternative                      Reconsideration rule. Under the current               agricultural chemical distributors;
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   proposal, EPA would retain the                          proposal, owners and operators would                  midstream gas plants; and a limited
                                                   notification exercise provision of                      be still be required to have exercise                 number of other sources, including
                                                   § 68.96(a), but revise it and § 68.93(b) to             plans and schedules meeting the                       Federal installations, that use RMP-
                                                   remove any reference to tabletop and                    requirements of § 68.96 in place within               regulated substances. Table 2 presents
                                                   field exercises, while also modifying the               four years of the effective date of a final           the number of facilities according to the

                                                     5 Chemical Safety Chemical Safety Information,          6 Regulatory Text Redline/Strikeout Changes for

                                                   Site Security and Fuels Regulatory Relief Act.          Proposed RMP Reconsideration Rule, April 26,
                                                                                                           2018.


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00005   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24854                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   RMP reporting as of February 2015 by
                                                   industrial sector and chemical use.

                                                                                                               TABLE 2—NUMBER OF AFFECTED FACILITIES BY SECTOR
                                                                                 Sector                                                      NAICS codes                              Total facilities                             Chemical uses

                                                   Administration of environmental quality pro-                              924 ..............................................                    1,923        Use chlorine and other chemicals for treat-
                                                     grams (i.e., governments).                                                                                                                                    ment.
                                                   Agricultural chemical distributors/wholesalers                            111, 112, 115, 42491 ..................                               3,667        Store ammonia for sale; some in NAICS 111
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   and 115 use ammonia as a refrigerant.
                                                   Chemical manufacturing ................................                   325 ..............................................                    1,466        Manufacture, process, store.
                                                   Chemical wholesalers ....................................                 4246 ............................................                       333        Store for sale.
                                                   Food and beverage manufacturing ................                          311, 312 ......................................                       1,476        Use—mostly ammonia as a refrigerant.
                                                   Oil and gas extraction ....................................               211 ..............................................                      741        Intermediate processing (mostly regulated
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   flammable substances and flammable
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   mixtures).
                                                   Other ..............................................................      44, 45, 48, 54, 56, 61, 72 ...........                                   248       Use chemicals for wastewater treatment, re-
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   frigeration, store chemicals for sale.
                                                   Other manufacturing ......................................                313, 326, 327, 33 ........................                               384       Use various chemicals in manufacturing
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   process, waste treatment.
                                                   Other wholesale .............................................             423, 424 ......................................                          302       Use (mostly ammonia as a refrigerant).
                                                   Paper manufacturing ......................................                322 ..............................................                        70       Use various chemicals in pulp and paper
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   manufacturing.
                                                   Petroleum and coal products manufacturing                                 324 ..............................................                       156       Manufacture, process, store (mostly regu-
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   lated flammable substances and flam-
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   mable mixtures).
                                                   Petroleum wholesalers ...................................                 4247 ............................................                        276       Store for sale (mostly regulated flammable
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   substances and flammable mixtures).
                                                   Utilities ............................................................    221 (except 22131, 22132) .........                                     343        Use chlorine (mostly for water treatment).
                                                   Warehousing and storage ..............................                    493 ..............................................                    1,056        Use mostly ammonia as a refrigerant.
                                                   Water/wastewater Treatment Systems ..........                             22131, 22132 ..............................                             102        Use chlorine and other chemicals.

                                                         Total ........................................................      ......................................................              12,542



                                                     Table 3 presents a summary of the                                         regulatory impact analysis.7 In total,                                       of $87.9 million at a 3% discount rate
                                                   annualized cost savings estimated in the                                    EPA estimates annualized cost savings                                        and $88.4 million at a 7% discount rate.

                                                                                                                   TABLE 3—SUMMARY OF ANNUALIZED COST SAVINGS
                                                                                                                                                   [Millions, 2015 dollars]

                                                                                                                                  Provision                                                                                          3%            7%

                                                   Third-party Audits ....................................................................................................................................................                 (9.8)         (9.8)
                                                   Incident Investigation/Root Cause ...........................................................................................................................                           (1.8)         (1.8)
                                                   STAA ........................................................................................................................................................................          (70.0)        (70.0)
                                                   Information Availability .............................................................................................................................................                  (3.1)         (3.1)
                                                   Rule Familiarization (net) .........................................................................................................................................                    (3.2)         (3.7)

                                                         Total Cost Savings* ..........................................................................................................................................                   (87.9)        (88.4)
                                                      * Values may not sum due to rounding.


                                                     Most of the annual cost savings under                                     2. Summary of Potential Benefits and                                         benefits. The proposed rescission of the
                                                   the proposed rule are due to the repeal                                     Benefit Reductions                                                           prevention program requirements (i.e.,
                                                   of the STAA provision (annual savings                                          The RMP Amendments Rule                                                   third-party audits, incident
                                                   of $70 million), followed by third-party                                    produced a variety of benefits from                                          investigation, STAA), would result in a
                                                   audits (annual savings of $9.8 million),                                    prevention and mitigation of future                                          reduction in the magnitude of these
                                                   rule familiarization (annual net savings                                    RMP and non-RMP accidents at RMP                                             benefits. The proposed rescission of the
                                                   of $3.7 million), information availability                                  facilities, avoided catastrophes at RMP                                      chemical hazard information
                                                   (annual savings of $3.1 million), and                                       facilities, and easier access to facility                                    availability provision would result in a
                                                   root-cause incident investigation                                           chemical hazard information. The                                             reduction of the information sharing
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   (annual savings of $1.8 million).                                           proposed Reconsideration rule would                                          benefit, although a portion of this
                                                                                                                               largely retain the revised local                                             benefit from the Amendments rule
                                                                                                                               emergency coordination and exercise                                          would still be conveyed by the public
                                                                                                                               provisions of the 2017 Amendments                                            meeting, emergency coordination and
                                                                                                                               final rule, which convey mitigation                                          exercise provisions. The proposed
                                                     7 A full description of costs and benefits for this                       Amendments to the Accidental Release Prevention                              document is available in the docket for this
                                                   proposed rule can be found in the ‘‘Regulatory                              Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under                                 rulemaking (Docket ID Number EPA–HQ–OEM–
                                                   Impact Analysis, Reconsideration of the 2017                                the Clean Air Act, Section 112(r)(7).’’ This                                 2015–0725).



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014         17:34 May 29, 2018           Jkt 244001      PO 00000        Frm 00006         Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4702      E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM               30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                24855

                                                   rulemaking would also convey the                        that was impracticable to raise during                 from additional comment. This
                                                   benefit of improved chemical site                       the comment period or if the grounds                   proposed rulemaking is the next step in
                                                   security, by modifying previously open-                 for the objection arose after the                      EPA’s reconsideration of the Risk
                                                   ended information sharing provisions of                 comment period but within the period                   Management Program Amendments.
                                                   the Amendments rule that might have                     for judicial review and if the objection
                                                                                                                                                                  B. EPA Authority To Reconsider and
                                                   resulted in an increased risk of terrorism              is of central relevance to the outcome of
                                                                                                                                                                  Revise the RMP Rule
                                                   against regulated sources. See the RIA                  the rule. The Administrator may stay
                                                   for additional information on benefits                  the effective date of the rule for up to               1. What are the procedural requirements
                                                   and benefit reductions.                                 three months during such                               for reconsidering the RMP
                                                                                                           reconsideration. On March 13, 2017, the                Amendments?
                                                   II. Background                                          Chemical Safety Advocacy Group                            Congress granted the EPA the
                                                   A. Events Leading to This Action                        (‘‘CSAG’’) also submitted a petition                   authority for rulemaking on the
                                                                                                           (‘‘CSAG Petition’’) for reconsideration                prevention of chemical accidental
                                                      On January 13, 2017, the EPA issued
                                                                                                           and stay (including a March 14, 2017                   releases as well as the correction or
                                                   a final rule amending 40 CFR part 68,
                                                                                                           supplement to the CSAG Petition).9 On                  response to such releases in
                                                   the chemical accident prevention
                                                                                                           March 14, 2017, the EPA received a                     subparagraphs (A) and (B) of CAA
                                                   provisions under section 112(r) of the
                                                                                                           third petition for reconsideration and                 section 112(r)(7). The scope of this
                                                   CAA (42 U.S.C. 7412(r)). The
                                                                                                           stay from the States of Louisiana, joined              authority is discussed in more detail
                                                   amendments addressed various aspects
                                                                                                           by Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Kansas,
                                                   of risk management programs, including                                                                         below. The EPA has used its authority
                                                                                                           Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas,
                                                   prevention programs at stationary                                                                              under CAA section 112(r)(7) to issue the
                                                                                                           Wisconsin, West Virginia, and the
                                                   sources, emergency response                                                                                    RMP Rule (61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996),
                                                                                                           Commonwealth of Kentucky (the
                                                   preparedness requirements, information                                                                         the 2017 RMP Amendments, and this
                                                                                                           ‘‘States Petition’’).10 The Petitioners
                                                   availability, and various other changes                                                                        reconsideration document and proposed
                                                                                                           CSAG and States also requested that
                                                   to streamline, clarify, and otherwise                                                                          rulemaking.
                                                                                                           EPA delay the various compliance dates                    When promulgating rules under CAA
                                                   technically correct the underlying rules.               of the Risk Management Program
                                                   This rulemaking is known as the ‘‘Risk                                                                         section 112(r)(7)(A) and (B), the EPA
                                                                                                           Amendments.
                                                   Management Program Amendments’’ or                                                                             must follow the procedures for
                                                                                                              In a letter dated March 13, 2017, the
                                                   ‘‘RMP Amendments’’ rule. For further                                                                           rulemaking set out in CAA section
                                                                                                           Administrator announced the convening
                                                   information on the Risk Management                      of a proceeding for reconsideration of                 307(d). See CAA sections 112(r)(7)(E)
                                                   Program Amendments, see 82 FR 4594                      the Risk Management Program                            and 307(d)(1)(C). Among other things,
                                                   (January 13, 2017).                                     Amendments (a copy of this letter is                   section 307(d) sets out requirements for
                                                      On January 26, 2017, the EPA                         included in the docket for this rule,                  the content of proposed and final rules,
                                                   published a final rule delaying the                     Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–                         the docket for rulemakings, requirement
                                                   effective date of the Risk Management                   0725).11 As explained in that letter,                  to provide an opportunity for oral
                                                   Program Amendments from March 14,                       having considered the objections raised                testimony on the proposed rulemaking,
                                                   2017 to March 21, 2017, see 82 FR 8499.                 in the RMP Coalition Petition, the                     the length of time for comments, and
                                                   This revision to the effective date of the              Administrator determined that the                      judicial review. Only objections raised
                                                   Risk Management Program                                 criteria for reconsideration have been                 with reasonable specificity during the
                                                   Amendments was part of an EPA final                     met for at least one of the objections.                public comment period may be raised
                                                   rule implementing a memorandum                          EPA issued a three-month (90-day)                      during judicial review.
                                                   dated January 20, 2017, from the                        administrative stay of the effective date                 Section 307(d) has a provision that
                                                   Assistant to the President and Chief of                 of the Risk Management Program                         requires the EPA to convene a
                                                   Staff, entitled ‘‘Regulatory Freeze                     Amendments until June 19, 2017 (82 FR                  reconsideration proceeding when the
                                                   Pending Review.’’ This memorandum                       13968, March 16, 2017). EPA                            person makes an objection that meets
                                                   directed the heads of agencies to                       subsequently further delayed the                       specific criteria set out in CAA section
                                                   postpone, until 60 days after the date of               effective date of the Risk Management                  307(d)(7)(B). The statute provides:
                                                   its issuance, the effective date of rules               Program Amendments until February                         If the person raising an objection can
                                                   that were published prior to January 20,                19, 2019, via notice and comment                       demonstrate to the Administrator that it was
                                                   2017, but which had not yet become                      rulemaking (82 FR 27133, June 14,                      impracticable to raise such objection within
                                                   effective.                                              2017). The purpose of this Delay Rule                  [the comment period] or if the grounds for
                                                      In a letter dated February 28, 2017, a                                                                      such objection arose after the period for
                                                                                                           was to allow EPA to conduct a                          public comment (but within the time period
                                                   group known as the ‘‘RMP Coalition,’’                   reconsideration proceeding and to                      specified for judicial review) and if such
                                                   submitted a petition for reconsideration                consider other issues that may benefit                 objection is of central relevance to the
                                                   of the Risk Management Program                                                                                 outcome of the rule, the Administrator shall
                                                   Amendments (‘‘RMP Coalition                               9 Chemical Safety Advocacy Group (CSAG)’s            convene a proceeding for reconsideration of
                                                   Petition’’) as provided for in CAA                      Petition and Reconsideration and Stay Request of       the rule and provide the same procedural
                                                   section 307(d)(7)(B) (42 U.S.C.                         the Final RMP rule (82 FR 4594, January 13, 2017)      rights as would have been afforded had the
                                                                                                           March 13, 2017, Hunton & Williams, San Francisco,      information been available at the time the
                                                   7607(d)(7)(B)).8 Under that provision,                  CA, EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0766 and EPA–
                                                   the Administrator is to commence a                                                                             rule was proposed.
                                                                                                           HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0765 (supplemental
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   reconsideration proceeding if, in the                   petition).                                               As noted in the Background section
                                                                                                             10 Petition for Reconsideration and Stay on behalf
                                                   Administrator’s judgement, the                                                                                 above, when several parties petitioned
                                                                                                           of States of Louisiana, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida,
                                                   petitioner raises an objection to a rule                Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
                                                                                                                                                                  for reconsideration of the 2017 RMP
                                                                                                           Wisconsin, West Virginia, and the Commonwealth         Amendments, the Administrator found
                                                     8 RMP Coalition’s Petition for Reconsideration        of Kentucky with respect to Risk Management            that at least one objection the petitioners
                                                   and Request for Agency Stay Pending                     Program Final Rule, (82 FR 4594, January 13, 2017),    raised met the specific criteria for
                                                   Reconsideration of Final RMP rule (82 FR 4594,          March 14, 2017. State of Louisiana, Department of
                                                   January 13, 2017), February 28, 2017. Hogan Lovells     Justice, Attorney General. EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–            mandatory reconsideration and
                                                   US LLP, Washington, DC. Document ID: EPA–HQ–            0725–0762.                                             therefore he convened a proceeding for
                                                   OEM–2015–0725–0759.                                       11 EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0758                         reconsideration under CAA section


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00007   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24856                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   307(d)(7)(B). While section 307(d)(7)(B)                sources with more than a ‘‘threshold                  coordination and exercises provisions in
                                                   sets out criteria for when the Agency                   quantity to prepare and implement a                   this rule modify existing provisions that
                                                   must conduct a reconsideration, the                     risk management plan.’’ Such plans                    provide for ‘‘response to such releases
                                                   Agency has the discretion to reopen,                    needed to provide for compliance with                 by the owners or operators of the
                                                   revisit, amend and revise a rule under                  rule requirements under CAA section                   sources of such releases.’’ The
                                                   the rulemaking authority granted in                     112(r) and include a hazard assessment                information disclosure provisions
                                                   CAA section 112(r)(7) by following the                  with release scenarios and an accident                proposed to be rescinded or modified in
                                                   procedures of CAA 307(d) at any time,                   history, a release prevention program,                this document are related to the
                                                   including while it conducts a                           and a response program (CAA section                   development of ‘‘procedures and
                                                   reconsideration proceeding required by                  112(r)(7)(B)(ii)). Plans were to be                   measures for emergency response after
                                                   CAA section 307(d)(7)(B). In light of the               registered with EPA and submitted to                  an accidental release of a regulated
                                                   fact that EPA must already grant                        various planning entities (CAA section                substance in order to protect human
                                                   petitioners ‘‘the same procedural rights                112(r)(7)(B)(iii)). The rules would apply             health and the environment.’’ 13 (CAA
                                                   as would have been afforded had the                     to sources three years after                          section 112(r)(7)(B)(i)).
                                                   information been available at the time                  promulgation or three years after a                      In considering whether it is legally
                                                   the rule was proposed,’’ it is efficient to             substance was first listed for regulation             permissible for the Agency to rescind
                                                   conduct a discretionary amendment                       under CAA section 112(r). (CAA section                and/or modify provisions of the RMP
                                                   proceeding simultaneously with the                      112(r)(7)(B)(i)).                                     Amendments rule while continuing to
                                                   reconsideration proceeding.                                In addition to the direction to use the            meet EPA’s obligations under CAA
                                                                                                           expertise of the Secretaries of Labor and             section 112(r), EPA notes that the CAA
                                                   2. What is EPA’s substantive authority                  Transportation in subparagraph (B) of                 did not require EPA to promulgate the
                                                   under Clean Air Act section 112(r)(7)?                  CAA section 112(r)(7), the statute                    RMP Amendments rule. There are four
                                                      Congress granted EPA authority for                   required EPA to consult with these                    provisions of CAA section 112(r) that
                                                   accident prevention rules under two                     secretaries when carrying out the                     require or authorize the Administrator
                                                   provisions in CAA section 112(r)(7).                    authority of CAA section 112(r)(7) and                to promulgate regulations. The first two
                                                   Under subparagraph (A) of CAA section                   to ‘‘coordinate any requirements under                relate to the list of regulated substances
                                                   112(r)(7), EPA may set rules addressing                 [CAA section 112(r)(7)] with any                      and their threshold quantities. CAA
                                                   the prevention, detection, and                          requirements established for comparable               section 112(r)(3) required EPA to
                                                   correction of accidental releases of                    purposes by’’ OSHA. (CAA section                      promulgate a list of at least 100
                                                   substances listed by EPA by rule                        112(r)(7)(D)). This consultation and                  regulated substances. Section 112(r)(5)
                                                   (‘‘regulated substances’’ listed in the                 coordination language derives from and                required EPA to establish, by rule, a
                                                   tables in 40 CFR 68.130). Such rules                    expands upon provisions on hazard                     threshold quantity for each listed
                                                   may include data collection, training,                  assessments in the bill that eventually               substance. EPA met these obligations in
                                                   design, equipment, work practice, and                   passed the Senate as its version of the               1994 with the publication of the list of
                                                   operational requirements. EPA has wide                  1990 CAAA, section 129(e)(4) of S.                    regulated substances and threshold
                                                   discretion regarding the effective date                 1630. The Senate committee report on                  quantities (59 FR 4493, January 31,
                                                   (‘‘as determined by the Administrator,                  this language notes that the purpose of               1994). Section 112(r)(7) contains the
                                                   assuring compliance as expeditiously as                 the coordination requirement is to                    other two regulatory provisions. Section
                                                   practicable’’).                                         ensure that ‘‘requirements imposed by                 112(r)(7)(B) required EPA to publish
                                                      Under subparagraph (B) of CAA                        both agencies to accomplish the same                  accidental release prevention, detection,
                                                   section 112(r)(7), Congress authorized                  purpose are not unduly burdensome or                  and response requirements and
                                                   EPA to develop ‘‘reasonable regulations                 duplicative.’’ Senate Report at 244.12                guidance (‘‘. . . the Administrator shall
                                                   and appropriate guidance’’ that provide                 The mandate for coordination in the                   promulgate reasonable regulations and
                                                   for the prevention and detection of                     area of safer chemical processes was                  appropriate guidance to provide, to the
                                                   accidental releases and the response to                 incorporated into the CAA in section                  greatest extent practicable, for the
                                                   such releases, ‘‘to the greatest extent                 112(r)(7)(D) in the same legislation that             prevention and detection of accidental
                                                   practicable.’’ Congress required an                     Congress directed OSHA to promulgate                  releases of regulated substances and for
                                                   initial rulemaking under this                           a process safety standard that became                 response to such releases by the owners
                                                   subparagraph by November 15, 1993.                      the PSM standard. See CAAA of 1990                    or operators of the sources of such
                                                   Subparagraph (B) sets out a series of                   section 304.                                          releases’’). EPA met this obligation in
                                                   mandatory subjects to address,                             The RMP Amendments and this                        1996 with the publication of the original
                                                   interagency consultation requirements,                  reconsideration address three aspects of              RMP rule (61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996),
                                                   and discretionary provisions that                       the Risk Management Program:                          and associated guidance documents
                                                   allowed EPA to tailor requirements to                   Requirements for prevention programs,                 published in the late 1990s. The other
                                                   make them reasonable and practicable.                   emergency response provisions, and                    regulatory promulgation provision of
                                                   For example, the regulations needed to                  information disclosure. The prevention                section 112(r)(7)—section 112(r)(7)(A)—
                                                   address ‘‘storage, as well as operations’’              program provisions proposed to be                     is permissive. Subparagraph (A)
                                                   and ‘‘emergency response after                          rescinded in this document (auditing,                 authorizes EPA to promulgate
                                                   accidental releases;’’ EPA was to use the               incident investigation, and safer                     regulations but does not require it.
                                                   expertise of the Secretaries of Labor and               technologies and alternatives analysis)                  Therefore, EPA had met all of its
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   Transportation in promulgating the                      address the ‘‘prevention and detection                regulatory obligations under section
                                                   regulations; and EPA had the discretion                 of accidental releases.’’ The emergency               112(r) prior to promulgating the RMP
                                                   (‘‘shall, as appropriate’’) to recognize
                                                   differences in ‘‘size, operations,                        12 Clean Air Act Amendments of 1989, Report of         13 Incident investigation, compliance auditing,

                                                   processes . . . and the voluntary                       the Committee on Environment and Public Works,        and STAA are also authorized as release prevention
                                                   actions’’ of regulated sources to prevent               U.S. Senate together with Additional and Minority     requirements pertaining to stationary source
                                                                                                           Views to Accompany S. 1630. S. Report No. 101–        ‘‘design, equipment . . . and work practice’’ as well
                                                   and respond to accidental releases (CAA                 228. 101st Congress, 1st Session, December 20,        as ‘‘record-keeping [and] reporting.’’ Information
                                                   section 112(r)(7)(B)(i)). At a minimum,                 1989.—‘‘Senate Report’’ EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–              disclosure is also authorized as ‘‘reporting.’’ CAA
                                                   the regulations had to require stationary               0725–0645.                                            section 112(r)(7)(A).



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00008   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                   24857

                                                   Amendments rule. In promulgating the                     management program elements, the                      comparison of the PSM standard and
                                                   RMP Amendments rule, EPA took a                          RMP rule requires covered sources to                  RMP requirements, see the ‘‘Process
                                                   discretionary regulatory action in                       submit (to EPA) a document                            Safety Management and Risk
                                                   response to Executive Order 13650,                       summarizing the source’s risk                         Management Plan Comparison Tool’’
                                                   ‘‘Improving Chemical Safety and                          management program—called a Risk                      published by OSHA and EPA in October
                                                   Security.’’ 14 We have made                              Management Plan (or RMP).                             2016.19
                                                   discretionary amendments to the RMP                         The EPA’s risk management program                  III. Proposed Changes
                                                   rule several times without a dispute                     requirements include conducting a
                                                   over our authority to issue discretionary                worst-case scenario analysis and a                    A. Rescind Incident Investigation,
                                                   amendments. See 64 FR 964 (January 6,                    review of accident history, coordinating              Third-Party Audit, Safer Technology
                                                   1999); 64 FR 28696 (May 26, 1999); 69                    emergency response procedures with                    and Alternatives Analysis (STAA), and
                                                   FR 18819 (April 9, 2004). As EPA’s                       local response organizations,                         Other Prevention Program Amendments
                                                   action in the RMP Amendments rule                        conducting a hazard assessment,                          In this section, EPA discusses the
                                                   was discretionary, the Agency may take                   documenting a management system,                      proposed changes to the RMP
                                                   additional action to rescind or modify                   implementing a prevention program and                 Amendments rule, but explanations of
                                                   provisions of the RMP Amendments                         an emergency response program, and                    the rationale for most changes are
                                                   rule if the Agency finds that it is                      submitting a risk management plan that                discussed later in Section IV. Rationale
                                                   reasonable to do so.                                     addresses all aspects of the risk                     for Rescissions and Modifications.
                                                   C. Overview of EPA’s Risk Management                     management program for all covered                    Because many of the changes are being
                                                   Program Regulations                                      processes and chemicals. A process at a               proposed for the same reason,
                                                                                                            source is covered under one of three                  presenting the rationale separately
                                                      EPA’s existing RMP regulation was                     different prevention programs (Program                eliminates redundant discussion and
                                                   published in two stages. The Agency                      1, Program 2 or Program 3) based on the               allows rationale discussion to be
                                                   published the list of regulated                          threat posed to the community and the                 organized by topic (i.e. OSHA
                                                   substances and TQs in 1994 (59 FR                        environment. Program 1 has minimal                    coordination, security risks, cost
                                                   4478, January 31, 1994) (the ‘‘list                      requirements and is for processes not                 reduction).
                                                   rule’’) 15 and published the RMP final                   classified in industrial sectors 18                      In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA
                                                   regulation, containing risk management                   specified for Program 3, that have not                added three major provisions to the
                                                   requirements for covered sources, in                     had an accidental release with offsite                accident prevention program of
                                                   1996 (61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996) (the                   consequences in the last five years prior             Subparts C (for Program 2 processes)
                                                   ‘‘RMP rule’’).16 17 Subsequent                           to submission of the source’s risk                    and D (for Program 3 processes). These
                                                   modifications to the list rule and RMP                   management plan, and that have no                     included:
                                                   rule were made as discussed in the                       public receptors within the worst case                   (1) A requirement in § 68.60 and
                                                   Amendments Rule (82 FR 4594, January                     release scenario vulnerable zone for the              § 68.81 for all facilities with Program 2
                                                   13, 2017 at 4600). Prior to development                  process. Program 3 has the most                       or 3 processes to conduct a root cause
                                                   of EPA’s 1996 RMP rule, OSHA                             requirements and applies to processes                 analysis using a recognized method as
                                                   published their Process Safety                           covered by the OSHA PSM standard                      part of an incident investigation of a
                                                   Management (PSM) standard in 1992                        (but not eligible for RMP Program 1) or               catastrophic release or an incident that
                                                   (57 FR 6356, February 24, 1992), as                      classified in specified industrial sectors.           could have reasonably resulted in a
                                                   required by section 304 of the 1990                      Program 2 has fewer requirements than                 catastrophic release (i.e., a near-miss).
                                                   CAAA, using its authority under 29                       Program 3, and applies to any process                    (2) Requirements in § 68.58 and
                                                   U.S.C. 653. The OSHA PSM standard                        not covered under Programs 1 or 3.                    § 68.79 for regulated facilities with
                                                   can be found in 29 CFR 1910.119. Both                    Programs 2 and 3 both require a hazard                Program 2 or Program 3 processes to
                                                   the OSHA PSM standard and the EPA                        assessment, a prevention program and                  contract with an independent third-
                                                   RMP rule aim to prevent or minimize                      an emergency response program,                        party, or assemble an audit team led by
                                                   the consequences of accidental chemical                  although Program 2 requirements are                   an independent third-party, to perform
                                                   releases through implementation of                       less extensive and more streamlined.                  a compliance audit after the facility has
                                                   management program elements that                         For example, the Program 2 prevention                 an RMP reportable accident or when an
                                                   integrate technologies, procedures, and                  program was intended to cover simpler                 implementing agency requires a third-
                                                   management practices. In addition to                     processes located at smaller businesses               party audit due to conditions at the
                                                   requiring implementation of                              and does not require the following                    stationary source that could lead to an
                                                                                                            process safety elements: management of                accidental release of a regulated
                                                      14 See 82 FR 4594, January 13, 2017: ‘‘Section 6(c)
                                                                                                            change, pre-startup review, contractors,              substance, or when a previous third-
                                                   of Executive Order 13650 requires the
                                                                                                            employee participation and hot work                   party audit failed to meet the specified
                                                   Administrator of EPA to review the chemical                                                                    competency or independence criteria.
                                                   hazards covered by the Risk Management Program           permits. The Program 3 prevention
                                                   and expand, implement and enforce the Risk               program is fundamentally identical to                 Requirements were established in new
                                                   Management Program to address any additional             the OSHA PSM standard and designed                    § 68.59 and § 68.80 for third-party
                                                   hazards.’’                                                                                                     auditor competency, independence, and
                                                                                                            to cover those processes in the chemical
                                                      15 Documents and information related to
                                                                                                                                                                  responsibilities and for third-party audit
                                                   development of the list rule can be found in the         industry. For further explanation and
                                                                                                                                                                  reports and audit findings response
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   EPA docket for the rulemaking, docket number A–
                                                   91–74.                                                      18 See ten industry NAICS codes listed at
                                                                                                                                                                  reports.
                                                      16 Documents and information related to
                                                                                                            § 68.10(d)(1) representing pulp mills, petroleum         (3) A requirement in § 68.67(c)(8) for
                                                   development of the RMP rule can be found in EPA          refineries, petrochemical manufacturing, alkalies     facilities with Program 3 regulated
                                                   docket number A–91–73.                                   and chlorine manufacturing, all other basic           processes in North American Industrial
                                                      17 40 CFR part 68 applies to owners and operators     inorganic chemical manufacturing, cyclic crude and    Classification System (NAICS) codes
                                                   of stationary sources that have more than a TQ of        intermediates manufacturing, all other basic
                                                   a regulated substance within a process. The              chemical manufacturing, plastic material and resin    322 (paper manufacturing), 324
                                                   regulations do not apply to chemical hazards other       manufacturing, nitrogenous fertilizer manufacturing
                                                   than listed substances held above a TQ within a          and pesticide and other agricultural chemicals          19 Available at https://www.osha.gov/chemical

                                                   regulated process.                                       manufacturing.                                        executiveorder/psm_terminology.html.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00009   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24858                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   (petroleum and coal products                            the affected process being                            requirement for PHA to address the
                                                   manufacturing), and 325 (chemical                       decommissioned or destroyed; added                    findings from all incident investigations
                                                   manufacturing) to conduct a safer                       paragraph (c) to § 68.60 to require for               required under § 68.81, as well as any
                                                   technology and alternatives analysis                    Program 2 processes, incident                         other potential failure scenarios.
                                                   (STAA) as part of their process hazard                  investigation teams to be established                    • § 68.3 Definitions—added
                                                   analysis (PHA). This required the owner                 and consist of at least one person                    definitions for terms active measures,
                                                   or operator to address safer technology                 knowledgeable in the process involved                 inherently safer technology or design,
                                                   and alternative risk management                         and other persons with appropriate                    passive measures, practicability, and
                                                   measures applicable to eliminating or                   knowledge and experience to
                                                                                                                                                                 procedural measures related to
                                                   reducing risk from process hazards; to                  thoroughly investigate and analyze the
                                                                                                                                                                 amendments to requirements in § 68.67.
                                                   consider, in the following order or                     incident; redesignated paragraphs (c)
                                                                                                                                                                 Added definition of root cause related
                                                   preference, inherently safer                            through (f) in § 68.60 as paragraphs (d)
                                                                                                                                                                 to amendments to requirements in
                                                   technologies, passive measures, active                  through (g); revised redesignated
                                                   measures and procedural measures                        paragraph (d) in § 68.60 and paragraph                § 68.60 and § 68.81. Added definition
                                                   while using any combination of risk                     (d) in § 68.81 to require an incident                 for term third-party audit related to
                                                   management measures to achieve the                      investigation report to be prepared and               amendments to requirements in § 68.58
                                                   desired risk reduction; and to evaluate                 completed within 12 months of the                     and added § 68.59.
                                                   the practicability of any inherently safer              incident, unless the implementing                        EPA now proposes to rescind all of
                                                   technologies and designs considered.                    agency approves, in writing, an                       the above changes, with the exception of
                                                      (4) The RMP Amendments rule also                     extension of time, and added paragraph                the two changes that would revise the
                                                   made several other minor changes to the                 (g) in § 68.60 to require investigation               term ‘‘Material Safety Data Sheets’’ to
                                                   Subparts C and D prevention program                     reports to be retained for five years; and            ‘‘Safety Data Sheets (SDS)’’ in §§ 68.48
                                                   requirements. These included the                        in § 68.60 replaced the word                          and 68.65. This includes deleting the
                                                   following:                                              ‘‘summary’’ in redesignated paragraph                 words ‘‘for each covered process’’ from
                                                      • § 68.48 Safety information—                        (d) with ‘‘report.’’ The following                    the compliance audit provisions in
                                                   changed requirement in subparagraph                     changes were made in both paragraph                   § 68.58 and § 68.79, which apply to
                                                   (a)(1) to maintain Safety Data Sheets                   (d) of § 68.81 and redesignated                       RMP Program 2 and Program 3,
                                                   (SDS) in lieu of Material Safety Data                   paragraph (d) of § 68.60 to specify                   respectively. EPA proposes to rescind
                                                   Sheets.                                                 additional required contents of the                   the requirements to report the following
                                                      • § 68.50 Hazard review—added                        investigation report: revised paragraph               data elements in the risk management
                                                   language to existing subparagraph (a)(2)                (d)(1) to include time and location of the            plan: in § 68.170 (i), whether the most
                                                   to require hazard reviews to include                    incident; revised paragraph (d)(3) to                 recent compliance audit was a third-
                                                   findings from incident investigations                   require that description of incident be in            party audit, pursuant to §§ 68.58 and
                                                   when identifying opportunities for                      chronological order, with all relevant                68.59; in § 68.175 (k), whether the most
                                                   equipment malfunctions or human                         facts provided; redesignated and revised              recent compliance audit was a third-
                                                   errors that could cause an accidental                   paragraph (d)(4) into paragraph (d)(7) to             party audit, pursuant to §§ 68.79 and
                                                   release.                                                require that the factors that contributed             68.80; and in § 68.175 (e)(7), inherently
                                                      • §§ 68.54 and 68.71 Training—                       to the incident include the initiating                safer technology or design measures
                                                   changed description of employee(s)                      event, direct and indirect contributing;              implemented since the last PHA, if any,
                                                   ‘‘operating a process’’ to ‘‘involved in                added new paragraph (d)(4) to require                 and the technology category
                                                   operating a process’’ in § 68.54                        the name and amount of the regulated                  (substitution, minimization,
                                                   paragraphs (a) and (b), and changed                     substance involved in the release (e.g.               simplification and/or moderation). In
                                                   ‘‘operators’’ to ‘‘employees involved in                fire, explosion, toxic gas loss of                    § 68.175(e), EPA proposes to rescind the
                                                   operating a process’’ in § 68.54 (d). EPA               containment) or near miss and the                     Amendments rule’s deletion of the
                                                   also added paragraph (e) in § 68.54 and                 duration of the event; added new                      expected date of completion of any
                                                   paragraph (d) in § 68.71 to make                        paragraph (d)(5) to require the                       changes resulting from the PHA for
                                                   employee training requirements also                     consequences, if any, of the incident                 program 3 facilities. Adding back this
                                                   apply to supervisors responsible for                    including, but not limited to: injuries,              requirement would revert reporting of
                                                   directing process operations (under                     fatalities, the number of people                      the PHA information in the risk
                                                   § 68.54) and supervisors with process                   evacuated, the number of people                       management plan to what is currently
                                                   operational responsibilities (under                     sheltered in place, and the impact on                 required by the existing in-effect rule.
                                                   § 68.71).                                               the environment; added new paragraph
                                                      • §§ 68.58 and 68.79 Compliance                                                                            This would also be consistent with the
                                                                                                           (d)(6) to require the emergency response              similar § 68.170 (e) requirement for
                                                   audits—changes to paragraph (a) for                     actions taken; and redesignated and
                                                   Program 2 and Program 3 provisions                                                                            Program 2 facilities to report the
                                                                                                           revised paragraph (d)(5) of § 68.81 and               expected date of completion of any
                                                   added language to clarify that the owner                paragraph (c)(5) of § 68.60 into
                                                   or operator must evaluate compliance                                                                          changes resulting from the hazard
                                                                                                           paragraphs (d)(8) of both sections to                 review, a requirement that was not
                                                   with each covered process every three                   require that the investigation
                                                   years.                                                                                                        deleted in the Amendments rule. EPA
                                                                                                           recommendations have a schedule for
                                                      • §§ 68.60 and 68.81 Incident                                                                              also proposes to rescind the requirement
                                                                                                           being addressed.
                                                                                                                                                                 in § 68.190 (c), that prior to de-
                                                                                                              • § 68.65 Process safety information—
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   investigation—made the following
                                                   changes: Revised paragraph (a) in both                  change to paragraph (a) required the                  registration, the owner or operator shall
                                                   sections by adding clarifying text ‘‘(i.e.,             owner or operator to keep process safety              meet applicable reporting and incident
                                                   a near miss)’’ to describe an incident                  information up-to-date; change to Note                investigation requirements in
                                                   that could reasonably have resulted in a                to paragraph (b) revised the term                     accordance with §§ 68.42, 68.60 and/or
                                                   catastrophic release; revised paragraph                 ‘‘Material Safety Data Sheets’’ to ‘‘Safety           68.81.
                                                   (a) in both sections to require                         Data Sheets (SDS).’’                                     Alternatively, EPA proposes to
                                                   investigation when an incident resulting                   • § 68.67 Process hazard analysis—                 rescind all of the above changes, except
                                                   in catastrophic releases also results in                change to subparagraph (c)(2) added                   for the following:


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00010   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                            24859

                                                     • Requirement in § 68.50(a)(2) for the                request the information, as well as                   (CSISSFRRA).20 The provisions for
                                                   hazard review to include findings from                  information on where members of the                   classified information in § 68.210(f) will
                                                   incident investigations;                                public may access information on                      also be retained but are separately
                                                     • Retain the term ‘‘report(s)’’ in place              community preparedness, including                     proposed to be incorporated into the
                                                   of the word ‘‘summary(ies)’’ in § 68.60;                shelter-in-place and evacuation                       emergency response coordination
                                                     • Requirement in § 68.60 for Program                  procedures;                                           section of the rule. EPA proposes to
                                                   2 processes to establish an incident                       (3) A requirement for the owner or                 delete the provision for CBI in
                                                   investigation team consisting of at least               operator to provide the requested                     § 68.210(g), because the only remaining
                                                   one person knowledgeable in the                         chemical hazard information within 45                 provision for public information
                                                   process involved and other persons with                 days of receiving a request from any                  availability in this section (other than
                                                   experience to investigate an incident;                  member of the public, and;                            the provision for RMP availability) is
                                                     • Requirements in §§ 68.54 and 68.71                     (4) A requirement to hold a public                 the requirement to provide at a public
                                                   for training requirements to apply to                   meeting to provide accident information               meeting, the information required in the
                                                   supervisors responsible for process                     required under § 68.42 as well as other               source’s five-year accident history,
                                                   operations and minor wording changes                    relevant chemical hazard information,                 which § 68.151(b)(3) prohibits the
                                                   involving the description of employees                  no later than 90 days after any accident              owner or operator from claiming as CBI.
                                                   operating a process in § 68.54; and,                    subject to reporting under § 68.42.                   EPA proposes to rescind the
                                                     • Retain the two changes that would                      Additionally, the RMP Amendments                   requirements in § 68.160(b)(21) to report
                                                   revise the term ‘‘Material Safety Data                  rule added provisions to § 68.210 to                  in the risk management plan, the
                                                   Sheets’’ to ‘‘Safety Data Sheets (SDS)’’ in             address classified information and                    method of communication and location
                                                   §§ 68.48 and 68.65.                                     confidential business information (CBI)               of the notification that hazard
                                                     EPA requests public comment on the                    claims for information required to be                 information is available to the public,
                                                   Agency’s proposal to rescind and                        provided to the public, and made a                    pursuant to § 68.210(c). EPA requests
                                                   modify the prevention requirements of                   minor change to the existing paragraph                public comment on the Agency’s
                                                   the RMP Amendments rule, as well as                     (a) RMP availability, to add a reference              proposal to rescind and modify the
                                                   the alternatives described above.                       to 40 CFR part 1400 for controlling                   public information availability
                                                                                                           public access to RMPs.                                requirements of the RMP Amendments
                                                   B. Rescind Information Availability                        EPA now proposes for security                      rule, as well as the alternatives
                                                   Amendments                                              reasons to rescind the requirements for               described above.
                                                     In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA                       providing to the public upon request,
                                                   added several new provisions to                         chemical hazard information and access                C. Modify Local Coordination
                                                   § 68.210—Availability of information to                 to community emergency preparedness                   Amendments
                                                   the public. These included:                             information in § 68.210 (b) through (d),                 In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA
                                                     (1) A requirement for the owner or                    as well as rescind the requirement to                 required owners or operators of
                                                   operator to provide, upon request by                    provide the ‘‘other chemical hazard                   ‘‘responding’’ and ‘‘non-responding’’
                                                   any member of the public, specified                     information such as that described in                 stationary sources to perform emergency
                                                   chemical hazard information for all                     paragraph (b) of this section’’ at public             response coordination activities
                                                   regulated processes, as applicable,                     meetings required under § 68.210(e).                  required under new § 68.93. These
                                                   including:                                              Alternatively, EPA proposes to rescind                activities included coordinating
                                                     • Names of regulated substances held                  all of the information elements in                    response needs at least annually with
                                                   in a process,                                           § 68.210 (b) through (d), as well as                  local emergency planning and response
                                                     • SDSs for all regulated substances                   rescind the requirement to provide the                organizations, as well as documenting
                                                   located at the facility,                                ‘‘other chemical hazard information                   these coordination activities. The RMP
                                                     • Accident history information                        such as that described in paragraph (b)               Amendments rule required coordination
                                                   required to be reported under § 68.42,                  of this section’’ at public meetings                  to include providing to the local
                                                     • Emergency response program                          required under § 68.210(e), except for                emergency planning and response
                                                   information, including whether or not                   the requirement in § 68.210(b)(5) for the             organizations the stationary source’s
                                                   the source responds to releases of                      owner or operator to provide a list of                emergency response plan if one exists,
                                                   regulated substances, name and phone                    scheduled exercises required under                    emergency action plan, updated
                                                   number of local emergency response                      § 68.96. EPA will retain the requirement              emergency contact information, and any
                                                   organizations, and procedures for                       in § 68.210(e) for owner/operator of a                other information that local emergency
                                                   informing the public and local                          stationary source to hold a public                    planning and response organizations
                                                   emergency response agencies about                       meeting to provide accident information               identify as relevant to local emergency
                                                   accidental releases,                                    required under § 68.42 no later than 90               response planning. For responding
                                                     • A list of scheduled exercises                       days after any accident subject to                    stationary sources, coordination must
                                                   required under § 68.96 (i.e., new                       reporting under § 68.42, but clarifying               also include consulting with local
                                                   emergency exercise provisions of the                    that the information to be provided is                emergency response officials to
                                                   RMP Amendments rule), and;                              the data listed in § 68.42(b). This data              establish appropriate schedules and
                                                     • Local Emergency Planning                            would be provided for only the most                   plans for field and tabletop exercises
                                                   Committees (LEPC) contact information;                  recent accident, and not for previous                 required under § 68.96(b). Owners or
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                     (2) A requirement for the owner or                    accidents covered by the 5-year accident              operators of responding and non-
                                                   operator to provide ongoing notification                history requirement of § 68.42(a). EPA                responding sources are required to
                                                   on a company website, social media                      will retain the change to paragraph (a)               request an opportunity to meet with the
                                                   platforms, or through other publicly                    ‘‘RMP availability’’ which added                      local emergency planning committee (or
                                                   accessible means that the above                         availability under 40 CFR part 1400                   equivalent) and/or local fire department
                                                   information is available to the public                  (addresses restrictions on disclosing                 as appropriate to review and discuss
                                                   upon request, along with the                            RMP offsite consequence analysis under                these materials.
                                                   information elements that may be                        the Chemical Safety Information, Site
                                                   requested and instructions for how to                   Security and Fuels Regulatory Relief Act                20 EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0135.




                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00011   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24860                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                      EPA now proposes to modify the local                 RMP Amendments rule), January 13,                     emergency response program, as
                                                   coordination amendments by deleting                     2017. EPA requests public comment on                  appropriate.
                                                   the phrase in § 68.93(b), ‘‘. . . and any               the Agency’s proposal to modify the                      Æ Tabletop exercises must include
                                                   other information that local emergency                  local coordination requirements of the                discussions of procedures to notify the
                                                   planning and response organizations                     RMP Amendments rule, as well as the                   public and the appropriate Federal,
                                                   identify as relevant to local emergency                 alternatives described above.                         state, and local emergency response
                                                   response planning.’’ Alternatively, EPA                                                                       agencies; procedures and measures for
                                                   proposes to change this phrase to read:                 D. Modify Exercise Amendments                         emergency response including
                                                   ‘‘other information necessary for                          In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA                    evacuations and medical treatment;
                                                   developing and implementing the local                   added a new section entitled § 68.96                  identification of facility emergency
                                                   emergency response plan.’’ Under both                   Emergency response exercises. This                    response personnel and/or contractors
                                                   alternatives, EPA also proposes to                      section contained several new                         and their responsibilities; coordination
                                                   incorporate appropriate classified                      provisions, including:                                with local emergency responders;
                                                   information and CBI protections to                         • Notification exercises: At least once            procedures for emergency response
                                                   regulated substance and stationary                      each calendar year, the owner or                      equipment deployment; and any other
                                                   source information required to be                       operator of a stationary source with any              action identified in the emergency
                                                   provided under § 68.93.                                 Program 2 or Program 3 process must                   response plan, as appropriate.
                                                      EPA is retaining the requirement in                  conduct an exercise of the stationary                    • For both field and tabletop
                                                   § 68.95(a)(1)(i) for responding facilities              source’s emergency response                           exercises, the RMP Amendments rule
                                                   to update their facility emergency                      notification mechanisms.                              requires the owner or operator to
                                                   response plans to include appropriate                      Æ Owners or operators of responding                prepare an evaluation report within 90
                                                   changes based on information obtained                   stationary sources are allowed to                     days of each exercise. The report must
                                                   from coordination activities, emergency                 perform the notification exercise as part             include a description of the exercise
                                                   response exercises, incident                            of the tabletop and field exercises                   scenario, names and organizations of
                                                   investigations or other information. In                 required in new § 68.96(b).                           each participant, an evaluation of the
                                                   addition, EPA will retain the                              Æ The owner/operator must maintain                 exercise results including lessons
                                                   requirement in § 68.95(4) that                                                                                learned, recommendations for
                                                                                                           a written record of each notification
                                                   emergency response plan notification                                                                          improvement or revisions to the
                                                                                                           exercise conducted over the last five
                                                   procedures must inform appropriate                                                                            emergency response exercise program
                                                                                                           years.
                                                   Federal and state emergency response                                                                          and emergency response program, and a
                                                                                                              • Emergency response exercise
                                                   agencies, as well as local agencies and                                                                       schedule to promptly address and
                                                                                                           program: The owner or operator of a
                                                   the public.                                                                                                   resolve recommendations.
                                                                                                           responding stationary source must                        • The RMP Amendments rule also
                                                      EPA proposes to retain language in
                                                                                                           develop and implement an exercise                     contains a provision for alternative
                                                   § 68.93(b) referring to field and tabletop
                                                   exercise schedules and plans with a                     program for its emergency response                    means of meeting exercise requirements,
                                                   proposal to retain some form of field                   program.                                              which allows the owner or operator to
                                                   and tabletop exercise requirement.                         Æ Exercises must involve facility                  satisfy the requirement to conduct
                                                   Alternatively, in conjunction with an                   emergency response personnel and, as                  notification, field and/or tabletop
                                                   alternative proposal to rescind field and               appropriate, emergency response                       exercises through exercises conducted
                                                   tabletop exercise requirements (see                     contractors.                                          to meet other Federal, state or local
                                                   ‘‘Modify exercise amendments’’ below),                     Æ The emergency response exercise                  exercise requirements, or by responding
                                                   the Agency also proposes to rescind this                program must include field and tabletop               to an actual accidental release.
                                                   language.                                               exercises involving the simulated                        EPA is now proposing to modify the
                                                      EPA is proposing no other changes to                 accidental release of a regulated                     exercise program provisions of
                                                   the local coordination requirements of                  substance.                                            § 68.96(b), as requested by state and
                                                   the RMP Amendments rule. Under                             Æ Under the RMP Amendments rule,                   local response officials, by removing the
                                                   either alternative proposed above, the                  the owner or operator is required to                  minimum frequency requirement for
                                                   following provisions would remain                       consult with local emergency response                 field exercises and establishing more
                                                   unchanged: The provisions of paragraph                  officials to establish an appropriate                 flexible scope and documentation
                                                   (b) requiring coordination to include                   frequency for exercises, but at a                     provisions for both field and tabletop
                                                   providing to the local emergency                        minimum, the owner or operator must                   exercises. Under this proposal, EPA
                                                   planning and response organizations the                 hold a tabletop exercise at least once                would retain the final RMP
                                                   stationary source’s emergency response                  every three years, and a field exercise at            Amendments rule requirement for the
                                                   plan if one exists, emergency action                    least once every ten years.                           owner or operator to attempt to consult
                                                   plan, and updated emergency contact                        Æ Field exercises must include tests               with local response officials to establish
                                                   information, as well as the requirement                 of procedures to notify the public and                appropriate frequencies and plans for
                                                   for the owner or operator to request an                 the appropriate Federal, state, and local             field and tabletop exercises. The
                                                   opportunity to meet with the local                      emergency response agencies about an                  minimum frequency for tabletop
                                                   emergency planning committee (or                        accidental release; tests of procedures               exercises would remain at three years.
                                                   equivalent) and/or local fire department                and measures for emergency response                   However, there would be no minimum
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   as appropriate to review and discuss                    actions including evacuations and                     frequency specified for field exercises in
                                                   these materials. For provisions of the                  medical treatment; tests of                           order to reduce burden on regulated
                                                   RMP Amendments that we propose to                       communications systems; mobilization                  facilities and local responders as
                                                   retain, we continue to rely on the                      of facility emergency response                        explained in rationale section IV. D. 5.
                                                   rationale and responses we provided                     personnel, including contractors, as                  Costs of Field and Tabletop Exercises.
                                                   when we promulgated the                                 appropriate; coordination with local                  Documentation of both types of
                                                   Amendments. See 81 FR 13671–74                          emergency responders; emergency                       exercises would still be required, but
                                                   (proposed RMP Amendments rule),                         response equipment deployment; and                    the items specified for inclusion in
                                                   March 14, 2016, 82 FR 4653–58 (final                    any other action identified in the                    exercises and exercise evaluation


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00012   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                             24861

                                                   reports under the RMP Amendments                        regulations require emergency response                unless otherwise stated, by March 15,
                                                   rule would be recommended, and not                      exercises.                                            2021; and;
                                                   required. The content of exercise                          Alternatively, EPA is considering                     • Required the owner or operator to
                                                   evaluation reports would be left to the                 whether to fully rescind the field and                correct or resubmit their RMP to reflect
                                                   reasonable judgement of stationary                      tabletop exercise provisions of                       new and revised data elements
                                                   source owners or operators and local                    § 68.96(b). Under this alternative                    promulgated in the RMP Amendments
                                                   emergency response officials. As                        proposal, EPA would retain the                        rule by March 14, 2022.
                                                   described in the RMP Amendments                         notification exercise provision of                       EPA did not specify compliance dates
                                                   rule, if local emergency response                       § 68.96(a), but revise it and § 68.93(b) to           for the other minor changes to the
                                                   officials declined the owner or                         remove any reference to tabletop and                  Subpart C and D prevention program
                                                                                                           field exercises, while also modifying the             requirements. Therefore, under the RMP
                                                   operator’s request for consultation on
                                                                                                           provision in § 68.96(c) for alternative               Amendments rule, compliance with
                                                   and/or participation in exercises, the
                                                                                                           means of meeting exercise requirements                these provisions was required on the
                                                   owner or operator would be allowed to
                                                                                                           so that it applies only to notification               effective date of the RMP Amendments
                                                   unilaterally establish appropriate                                                                            rule. EPA now proposes to extend
                                                   frequencies and plans for the exercises                 exercises.
                                                                                                              EPA is also considering another                    compliance dates as follows:
                                                   (provided that the frequency for tabletop                                                                        • For emergency response
                                                                                                           alternative—to remove the minimum
                                                   exercises does not exceed three years),                                                                       coordination activities, EPA proposes to
                                                                                                           frequency requirement for field
                                                   and conduct exercises without the                                                                             require compliance by one year after the
                                                                                                           exercises, but retain all remaining
                                                   participation of local emergency                                                                              effective date of a final rule.
                                                                                                           provisions of the RMP Amendments
                                                   response officials. Likewise, if local                  rule regarding field and tabletop                        • For emergency response exercises,
                                                   emergency response officials and the                    exercises, including the RMP                          EPA proposes to require owners and
                                                   facility owner or operator cannot agree                 Amendments rule requirements for                      operators to have exercise plans and
                                                   on the appropriate frequency and plan                   exercise scope and documentation.                     schedules meeting the requirements of
                                                   for an exercise, owners and operators                      EPA requests public comment on the                 § 68.96 in place by four years after the
                                                   must still ensure that exercises occur                  Agency’s proposal to modify the                       effective date of a final rule. EPA also
                                                   and should establish plans to execute                   exercise requirements of the RMP                      proposes to require owners and
                                                   the exercises on their own. The RMP                     Amendments rule, as well as the                       operators to have completed their first
                                                   Amendments rule does not require local                  alternatives described above.                         notification drill by five years after the
                                                   responders to participate in any of these                                                                     effective date of a final rule, and to have
                                                   activities, nor would this proposal.                    E. Revise Emergency Response Contacts                 completed their first tabletop exercise
                                                                                                           Provided in RMP                                       by 7 years after the effective date of a
                                                      This proposal would not alter the
                                                   notification exercise requirement of                      EPA proposes to modify the                          final rule. Under this proposal, there
                                                   § 68.96(a) or the provision for                         emergency response contact information                would be no specific compliance date
                                                   alternative means of meeting exercise                   required to be provided in a facility’s               specified for field exercises, because
                                                                                                           RMP. In § 68.180(a)(1) of the                         field exercises would be conducted
                                                   requirements of § 68.96(c). EPA
                                                                                                           Amendments rule, EPA required the                     according to a schedule developed by
                                                   proposes to correct an error in
                                                                                                           owner or operator to provide the name,                the owner or operator in consultation
                                                   § 68.96(b)(2)(i) related to the frequency
                                                                                                           organizational affiliation, phone                     with local emergency responders.
                                                   of tabletop exercises by proposing to                                                                            • For corrections or resubmissions of
                                                   replace the phrase ‘‘shall conduct a field              number, and email address of local
                                                                                                           emergency planning and response                       RMPs to reflect reporting on new and
                                                   exercise every three years’’ with ‘‘shall                                                                     revised data elements (public meeting
                                                   conduct a tabletop exercise every three                 organizations with which the stationary
                                                                                                           source last coordinated emergency                     information and emergency response
                                                   years.’’ For provisions of the RMP                                                                            program and exercises), EPA proposes
                                                   Amendments that we propose to retain,                   response efforts. EPA now proposes to
                                                                                                           modify this requirement to read: ‘‘Name,              to require compliance by five years after
                                                   we continue to rely on the rationale and                                                                      the effective date of a final rule.
                                                   responses we provided when we                           phone number, and email address of
                                                                                                           local emergency planning and response                    • For third-party audits, STAA, root
                                                   promulgated the Amendments. See 81                                                                            cause analyses and other new
                                                   FR 13674–76 (proposed RMP                               organizations. . . .’’
                                                                                                                                                                 provisions of the RMP Amendments
                                                   Amendments rule), March 16, 2016 and                    F. Revise Compliance Dates                            rule for incident investigations and
                                                   82 FR 4659–67 (final RMP Amendments                       In the RMP Amendments rule, EPA                     chemical hazard information
                                                   rule), January 13, 2017. In summary,                    required compliance with the new                      availability and notice of availability of
                                                   EPA found that exercising an emergency                  provisions as follows:                                information, as well as other minor
                                                   response plan is critical to ensure that                  • Required compliance with                          changes to the Subpart C and D
                                                   response personnel understand their                     emergency response coordination                       prevention program requirements
                                                   roles, that local emergency responders                  activities by March 14, 2018;                         (except for the two changes that would
                                                   are familiar with the hazards at the                      • Required compliance with the                      revise the term ‘‘Material Safety Data
                                                   facility, and that the emergency                        emergency response program                            Sheets’’ to ‘‘Safety Data Sheets (SDS)’’ in
                                                   response plan is appropriate and up-to-                 requirements of § 68.95 within three                  §§ 68.48 and 68.65), EPA is proposing to
                                                   date. Exercises also ensure that                        years of when the owner or operator                   rescind these provisions. However, if a
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   personnel are properly trained and                      initially determines that the stationary              final rule does not rescind these
                                                   lessons learned from exercises can be                   source is subject to those requirements;              provisions, EPA proposes to require
                                                   used to identify future training needs.                   • Required compliance with other                    compliance with any of these provisions
                                                   Poor emergency response procedures                      major provisions (i.e., third-party                   that are not rescinded, by four years
                                                   during some recent accidents have                       compliance audits, root cause analyses                after the effective date of a final rule.
                                                   highlighted the need for facilities to                  and other added requirements to                          • For the public meeting requirement
                                                   conduct periodic emergency response                     incident investigations, STAA,                        in § 68.210(b), EPA proposes to require
                                                   exercises. Other EPA and federal agency                 emergency response exercises, and                     compliance by two years after the
                                                   programs and some state and local                       information availability provisions),                 effective date of a final rule.


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00013   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24862                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                      • EPA is retaining the requirement to                facilities and local response agencies.               G. Corrections to Cross Referenced CFR
                                                   comply with the emergency response                      Also, EPA plans to publish guidance for               Sections
                                                   program requirements of § 68.95 within                  emergency response exercises and once                    EPA proposes to correct CFR section
                                                   three years of when the owner or                        these materials are complete, owners                  numbers that are cross referenced in
                                                   operator initially determines that the                  and operators will need time to                       certain sections of the rule because
                                                   stationary source is subject to those                   familiarize themselves with the                       these were changes necessitated by
                                                   requirements.                                           materials and use them to plan and                    addition and redesignation of
                                                      For provisions of the RMP                            develop their exercises. If local                     paragraphs pertaining to provisions in
                                                   Amendments that we propose to retain,                   emergency response organizations are to               the Amendments rule but were
                                                   we continue to rely on the rationale and                be able to participate in the field and               overlooked at the time. Table 4 contains
                                                   responses we provided when we
                                                                                                           tabletop exercises, sufficient time is                a list of these corrections.
                                                   promulgated the Amendments. See 81
                                                                                                           needed to accommodate any time or
                                                   FR 13686–91 proposed RMP
                                                   Amendments rule), March 14, 2016 and                    resource limitations local responders                   TABLE 4—CORRECTIONS TO CROSS
                                                   82 FR 4675–80 (final RMP Amendments                     might have not only for participating in                 REFERENCED SECTION NUMBERS
                                                   rule), January 13, 2017. In summary,                    exercises, but for helping to plan them.
                                                                                                              For the public meeting requirement in                In section:        Change in section reference
                                                   EPA found that one year was sufficient
                                                   to arrange and document coordination                    § 68.210(b), EPA proposes to require                  68.12(b) .........   68.10(b) should be 68.10(g).
                                                   activities, three years was needed to                   compliance by two years after the                     68.12(c) .........   68.10(c) should be 68.10(h).
                                                   comply with emergency response                          effective date of a final rule. The RMP               68.12(d) .........   68.10(d) should be 68.10(i).
                                                   program requirements, four years was                    Amendments rule allows four years for                 68.12(b)(4) .....    68.10(b)(1) should be
                                                   necessary to comply with exercise                       compliance for the public meeting                                            68.10(g)(1).
                                                   provisions, and five years was necessary                which was consistent with the                         68.96(a) .........   68.90(a)(2) should be
                                                   to update risk management plans.                                                                                                     68.90(b)(3).
                                                                                                           compliance date for other information to
                                                      Three years to develop an emergency                                                                        68.180(a)(1) ...     68.10(f)(3) should be
                                                                                                           be required to the public by § 68.210.                                       68.10(g)(3).
                                                   response program is necessary for                       However, EPA is proposing to remove
                                                   facility owners and operators to                                                                              68.215(a)(2)(i)      68.10(a) should be 69.10(a)
                                                                                                           the requirement to provide to the public                                     through (f).
                                                   understand the requirements, arrange
                                                                                                           the chemical hazard information in
                                                   for emergency response resources and
                                                                                                           § 68.210 (b), the notice of availability of           IV. Rationale for Rescissions and
                                                   train personnel to respond to an
                                                   accidental release. Compliance with                     information in § 68.210(c) and the                    Modifications
                                                   emergency coordination requirements                     timeframe for providing information
                                                                                                                                                                 A. Maintain Consistency in Accident
                                                   could require up to one year because                    68.210(d) as well proposing to remove
                                                                                                                                                                 Prevention Requirements
                                                   some facilities who have not been                       the requirement to provide the chemical
                                                                                                           hazard information in § 68.210 (b) at the               In both the RMP Coalition Petition
                                                   regularly coordinating will need time to
                                                                                                           public meeting. The stationary source                 and the CSAG Petition, the petitioners
                                                   get familiar with the new requirements,
                                                                                                           would be required to provide the                      seek reconsideration of the RMP
                                                   while having some flexibility in
                                                                                                           chemical accident data elements                       Amendments based on what they view
                                                   scheduling and preparing for
                                                   coordination meetings with local                        specified in § 68.42, data which should               as either EPA’s failure to coordinate
                                                   emergency response organizations                        already be familiar to the source because             with OSHA and DOT as required by
                                                   whose resources and time for                            this information is currently required to             paragraph (D) of CAA section 112(r)(7)
                                                   coordination may be limited. A shorter                  be reported in their risk management                  or at least inadequate coordination. For
                                                   timeframe may be difficult to comply                    plan. Thus, two years should be enough                example, CSAG’s petition comments: 21
                                                   with, especially for RMP sources whose                  time for facilities to be prepared to                    Stakeholders have repeatedly asked EPA
                                                   local emergency organization has many                   provide the required information at a                 why it is pursuing this effort in isolation
                                                   RMP sources in their jurisdiction who                   public meeting after an RMP reportable                when Congress directed it to coordinate any
                                                   are trying to schedule coordination                                                                           requirements under Clean Air Act Section
                                                                                                           accident. EPA seeks comment on
                                                                                                                                                                 112(r) with certain industry standards, and
                                                   meetings with local responders at the                   whether a sooner compliance date is                   with those issued for comparable purposes
                                                   same time.                                              more appropriate.                                     by OSHA and U.S. Department of
                                                      For the emergency exercises, EPA is                                                                        Transportation (DOT). This directive to
                                                                                                              With regard to the five-year
                                                   proposing a four year compliance time                                                                         coordinate was repeated in E.O. 13650
                                                   for developing exercise plans and                       compliance date for updating RMPs
                                                                                                                                                                 (footnotes omitted).
                                                   schedules, an additional year for                       with newly-required information, EPA
                                                   conducting the first notification                       is proposing this time frame because                  The RMP Coalition notes that OSHA
                                                   exercise, and an additional three years                 EPA will need time to revise its RMP                  had been reexamining the PSM standard
                                                   for conducting the first tabletop                       submission guidance for any provisions                under E.O. 13650 but ‘‘ha[d] yet to
                                                   exercise, because EPA believes that                     finalized and also to revise its risk                 complete the PSM standard rulemaking
                                                   additional time is necessary for sources                management plan submission system,                    process and the timeframe for that
                                                   to understand the new requirements for                  RMP*eSubmit, to include additional                    regulation is unclear.’’ 22
                                                   notification, field and tabletop                        data elements. Sources will not be able               1. What was EPA’s approach to
                                                                                                           to update risk management plans until
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   exercises, train facility personnel on                                                                        coordination with other agencies prior
                                                   how to plan and conduct these                           the revised RMP*eSubmit system is                     to E.O. 13650?
                                                   exercises, coordinate with local                        ready. Also, once the software is ready,
                                                                                                           some additional time is needed to allow                 Both EPA’s 40 CFR part 68 RMP
                                                   responders to plan and schedule
                                                                                                           sources to update their risk management               regulation and OSHA’s 29 CFR 1910.119
                                                   exercises, and carry out the exercises.
                                                   Additional time will also provide                       plans while preventing potential                        21 CSAG Petition, pg. 25, document ID: EPA–HQ–
                                                   owners and operators with flexibility to                problems with thousands of sources                    OEM–2015–0725–0766.
                                                   plan, schedule, and conduct exercises in                submitting updated risk management                      22 RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 19, Document ID:

                                                   a manner which is least burdensome for                  plans on the same day.                                EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0759.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00014   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                   24863

                                                   PSM standard were authorized under                      all three Programs.23 The Program 3                   Commitment.’’ 25 In justifying its pre-
                                                   the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990.                   prevention program finalized in 1996                  regulatory ‘‘Request for Information’’
                                                   Both the OSHA PSM standard and the                      includes requirements of the OSHA                     notice that raised for discussion
                                                   EPA RMP rule aim to prevent or                          PSM standard 29 CFR 1910.119 (c)                      potential amendments to the risk
                                                   minimize the consequences of                            through (m) and (o), with minor                       management program, EPA noted that
                                                   accidental chemical releases and protect                wording changes to address statutory                  E.O. 13650 had directed OSHA to
                                                   workers, the community and the                          differences. This makes it clear that one             publish an RFI on potentially amending
                                                   environment through implementation of                   accident prevention program to protect                the PSM standard, cited the
                                                   management program elements that                        workers, the general public, and the                  coordination requirement of CAA
                                                   integrate technologies, procedures and                  environment will satisfy both OSHA                    section 112(r)(7)(D), and found that
                                                   management practices. EPA’s RMP                         and EPA.24 These prevention program                   ‘‘[t]his RFI will allow EPA to evaluate
                                                   regulation has a large overlap with the                 requirements in Program 3 cover                       any potential updates to the RMP
                                                   PSM standard and both were written to                   employee participation, process safety                regulation in parallel to OSHA’s
                                                   complement each other in                                information, process hazard analysis,                 evaluation of potential updates to the
                                                   accomplishing these Congressional                       operating procedures, training,                       PSM standard.’’ 79 FR 44604, July 31,
                                                   goals.                                                  contractors, pre-startup safety review,               2014 at 44605 (emphasis added).
                                                      The 1996 Risk Management Program                     mechanical integrity, hot work permits,               Nevertheless, when EPA proceeded to
                                                   rule and the related notice and                         management of change, incident                        rulemaking, we pushed forward with
                                                   supplemental notice of proposed                         investigation, and compliance audits.                 finalizing amendments to the Risk
                                                   rulemaking (60 FR 13526, March 13,                         Other provisions of the 1996 rule as               Management Program before OSHA had
                                                   1995) not only mention and reflect                      well as subsequent amendments to the                  evaluated all of the information before
                                                   consultations with both DOT and DOL–                    Risk Management Program reflect                       it and before EPA had an understanding
                                                   OSHA, but also show close coordination                  coordination with DOT. EPA has relied                 of OSHA’s future actions. In other
                                                   between the PSM standard and the EPA                    on DOT definitions for key terms and                  words, when EPA proceeded with its
                                                   program. In the proposed Risk                           allowed compliance with the hazardous                 rulemaking, we no longer emphasized
                                                   Management Program rule, EPA                            material regulations to satisfy                       proceeding in parallel.
                                                   proposed that all sources subject to                    requirements of EPA’s program. See 61                    Several commenters were critical
                                                   EPA’s rules comply with a prevention                    FR 31668, June 20, 1996 at 31700, 63 FR               about EPA’s approach to coordination
                                                   program based on the PSM standard.                      640, January 6, 1998, and 64 FR 28696,                with OSHA and other agencies during
                                                   See 58 FR 54190, 54195–96 (October 20,                  May 26, 1999 at 28698. The                            the development of the RMP
                                                   1993). The preamble to the proposed                     coordination with other agencies in the               Amendments. Many advanced theories
                                                   rulemaking contained an explanation of                  Risk Management Program helped to                     of OSHA ‘‘primacy’’ in the area of
                                                   the differences between PSM standard                    minimize burden and avoided requiring                 process safety and that EPA had
                                                   and the Risk Management Program and                     unduly duplicative and distinct                       impermissibly regulated workplace
                                                   a section-by-section comparison. Id. at                 compliance programs addressing the                    safety in violation of the statute. See
                                                   54203–05. In EPA’s view, ‘‘[e]xcept for                 same matters. In short, whenever                      Amendments RTC at 15–16,26 see also
                                                   the management system requirement                       possible, compliance with one agency’s                id. for EPA’s responses. Others claimed
                                                   . . . , the proposed EPA prevention                     program was compliance with all.                      EPA failed to coordinate with OSHA
                                                   program covers the same elements as                     2. What was EPA’s approach to                         and should cease its rulemaking until it
                                                   OSHA’s [PSM standard] and generally                     coordination under E.O. 13650 during                  did so. See Amendments RTC at 249–
                                                   uses identical language except where                    the development of the RMP                            51. Generally, EPA responded by
                                                   the statutory mandates of the two                       Amendments?                                           providing information on meetings and
                                                   agencies dictate differences.’’ Id. at                     EPA adopted a somewhat inconsistent                other interactions with OSHA during
                                                   54204. EPA retained a PSM standard-                     approach to the consultation and                      the rule development. Id.; see 82 FR
                                                   based prevention program (tier) in its                  coordination requirement in developing                4594, January 13, 2017 at 4601.
                                                   supplemental proposal. See 60 FR                        the Risk Management Program                           However, some commenters made the
                                                   13526, March 13, 1995 at 13529. In the                  Amendments of 2017. After the West                    more specific criticism that EPA should
                                                   1996 final rule, EPA placed all PSM                     Fertilizer fire and explosion on April 17,            have deferred proceeding with the RMP
                                                   standard-covered processes that were                    2013, EPA and OSHA, (along with DHS)                  Amendments until OSHA had a parallel
                                                   subject to EPA’s Risk Management                        as members of the Chemical Facility                   proposed rule amending the PSM
                                                   Program in program 3 for prevention                     Safety and Security Working Groups                    standard available. Amendments RTC at
                                                   (unless the process was eligible for                    established by Executive Order 13650,                 249–50. In response, EPA noted that
                                                   Program 1), and adopted language in                     continued to consult with each other on               each agency had distinct rulemaking
                                                   program 3 that even more closely                        their overlapping programs as they                    procedures and that the 1990 CAA
                                                   tracked PSM than had the proposal. See                  considered changes to existing chemical               Amendments allowed for and
                                                   61 FR 31668, June 20, 1996 at 31672–                    safety and security regulations. EPA and              contemplated each agency to proceed
                                                   3, 31677, 31686–8, 31692–3, 31696–7,                    OSHA discussed options for changes to                 with rulemaking on different schedules.
                                                   31708 and 31711–12. Those differences                   the RMP regulations and the OSHA                      Id. at 251. Furthermore, EPA noted that
                                                   in provisions between program 3 and                     PSM standard, respectively, in the May                OSHA had completed an advisory small
                                                   the PSM standard that did exist were
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                                                                           2014 document entitled ‘‘Executive
                                                   driven by statutory terms. See 61 FR                    Order 13650 Report to the President—                    25 Chemical Facility Safety and Security Working

                                                   31668, June 20, 1996 at 31672, 31687,                                                                         Group. May 2014. E. O. 13650 Report to the
                                                                                                           Actions to Improve Chemical Facility                  President—Actions to Improve Chemical Facility
                                                   and 31696.                                              Safety and Security—A Shared                          Safety and Security—A Shared Commitment. EPA,
                                                      Measures taken by sources to comply                                                                        Department of Labor, Department of Homeland
                                                   with the OSHA PSM standard for any                        23 61 FR 31671, June 20, 1996. EPA final rule for   Security, Department of Justice, Department of
                                                   process that meets OSHA’s PSM                           Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk      Agriculture and Department of Transportation
                                                                                                           Management Programs under the CAA, Section            (DOT). Washington, DC, EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–
                                                   standard are sufficient to comply with                  112(r)(7).                                            0725–0246.
                                                   the prevention program requirements of                    24 61 FR 31672, June 20, 1996.                        26 EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0729 in the docket.




                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00015   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24864                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   business panel proceeding on its                        requirements. It is also responsive to                Administration Office of Advocacy, and
                                                   potential PSM standard amendments,                      concerns from stakeholders about our                  the OMB Office of Information and
                                                   and we expressed the belief that the two                approach to coordination under the                    Regulatory Affairs).27 EPA published its
                                                   agencies did not need to proceed on                     Amendments rule. We intend to allow                   proposed rulemaking on the RMP
                                                   identical timelines. Id. at 232. Our                    for a better understanding of OSHA’s                  amendments on March 14, 2016 (81 FR
                                                   responses were generally focused on the                 plan for changes to the PSM standard                  13638).
                                                   legal permissibility of proceeding on                   before proposing any future changes to                  During the summer of 2016, OSHA
                                                   separate schedules rather than the                      our rule.                                             initiated a Small Business Advocacy
                                                   policy wisdom of doing so.                                While EPA has amended the Risk                      Review Panel in order to get feedback
                                                                                                           Management Program several times after                on several potential revisions to OSHA’s
                                                   3. What is EPA’s proposed approach to                   1996 without corresponding OSHA                       Process Safety Management Program
                                                   ‘‘coordination’’ in this reconsideration?               amendments to its PSM standard, these                 (PSM) standard. Some potential
                                                      Under Clean Air Act section                          changes did not involve the prevention                revisions tracked EPA’s RMP
                                                   112(r)(7)(D), although Congress has                     program provisions, thus precluding                   Amendments, which were in the
                                                   conveyed to EPA discretion regarding                    any need for coordination with OSHA.                  proposed rule stage, while others were
                                                   how it should coordinate with OSHA,                     The Risk Management Program                           not included in the Amendments.
                                                   Congress’s intent is clear that EPA                     Amendments of 2017 were the first time                OSHA also considered a number of
                                                   coordinate its program with the other                   we had issued post-1996 amendments                    minor modifications which largely
                                                   agencies’ where possible. Accordingly,                  that were significant due to costs and                codify existing OSHA interpretations of
                                                   although at times divergence between                    deemed major for purposes of the                      the PSM standard. OSHA completed
                                                   the RMP rule and the PSM standard                       Congressional Review Act. Under these                 their SBAR Panel Final Report in
                                                   may make sense given the agencies’                      circumstances, we think that our                      August 2016.28
                                                   different missions, both agencies                       approach to the 1996 RMP rule, where                    OSHA may or may not adopt
                                                   generally have tried to minimize                        we attempted to either maintain                       amendments discussed in the SBAR
                                                   confusion and burden on the regulated                   consistent language with the PSM                      Panel Report. EPA believes it would be
                                                   community by minimizing divergence.                     standard or carefully justify our                     prudent to understand OSHA’s path
                                                   The RMP Amendments constitute a                         departure, is a better approach. Our                  forward in this area before owners and
                                                   divergence from that longstanding                       record shows the 2017 Amendments                      operators are required to implement
                                                   practice: Although EPA has regularly                    have significant costs and are                        changes under the RMP rule in order to
                                                   communicated and coordinated with                       discretionary. Given the flexibility in               decide whether any divergence from
                                                   OSHA on its prevention program and                      CAA section 112(r)(7), EPA may thus                   OSHA’s PSM standard is reasonable for
                                                   process safety efforts so far, EPA                      make a policy choice to conduct EPA’s                 EPA. One example of potential
                                                   proceeded to promulgate the RMP                         rulemaking proceedings to improve the                 divergence between the OSHA PSM
                                                   Amendments before understanding                         RMP program after we have a better                    standard and the RMP rule would be in
                                                   OSHA’s path forward in this area and                    understanding of OSHA’s timing of                     the requirement for third-party audits.
                                                   before understanding whether any                        comment opportunities, content of                     The August 2016 OSHA SBAR panel
                                                   divergence is reasonable for EPA.                       amendments, and implementation                        report did not fully support third-party
                                                      After further consideration, EPA                     schedules. EPA proposes to place                      audits. Instead the SBAR panel
                                                   believes it did not give sufficient weight              greater weight than it did in                         recommended further review of the
                                                   to the value of coordination with OSHA                  promulgating the Amendments on the                    need and benefits of third-party audits;
                                                   and focused too much on its legal                       policy importance of coordinating with                the sufficient availability, adequate
                                                   authority to proceed independently.                     OSHA and not adopting significant                     process knowledge and degree of
                                                   EPA now proposes to determine that a                    changes to the risk prevention aspects of             independence needed of third-party
                                                   more sensible approach would be to                      the RMP rule that diverge from OSHA’s                 auditors; and whether facilities should
                                                   have a better understanding of what                     requirements until we have a better                   decide the best type of audit appropriate
                                                   OSHA will be doing in this area before                  understanding of OSHA’s path forward.                 for their process.
                                                   revising the RMP accident prevention                      The reasonableness of this approach                   EPA believes that we should not
                                                   program. Thus, EPA proposes to rescind                  to coordination can be seen in both                   retain and put into effect changes to the
                                                   the RMP accident prevention                             EPA’s and OSHA’s experiences                          prevention aspects of the Risk
                                                   amendments pending further action by                    conducting outreach to small entities as              Management Program until we have a
                                                   OSHA. This approach would allow the                     both agencies prepared to develop                     better understanding of OSHA’s plans
                                                   two programs’ process safety                            amendments to the RMP rule and the                    for the PSM standard changes so that we
                                                   requirements to remain aligned as much                  PSM standard. For EPA, we must ‘‘take                 may move forward in a more
                                                   as possible so that the regulated                       into consideration the concerns of small              coordinated fashion with regulatory
                                                   community may have a better                             business in promulgating regulations                  changes that improve process safety
                                                   understanding of what to do to comply                   under [CAA section 112(r)].’’ CAA                     performance and reduce accidents
                                                   while reducing unnecessary complexity                   section 112(r)(7)(C). During the fall/                without causing undue burden and
                                                   and cost. Having consistency between                    winter of 2015, EPA convened an Small                 regulatory conflicts. Therefore, EPA is
                                                   required safe practices and common                      Business Advocacy Review (SBAR)
                                                   understanding of requirements should                    panel to obtain advice and                              27 EPA/OMB/SBA. February 19, 2016. Small
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   help industry to comply with the PSM                    recommendations from Small Entity                     Business Advocacy Review Panel Report on EPA’s
                                                                                                                                                                 Planned Proposed Rule: Risk Management
                                                   standard and RMP rule and improve the                   Representatives (SERs) that were                      Modernization Rule. Letter to EPA Administrator
                                                   effectiveness of accident prevention                    potentially subject to the proposed RMP               with Executive Summary (EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–
                                                   efforts.                                                amendments. The SBAR panel report on                  0725–0030), Final Report (EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–
                                                      This approach would better fulfill the               the proposed RMP amendments under                     0725–0032), and Appendix B Written Comments
                                                   Congressional purpose of coordination                   consideration contains the small entity               Submitted by SERs (EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–
                                                                                                                                                                 0031).
                                                   between the two agencies while                          comments and recommendations to the                     28 OSHA. August 1, 2016. Process Safety
                                                   maximizing consistency and ease of                      EPA Administrator from the three panel                Management (PSM) SBREFA Panel Final Report.
                                                   implementation of regulatory                            members (EPA, Small Business                          OSHA–2013–0020–0116.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00016   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                           24865

                                                   proposing to rescind the prevention                     would not affect the consistency of the               these concerns, while clarifying source’s
                                                   requirements of the RMP Amendments                      Program 3 prevention program                          obligations for coordination, including
                                                   rule applicable to both Program 2 and                   requirements with the OSHA PSM                        specific information that must be
                                                   Program 3 processes in order to better                  standard. With the exception of the                   communicated to local responders
                                                   understand OSHA’s path forward for                      amendment to the training requirements                during annual coordination activities. In
                                                   similar issues our sister agency is still               (and the SDS provisions, which are                    addition, EPA finalized the
                                                   evaluating. We propose to rescind the                   minor terminology changes), these                     requirements to conduct field and
                                                   RMP Amendment provisions for                            provisions would affect only the                      tabletop exercises and stipulations for
                                                   incident investigation, third-party                     Program 2 prevention requirements.                    scope, frequency and documentation of
                                                   compliance audits, STAA, and various                    Also, retaining these changes would not               exercises. Facilities must consult with
                                                   minor changes impacting subpart C and                   make these Program 2 provisions more                  local emergency response officials to
                                                   D of the RMP rule. Although the pre-                    rigorous than their Program 3                         establish appropriate schedules and
                                                   amendment RMP Program 3                                 counterparts, thus maintaining the                    plans for these exercises. EPA proposes
                                                   requirements were consistent with                       rule’s current model where Program 2                  to retain these requirements while
                                                   OSHA PSM standard, the RMP Program                      requirements are generally more                       addressing security concerns raised by
                                                   2 regulations were slightly different by                streamlined than the comparable                       petitioners. In all three petitions
                                                   design, as explained earlier, providing                 Program 3 requirements. Regarding the                 requesting reconsideration of the RMP
                                                   less rigorous requirements and                          change to the Program 3 training                      Amendments rule, petitioners objected
                                                   recordkeeping for Program 2 facilities.                 requirement, as EPA noted in the                      to the rule language in § 68.93(b)
                                                   In contrast to Program 3 processes,                     proposed Amendments rule, EPA has                     requiring local emergency response
                                                   small businesses make up a greater                      traditionally interpreted the training                coordination to include providing to the
                                                   percentage of the processes subject to                  provisions of §§ 68.54 and 68.71 to                   local emergency planning and response
                                                   Program 2. Therefore, EPA also                          apply to any worker that is involved in               organizations ‘‘. . . any other
                                                   proposes to rescind any changes made                    operating a process, including                        information that local emergency
                                                   to Program 2 prevention program                         supervisors. This is consistent with the              planning and response organizations
                                                   elements to keep the Program 2                          OSHA definition of employee set forth                 identify as relevant to local emergency
                                                   requirements less burdensome than                       at 29 CFR 1910.2(d) (see 81 FR 13686,                 response planning.’’ All Petitioners
                                                   those of Program 3, maintaining the pre-                Monday, March 14, 2016). Therefore,                   noted that the language was new to the
                                                   amendment RMP requirements for                          retaining this change may make the                    final rule (i.e., it was not contained in
                                                   Program 2 facilities and the pre-                       RMP Program 3 training provision even                 the Amendments as proposed), broad,
                                                   amendment balance of burdens on                         more consistent with the comparable                   and posed potential security concerns.
                                                   smaller entities. EPA also proposes to                  provision of the PSM standard.                        Petitioner CSAG identified a particular
                                                   rescind the words ‘‘for each covered                       EPA requests comments on its                       problem with the new disclosure
                                                   process’’ from the compliance audit                     proposal to rescind the changes made in               provision: By relocating the disclosure
                                                   provisions in §§ 68.58 and 68.79, which                 the Program 2 and Program 3 prevention                provision from section § 68.205 in the
                                                   apply to RMP Program 2 and Program 3,                   program provisions of the final RMP                   proposal to section § 68.93, EPA had
                                                   respectively, in order to prevent                       Amendments rule, including the                        moved it to a section of the RMP rule
                                                   unnecessary divergence from language                    alternative described above. Should                   that did not have specific procedures for
                                                   in compliance audits in the OSHA PSM                    investigation of Program 2 processes be               handling CBI claims, and, CSAG argued,
                                                   standard.                                               required to have a team (of at least two              the protection in the RMP rule for
                                                      As an alternative to rescinding the                  people) with expertise in the process                 classified information in section
                                                   Amendments rule changes to the                          and investigation methods in order to                 68.210(f) did not clearly apply to
                                                   Program 2 and Program 3 prevention                      thoroughly investigate and analyze the                disclosures under section 68.93(b).
                                                   program provisions as proposed above,                   causes of incidents, even if the
                                                   EPA is considering rescinding all of the                                                                         Petitioners have correctly noted that
                                                                                                           requirement to specifically conduct a                 EPA incorporated the language at issue
                                                   above changes except for the                            root causes analysis is rescinded?
                                                   requirement in § 68.50(a)(2) for the                                                                          in order to address concerns, including
                                                                                                           Should Program 2 process investigations               security concerns, raised by various
                                                   hazard review to include findings from
                                                                                                           at least require investigation be                     commenters over EPA’s proposed RMP
                                                   incident investigations, the term
                                                                                                           performed by someone with expertise in                Amendments rule (81 FR 13638, March
                                                   ‘‘report(s)’’ in place of the word
                                                                                                           the process?                                          14, 2016), which among other things
                                                   ‘‘summary(ies)’’ in § 68.60, the
                                                   requirement in § 68.60 for Program 2                    B. Address Security Concerns                          proposed to add new § 68.205 to require
                                                   processes to establish an incident                                                                            owners and operators of all RMP-
                                                                                                           1. Emergency Response Coordination                    regulated facilities to provide certain
                                                   investigation team consisting of at least
                                                   one person knowledgeable in the                            EPA discussed the need for enhanced                information to Local Emergency
                                                   process involved and other persons with                 RMP local coordination provisions in                  Planning Committees (LEPCs) or local
                                                   experience to investigate an incident,                  the proposed Amendments rule. See 81                  emergency response officials upon
                                                   the requirements in §§ 68.54 and 68.71                  FR 13671, March 14, 2016. In summary,                 request. In response to these concerns,
                                                   for training requirements to apply to                   although there is substantial overlap                 EPA, without acknowledging any
                                                   supervisors responsible for process                     between EPCRA requirements and RMP                    inconsistency with the Chemical
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   operations and minor wording changes                    local coordination requirements, EPA                  Facility Anti-Terrorism Standard or
                                                   involving the description of employees                  found that some facilities who had                    other regulatory structure, did not
                                                   operating a process in § 68.54, and the                 indicated they do not have an RMP                     finalize § 68.205 of the proposed
                                                   two changes that would revise the term                  emergency response plan had not                       rulemaking in the final Amendments
                                                   ‘‘Material Safety Data Sheets’’ to ‘‘Safety             properly coordinated response actions                 rule. Instead we required that the owner
                                                   Data Sheets (SDS)’’ in §§ 68.48 and                     with local authorities. State and local               or operator to provide ‘‘any other
                                                   68.65.                                                  officials echoed these same concerns. In              information that local emergency
                                                      The reason that EPA is considering                   the final rule, EPA finalized enhanced                planning and response organizations
                                                   this alternative is that these changes                  local coordination provisions to address              identify as relevant to local emergency


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00017   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24866                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   planning’’ in § 68.93. Any claims for                   information that local emergency                      already subject to it under EPCRA
                                                   Chemical-terrorism Vulnerability                        planning and response organizations                   section 303(d)(3) or § 68.95(c) should
                                                   Information (CVI) could then be                         identify as relevant to local emergency               not create any security vulnerabilities.
                                                   handled on a case-by-case basis by the                  response planning’’ would solve the                      Under both alternatives, EPA’s
                                                   stationary source, the LEPC, DHS and                    problem with the open-ended disclosure                proposal to incorporate CBI and
                                                   others, as appropriate.                                 provision. This is EPA’s preferred                    classified information protections to
                                                     In effect, petitioners are saying not                 option, as the Agency believes that the               regulated substance and stationary
                                                   only that EPA’s final rule solution to the              remaining language in § 68.93 will still              source information provided under
                                                   security concerns created by proposed                   ensure that local responders obtain the               § 68.93 is intended to address
                                                   § 68.205 did not fix the problem—it                     information they need while avoiding                  petitioners’ concerns regarding these
                                                   actually made it worse. After further                   potential security concerns associated                issues. Incorporating a CBI provision in
                                                   review, EPA acknowledges that the                       with the deleted provision. Even with
                                                   petitioners’ concerns have merit.                                                                             this section of the rule will emphasize
                                                                                                           this change, § 68.93 still requires the               the facility owner or operator’s right to
                                                   Section 68.205 from the proposed RMP                    owner and operator to provide local
                                                   Amendments rule listed specific items                                                                         protect CBI. EPA notes that the RMP
                                                                                                           responders with the names and                         rule already authorizes the owner or
                                                   of information that the owner or                        quantities of regulated substances at the
                                                   operator must provide to the LEPC or                                                                          operator of an RMP-regulated facility to
                                                                                                           stationary source, the risks presented by             assert CBI claims for information
                                                   local emergency response officials upon                 covered processes, and the resources
                                                   request, but it did not include an open-                                                                      submitted in the RMP required under
                                                                                                           and capabilities at the stationary source             subpart G that meets the requirements of
                                                   ended provision for ‘‘any other                         to respond to an accidental release of a
                                                   information that local emergency                                                                              40 CFR 2.301, with some limitations
                                                                                                           regulated substance, as well as the                   (e.g. five-year accident history
                                                   planning and response organizations                     stationary source’s emergency response
                                                   identify as relevant to local emergency                                                                       information and emergency response
                                                                                                           plan if one exists; emergency action                  program information required to be
                                                   response planning.’’ By including such                  plan; and updated emergency contact
                                                   a provision in the final RMP                                                                                  reported in source’s RMP cannot be
                                                                                                           information. Responding stationary                    claimed as CBI). EPA’s proposal would
                                                   Amendments rule, EPA may have                           sources would still be required to
                                                   inadvertently opened the door to local                                                                        relocate the CBI provision of § 68.210(g)
                                                                                                           consult with local emergency response                 of the final RMP Amendments rule to
                                                   emergency officials requesting and                      officials to establish appropriate
                                                   receiving security-sensitive information                                                                      § 68.93, which would allow CBI claims
                                                                                                           schedules and plans for field and                     for emergency response coordination
                                                   even beyond the specific items included                 tabletop exercises required under
                                                   in § 68.205 of the proposed RMP                                                                               information in the same manner as
                                                                                                           § 68.96(b), and all stationary source                 required in §§ 68.151 and 68.152 for
                                                   Amendments about which petitioners                      owners or operators would still be
                                                   and others had raised concerns.                                                                               information contained in the RMP.
                                                                                                           required to request an opportunity to                 EPA’s proposal would also replicate the
                                                     Petitioners have also correctly noted
                                                                                                           meet with the LEPC (or equivalent) and/               classified information provisions of
                                                   that by locating the final rule’s local
                                                                                                           or local fire department as appropriate               § 68.210(f) of the final RMP
                                                   responder information availability
                                                                                                           to review and discuss the information.                Amendments rule in § 68.93, which
                                                   provision in § 68.93, EPA removed any
                                                   protections for CBI. Items requested                      EPA’s alternative proposal—to replace               would require that the disclosure of
                                                   under the proposed amendment to                         the phrase ‘‘. . . any other information              emergency response coordination
                                                   § 68.205 (but not included in final                     that local emergency planning and                     information classified by the
                                                   Amendments rule) would have                             response organizations identify as                    Department of Defense or other Federal
                                                   benefited from the inclusion in that                    relevant to local emergency response                  agencies or contractors of such agencies
                                                   section of paragraphs (d) Classified                    planning’’ with the phrase, ‘‘other                   be controlled by applicable laws,
                                                   information, and (e) CBI, but these                     information necessary for developing                  regulations, or executive orders
                                                   paragraphs do not appear in § 68.93 of                  and implementing the local emergency                  concerning the release of classified
                                                   the final rule. EPA did not intend to                   response plan,’’ opts to use language                 information.29 While the provision in
                                                   eliminate CBI protection—it was an                      virtually identical to that used in                   § 68.210 (to be restored to § 68.210(b))
                                                   inadvertent consequence of relocating                   Emergency Planning and Community                      protects classified information for all
                                                   the local responder information                         Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) section                     information disclosure under the RMP
                                                   availability provision to § 68.93.                      303(d)(3), [42 U.S.C. 11003(d)(3)]. That              rule, we believe replicating this
                                                      EPA disagrees with the Petitioners’                  provision of EPCRA states: ‘‘Upon                     language in § 68.93 will avoid
                                                   assertion that the protection for                       request from the emergency planning                   unnecessary disputes between LEPCs
                                                   classified information in § 68.210(f)                   committee, the owner or operator of the               and holders of classified information.
                                                   would not apply to all provisions of the                facility shall promptly provide
                                                                                                                                                                    EPA requests public comments on its
                                                   RMP rule, including disclosures under                   information to such committee
                                                                                                                                                                 proposed changes to the emergency
                                                   § 68.93(b). This provision, which is                    necessary for developing and
                                                                                                                                                                 response coordination activities section
                                                   simply a recodification of former                       implementing the emergency plan.’’
                                                                                                                                                                 of the RMP Amendments final rule.
                                                   § 68.210(b), has always applied to all                  This language also appears in § 68.95(c)
                                                                                                                                                                 Does deleting the phrase in § 68.93(b)
                                                   provisions under the RMP rule since it                  of the version of the RMP rule currently
                                                                                                                                                                 ‘‘. . . any other information that local
                                                   was adopted in 1996. Nevertheless, EPA                  in effect, which applies to facilities with
                                                                                                                                                                 emergency planning and response
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   proposes removal of the new broad                       Program 2 and Program 3 processes
                                                                                                                                                                 organizations identify as relevant to
                                                   information disclosure provision in                     whose employees respond to accidental
                                                                                                                                                                 local emergency response planning’’
                                                   § 68.93(b) as proposed to avoid any                     releases of regulated substances.
                                                                                                                                                                 resolve petitioners’ security concerns
                                                   unnecessary disputes between LEPCs                      Therefore, as a result of either the
                                                                                                                                                                 without denying important emergency
                                                   and holders of classified information                   EPCRA section 303(d)(3) provision or
                                                   over the scope of § 68.210(f) (to be                    the provision in § 68.95(c), most RMP                    29 The classified information provisions of
                                                   redesignated § 68.210(b)).                              facilities have long been subject to this             § 68.210(f) would also remain within § 68.210, but
                                                      EPA’s proposed deletion of the phrase                requirement, and applying it to the                   be renumbered to § 68.210(b), which is where they
                                                   in § 68.93(b), ‘‘. . . any other                        relatively few RMP facilities that are not            appear within the currently-in-effect rule.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00018   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                             24867

                                                   planning information to local                             For example, EPA might have focused its             of the emergency response program).’’
                                                   emergency responders?                                   proposal on enhanced security measures for            (82 FR 4668, January 13, 2017).
                                                      Would EPA’s alternate proposal,                      facilities, strict scrutiny of the type of               Noting that many commenters on the
                                                   which replaces this language with,                      information that should be disclosed to               proposed RMP Amendments rule had
                                                                                                           LEPCs or the public, protections for that             objected to the proposed public
                                                   ‘‘other information necessary for                       information, prohibitions against using any
                                                   developing and implementing the local                   sensitive information from these facilities to
                                                                                                                                                                 information availability provisions
                                                   emergency response plan’’ better resolve                cause harm to the public or the environment,          because, they argued, those provisions
                                                   the issue by limiting additional                        or screening measures for third parties with          had the potential to create a security
                                                   information to that necessary for                       access to the facility and its sensitive              risk, EPA’s primary method of
                                                   developing the local response plan?                     information.                                          addressing commenters’ concerns was
                                                      If stakeholders believe the alternative                                                                    to require facility owners and operators
                                                                                                              In the proposed RMP Amendments
                                                   language also presents new security                                                                           to notify the public that certain
                                                                                                           rule, under § 68.210 EPA proposed to
                                                   concerns, how is it that this language                                                                        information is available upon request,
                                                                                                           require the owner or operator to
                                                   has not caused such concerns in relation                                                                      and only provide the information after
                                                                                                           distribute to the public in an easily
                                                   to its presence in EPCRA section                                                                              receiving such a request. EPA indicated
                                                                                                           accessible manner, such as on a
                                                   303(d)(3) or in § 68.95(c) of the currently                                                                   that this would ‘‘allow community
                                                                                                           company website, the following
                                                   in-effect RMP rule? Does EPA’s proposal                                                                       members an opportunity to request
                                                                                                           information:
                                                   to incorporate the classified information                                                                     chemical hazard information from a
                                                                                                              • Names of regulated substances held
                                                   provision of § 68.210(f) into § 68.93                                                                         facility, so they can take measures to
                                                                                                           in a process;
                                                   limit the potential for disputes between                                                                      protect themselves in the event of an
                                                                                                              • SDSs for all regulated substances at
                                                   holders of classified information and                                                                         accidental release, while allowing
                                                                                                           the facility;                                         facility owners and operators to identify
                                                   LEPCs over the scope of the general                        • The facility’s five-year accident
                                                   protection against disclosure of                                                                              who is requesting the information.’’ (82
                                                                                                           history required under § 68.42;                       FR 4668, January 13, 2017).
                                                   classified information in section 68.210?                  • Emergency response program
                                                   Does EPA’s proposal to incorporate the                                                                           Petitioners’ comments summarized
                                                                                                           information concerning the source’s                   above indicate that EPA in the final
                                                   CBI provisions of § 68.210(g) into                      compliance with § 68.10(b)(3) or the
                                                   § 68.93 appropriately address                                                                                 amendments may not have struck the
                                                                                                           emergency response provisions of                      appropriate balance between various
                                                   petitioners’ concerns that these issues                 subpart E, including:
                                                   were not addressed in the emergency                                                                           relevant policy concerns, including
                                                                                                              Æ Whether the source is a responding               information availability, community
                                                   response coordination provisions of the                 stationary source or a non-responding
                                                   final RMP Amendments rule?                                                                                    right to know, minimizing facility
                                                                                                           stationary source;                                    burden, and minimizing information
                                                   2. Information Availability                                Æ Name and phone number of local                   security risks. EPA agrees with
                                                                                                           emergency response organizations with                 petitioners that requiring unlimited
                                                      Notwithstanding EPA efforts to                       which the source last coordinated
                                                   address security concerns raised in                                                                           disclosure of the chemical hazard
                                                                                                           emergency response efforts, pursuant to               information elements required under
                                                   public comments on the RMP                              § 68.180; and
                                                   Amendments, petitioners remain                                                                                the RMP Amendments may create
                                                                                                              Æ For sources subject to § 68.95,                  additional policy concerns, particularly
                                                   concerned about the potential for the                   procedures for informing the public and
                                                   information made available under                                                                              with regard to the potential security
                                                                                                           local emergency response agencies                     risks created by disclosing such
                                                   § 68.210 of the RMP Amendments rule                     about accidental releases.
                                                   to be used by criminals or terrorists to                                                                      information.
                                                                                                              • Information on emergency response                   A related concern not specifically
                                                   target facilities for attack. Petitioner                exercises required under § 68.96,                     raised by petitioners, but which EPA is
                                                   CSAG stated, ‘‘By providing unfettered                  including schedules for upcoming                      now considering, is whether the
                                                   access to information by local response                 exercises, reports for completed                      synthesis of the required information
                                                   organizations without safeguards, and                   exercises as described in § 68.96(b)(3),              disclosure elements could create an
                                                   by requiring disclosure of extensive                    and any other related information; and                additional security risk for facilities.
                                                   facility information to the public upon                    • LEPC contact information,                        EPA had not previously considered that
                                                   request, EPA has done nothing to                        including LEPC name, phone number,                    the combination of mandatory
                                                   protect sensitive facility information.’’ 30            and website address as available.                     disclosure elements as required under
                                                      The States Petition enumerates the                      In the final Amendments rule, EPA                  the Amendments is generally not
                                                   States’ specific concerns with public                   made only one change to this list—EPA                 already available to the public from any
                                                   information availability provisions,                    revised the exercise information                      single source. EPA believes that the
                                                   including that there is no screening                    element to require the owner or operator              synthesis of the required chemical
                                                   process for requesters or limitations on                to provide a list of scheduled exercises              hazard and facility information may
                                                   the use or distribution of information,                 required under § 68.96, rather than the               present a more comprehensive picture
                                                   and that the provisions potentially                     additional exercise information that was              of the vulnerabilities of a facility than
                                                   conflict with other anti-terrorism laws,                proposed. In so doing, EPA noted that,                would be apparent from any individual
                                                   and others.31                                           ‘‘The information required to be                      element, and that therefore requiring it
                                                      Linking its objection to the BATF                    disclosed by this rule largely draws on               to be made more easily available to the
                                                   finding that the West Fertilizer incident
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                                                                           information otherwise in the public                   public from a single source (i.e., the
                                                   was due to criminal conduct, Petitioner                 domain and simplified the public’s                    facility itself) could increase the risk of
                                                   RMP Coalition suggests: 32                              access to it.’’ EPA further stated, ‘‘Other           a terrorist attack on some facilities. For
                                                                                                           statutes and regulatory programs, or                  example, if a facility is required to
                                                     30 CSAG Petition, pgs. 6–7. Document ID: EPA–
                                                                                                           other provisions of the risk management               disclose in synthesis and in one public
                                                   HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0766.
                                                     31 States Petition, pgs. 3–4. Document ID: EPA–
                                                                                                           program, require the stationary source to             source that it has experienced frequent
                                                   HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0762.                                  assemble the information that the rule                accidental releases involving large
                                                     32 RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 16, Document ID:       would make available upon request                     quantities of highly toxic or flammable
                                                   EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0759.                              (e.g., accident history, SDSs, and aspects            chemicals, does not maintain an on-site


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00019   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24868                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   response capability, and is located a                      EPA requests comments on its                       local emergency response planning’’ to
                                                   long distance away from the nearest                     proposal to rescind the public                        LEPCs, which EPA is now proposing to
                                                   public responders, the synthesis of this                information availability requirements of              rescind. ‘‘Information, such as that
                                                   information might allow a criminal or                   the final RMP Amendments rule. As an                  described in paragraph (b) of this
                                                   terrorist to identify a relatively ‘‘softer’’           alternative to rescinding all of the                  section’’ is referring to the same
                                                   facility target for attack, or a target that            public information elements, EPA                      chemical hazard information that is
                                                   if attacked could cause more damage to                  request comments on rescinding all                    required to be provided upon request to
                                                   the facility and surrounding community                  except the information on exercise                    the public. As discussed in section
                                                   due to a less timely response.                          schedules. If EPA maintains a field                   IV.B.2. of this preamble ‘‘Information
                                                                                                           exercise requirement in the final rule,               Availability’’, all three of the petitioners
                                                      EPA’s proposal to rescind the public
                                                                                                           information on upcoming facility                      had security concerns with providing
                                                   information availability provisions
                                                                                                           exercises would be the only item of                   this type of information with no
                                                   would address this concern, as well as
                                                                                                           information required to be disclosed in               screening process for requesters or
                                                   petitioners’ and other commenters                       § 68.210(b) that is not already available
                                                   concerns about the lack of any appeals                                                                        limitations on the use or distribution of
                                                                                                           from another source, and EPA maintains                information. Based on the reasoning
                                                   or vetting process for members of the                   that providing the local community                    provided in sections IV.B.1 and 2 of this
                                                   public requesting facility information.                 with this information could avoid                     preamble, EPA proposes to rescind the
                                                   Information on most of the required                     unnecessary public concerns or panic                  requirement to provide at the public
                                                   disclosure elements would still be                      during facility exercises.                            meeting ‘‘other relevant chemical
                                                   available via other means, such as                         Another element of publicly available              hazard information, such as that
                                                   through an LEPC, by visiting a Federal                  information is the RMP information                    described in paragraph (b) of this
                                                   RMP reading room, or making a request                   about local emergency response                        section.’’
                                                   under the Freedom of Information Act                    organizations. In § 68.180(a)(1) of the                 CSAG’s petition 35 cited additional
                                                   (FOIA). FOIA requests require a name                    Amendments rule, EPA required the                     concerns with the public meeting
                                                   and U.S. state or territory address to                  owner or operator to provide the name,                requirement:
                                                   receive information.33 Federal Reading                  organizational affiliation, phone
                                                   Rooms require photo identification                                                                               The requirement to hold a public meeting
                                                                                                           number, and email address of local                    within 90 days after any reportable accident
                                                   issued by a Federal, state, or local                    emergency planning and response                       is overly broad. It is not necessary for
                                                   government agency such as a driver’s                    organizations with which the stationary               facilities to hold a public meeting every time
                                                   license or passport.34 These                            source last coordinated emergency                     that a release occurs. EPA provided no
                                                   requirements to accurately identify the                 response efforts. EPA now proposes to                 evidence that public meetings were requested
                                                   party requesting the information may                    modify this requirement to read: ‘‘Name,              or needed and not held under pre-existing
                                                   provide a deterrent to those who seek to                phone number, and email address of                    rules. Often a release does not warrant a
                                                   obtain chemical information for a                       local emergency planning and response                 public meeting and the expense should not
                                                   facility for terrorist purposes without                 organizations . . . .’’ This change                   be imposed automatically. See CSAG
                                                                                                                                                                 Proposed Rule Comments, at pg. 17.
                                                   unduly impeding access to the                           would clarify that the Agency is only
                                                   information by those in the nearby                      requiring organization-level information                 A public meeting is not required
                                                   community with a right-to-know. The                     about local emergency planning and                    under the 2017 Amendments every time
                                                   current provisions in § 68.210 do not                   response organizations, and that                      that a release occurs, but only after an
                                                   specify that requestors provide any                     facilities are not required to provide                accident occurs that is subject to
                                                   particular identification. For example, if              information about individual local                    reporting under § 68.42. Those are
                                                   a facility is providing access to the                   emergency responders in order to                      accidents that resulted in deaths,
                                                   required information by responding to                   reduce the amount of personally                       injuries, or significant property damage
                                                   email requests, requestors could receive                identifiable information available in                 on site, or known offsite deaths,
                                                   information via email without                           facility RMPs. This could help avoid                  injuries, evacuations, sheltering in
                                                   verification of their true identity. While              criminals or terrorists targeting                     place, property damage, or
                                                   EPA’s intent was to give the local                      individual emergency responders                       environmental damage. EPA believes
                                                   community access to information ‘‘by                    through identifying them using the                    that having a public meeting so that
                                                   facilitating public participation at the                publicly available portions of facility’s             community members may learn more
                                                   local level’’ and ‘‘allow people that live              RMPs.                                                 about the causes of an accident that
                                                   and work near a regulated facility to                                                                         resulted in such impacts, and the
                                                                                                           3. Public Meeting After an Accident
                                                   improve their awareness of risks to the                                                                       facility’s plans to address those causes
                                                   community and to be prepared to                            The public meeting requirement in                  is warranted. A public meeting also
                                                   protect themselves in the event of an                   § 68.210(e) requires the owner/operator               gives members of the community an
                                                   accidental release’’ (82 FR 4668, January               of a stationary source to ‘‘hold a public             opportunity to ask questions directly of
                                                   13, 2017), the provisions have no                       meeting to provide accident information               the facility about issues that concern
                                                   limitation on the location or address of                required under § 68.42 as well as other               them. Therefore, EPA proposes to retain
                                                   the requestors or whether the requestor                 relevant chemical hazard information,                 the public meeting requirement in
                                                   must provide an accurate identification                 such as that described in paragraph (b)               § 68.210(e), modified to require that the
                                                   of their name and address. A                            of this section, no later than 90 days                owner or operator provide only accident
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   justification cannot be made for those                  after any accident subject to reporting               information required under § 68.42(b)
                                                   outside of the community to know, for                   under § 68.42.’’ The requirement to                   no later than 90 days after any
                                                   example, a schedule of upcoming                         provide ‘‘other relevant chemical hazard              reportable accident. However, EPA
                                                   exercises, for the purpose intended.                    information’’ could be interpreted to be              requests public comment on whether
                                                                                                           an overly broad requirement for                       the Agency should further limit the
                                                     33 https://foiaonline.regulations.gov/foia/action/
                                                                                                           information, similar to the requirement               public meeting requirement to apply
                                                   public/request/createRequest.                           to provide ‘‘any other information that
                                                     34 https://www.epa.gov/rmp/federal-reading-           local emergency planning and response                  35 CSAG Petition, pg. 21, Document ID: EPA–HQ–

                                                   rooms-risk-management-plans-rmp.                        organizations identify as relevant to                 OEM–2015–0725–0766.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00020   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                      24869

                                                   only after accidents that meet certain                  § 68.42(b) for only the most recent                   West, Texas, investigation results further
                                                   criteria, such as accidents with offsite                accident, and not for previous accidents              merits reconsideration of the EPA’s RMP
                                                   impacts specified in § 68.42(a) (i.e.,                  covered by the 5-year accident history                Final Rule.
                                                   known offsite deaths, injuries,                         requirement of § 68.42(a). This proposed                In responding to this petition, EPA
                                                   evacuations, sheltering in place,                       modification should provide clarity for               Administrator Pruitt agreed that the
                                                   property damage, or environmental                       the regulated community regarding the                 timing of the BATF finding was a valid
                                                   damage)? In comments on the RMP                         public meeting requirements.                          basis for reconsideration of the RMP
                                                   Amendments rule, commenters stated                      Nevertheless, EPA requests comments                   Amendments rule: 39
                                                   that the public would not attend a                      on this issue—should the public
                                                   meeting after a minor incident, but                     meeting provision require providing                      Among the objections raised in the petition
                                                   recommended holding a public meeting                    information on all accidents in a                     that meet the requirements for a petition for
                                                   for an event with major offsite                                                                               reconsideration under CAA section
                                                                                                           facility’s five-year accident history?                307(d)(7)(B), we believe the timing of the
                                                   impacts.36 Would members of                                Because EPA proposes to rescind the                BATF finding on the West, Texas incident,
                                                   communities surrounding RMP facilities                  requirements in § 68.210(b) for the                   which was announced just before the close
                                                   be less likely to attend post-accident                  owner or operator to provide chemical                 of the public comment period, made it
                                                   public meetings if the accident had no                  hazard information to the public upon                 impracticable for many commenters to
                                                   offsite public or environmental impacts?                request and to provide ‘‘other relevant               meaningfully address the significance of this
                                                      Additionally, EPA requests public                    chemical hazard information’’ at public               finding in their comments on this multi-
                                                   comment on the required time frame for                  meetings after a reportable accident,                 faceted rule. Prior to this finding, many
                                                   public meetings. In the proposed                        EPA proposes to delete the provision for              parties had assumed that the cause of the
                                                   Amendments rule, EPA had proposed                                                                             incident was accidental. Additionally, the
                                                                                                           CBI in § 68.210(g), as unnecessary. The
                                                   that post-accident public meetings be                                                                         prominence of the incident in the policy
                                                                                                           proposed revised public meeting                       decisions underlying the rule makes the
                                                   required within 30 days. Several                        provision would only require the owner                BATF finding regarding the cause of the
                                                   commenters claimed that this time                       or operator to provide data specified in              incident of central relevance to the Risk
                                                   frame was too short, and would cause                    the source’s five-year accident history               Management Program Amendments.
                                                   owners and operators to divert resources                (§ 68.42), which is not allowed to be
                                                   away from post-accident                                 claimed as CBI under § 68.151(b)(3). The                EPA agrees that the West, Texas,
                                                   investigations.37 However, other                        owner or operator may provide                         incident was prominent in the issuance
                                                   commenters agreed with EPA’s                            additional information during public                  of Executive Order 13650 and the
                                                   proposed 30-day time frame, and one                     meetings, but is not required to do so.               consideration for the final RMP
                                                   commenter recommended that the                                                                                Amendments rule. In the Executive
                                                   meeting should occur within two weeks                   C. Address BATF Finding on West                       Order 13650 Report for the President,
                                                   of the accident. Although the final                     Fertilizer Incident                                   the Chemical Facility Safety and
                                                   Amendments rule required public                            Petitioner RMP Coalition asserted that             Security Working Group, of which EPA
                                                   meetings to occur within 90 days of an                  it was impracticable for commenters to                serves as one of three tri-chairs, stated:40
                                                   accident and this proposal would not                    address in their comments the                            The West, Texas, disaster in which a fire
                                                   change that time frame, EPA is again                    significance of the May 11, 2016                      involving ammonium nitrate at a fertilizer
                                                   considering whether public meetings                     determination by the Bureau of Alcohol,               facility resulted in an explosion that killed 15
                                                   should be required sooner than 90 days                  Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives                     people, injured many others, and caused
                                                   after an accident. Would a shorter time                 (BATF) that the fire and explosion at the             widespread damage, revealed a variety of
                                                   frame, such as 30, 45, or 60 days, be                   West Fertilizer facility was caused by an             issues related to chemical hazard awareness,
                                                   more useful to surrounding                              intentional, criminal act. Petitioner                 regulatory coverage, and emergency
                                                   communities without unduly impeding                                                                           response. The Working Group has outlined a
                                                                                                           further stated: 38
                                                                                                                                                                 suite of actions to address these issues, such
                                                   facilities’ post-accident recovery and                    As the primary driver behind the Executive          as:
                                                   investigation activities?                               Order that inspired this rule, and the focus             • Strengthening State and local
                                                      In establishing the requirement for the              of EPA’s introduction to the Proposed Rule,           capabilities
                                                   owner or operator to provide accident                   the circumstances surrounding the West,                  • Expanding tools to assist emergency
                                                   information required under § 68.42 at                   Texas, incident highlight the risks central to        responders
                                                   public meetings, we have not previously                 the Final Rule. Knowing that the incident                • Enhancing awareness and increasing
                                                   specified whether it requires the owner                 was intentional would could [sic] have                information sharing with communities
                                                   or operator to provide at the meeting,                  impacted the scope of the Executive Order,            around chemical facilities
                                                   accident information for only the                       certainly have changed the comments EPA                  • Increasing awareness of chemical facility
                                                                                                           received, and likely would have caused EPA            safety and security regulatory responsibilities
                                                   accident triggering the public meeting,                 to construct its proposed and final rules                • Pursuing rulemaking options for changes
                                                   or, if the facility has multiple accidents              differently had it known of these                     to EPA, OSHA, and DHS standards to
                                                   in its five-year accident history, for all              circumstances at the time of the proposed             improve safety and security, including
                                                   such accidents. EPA did not intend that                 rulemaking. For example, EPA might have               potential changes specific to ammonium
                                                   the public meeting cover providing                      focused its proposal on enhanced security             nitrate.
                                                   information for all reportable accidents                measures for facilities, strict scrutiny of the
                                                   over the last five years. EPA proposes to               type of information that should be disclosed            The ‘‘changes to EPA . . . standards’’
                                                                                                           to LEPCs or the public, protections for that          ultimately became the RMP
                                                   amend the public meeting provision to
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                                                                           information, prohibitions against using any           Amendments final rule, where EPA
                                                   require the information listed in                       sensitive information from these facilities to
                                                                                                           cause harm to the public or the environment,
                                                     36 See document IDs EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–                                                                     39 March 13, 2017 letter from EPA Administrator
                                                                                                           or screening measures for third parties with
                                                   0492, and EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0542 in the                                                                    E. Scott Pruitt to Justin Savage, Esq., Hogan Lovells
                                                                                                           access to the facility and its sensitive
                                                   docket.                                                                                                       US LLP. Letter available in the docket for this
                                                     37 See Response to Comments on the 2016
                                                                                                           information. Reliance on the E.O. as a                rulemaking. EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0758.
                                                   Proposed Rule Amending EPA’s Risk Management            predicate for this rule, combined with the              40 Executive Order 13650 Actions to Improve

                                                   Program Regulations (March 14, 2016; 81 FR                                                                    Chemical Safety and Security—a Shared
                                                   13637), EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0729, pgs. 207–             38 RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 16, EPA–HQ–           Commitment, Report for the President, May 2014,
                                                   209.                                                    OEM–2015–0725–0759.                                   page 1, EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0246.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00021   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24870                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   again acknowledged the prominence of                      the significance of the BATF finding to               D. Reduce Unnecessary Regulations and
                                                   the West Fertilizer incident: 41                          the final RMP Amendments rule, and                    Regulatory Costs
                                                      The purpose of this action is to improve               this proposal. When we solicited                      1. Petitioners’ Comments on Costs and
                                                   safety at facilities that use and distribute              comment during the rulemaking to                      EPA’s Economic Analysis
                                                   hazardous chemicals. In response to                       delay the effective date of the RMP
                                                   catastrophic chemical facility incidents in               Amendments to February 19, 2019,                         All three petitioners objected to the
                                                   the United States, including the explosion                                                                      costs and burdens associated with the
                                                   that occurred at the West Fertilizer facility in
                                                                                                             several commenters criticized the
                                                                                                                                                                   new provisions of the RMP
                                                   West, Texas, on April 17, 2013 that killed 15             methodology used by BATF in support
                                                                                                                                                                   Amendments rule, and claimed that
                                                   people (on May 11, 2016, ATF ruled that the               of its finding regarding the cause of the             EPA’s economic analysis did not
                                                   fire was intentionally set.) President Obama              West Explosion. See 82 FR 27140, June                 accurately assess the costs of new
                                                   issued Executive Order 13650, ‘‘Improving                 14, 2017. These commenters claimed
                                                   Chemical Facility Safety and Security,’’ on                                                                     provisions and violated procedural
                                                                                                             the BATF used a process of elimination                requirements by not quantifying
                                                   August 1, 2013.
                                                                                                             called ‘‘negative corpus’’ to develop its             potential benefits or linking specific
                                                      As indicated above, the final RMP                      conclusion rather than a more sound                   rule provisions to quantified benefits.
                                                   Amendments rule acknowledged the                          investigative methodology.42 BATF                     Most of these objections were variations
                                                   BATF finding concerning the cause of                      provided EPA an explanation of                        of the comments previously provided on
                                                   the West Fertilizer incident. 82 FR at                    methodology used in their investigation,              issues raised in the proposed RMP
                                                   4594, January 13, 2017.                                   which did not rely on ‘‘negative corpus’’             Amendments rule.44 Without deciding
                                                   Notwithstanding this finding, EPA                         but relied on the scientific method as                whether reconsideration of any
                                                   maintained that the incident still                        explained in the 2014 Edition of the                  particular objection meets the standard
                                                   highlighted the need for better                                                                                 of CAA section 307(d)(7)(B), EPA is
                                                                                                             NFPA 921 Guide for Fire and Explosion
                                                   coordination between facility staff and                                                                         using its discretion to reopen its
                                                                                                             Investigations and by considering the
                                                   local emergency responders. EPA also                                                                            consideration of regulatory costs of the
                                                   highlighted in the RMP Amendments                         significant evidence, artifacts, and
                                                                                                             information collected.43 BATF                         Amendments in this reconsideration
                                                   Rule other incidents that further                                                                               proceeding.
                                                   supported the need for better                             continues to have an award posted for
                                                                                                                                                                      In developing the 1996 RMP rule, the
                                                   coordination between facility staff and                   information leading to an arrest of the
                                                                                                                                                                   Agency addressed the reasonableness of
                                                   local emergency responders (e.g., BP                      person or persons responsible for the                 its regulations in part by taking account
                                                   Refinery incident in Texas City, TX;                      fire and subsequent explosion at the                  of the costs and implementation
                                                   Tesoro Refinery incident in Anacortes,                    West Fertilizer facility. EPA defers to               burdens. See 61 FR 31668, 31717 (June
                                                   WA). EPA reaffirms this view, and this                    BATF expertise in determining the                     20, 1996). For example, EPA shifted
                                                   proposal would preserve the emergency                     cause of the West Fertilizer fire and                 from an initially proposed approach of
                                                   response coordination enhancements of                     explosion and the validity of                         requiring all source prevention
                                                   the RMP Amendments rule with minor                        investigation methods. We also believe                programs to be based on the PSM
                                                   modifications to address valid security                   we should strike a different balance                  standard to requiring PSM standard-
                                                   concerns raised by petitioners. Our                       between security and safety with respect              based prevention programs only for
                                                   proposal also would rescind virtually all                 to information disclosure and security                sources already subject to the PSM
                                                   changes to the accident prevention                        for the reasons stated above, and solicit             standard or in high-accident sectors;
                                                   provisions of Subparts C and D made in                    comment on this view. Does the BATF                   EPA allowed other sources subject to
                                                   the RMP Amendments rule, as well as                       finding provide additional justification              the risk management program to use
                                                   the public information availability                       for EPA rescinding the STAA, third-                   more streamlined prevention
                                                   provisions (except for the requirement                    party audit, incident investigation, and              requirements. Additionally, EPA
                                                   to hold a public meeting after an                         information availability provisions of                developed tools and parameters to
                                                   accident), and make modifications to                      the RMP Amendments rule? Do EPA’s                     simplify offsite consequence analyses
                                                   the emergency exercise provisions. EPA                    proposed changes to the emergency                     for release scenarios. The Agency also
                                                   primarily justifies herein these proposed                                                                       centralized risk management plan
                                                                                                             response coordination provisions
                                                   rescissions and modifications on bases                                                                          submissions, standardizing the format
                                                                                                             preserve the Agency’s goal of better
                                                   other than the BATF finding. However,                                                                           and establishing an electronically
                                                                                                             coordination between facility staff and               accessible database, in order to relieve
                                                   the BATF finding informs EPA’s
                                                   concern, expressed above, that the                        local emergency responders that it                    multiple agencies of data management
                                                   Amendments may not have struck the                        sought in the final RMP Amendments                    burdens and to simplify compliance for
                                                   appropriate balance between multiple                      rule while resolving petitioners’ security            small businesses. While not explicitly
                                                   policy considerations, including but not                  concerns? Does the BATF finding have                  adopting a requirement that costs
                                                   limited to information security and                       any significance for EPA’s proposed                   exceed benefits in the 1996 rule, EPA
                                                   community right to know.                                  revisions to the emergency exercise                   helped justify the various modifications
                                                      The BATF finding was contrary to the                   provisions, or alternatively, their                   between the RMP proposal of 1993 and
                                                   widespread belief among the public and                    rescission?                                           the final rule of 1996 by noting large
                                                   regulated community during                                                                                      cost reductions relative to prior
                                                   development of the proposed RMP rule                                                                            proposed approaches without
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   that the West incident was the result of                                                                        significant loss of benefits. See, e.g., 60
                                                                                                               42 See Response to Comments on the 2017
                                                   an accident. Considering the timing of                                                                          FR 13526, 13527, March 13, 1995
                                                   BATF’s announcement, and that few                         Proposed Rule Further Delaying the Effective Date     (prevention program); id. at 13533
                                                                                                             of EPA’s Risk Management Program Amendments
                                                   commenters made reference to the                          (April 3, 2017; 82 FR 16146), EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–
                                                   finding in their comments on the                          0725–0881, pgs. 32–33.
                                                                                                                                                                     44 Compare RMP Coalition Petition, pgs.8–10,

                                                   proposed RMP Amendments rule, EPA                                                                               EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0759 to American Fuel
                                                                                                               43 BATF. 2016. Excerpt from West Fertilizer
                                                                                                                                                                   & Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM) May 13,
                                                   is requesting further public comment on                   Investigation Report regarding investigation          2016 comments on RMP proposed rule (81 FR
                                                                                                             methodology. US Department of Justice, Bureau of      13638, March 14, 2016), part 1 of 2, pgs. 56–59,
                                                     41 82   FR 4594, January 13, 2017.                      Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.            EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0579.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014     17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00022   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                              24871

                                                   (dispersion lookup tables); 61 FR at                      Orders. Each of these Executive Orders                are ‘‘reasonable,’’ consistent with the
                                                   31695, June 20, 1996 (burden reducing                     was promulgated shortly after the final               President’s policy direction, EPA is now
                                                   effect of electronic submission).                         RMP Amendments rule was published.                    placing greater weight on the
                                                      In developing the RMP Amendments,                         Executive Order 13771, ‘‘Reducing                  uncertainty of the accident reduction
                                                   EPA also considered costs and burdens                     Regulation and Controlling Regulatory                 benefits than we had when we
                                                   in deciding not to propose certain                        Costs’’ of January 30, 2017, says that any            promulgated the RMP Amendments,
                                                   options and to modify or not go forward                   new incremental costs associated with                 especially in contrast to the extensive
                                                   with various provisions in the final rule.                new regulation shall, to the extent                   record on the costs of the rule. In
                                                   For example, EPA chose not to propose                     permitted by law, be offset by the                    determining whether rescinding or
                                                   requiring all Program 2 and 3 facilities                  elimination of existing costs associated              modifying particular provisions is
                                                   to implement an emergency response                        with at least two prior regulations.46                reasonable and practicable, we
                                                   program; See 81 FR 13674 (March 14,                          Executive Order 13777, ‘‘Enforcing                 examined each on its merits and in the
                                                   2016), or perform emergency exercises.                    the Regulatory Reform Agenda’’ of                     context of the policy direction reflected
                                                   Id. at 13677. In the final Amendments                     February 24, 2017, calls for agency                   in the new Executive Orders. EPA notes
                                                   rule, EPA chose not to incorporate                        Regulatory Reform Task Forces to                      that while further analysis of the
                                                   commenters’ suggestion that EPA                           identify regulations that, among other                reasonableness and practicability of the
                                                   require third-party audits for all RMP                    things, impose costs that exceed                      Amendments is in keeping with the
                                                   facilities with Program 2 or 3 processes,                 benefits, evaluate these regulations and              principles articulated in the new
                                                   see 82 FR 4617 (January 13, 2017); and                    make recommendations to the agency                    Executive Orders, such an analysis
                                                   EPA chose to reduce the required                          head regarding their repeal,                          would be appropriate even without the
                                                   frequency of field and tabletop exercises                 replacement, or modification, consistent              Executive Orders, and the Agency
                                                   from what had initially been proposed.                    with applicable law.47                                retained the discretion to do so prior to
                                                   Id. at 4662.                                                 Executive Order 13783,’’ Promoting                 their promulgation.
                                                      While at the time we promulgated the                   Energy Independence and Economic
                                                   final Amendments rule we believed the                     Growth’’ of March 28, 2017, directs                   3. Costs of STAA, Third-Party Audits,
                                                   costs of the rule were reasonable in                      executive departments and agencies to                 and Incident Investigation Root Cause
                                                   relation to its benefits, we are                          immediately review existing regulations               Analysis
                                                   reexamining the reasonableness of the                     that potentially burden the development                  STAA is by far the costliest provision
                                                   Amendments in light of three newly                        or use of domestically produced energy                of the RMP Amendments rule. EPA
                                                   promulgated Executive Orders that                         resources and appropriately suspend,                  estimated that this provision would cost
                                                   require Agencies to place greater                         revise, or rescind those that unduly                  $70 million on an annualized basis.
                                                   emphasis on reducing regulatory costs                     burden the development of domestic                    This represents over 53% of the total
                                                   and burdens. These Executive Orders,                      energy resources beyond the degree                    estimated costs of the rule ($131.8
                                                   and their relationship to this proposal,                  necessary to protect the public interest              million annualized at a 7% discount
                                                   are discussed below. The agency                           or otherwise comply with the law.48                   rate). EPA estimated that third-party
                                                   acknowledges that the continual                           This Executive Order also directs that                audits would cost approximately $9.8
                                                   decrease in accidental releases under                     environmental regulations have greater                million on an annualized basis, and that
                                                   the existing RMP rule is evidence that                    benefits than cost, when permissible                  incident investigation root-cause
                                                   the existing rule is working and that                     under law.                                            analysis would cost approximately $1.8
                                                   additional costs may not justify the                         In addition to the justifications                  million on an annualized basis.
                                                   additional requirements. EPA is                           discussed previously (i.e., to maintain                  Petitioners for reconsideration raised
                                                   uncertain about whether the additional                    consistency in accident prevention                    objections to the costs and other
                                                   requirements (i.e., third party audits,                   programs and address security                         burdens of these provisions. For
                                                   STAA, and root cause analysis) add                        concerns), an important factor in                     example, CSAG complained of ‘‘ill-
                                                   environmental benefits beyond those                       selecting the provisions of the final RMP             defined and potentially expansive
                                                   provided by the existing requirements                     Amendments rule that EPA seeks to                     triggers for third party auditing,’’ as well
                                                   that are significant enough to justify                    rescind or modify with this proposal is               as reports from such audits and
                                                   their added costs. EPA will carefully                     that these provisions would otherwise                 ‘‘restrictive qualifications’’ for auditors
                                                   examine the provisions of the RMP                         place substantial economic burdens on                 as imposing significant burdens beyond
                                                   Amendments for their costs and benefits                   regulated entities, potentially                       what we quantified. The RMP Coalition
                                                   in implementing the statutory                             contravening the new policy direction                 noted the potential need for sources to
                                                   provisions of CAA section 112(r)(7).                      set in these new Executive Orders. In                 duplicate Process Hazard Analysis
                                                                                                             addition, such burdens are directly                   (PHAs) during the phase-in of STAA
                                                   2. New Executive Orders on Reducing                                                                             under the requirement to complete a
                                                                                                             relevant to whether the Amendments
                                                   Regulation, Regulatory Reform, and                                                                              PHA with STAA by 4 years after the
                                                                                                             are ‘‘practicable’’ for sources, as that
                                                   Promoting Energy Independence and                                                                               promulgation of the Amendments.
                                                                                                             term is used in CAA section 112(r)(7).
                                                   Economic Growth                                                                                                    In the RMP Amendments, EPA had
                                                                                                             In deciding whether the Amendments
                                                      In the final Delay Rule published June                                                                       judged the costs of STAA to be
                                                   14, 2017,45 EPA said the following:                         46 See Executive Order 13771: ‘‘Reducing            reasonable based on two assumptions,
                                                   ‘‘During the reconsideration, EPA may                     Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs’’         one explicit and one implicit. First, we
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   also consider other issues, beyond those                  which was signed on January 30, 2017 and              explicitly assumed that, whatever the
                                                                                                             published in the Federal Register on February 3,
                                                   raised by petitioners, that may benefit                   2017 (82 FR 9339).
                                                                                                                                                                   cost of a new safer technology
                                                   from additional comment, and take                           47 See Executive Order 13777: ‘‘Enforcing the       alternative, a company would incur
                                                   further regulatory action.’’ One such                     Regulatory Reform Agenda’’ which was signed on        such costs only if it were net beneficial
                                                   issue that EPA believes it should                         February 24, 2017 and published in the Federal        to the company. Amendments RTC at
                                                                                                             Register on March 31, 2017 (82 FR 12285).             70. We then implicitly assumed that an
                                                   consider is the policies of the President                   48 See Executive Order 13783: ‘‘Promoting Energy
                                                   that are reflected in the new Executive                   Independence and Economic Growth’’ which was
                                                                                                                                                                   unknown but sufficient fraction of the
                                                                                                             signed on March 28, 2017 and published in the         three affected industries would in fact
                                                     45 82   FR 27133, June 14, 2017                         Federal Register on March 31, 2017 (82 FR 16093).     implement changes as a result of having


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014     17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00023   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24872                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   performed STAA to make the                              of past accidents is a strong predictor of               auditing. The most directly analogous
                                                   requirement to conduct STAA                             future accidents.50                                      programs reviewed by EPA included
                                                   assessments reasonable. Nevertheless,                      Several commenters during the                         programs relating to boiler safety,
                                                   the Agency also acknowledged that no                    rulemaking asked that EPA emphasize                      medical device safety, food and product
                                                   benefits would accrue from                              enforcement rather than amend the RMP                    safety, hazardous waste site cleanups,
                                                   implementing STAA unless facilities                     rule. The data (as analyzed by ACC in                    and compliance with waste treatment
                                                   subject to the requirement voluntarily                  its petition) tend to support the                        and underground storage tank
                                                   elect to implement a safer technology.                  reasonableness of an enforcement-led                     regulations, but even these programs do
                                                   EPA did not account for the indirect                    approach to strengthening accident                       not involve review of production
                                                   costs of implementing safer technologies                prevention that focuses on problematic                   processes as complex as modern
                                                   and alternatives in the RMP                             facilities rather than broader regulatory                refineries and chemical manufacturing
                                                   Amendments rule, but in the RIA                         mandates. Under the RMP rule as it                       plants. When EPA first took comment
                                                   provided examples of safer technologies                 existed before the RMP Amendments,                       on third party oversight in 1995,52 we
                                                   that could cost as much as $500 million                 EPA has required third-party audits in                   examined whether such oversight
                                                   (converting hydrogen fluoride (HF)                      resolving enforcement actions not only                   would be appropriate for sectors with
                                                   alkylation unit to sulfuric acid) or $1                 after reported releases but also when                    simpler processes, and EPA’s own RMP
                                                   billion (converting a paper mill from                   inspections have indicated potentially                   third party audit pilot project conducted
                                                   gaseous chlorine bleaching to chlorine                  weak prevention programs. By requiring                   with the Wharton School of the
                                                   dioxide). Therefore, not only are the                   third-party audits after every reportable                University of Pennsylvania involved
                                                   known costs of complying with this                      accident rather than using an                            simpler processes.53 Should EPA
                                                   provision high, indirect costs could also               enforcement-led approach, the RMP                        consider limiting third party audits to
                                                   be incurred, if facilities take actions                 Amendments potentially burden more                       relatively simple or common processes
                                                   based on the results of their STAA (or                  of the regulated community than is                       where experts could apply transferable
                                                   based on external pressures to                          appropriate in light of new policy                       expertise more easily than in more
                                                   implement STAA recommendations                          direction that we put more emphasis on                   complex processes? Are there other
                                                   regardless of whether they are necessary                regulatory burden reduction and                          ways to more narrowly tailor
                                                   or practical). Lastly, given the                        improved net benefits. An enforcement-                   applicability to appropriate RMP
                                                   application of the current requirements,                led approach allows the agency                           facilities without broadly burdening the
                                                   the Agency now questions the implicit                   additional discretion to make a                          RMP-regulated universe with a third-
                                                   assumption that a sufficient number of                  determination of the utility of a third-                 party audit requirement? Should third
                                                   sources would implement STAA                            party audit or a root-cause analysis.                    party audits only be mandated for
                                                   improvements to offset the costs of the                 While EPA believes an enforcement-led                    facilities with multiple incidents? Some
                                                   provision.                                              approach is preferable to a uniform                      critics of the RMP Amendments have
                                                      Both the third-party auditing and the                regulatory standard for third party                      particular concerns about whether
                                                   root cause incident investigation                       audits and root cause analyses, the                      parties that meet the strict
                                                   provisions trigger after one incident—                  Agency requests public comment on                        independence criteria of the RMP
                                                   either a reportable accident for third-                 whether a third-party audit or root-                     Amendments would be able to
                                                   party auditing or a catastrophic release                cause analysis should be required under                  understand these complex processes
                                                   for a root-cause investigation. Data                    certain well-defined regulatory criteria.                enough to make strong
                                                   analysis provided by the American                                                                                recommendations in an audit. Should
                                                                                                           For third party audits, such criteria
                                                   Chemistry Council (ACC) to support the                                                                           the agency consider modifying the
                                                                                                           might include requiring audits
                                                   RMP Coalition Petition demonstrates                                                                              independence criteria in any future
                                                                                                           following multiple RMP-reportable
                                                   that accidents, and especially patterns                                                                          third-party audit provision?
                                                                                                           accidents, or multiple regulatory
                                                   of multiple accidents, are concentrated                                                                            Likewise, by burdening whole sectors
                                                                                                           violations of a particular gravity. For
                                                   in very few facilities. Of the                                                                                   rather than facilities that have multiple
                                                                                                           root-cause analyses, EPA could consider
                                                   approximately 1500 reportable                                                                                    accidents, the RMP Amendments
                                                                                                           requiring such analyses following
                                                   accidents in EPA’s RMP database from                                                                             missed an opportunity to better target
                                                                                                           incidents exceeding specified severity
                                                   the years 2004 to 2013, only 8% of the                                                                           the burdens of STAA to the specific
                                                                                                           levels. Although it is not our intent at
                                                   12,500 facilities subject to the RMP rule                                                                        facilities that are responsible for nearly
                                                   reported any accidental releases, while                 this time to adopt such provisions, we
                                                                                                           invite parties to suggest appropriate                    half of the accidents associated with
                                                   the less than 2% of facilities that                                                                              regulated substances at stationary
                                                   reported multiple releases in that time                 regulatory criteria for third party audits
                                                                                                           and root-cause analyses.                                 sources subject to the RMP rule. EPA
                                                   frame were responsible for nearly half                                                                           has also used an enforcement-led
                                                   (48%) of reportable accidents from all                     For third party audits, while EPA
                                                                                                           cited a number of studies relating to the                approach in some past CAA section
                                                   types of facilities. Within NAICS code                                                                           112(r) enforcement cases where facility
                                                   325, the chemical manufacturing                         usefulness of such audits in various
                                                                                                           contexts,51 EPA is particularly                          owners or operators have entered into
                                                   industry, of the 1465 facilities subject to
                                                   the RMP rule, 99 facilities with multiple               interested in gaining additional
                                                                                                                                                                      52 See 60 FR 13530. March 13, 1995.
                                                   reportable accidents were responsible                   information relating to third-party audit                  53 EPA  conducted a pilot study with the Wharton
                                                   for approximately 70% of all reportable                 programs relevant to process safety                      School of the University of Pennsylvania on the
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   accidents in the sector and more than                     50 Kleindorfer, P.R., Belke, J.C., Elliot, M.R, Lee,
                                                                                                                                                                    efficacy of voluntary third-party RMP audits. For
                                                   one-third of all reportable accidents.49                                                                         relevant reports from this pilot, see R. Barrish, R.
                                                                                                           K., Lowe, R.A., and Feldman, H.I., 2003. Accident        Antoff, & J. Brabson, Dep’t of Natural Resources &
                                                   Other studies have also found a history                 Epidemiology and the U.S. Chemical Industry:             Env. Control, Third Party Audit Pilot Project in the
                                                                                                           Accident History and Worst-Case Data from                State of Delaware, Final Report (June 6, 2000)
                                                     49 EPA. March 9, 2017. Notes and Documentation        RMP*Info, Risk Analysis, Vol.23, No. 5, pgs. 865–        http://opim.wharton.upenn.edu/risk/library/2000,
                                                   Related to a March 9, 2017 Meeting between the          881. See Table IV, pg. 872. https://                     Document ID EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0658 and
                                                   RMP Coalition and EPA regarding a Petition for          pdfs.semanticscholar.org/f0c9/f27d670a6ea                EPA Region 3, Third-Party Pilot Project in the
                                                   Reconsideration of the RMP Amendments rule (82          77187aeb3f78ca0ced444db8b.pdf.                           Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Final Report
                                                   FR 4594, January 17, 2017). USEPA, Office of              51 See 81 FR 13656–58, March 14, 2016 and 82           (February 2001), Document ID, EPA–HQ–OEM–
                                                   Emergency Management.                                   FR 4620–25, January 13, 2017.                            2015–0725–0651.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00024   Fmt 4701    Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM       30MYP2


                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                 24873

                                                   consent agreements involving                              costs associated with the prevention                  § 68.210(b) that is not available in a
                                                   implementation of safer alternatives as                   program provisions of the RMP                         facility’s RMP is the Safety Data Sheet
                                                   discussed in the proposed RMP                             Amendments exceed their benefits                      (SDS) for a regulated substance.
                                                   Amendments rule. See 82 FR at 13664,                      unless significant non-monetized                      However, SDSs are already widely
                                                   March 16, 2016.                                           benefits are assumed. Thus, we                        available to the public by means of a
                                                      Given the small numbers of                             recommend rescinding them in                          basic internet search using the chemical
                                                   problematic facilities, the                               accordance with the direction reflected               name. Some chemical manufacturers
                                                   reasonableness of an enforcement-led                      in E.O. 13777. Rescinding these                       provide access to SDSs for their specific
                                                   approach to the prevention programs                       provisions would also allow EPA greater               products on the company’s website.
                                                   under the RMP rule in lieu of the RMP                     flexibility to offset the incremental costs           Hazardous chemical SDSs that are
                                                   Amendments leads us to believe that the                   associated with other new regulations in              required to be submitted to State
                                                   prevention program provisions in the                      accordance with E.O. 13771.                           Emergency Response Commissions
                                                   RMP Amendments place an                                      Additionally, the STAA costs are                   (SERCs) and LEPCs under Section 311
                                                   unnecessary and undue burden on                           concentrated on three industry sectors—               of EPCRA (42 U.S.C. 11044) are
                                                   regulated entities. In lieu of broadly                    petroleum and coal products                           available to the public upon request
                                                   imposing STAA in particular on broad                      manufacturing, chemical                               from the SERC or LEPC, except the
                                                   sectors, an enforcement-led approach                      manufacturing, and paper                              identity of any chemical name meeting
                                                   can retain much benefit of the RMP                        manufacturing—which include a                         the criteria for trade secret protection
                                                   Amendments at a fraction of the cost.                     significant number of facilities that                 provided by Section 322 of EPCRA (42
                                                   Such an approach would contain a                          produce domestic energy resources.                    U.S.C. 11042) may not be disclosed.
                                                   compliance assistance element as well.                    Therefore, this provision in particular                  In addition to chemical hazard
                                                   Targeted compliance assistance could                      appears to be a good candidate for                    information, § 68.210(b) requires the
                                                   provide the benefit of independent                        rescission to achieve the policies                    facility to provide emergency response
                                                   assistance to sources that have had                       reflected in E.O. 13783.                              program information (including whether
                                                   multiple releases with more flexibility                                                                         the stationary source is a responding
                                                                                                             4. Costs of Information Availability
                                                   than the third-party audit provisions of                                                                        stationary source or a non-responding
                                                   the RMP Amendments. Such a program                           For providing the public the means to              stationary source, the name and phone
                                                   would be consistent with a measure                        access the available chemical hazard                  number of local emergency response
                                                   included in the President’s proposed                      information in § 68.210(b), as well as                organizations with which the owner or
                                                   budget that would authorize a fee-based                   information on community                              operator last coordinated emergency
                                                   program allowing owners and operators                     preparedness, in the RMP Amendments
                                                                                                                                                                   response efforts, and for stationary
                                                   to request EPA to conduct a walk-                         rule EPA required the regulated facility
                                                                                                                                                                   sources subject to § 68.95, procedures
                                                   through of their facilities to assist in                  to provide ongoing notification on a
                                                                                                                                                                   for informing the public and local
                                                   compliance. Another non-regulatory                        company website, social media
                                                                                                                                                                   emergency response agencies about
                                                   option to promote IST and ISD would be                    platforms, or through other publicly
                                                                                                                                                                   accidental releases), LEPC contact
                                                   to encourage technology transfer, either                  accessible means for instructions on
                                                                                                                                                                   information (including LEPC name,
                                                   through EPA-led forums or through non-                    how to request the information (e.g.
                                                                                                                                                                   phone number, and web address as
                                                   governmental entities like industry                       email, mailing address, and/or
                                                                                                                                                                   available), and a list of scheduled
                                                   associations or academic institutions.                    telephone or website request). The
                                                                                                                                                                   exercises required under § 68.96. Most
                                                   By not establishing any means for                         facility is required to identify this
                                                                                                             publicly accessible means in their RMP                of this information is also already
                                                   sharing IST and ISD beyond the facility,                                                                        available in the facility’s RMP. The only
                                                   the RMP Amendments did little to                          submission [§ 68.160 (b)(21)—‘‘Method
                                                                                                             of communication and location of the                  required item of emergency response
                                                   promote technology-transfer. An                                                                                 program information that is not
                                                   approach that emphasizes voluntary                        notification that chemical hazard
                                                                                                             information is available to the public,               available in the facility’s RMP is the
                                                   technology-transfer would be consistent                                                                         facility’s procedure for informing the
                                                   with the statutory provision to                           pursuant to § 68.210(c)’’]. Unless a
                                                                                                             member of the public discovered the                   public and local emergency response
                                                   ‘‘recognize . . . the voluntary actions of                                                                      agencies about accidental releases.
                                                   [facilities] to prevent . . . and respond                 means to access the information through
                                                                                                             their own efforts or were notified by                 However, this information can be
                                                   to [accidental] releases.’’ CAA section
                                                                                                             outreach efforts of the facility, they                obtained by contacting the appropriate
                                                   112(r)(7)(B)(i). Emphasizing burden
                                                                                                             would need to access the facility’s RMP               local response agencies. A member of
                                                   reduction while retaining benefits is
                                                                                                             submission to determine how to obtain                 the public living near a facility can
                                                   consistent with the approach we took
                                                                                                             the chemical hazard information                       identify their LEPC either by reviewing
                                                   when we adopted the RMP rule in 1996.
                                                      It is also possible that the existing                  available under § 68.210(b). However,                 the facility’s RMP, or by contacting their
                                                   rule’s prevention program measures                        most of the § 68.210(b) chemical hazard               SERC. EPA maintains contact
                                                   already encompass many of the benefits                    information elements are already in the               information for each SERC on its
                                                   of the Amendments rule prevention                         RMP submission, as it already contains,               website.55
                                                   provisions—some facilities may already                    among other information, the names of                   Therefore, once a member of the
                                                   be considering safer technologies in                      regulated substances held above                       public obtains a facility’s RMP, the need
                                                   conjunction with their process hazard                     threshold quantities, the facility’s five-            to make a request to that facility for the
                                                                                                                                                                   elements contained in the RMP would
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   analysis, using root cause analysis for                   year accident history, whether the
                                                   incident investigations, and/or hiring                    facility is a responding or non-                      be eliminated, and most other elements
                                                   independent third parties to conduct                      responding stationary source, the name                are available using the internet or by
                                                   audits. Considering the low and                           and phone number of the local response                contacting local response agencies. In
                                                   declining accident rate 54 at RMP                         organization involved in emergency                    promulgating the Amendments, EPA
                                                   facilities under the existing RMP rule,                   response coordination, and the LEPC                     55 https://www.epa.gov/epcra/local-emergency-
                                                   the Agency believes it is likely that the                 name.                                                 planning-committees Contains contact information
                                                                                                                One chemical hazard information                    for each SERC, names, address and websites for
                                                     54 See   Reconsideration RIA, Exhibit 3–7.              item required to be provided under                    each SERC.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014     17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00025   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24874                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   overlooked the apparent redundancy of                   in their area are particularly impacted                   agencies; procedures and measures for
                                                   requiring the public to obtain a facility’s             by the minimum exercise frequency                         emergency response including
                                                   RMP in order to find out how to request                 requirement. EPA’s proposal herein                        evacuations and medical treatment;
                                                   the information authorized for                          would retain the emergency response                       identification of facility emergency
                                                   disclosure under § 68.210(b). For this                  coordination provisions (with proposed                    response personnel and/or contractors
                                                   reason, as well as the availability of                  modifications) and emergency                              and their responsibilities; coordination
                                                   information from other public data                      notification drill provisions, and modify                 with local emergency responders;
                                                   sources, EPA now believes that the                      the field and tabletop exercise                           procedures for emergency response
                                                   additional burden for facilities to                     provisions by removing the minimum                        equipment deployment; and any other
                                                   provide these information elements                      exercise frequency requirements for                       action identified in the emergency
                                                   directly to the public is not justified and             field exercises and modifying exercise                    response plan, as appropriate. EPA is
                                                   that these provisions are good                          scope and documentation requirements                      proposing to replace ‘‘shall’’ with
                                                   candidates for rescission to further the                to provide more flexibility to regulated                  ‘‘should’’ in both provisions. While EPA
                                                   policies reflected in Executive Orders                  facilities. As alternatives to modifying                  believes that these scope provisions are
                                                   13771 and 13777.                                        the frequency, scope, and                                 likely to be suitable guidelines for most
                                                      As indicated above, if EPA maintains                 documentation requirements, EPA has                       facilities, the Agency believes that
                                                   a field exercise requirement in the final               considered either fully rescinding the                    converting them to discretionary
                                                   rule, information on upcoming facility                  emergency field and tabletop exercise                     provisions (i.e., ‘‘should’’) will allow
                                                   exercises would be the only item of                     provisions or modifying them by                           owners and operators to coordinate with
                                                   information required to be disclosed in                 removing the minimum exercise                             local responders to design exercises that
                                                   § 68.210(b) that is not already available               frequency requirement for field                           are most suitable for their own
                                                   from another source. EPA nevertheless                   exercises but retaining the existing                      situations. Alternatively, EPA
                                                   is proposing not to require disclosure of               requirements for scope and                                considered retaining the exercise scope
                                                   exercise schedules. As stated                           documentation of field and tabletop                       provisions as stated in the final RMP
                                                   previously, there is no easy way to                     exercises. EPA believes that any of these                 Amendments rule. EPA requests
                                                   restrict that information to only                       alternatives would reduce the regulatory                  comments on its proposed revisions to
                                                   members of the local public, and wider                  burden on both facilities and local                       the field and tabletop scope provisions.
                                                   distribution of this information could                  responders.59                                             Would EPA’s proposed changes reduce
                                                   carry security risks. Nevertheless, the                    EPA’s proposed revisions to                            the burden of the exercise requirements
                                                   Agency requests public comment on                       § 68.96(b)(1)(ii) and § 68.96(b)(2)(ii)—                  on owners and operators and local
                                                   whether information on upcoming                         the scope provisions for field and                        responders by allowing them to design
                                                   exercises should still be required to be                tabletop exercises, respectively—would                    exercises that are tailored to their own
                                                   provided to members of the public upon                  provide the owner or operator with                        circumstances?
                                                   request.                                                discretion to decide on an appropriate
                                                                                                                                                                        EPA’s proposed revisions to
                                                   5. Costs of Field and Tabletop Exercises                scope for exercises. In the RMP
                                                                                                                                                                     § 68.96(b)(3) Documentation, would
                                                                                                           Amendments rule, EPA stated that field
                                                      After STAA, field and tabletop                                                                                 retain the RMP Amendments rule
                                                                                                           exercises shall include: Tests of
                                                   exercises were estimated to be the next                                                                           requirement that the owner/operator
                                                                                                           procedures to notify the public and the
                                                   costliest provision of the RMP                                                                                    prepare an evaluation report within 90
                                                                                                           appropriate Federal, state, and local
                                                   Amendments rule, at $24.7 million per                                                                             days of each exercise. However, the
                                                                                                           emergency response agencies about an
                                                   year. While the majority of these costs                                                                           contents of the report would be
                                                                                                           accidental release; tests of procedures
                                                   were projected to fall on regulated                                                                               discretionary. In the RMP Amendments
                                                                                                           and measures for emergency response
                                                   facilities, EPA also projected that a                                                                             rule, EPA stated that the report shall
                                                                                                           actions including evacuations and
                                                   significant share of costs would fall on                                                                          include: A description of the exercise
                                                                                                           medical treatment; tests of
                                                   local emergency responders                                                                                        scenario; names and organizations of
                                                                                                           communications systems; mobilization
                                                   participating in field and tabletop                                                                               each participant; an evaluation of the
                                                                                                           of facility emergency response
                                                   exercises.56 Petitioner States indicated                                                                          exercise results including lessons
                                                                                                           personnel, including contractors, as
                                                   that emergency coordination and                                                                                   learned; recommendations for
                                                                                                           appropriate; coordination with local
                                                   exercise costs would place significant                                                                            improvement or revisions to the
                                                                                                           emergency responders; emergency
                                                   burdens on state and local responders: 57                                                                         emergency response exercise program
                                                                                                           response equipment deployment; and
                                                   Petitioner States also claimed that EPA                                                                           and emergency response program; and a
                                                                                                           any other action identified in the
                                                   understated costs for these provisions                                                                            schedule to promptly address and
                                                                                                           emergency response program, as
                                                   and did not show benefits.58 Petitioner                                                                           resolve recommendations. EPA is
                                                                                                           appropriate. For tabletop exercises, EPA
                                                   CSAG made similar claims.                                                                                         proposing to replace ‘‘shall’’ with
                                                                                                           stated that exercises shall include
                                                      The agency is not certain that it                                                                              ‘‘should’’ in this provision. While EPA
                                                                                                           discussions of: Procedures to notify the
                                                   properly assessed the actual demands of                                                                           continues to believe that it is important
                                                                                                           public and the appropriate Federal,
                                                   these provisions or the increased burden                                                                          to prepare an evaluation report for each
                                                                                                           state, and local emergency response
                                                   on LEPCs in the final rule. EPA agrees                                                                            exercise in order to identify lessons
                                                   that these provisions, and particularly                   59 Note, however, that the RIA for this rulemaking      learned and share results with others
                                                   the emergency exercise provisions,                      retains the cost estimate for exercises from the          involved in responding to releases, the
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   would place substantial burdens on                      Amendments rule. See Reconsideration RIA, Ch. 4.          Agency believes it may be reasonable to
                                                   regulated facilities and local responders.              EPA retained this estimate as a conservative              allow owners and operators discretion
                                                   Local responders with multiple facilities               approach to estimating exercise costs under this
                                                                                                           proposal. By removing the minimum frequency
                                                                                                                                                                     on the contents of the report. Allowing
                                                                                                           requirement for field exercises and encouraging           such flexibility in documenting
                                                     56 See final rule RIA, page Exhibits 4–7 and 4–8,
                                                                                                           facilities to conduct joint exercises and using           exercises would also allow owners and
                                                   page 47.                                                exercises already conducted under other
                                                     57 States Petition, pgs. 4–5, Document ID: EPA–
                                                                                                                                                                     operators to create separate exercise
                                                                                                           requirements to meet the requirements of the RMP
                                                   HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0762.                                  rule, EPA expects that the total number, and
                                                                                                                                                                     documents and/or appendices in such
                                                     58 States Petition, pg. 5, Document ID: EPA–HQ–       therefore costs, of exercises held for compliance         documentation that clearly distinguish
                                                   OEM–2015–0725–0762.                                     with the rule is likely to be lower than this estimate.   content that should be shared with local


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00026   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM    30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                             24875

                                                   emergency responders from security-                     EPA in the proposed RMP Amendments                    guidances and outreach materials we
                                                   sensitive content that should be closely                rule, while reducing undue burdens on                 had committed to developing in the
                                                   held by the owner or operator.                          facilities and local emergency                        final RMP Amendments will still be
                                                   Alternatively, EPA considered retaining                 responders as much as reasonably                      useful to sources seeking to comply
                                                   the exercise documentation requirement                  possible? Are there additional                        with those portions of our rule that we
                                                   as stated in the final RMP Amendments                   modifications or rescissions that EPA                 do not rescind. EPA will need time to
                                                   rule. EPA requests comments on its                      should make in order to further reduce                develop that material. EPA also agrees
                                                   proposed revision to the exercise                       costs, without significantly impacting                with CSAG and the States that regulated
                                                   documentation requirements. Should                      public health and environmental                       sources and local responders should not
                                                   the requirement for exercise evaluation                 protection?                                           be expected to expend resources
                                                   reports be retained, but altered to                                                                           complying with rule provisions that
                                                                                                           E. Revise Compliance Dates to Provide
                                                   provide more flexibility to regulated                                                                         may change, and that owners and
                                                                                                           Necessary Time for Program Changes
                                                   facilities?                                                                                                   operators will require this additional
                                                                                                              Petitioner CSAG recommended that                   time to familiarize themselves with the
                                                   6. Stakeholder Input on Cost Reductions                 EPA delay the compliance dates for the                revised rule and implement appropriate
                                                      EPA requests public comment on the                   same period by which the effective date               programmatic changes.
                                                   cost and burden reductions associated                   of the rule was extended.60 Petitioner                   EPA is proposing a different
                                                   with the proposed rule. Would                           States made the same                                  compliance date for public meetings
                                                   eliminating the STAA, third-party audit,                recommendation.61 In the final rule to                than that established under the final
                                                   incident investigation, and information                 delay the effective date of the RMP                   Amendments rule because with the
                                                   availability provisions and modifying or                Amendments, EPA did not adjust the                    proposed rescission of the other
                                                   rescinding the field and tabletop                       rule’s compliance dates, indicating that              information availability requirements of
                                                   exercise provisions contribute toward                   the Agency would propose to take such                 the final Amendments rule, EPA
                                                   the goals of Executive Orders 13771,                    action as necessary when considering                  believes that sources would not require
                                                   13777, and 13783 and address                            future regulatory action.62 EPA now                   four years to prepare to conduct post-
                                                   petitioners’ and other commenters’                      proposes to delay the rule’s compliance               accident public meetings. See Section
                                                   concerns about excessive regulatory                     dates to one year after the effective date            III.F—Revise compliance dates above for
                                                   costs and unjustified burdens? Are there                of a final rule for the emergency                     further discussion of this proposed
                                                   any data from chemical accident or                      coordination provisions, two years after              change.
                                                   toxic use reduction programs that                       the effective date of a final rule for the               EPA is also proposing one
                                                   demonstrates a substantially lower                      public meeting provision, four years                  modification to the compliance date for
                                                   accident rate at existing facilities that               after the effective date of a final rule for          emergency exercises. Under the final
                                                   already had successful accident                         the emergency exercise provisions, and                amendments rule, EPA required that
                                                   prevention programs in place and then                   five years after the effective date of a              owners and operators comply with the
                                                   conducted Inherently Safer Technology                   final rule for the risk management plan               emergency exercise provisions by four
                                                   or Design (IST/ISD) reviews or                          reporting provisions affected by new                  years after the effective date of the final
                                                   otherwise conducted chemical                            requirements. EPA is also retaining the               rule. As EPA explained in the final rule,
                                                   substitution to lower chemical hazards?                 requirement to comply with the                        this meant that the owner or operator
                                                   EPA’s proposal to modify the emergency                  emergency response program                            must have completed a notification
                                                   exercise provisions would retain the                    requirements of § 68.95 within three                  exercise, consulted with local
                                                   RMP Amendments rule requirement for                     years of when the owner or operator                   emergency response officials to
                                                   regulated facilities to coordinate with                 initially determines that the stationary              establish a schedule for conducting
                                                   local emergency responders to develop                   source is subject to those requirements.              tabletop and field exercises, and
                                                   emergency exercise schedules, but                          Except for the new proposed                        completed at least one field or tabletop
                                                   would remove the minimum frequency                      compliance date for public meetings,                  exercise by the compliance date. Under
                                                   requirement for field exercises, and                    these proposed compliance dates would                 the current proposal, owners and
                                                   allow facility owners to work with local                toll the compliance dates established                 operators would be still be required to
                                                   responders to establish appropriate                     under the final Amendments rule, using                have exercise programs and schedules
                                                   frequencies and plans for exercises.                    the same one-year compliance interval                 meeting the requirements of § 68.96 in
                                                   Would these changes help to address                     for the emergency coordination                        place within four years of the effective
                                                   petitioners’ and commenters’ concerns                   provision, four-year compliance interval              date of a final rule. However, the owner
                                                   about the excessive costs of the exercise               for the exercise provisions, and five-year            or operator would not be required to
                                                   provisions? Should EPA make other                       compliance interval for new or modified               have completed a notification and field
                                                   changes to these provisions, or fully                   risk management plan reporting                        or tabletop exercise by that date. Based
                                                   rescind the field and tabletop exercise                 provisions, that were used under the                  on the schedule established by the
                                                   provisions in order to further reduce                   final Amendments rule, but establishing               owner or operator in coordination with
                                                   costs? If EPA were to fully rescind the                 the new compliance dates relative to the              local response agencies, the owner or
                                                   exercise provisions, would the                          future effective date of a final rule                 operator would have up to one
                                                   remaining requirements of the RMP                       resulting from this proposal. In so                   additional year to perform their first
                                                   Amendments rule for annual                              doing, EPA is relying on the same                     notification drill, and up to three
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   notification drills (§ 68.96(a)), enhanced              rationale it used in establishing                     additional years to conduct their first
                                                   emergency response coordination                         compliance dates under the final                      tabletop exercise. There would be no
                                                   (§ 68.93—with proposed modifications),                  Amendments rule.63 We believe the                     specified deadline date for the first field
                                                   and enhanced emergency response                                                                               exercise, other than that established in
                                                                                                             60 CSAG Petition, pg. 1, EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–
                                                   program updates (§ 68.95(a)(4)) be                                                                            the owner or operator’s exercise
                                                                                                           0725–0766.
                                                   sufficient to address the emergency                       61 States Petition, pg. 1, EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–         schedule.
                                                   response planning and coordination                      0725–0762.                                               EPA is proposing this change to avoid
                                                   gaps highlighted by the West Fertilizer                   62 See 82 FR 27142, June 14, 2017.                  overburdening facilities and local
                                                   incident and other incidents noted by                     63 See 82 FR 4675–8, January 13, 2017.              responders in meeting exercise


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00027   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24876                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   requirements. Requiring every facility to               STAA provisions, the Agency requests                  audits, STAA feasibility, near misses or
                                                   complete notification and field or                      public comment on whether the                         root cause analysis that were added in
                                                   tabletop exercises by the compliance                    compliance date for STAA should be                    the final rule and RIA or Response to
                                                   date would likely result in many                        further extended. For example, should                 Comments. Other documents were
                                                   exercises occurring at or near the                      EPA extend the STAA compliance date                   internal EPA email communications
                                                   compliance date. In communities with                    to 5 years or some longer interval, so                involving the development of the
                                                   multiple RMP facilities, this could                     that all facilities subject to it would               proposed RMP amendments provisions
                                                   result in excessive demands on local                    have the opportunity to incorporate the               or estimating the rule’s costs, and some
                                                   responders to participate in notification               STAA into their PHA during their                      EPA and OSHA documents related to
                                                   drills and exercises, and be inconsistent               regular PHA revalidation cycle?                       RMP or PSM program guidance and
                                                   with EPA’s desire to give facilities and                Alternatively, should EPA require                     enforcement.
                                                   local responders more flexibility in                    STAA in PHAs performed after a certain                   To the extent EPA may have relied on
                                                   scheduling and conducting exercises.                    date, such as 3 or 4 years after                      these documents to support the third-
                                                   EPA believes that a better approach                     promulgation of a final rule?                         party audit and STAA provisions of the
                                                   would be to allow facilities and local                                                                        final RMP Amendments rule without
                                                                                                           F. Other Issues Raised by Petitioners                 providing the public with full
                                                   responders to work together to establish
                                                   an appropriate schedule by the                            In addition to the issues discussed                 opportunity for review and comment,
                                                   compliance date. In communities with                    previously, petitioners raised several                this point will become moot if the
                                                   multiple RMP facilities, this should                    other issues that EPA would like to                   Agency rescinds those provisions, as we
                                                   allow facilities and local responders to                address.                                              have proposed herein. Nevertheless, the
                                                   conduct required exercises at more                      1. New Documents Entered in Docket                    documents are now available for public
                                                   appropriate intervals, avoid                            After Close of Comment Period                         review in the rulemaking docket. A list
                                                   concentrating numerous exercises                                                                              of these 129 rule support documents is
                                                   around one date, provide more regular                      The RMP Coalition indicated that                   also available in the rulemaking
                                                   training opportunities for facility and                 EPA added numerous documents to the                   docket.67
                                                   local responders, and take full                         rulemaking docket after the close of the
                                                                                                           comment period, that EPA used several                 2. New Third-Party Audit Trigger and
                                                   advantage of opportunities to conduct                                                                         New Legal Rationales for Third-Party
                                                   joint exercises or combine RMP facility                 of these to support core provisions of
                                                                                                           the final rule, and that members of the               Audits and STAA
                                                   exercises with exercises conducted
                                                   under other requirements. EPA requests                  public were not able to submit                           The RMP Coalition stated that in the
                                                   public comment on its proposal to                       comments on these documents.65 66                     final RMP Amendments rule, EPA
                                                   extend compliance dates, including the                     EPA added 129 documents to the                     added a new trigger [criterion] for third-
                                                   proposed new compliance date for                        rulemaking docket after the end of the                party audits 68 as well as new legal
                                                   public meetings and the proposed                        public comment period. Many of these                  rationales for third-party audits and
                                                   modification to the compliance date for                 documents (59 total) were documents                   STAA, and that members of the public
                                                   exercises.                                              that would normally be added after the                did not have an opportunity to review
                                                      In addition to recommending that                     comment period, such as final                         and comment on the new provision or
                                                   EPA toll the rule’s compliance dates,                   interagency review documents, final                   legal rationales:
                                                   Petitioner CSAG indicated particular                    rule support documents (RIA, technical
                                                                                                                                                                    Though EPA claims that it only
                                                   concern with the four-year compliance                   background document, EPA response to                  ‘‘modifie[d] the criterion,’’ the Final Rule
                                                   date for STAA: 64                                       comments), documentation of tribal                    provision transformed a predictable trigger
                                                                                                           consultation, EPA responses to requests               (non-compliance with specific regulations)
                                                      CSAG is concerned with the four-year                 to extend the comment period, and                     into an unpredictable one that relies entirely
                                                   compliance deadline provided in the rule for                                                                  on the implementing agency’s discretion to
                                                   the STAA requirements. Such analysis is
                                                                                                           documentation of post-proposal
                                                                                                           meetings or presentations of the                      determine which conditions ‘‘could lead to
                                                   highly complex, and—given that the STAA
                                                                                                           proposed rulemaking that occurred after               an accidental release.’’ [82 FR at 4699.] The
                                                   would have to be part of the PHA for a
                                                                                                                                                                 Proposed Rule had identified a specific
                                                   covered process within four years—facilities            the end of the comment period. Also
                                                                                                                                                                 condition EPA thought was problematic,
                                                   will have to begin working immediately on               included were copies of laws, statutes,               namely noncompliance with the regulations.
                                                   incorporating this analysis without a                   Federal or state regulations, Federal                 The Final Rule provision is unrelated to legal
                                                   commonly accepted methodology. In the                   Register document that were mentioned                 compliance and subject to the whims and
                                                   RMP Rule preamble, EPA notes future
                                                                                                           in the final rule, RIA or Response to                 imagination of the implementing agency.
                                                   ‘‘guidance’’ that will be developed for
                                                   complying with RMP PHA and STAA                         Comments, but not the proposed                        Commenters had no opportunity to object to
                                                   requirements before sources must comply                 rulemaking or RIA. These were added                   the incredible breadth of a requirement that
                                                   with the STAA provision and its plans to                for convenience although they are                     covers any conditions that could lead, no
                                                   make draft guidance available for public                generally publicly available from                     matter how remote the chance of the
                                                                                                                                                                 condition resulting an accidental release.
                                                   comment.42 Without the benefit of this                  internet sources. There were also a few
                                                   guidance to reflect its intentions with respect                                                               (footnote omitted)
                                                                                                           documents that were cited in the final
                                                   to enforcement of the STAA provision,                   rule or RIA, but were published in 2016                 In the Proposed Rulemaking, EPA
                                                   complying with the new requirements within              after the close of comment period on                  proposed changes to §§ 68.58 and 68.79
                                                   four years will be extremely challenging.                                                                     to require third-party compliance audits
                                                                                                           May 13, 2016. Of the remaining 70
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   4282 FR 4640, [January 13, 2017].
                                                                                                           documents, some were technical                        for both Program 2 and Program 3
                                                     If EPA finalizes its proposal to rescind              articles, reports, studies (some                      processes, under certain conditions.
                                                   the STAA provisions, CSAG’s concern                     mentioned by commenters), and EPA
                                                                                                                                                                   67 List of 129 Supporting Documents for RMP
                                                   with the compliance date for STAA                       enforcement cases or press releases
                                                                                                                                                                 Amendments Rule Added to Rulemaking Docket
                                                   would be rendered moot. However, in                     relevant to discussion of third party                 EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725 after Close of Comment
                                                   the event that EPA does not rescind the                                                                       Period (May 13, 2016). USEPA, Office of Emergency
                                                                                                             65 RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 5, EPA–HQ–OEM–       Management, April 25, 2018.
                                                     64 CSAGPetition, pg. 16, EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–             2015–0725–0759.                                         68 RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 5, EPA–HQ–OEM–

                                                   0725–0766.                                                66 Ibid, pgs. 5–6.                                  2015–0725–0759.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00028   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                             24877

                                                   These proposed changes included                         emergency response provisions of the                  of central relevance to the outcome of
                                                   adding paragraph (f) to §§ 68.58 and                    final rule constitute unfunded mandates               the rule.
                                                   68.79 which identified third-party audit                and impose unjustified burdens on state                  In a letter dated March 13, 2017, the
                                                   applicability. EPA proposed that the                    and local emergency responders.69 As                  Administrator responded to the first of
                                                   next required compliance audit for an                   an initial matter, EPA notes that these               the reconsideration petitions received
                                                   RMP facility would be a third-party                     objections would not meet the standard                by announcing the convening of a
                                                   audit when one of the following                         for reconsideration under CAA section                 proceeding for reconsideration of the
                                                   conditions apply: An accidental release                 307(d)(7)(B), because the same                        Risk Management Program
                                                   meeting the criteria in § 68.42(a) from a               objections were raised during the                     Amendments.71 As explained in that
                                                   covered process has occurred; or an                     comment period for the proposed RMP                   letter, having considered the objections
                                                   implementing agency requires a third-                   Amendments rule, and responded to by                  raised in the petition, the Administrator
                                                   party audit based on non-compliance                     EPA in the Response to Comments                       determined that the criteria for
                                                   with the requirements of this subpart,                  document for the rule.70 However, EPA                 reconsideration have been met for at
                                                   including when a previous third-party                   seeks comment on the Petitioners’                     least one of the objections. This
                                                   audit failed to meet the competency,                    claims that the coordination and                      proposal addresses the issues raised in
                                                   independence, or impartiality criteria,                 emergency response provisions of the                  all three petitions for reconsideration, as
                                                   set forth in new paragraphs §§ 68.59(b)                 final rule constitute unfunded                        well as other issues that EPA believes
                                                   or 68.80(b).                                            mandates.                                             warrant reconsideration. A detailed
                                                     After considering public comments                                                                           discussion of EPA’s rationale for the
                                                   received on the proposed conditions                     V. Statutory and Executive Order                      rescissions and modifications to the rule
                                                   that would require a third-party audit,                 Reviews                                               is included above in section IV. of this
                                                   in the final Amendments Rule, EPA                       A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory                  preamble,
                                                   revised the applicability criteria for                  Planning and Review and Executive                     Rationale for Rescissions and
                                                   third-party audits required by                          Order 13563: Improving Regulation and                 Modifications
                                                   implementing agencies from non-                         Regulatory Review
                                                   compliance to conditions that could                                                                              As described in section IV. A. of this
                                                                                                             This action is a significant regulatory             preamble, Maintain consistency in
                                                   lead to an accidental release of a                      action that was submitted to the Office
                                                   regulated substance. EPA believed that                                                                        accident prevention requirements, this
                                                                                                           of Management and Budget (OMB) for                    action addresses the issues raised by
                                                   having the implementing agency                          review. Any changes made in response
                                                   evaluate whether conditions exist at a                                                                        petitioners regarding several of the
                                                                                                           to OMB recommendations have been                      provisions of the final Amendments
                                                   stationary source that could lead to an                 documented in the docket. EPA
                                                   accidental release better addressed the                                                                       rule. Petitioners asserted that EPA failed
                                                                                                           prepared a Regulatory Impact Analysis                 to sufficiently coordinate the changes to
                                                   types of situations where a third-party                 (RIA) of the potential costs and benefits
                                                   audit would be most effective, and                                                                            the RMP regulations with OSHA and the
                                                                                                           associated with this action. This RIA is              PSM program, and that the regulations
                                                   would minimize the potential for                        available in the docket and is
                                                   inconsistent or arbitrary decisions made                                                                      as revised by the Final Rule leave
                                                                                                           summarized here (Docket ID Number                     important gaps and create compliance
                                                   by implementing agencies. This revised                  EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725).
                                                   criterion responded to commenters’                                                                            uncertainties. Although EPA has
                                                   requests was not intended to be a new                   1. Why EPA is Considering This Action                 regularly communicated and
                                                   condition, but a narrowing of the                          This action addresses and responds to              coordinated with OSHA on its efforts so
                                                   applicability of these requirements. The                a number of issues related to the final               far, EPA believes it is reasonable to
                                                   criterion in the Final Rule focused on                  RMP Amendments Rule, including                        develop a better understanding of
                                                   conditions with the potential to lead to                those raised by petitioners, as well as               OSHA’s intentions regarding potential
                                                   accidental releases, rather than                        other issues that EPA believes warrant                changes to the PSM standard before
                                                   authorizing implementing agencies to                    reconsideration.                                      modifying the RMP rule. EPA has
                                                   require third-party audits under a                         As discussed above in section I of this            determined that a more sensible
                                                   potentially wide range of circumstances,                preamble, prior to the rule taking effect,            approach would be to rescind the RMP
                                                   including minor non-compliance.                         EPA received three petitions for                      accident prevention amendments at this
                                                   However, insofar as it is a change, the                 reconsideration of the rule under CAA                 time and continue existing coordination
                                                   petitioner correctly notes that the public              section 307(d)(7)(B), two from industry               with OSHA on any future regulatory
                                                   did not have a chance to comment on                     groups and one from a group of states.                changes.
                                                   the new language.                                       Under that provision, the Administrator                  All three petitions requesting
                                                     EPA is proposing to rescind the third-                is to commence a reconsideration                      reconsideration of the RMP
                                                   party audit requirements; however, if                   proceeding if, in the Administrator’s                 Amendments rule raised security
                                                   these requirements are not rescinded,                   judgement, the petitioner raises an                   concerns regarding provisions of the
                                                   EPA requests comment on the revised                     objection to a rule that was                          final Amendments rule, as discussed
                                                   applicability criteria for third-party                  impracticable to raise during the                     above in section IV. B. of this preamble,
                                                   audits required by implementing                         comment period or if the grounds for                  Address security concerns. These
                                                   agencies from non-compliance to                         the objection arose after the comment                 included objections, in all three
                                                   conditions that could lead to an                        period but within the period for judicial             petitions, regarding the rule language in
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   accidental release of a regulated                       review. In either case, the Administrator             § 68.93(b) requiring local emergency
                                                   substance.                                              must also conclude that the objection is              response coordination to include
                                                                                                                                                                 providing to the local emergency
                                                   3. Coordination and Emergency                              69 See CSAG Petition, pgs. 8–9 and States          planning and response organizations
                                                   Response Provisions Constitute                          Petition, pgs. 4–6.                                   ‘‘. . . any other information that local
                                                   Unfunded Mandates on State and Local                       70 See Response to Comments document, pgs.
                                                                                                                                                                 emergency planning and response
                                                   Responders                                              165–167, 185–186, 238, EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–
                                                                                                                                                                 organizations identify as relevant to
                                                                                                           0725–0729. See also States Petition at pg. 5
                                                      Petitioners CSAG and the States                      (‘‘Various State and other entities raised these
                                                   argued that the coordination and                        concerns during the comment period’’).                  71 EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0758.




                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00029   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                   24878                  Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   local emergency response planning.’’                    of these to support core provisions of                rule would not change under this
                                                   Petitioners claim that this language                    the final rule, and that members of the               alternative. Another, lower-cost
                                                   creates a security risk for regulated                   public were not able to submit                        alternative to EPA’s proposal would be
                                                   facilities. Petitioners have also noted                 comments on these documents.73 74                     to fully rescind the field and tabletop
                                                   concerns regarding the removal of                       Petitioner the RMP Coalition stated that              exercise provisions. This alternative
                                                   protections for CBI and classified                      in the final RMP Amendments rule, EPA                 would result in an additional annual
                                                   information that items proposed under                   added a new trigger for third-party                   cost savings of approximately $24.7
                                                   § 68.205 would have benefited from.                     audits as well as new legal rationales for            million (2015 dollars).
                                                   Petitioners also raised concerns about                  third-party audits and STAA, and that                    EPA is also considering an alternative
                                                   the potential for the information made                  members of the public did not have an                 to the proposed modification to the
                                                   available under § 68.210 of the RMP                     opportunity to review and comment on                  emergency coordination provisions of
                                                   Amendments rule to be used by                           the new provision or legal rationales.                the Amendments rule. EPA’s proposed
                                                   criminals or terrorists to target facilities            Petitioners CSAG and the States argued                modification to the local emergency
                                                   for attack. EPA is also considering                     that the coordination and emergency                   response coordination amendments
                                                   another security concern not                            response provisions of the final rule                 would delete the phrase in § 68.93(b),
                                                   specifically raised by petitioners,                     constitute unfunded mandates and                      ‘‘. . . and any other information that
                                                   regarding whether the synthesis of the                  impose unjustified burdens on state and               local emergency planning and response
                                                   required information disclosure                         local emergency responders. These                     organizations identify as relevant to
                                                   elements could create an additional                     issues are discussed in more detail in                local emergency response planning.’’ As
                                                   security risk for facilities.                           section IV. F. of this preamble, Other                an alternative to this proposal, EPA is
                                                     As discussed in section IV.C. of this                 issues raised by petitioners.                         considering replace this phrase with the
                                                   preamble, Address BATF finding on                       2. Description of Alternatives to the                 phrase ‘‘other information necessary for
                                                   West Fertilizer incident, above,                        Proposed Rule                                         developing and implementing the local
                                                   petitioners asserted that it was                                                                              emergency response plan.’’ However,
                                                   impracticable for commenters to address                    The RIA analyzed the proposed                      EPA does not believe either its proposed
                                                   in their comments the significance of                   rescissions and changes to the
                                                                                                                                                                 option or the alternative phrasing would
                                                   the May 11, 2016 determination by the                   requirements of the RMP Amendments
                                                                                                                                                                 significantly affect the cost of complying
                                                   Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms,                   rule, including one alternative option
                                                                                                                                                                 with the emergency coordination
                                                   and Explosives (BATF) that the fire and                 for emergency tabletop and field
                                                                                                                                                                 provisions of the Amendments rule.
                                                   explosion at the West Fertilizer facility               exercises. The proposed rulemaking
                                                                                                                                                                    Lastly, EPA is considering an
                                                   was caused by an intentional, criminal                  would retain the requirement for
                                                                                                                                                                 alternative to rescinding the availability
                                                   act. In responding to this petition, EPA                tabletop and field exercises, but remove
                                                                                                                                                                 of all chemical hazard information to
                                                   Administrator Pruitt agreed that the                    the minimum frequency requirement for
                                                                                                                                                                 the public under the final Amendments
                                                   timing of the BATF finding was a valid                  field exercises and establish more
                                                                                                                                                                 rule. Under this alternative, EPA would
                                                   basis for reconsideration of the RMP                    flexible scope and documentation
                                                                                                                                                                 rescind all elements required to be
                                                   Amendments rule.72                                      provisions for both field and tabletop
                                                                                                                                                                 disclosed under § 68.210(b) of the final
                                                     All three petitioners objected to the                 exercises. Although these changes are
                                                                                                                                                                 Amendments rule except the
                                                   costs and burdens associated with the                   intended to reduce the burden of and
                                                                                                                                                                 information on exercise schedules. If
                                                   new provisions of the RMP                               offer more flexibility to owners and
                                                                                                                                                                 EPA were to adopt this alternative, the
                                                   Amendments rule, and claimed that                       local response agencies in meeting the
                                                                                                                                                                 annual net cost savings under the
                                                   EPA’s economic analysis did not                         exercise requirements, the RIA took the
                                                                                                                                                                 proposed rule would decline by up to
                                                   accurately assess the costs of new                      conservative approach of assuming that
                                                                                                                                                                 $3.1 million.
                                                   provisions and violated procedural                      the cost of the provision as estimated
                                                   requirements by not properly                            under the Amendments final rule would                 3. Summary of Cost Savings
                                                   quantifying potential benefits.                         not change. EPA is considering two                       Approximately 12,500 facilities have
                                                   Petitioners submitted extensive                         alternatives to the proposed exercise                 filed current RMPs with EPA and are
                                                   commentary on these issues (complete                    provisions. One alternative would be                  potentially affected by the proposed rule
                                                   copies of each petition are available in                similar to the proposed option—this                   changes. These facilities range from
                                                   the docket for this rulemaking). A                      alternative would remove the minimum                  petroleum refineries and large chemical
                                                   discussion of this issue is included                    frequency requirement for field                       manufacturers to water and wastewater
                                                   above in section IV.D. of this preamble,                exercises, but unlike the proposed                    treatment systems; chemical and
                                                   Reduce unnecessary regulations and                      option, the alternative would retain all              petroleum wholesalers and terminals;
                                                   regulatory costs.                                       remaining provisions of the RMP                       food manufacturers, packing plants, and
                                                     This action also considers and                        Amendments rule regarding field and                   other cold storage facilities with
                                                   addresses several other issues raised by                tabletop exercises, including the RMP                 ammonia refrigeration systems;
                                                   petitioners. One petitioner noted that                  Amendments rule requirements for                      agricultural chemical distributors;
                                                   EPA added numerous documents to the                     exercise scope and documentation. Like                midstream gas plants; and a limited
                                                   rulemaking docket after the close of the                the proposed option, EPA assumes that                 number of other sources that use RMP-
                                                   comment period, that EPA used several                   the cost of the exercise provisions as                regulated substances.
                                                                                                           estimated under the Amendments final                     Table 5 presents the number of
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                     72 March 13, 2017 letter from EPA Administrator
                                                                                                             73 RMP Coalition Petition, pg. 5, EPA–HQ–OEM–
                                                                                                                                                                 facilities according to the latest RMP
                                                   E. Scott Pruitt to Justin Savage, Esq., Hogan Lovells
                                                   US LLP. Letter available in the docket for this         2015–0725–0759.                                       reporting as of February 2015 by
                                                   rulemaking. EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725–0758.                    74 Ibid, pgs. 5–6.                                  industrial sector and chemical use.




                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00030   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                                                      24879

                                                                                                               TABLE 5—NUMBER OF AFFECTED FACILITIES BY SECTOR
                                                                          Sector                                               NAICS codes                              Total facilities                                           Chemical uses

                                                   Administration of environmental                             924 ..............................................                    1,923        Use chlorine and other chemicals for treatment.
                                                     quality programs (i.e., govern-
                                                     ments).
                                                   Agricultural chemical distributors/                         111, 112, 115, 42491 ..................                               3,667        Store ammonia for sale; some in NAICS 111 and 115
                                                     wholesalers.                                                                                                                                    use ammonia as a refrigerant.
                                                   Chemical manufacturing ..................                   325 ..............................................                    1,466        Manufacture, process, store.
                                                   Chemical wholesalers ......................                 4246 ............................................                       333        Store for sale.
                                                   Food and beverage manufacturing                             311, 312 ......................................                       1,476        Use (mostly ammonia as a refrigerant).
                                                   Oil and gas extraction .....................                211 ..............................................                      741        Intermediate processing (mostly regulated flammable
                                                                                                                                                                                                     substances and flammable mixtures).
                                                   Other ................................................      44, 45, 48, 54, 56, 61, 72 ...........                                   248       Use chemicals for wastewater treatment, refrigera-
                                                                                                                                                                                                     tion, store chemicals for sale.
                                                   Other manufacturing ........................                313, 326, 327, 33 ........................                               384       Use various chemicals in manufacturing process,
                                                                                                                                                                                                     waste treatment.
                                                   Other wholesale ...............................             423, 424 ......................................                          302       Use (mostly ammonia as a refrigerant).
                                                   Paper manufacturing .......................                 322 ..............................................                        70       Use various chemicals in pulp and paper manufac-
                                                                                                                                                                                                     turing.
                                                   Petroleum and coal products manu-                           324 ..............................................                       156       Manufacture, process, store (mostly regulated flam-
                                                     facturing.                                                                                                                                      mable substances and flammable mixtures).
                                                   Petroleum wholesalers ....................                  4247 ............................................                        276       Store for sale (mostly regulated flammable sub-
                                                                                                                                                                                                     stances and flammable mixtures).
                                                   Utilities .............................................     221 (except 22131, 22132) .........                                     343        Use chlorine (mostly for water treatment).
                                                   Warehousing and storage ...............                     493 ..............................................                    1,056        Use mostly ammonia as a refrigerant.
                                                   Water/wastewater Treatment Sys-                             22131, 22132 ..............................                             102        Use chlorine and other chemicals.
                                                     tems.

                                                         Total ..........................................      ......................................................               12,542



                                                     Table 6 presents a summary of the                                          regulatory impact analysis.75 In total,                                     of $87.9 million at a 3% discount rate
                                                   annualized cost savings estimated in the                                     EPA estimates annualized cost savings                                       and $88.4 million at a 7% discount rate.

                                                                                                                   TABLE 6—SUMMARY OF ANNUALIZED COST SAVINGS
                                                                                                                                                   [Millions, 2015 dollars]

                                                                                                                                  Provision                                                                                              3%            7%

                                                   Third-party Audits ....................................................................................................................................................                     (9.8)         (9.8)
                                                   Incident Investigation/Root Cause ...........................................................................................................................                               (1.8)         (1.8)
                                                   STAA ........................................................................................................................................................................              (70.0)        (70.0)
                                                   Information Availability .............................................................................................................................................                      (3.1)         (3.1)
                                                   Rule Familiarization .................................................................................................................................................                      (3.2)         (3.7)

                                                         Total Cost Savings ...........................................................................................................................................                       (87.9)        (88.4)



                                                     Most of the annual cost savings under                                      4. Summary of Potential Benefits and                                        investigation, STAA), would result in a
                                                   the proposed rulemaking are due to the                                       Benefit Reductions                                                          reduction in the magnitude of these
                                                   repeal of the STAA provision (annual                                                                                                                     benefits. The proposed rescission of the
                                                   savings of $70 million), followed by                                            The RMP Amendments Rule                                                  chemical hazard information
                                                   third party audits (annual savings of                                        produced a variety of benefits from                                         availability provision would result in a
                                                   $9.8 million), rule familiarization                                          prevention and mitigation of future                                         reduction of the information sharing
                                                   (annual net savings of $3.7 million), rule                                   RMP and non-RMP accidents at RMP                                            benefit, although a portion of this
                                                   familiarization (annual net savings of                                       facilities, avoided catastrophes at RMP                                     benefit from the Amendments rule
                                                   $3.7 million), information availability                                      facilities, and easier access to facility                                   would still be conveyed by the public
                                                   (annual savings of $3.1 million), and                                        chemical hazard information. The                                            meeting, emergency coordination and
                                                   root cause incident investigation                                            proposed Reconsideration rule would                                         exercise provisions. The proposed rule
                                                                                                                                largely retain the revised local                                            would also convey the benefit of
                                                   (annual savings of $1.8 million). See the
                                                                                                                                emergency coordination and exercise                                         improved chemical site security, by
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   RIA for additional information on costs
                                                                                                                                provisions of the 2017 Amendments                                           modifying previously open-ended
                                                   and cost savings.
                                                                                                                                final rule, which convey mitigation                                         information sharing provisions of the
                                                                                                                                benefits. The proposed rescission of the                                    Amendments rule that might have
                                                                                                                                prevention program requirements (i.e.,                                      resulted in an increased risk of terrorism
                                                                                                                                third-party audits, incident                                                against regulated sources. See the RIA
                                                     75 A full description of costs and benefits for this                       Amendments to the Accidental Release Prevention                             is available in the docket for this rulemaking
                                                   proposed rule can be found in the Regulatory                                 Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under                                (Docket ID Number EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–0725).
                                                   Impact Analysis; Reconsideration of the 2017                                 the Clean Air Act, Section 112(r)(7). This document



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014         17:34 May 29, 2018           Jkt 244001      PO 00000         Frm 00031        Fmt 4701       Sfmt 4702      E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM               30MYP2


                                                   24880                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   for additional information on benefits                  local agencies and the public is already              no net burden or otherwise has a
                                                   and benefit reductions.                                 required under the original rule).                    positive economic effect on the small
                                                                                                              3. Conduct an annual notification                  entities subject to the rule.
                                                   B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing                      drill with emergency responders to                      The RMP Amendments final rule
                                                   Regulation and Controlling Regulatory                   verify emergency contact information.                 considered a broad range of costs on
                                                   Costs                                                      4. Responding facilities conduct and               small entities based on facility type. As
                                                     This action is expected to be an                      document emergency response exercises                 estimated in the 2017 Amendments RIA,
                                                   Executive Order 13771 deregulatory                      including:                                            the provisions in that final rule had
                                                   action. Details on the estimated cost                      a. Field exercises according to a                  quantifiable impacts on small entities.
                                                   savings of this proposed rule can be                    schedule established by the facility in               This proposed rule largely repeals, or
                                                   found in EPA’s analysis of the potential                consultation with local responders, and;              retains with slight modification, the
                                                   costs and benefits associated with this                    b. A tabletop exercise at least every              provisions incurring costs on small
                                                   action.76                                               three years.                                          entities. As a result, EPA expects the
                                                                                                              Respondents/affected entities:                     proposed rule to impose negative costs
                                                   C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)                        Manufacturers, utilities, warehouses,                 for all facilities, including small entities.
                                                     The information collection activities                 wholesalers, food processors, ammonia                 The only new costs imposed on small
                                                   in this proposed rule have been                         retailers, and gas processors.                        entities would be rule familiarization
                                                   submitted for approval to the OMB                          Respondent’s obligation to respond:                with the proposed rule, but even that
                                                   under the PRA. The Information                          Mandatory (CAA sections 112(r)(7)(B)(i)               cost would be offset by savings
                                                   Collection Request (ICR) document that                  and (ii), CAA section 112(r)(7)(B)(iii),              associated with eliminating the larger
                                                   the EPA prepared has been assigned                      114(c), CAA 114(a)(1)).                               costs associated with becoming familiar
                                                   EPA ICR number 2537.03. You can find                       Estimated number of respondents:                   with the RMP Amendments final rule.
                                                   a copy of the ICR in the docket for this                14,280                                                The impact of this proposed rule on
                                                   rule, and it is briefly summarized here.                   Frequency of response: On occasion.                small entities is discussed further in the
                                                     The ICR that covers the risk                             Total estimated burden: 682,665                    RIA, which is available in the
                                                   management program rule, promulgated                    hours (per year). Burden is defined at 5              rulemaking docket.77 We have therefore
                                                   on June 20, 1996; including previous                    CFR 1320.3(b).                                        concluded that this action will relieve
                                                   amendments, codified as 40 CFR part                        Total estimated cost: $44,712,465 (per             regulatory burden for all directly
                                                   68, is ICR number 1656.15, OMB                          year), includes $83,600 annualized                    regulated small entities.
                                                   Control No. 2050–0144. This ICR                         capital or operation & maintenance
                                                   (2537.03) addresses the following                       costs.                                                E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                   information requirements that were                         An agency may not conduct or                       (UMRA)
                                                   promulgated in the final RMP                            sponsor, and a person is not required to                 This action does not contain any
                                                   Amendments rule and not proposed to                     respond to, a collection of information               unfunded mandate as described in
                                                   be rescinded by the proposed revision to                unless it displays a currently valid OMB              UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
                                                   the rule:                                               control number. The OMB control                       not significantly or uniquely affect small
                                                                                                           numbers for the EPA’s regulations in 40               governments. The action imposes no
                                                   Improve Information Availability                        CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
                                                   (Applies to all Facilities)                                                                                   enforceable duty on any state, local or
                                                                                                              Submit your comments on the                        tribal governments or the private sector.
                                                     1. Hold a public meeting within 90                    Agency’s need for this information, the
                                                   days of an accident subject to reporting                accuracy of the provided burden                       F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
                                                   under § 68.42 (i.e., an RMP reportable                  estimates and any suggested methods                     This action does not have Federalism
                                                   accident) and for this accident provide                 for minimizing respondent burden to                   implications. It will not have substantial
                                                   the accident information required under                 the EPA using the docket identified at                direct effects on the states, on the
                                                   § 68.42 (b).                                            the beginning of this rule. You may also              relationship between the national
                                                                                                           send your ICR-related comments to                     government and the states, or on the
                                                   Improve Emergency Preparedness                          OMB’s Office of Information and                       distribution of power and
                                                   (Applies to P2 and P3 Facilities)                       Regulatory Affairs via email to oira_                 responsibilities among the various
                                                     2. Meet and coordinate with local                     submission@omb.eop.gov, Attention:                    levels of government.
                                                   responders annually to exchange                         Desk Officer for the EPA. Since OMB is
                                                   emergency planning information and                      required to make a decision concerning                G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
                                                   coordinate exercise schedules.                          the ICR between 30 and 60 days after                  and Coordination With Indian Tribal
                                                   Responding facilities’ updates of their                 receipt, OMB must receive comments no                 Governments
                                                   facility emergency response plans will                  later than June 29, 2018. The EPA will                  This action has tribal implications.
                                                   include appropriate changes based on                    respond to any ICR-related comments in                However, it will neither impose
                                                   information obtained from coordination                  the final rule.                                       substantial direct compliance costs on
                                                   activities, emergency response                                                                                federally recognized tribal governments,
                                                   exercises, incident investigations or                   D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)                   nor preempt tribal law. EPA will be
                                                   other information. Emergency response                      I certify that this action will not have           consulting with tribal officials as it
                                                   plans will have procedures for                          a significant economic impact on a                    develops this regulation to permit them
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   informing appropriate Federal and state                 substantial number of small entities                  to have meaningful and timely input
                                                   emergency response agencies, as well as                 under the RFA. In making this                         into its development. Consultation will
                                                   local agencies and the public (informing                determination, the impact of concern is               include conversations with interested
                                                                                                           any significant adverse economic
                                                     76 See ‘‘Regulatory Impact Analysis;                  impact on small entities. An agency may                 77 See ‘‘Regulatory Impact Analysis;

                                                   Reconsideration of the 2017 Amendments to the           certify that a rule will not have a                   Reconsideration of the 2017 Amendments to the
                                                   Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk                                                              Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk
                                                   Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act,
                                                                                                           significant economic impact on a                      Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act,
                                                   Section 112(r)(7)’’, in docket EPA–HQ–OEM–2015–         substantial number of small entities if               Section 112(r)(7)’’, Chapter 7, EPA–HQ–OEM–
                                                   0725.                                                   the rule relieves regulatory burden, has              2015–0725.



                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00032   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                            24881

                                                   tribal representatives to ensure that their               Dated: May 17, 2018.                                § 68.12    [Amended]
                                                   concerns are addressed before the rule                  E. Scott Pruitt,                                      ■  4. Amend § 68.12 by:
                                                   is finalized. In the spirit of Executive                Administrator.                                        ■  a. In paragraph (b):
                                                   Order 13175 and consistent with EPA                       For the reasons set out in the                      ■  1. In the introductory text removing
                                                   policy to promote communications                        preamble, title 40, chapter I, part 68, of            the text ‘‘68.10(b)’’ and adding
                                                   between EPA and tribal governments,                     the Code of Federal Regulations is                    ‘‘68.10(g)’’ in its place;
                                                   EPA specifically solicits comment on                    proposed to be amended as follows:                    ■ 2. In paragraph (4) second sentence,
                                                   this proposed rule from tribal officials.                                                                     removing the text ‘‘68.10(b)(1)’’ and
                                                                                                           PART 68—CHEMICAL ACCIDENT                             adding ‘‘68.10(g)(1)’’ in its place;
                                                   H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of                 PREVENTION PROVISIONS                                 ■ b. In paragraph (c) introductory text
                                                   Children From Environmental Health                                                                            by removing the text ‘‘68.10(c)’’ and
                                                   Risks and Safety Risks                                  ■ 1. The authority citation for part 68               adding ‘‘68.10(h)’’ in its place;
                                                                                                           continues to read as follows:                         ■ c. In paragraph (d) introductory text
                                                      This action is not subject to Executive
                                                                                                             Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7412(r), 7601(a)(1),           by removing the text ‘‘68.10(d)’’ and
                                                   Order 13045 because it is not
                                                                                                           7661–7661f.                                           adding ‘‘68.10(i)’’ in its place.
                                                   economically significant as defined in                                                                        ■ 5. Amend § 68.50 by revising
                                                   Executive Order 12866, and because the                  § 68.3    [Amended]                                   paragraph (a)(2) to read as follows:
                                                   EPA does not believe the environmental                  ■  2. Amend § 68.3 by removing the
                                                   health risks or safety risks addressed by               definitions ‘‘Active measures’’,                      § 68.50    Hazard review.
                                                   this action present a disproportionate                  ‘‘Inherently safer technology or design’’,               (a) * * *
                                                   risk to children. This action’s health and              ‘‘Passives measures’’, ‘‘Practicability’’,               (2) Opportunities for equipment
                                                   risk assessments are contained in the                   ‘‘Procedural measures’’, ‘‘Root cause’’               malfunctions or human errors that could
                                                   RIA for this proposed rule, available in                and ‘‘Third-party audit’’.                            cause an accidental release;
                                                   the docket.                                             ■ 3. Amend § 68.10 by:                                *      *    *      *    *
                                                                                                           ■ a. Revising paragraphs (b), (d), and (e);           ■ 6. Amend § 68.54 by revising the first
                                                   I. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
                                                   Significantly Affect Energy Supply,                     ■ b. Redesignating paragraphs (f)                     sentence in paragraphs (a) and (b),
                                                   Distribution or Use                                     through (j) as paragraphs (g) through (k);            paragraph (d), and removing paragraph
                                                                                                           and                                                   (e) to read as follows:
                                                      This proposed action is not a                        ■ c. Adding new paragraph (f).
                                                                                                                                                                 § 68.54    Training.
                                                   ‘‘significant energy action’’ because it is                The revisions read as follows:
                                                   not likely to have a significant adverse                                                                         (a) The owner or operator shall ensure
                                                   effect on the supply, distribution, or use              § 68.10   Applicability.                              that each employee presently operating
                                                   of energy. This proposed action is not                  *      *     *    *    *                              a process, and each employee newly
                                                   anticipated to have notable impacts on                     (b) By [DATE 1 YEAR AFTER THE                      assigned to a covered process have been
                                                   emissions, costs or energy supply                       EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL                           trained or tested competent in the
                                                   decisions for the affected electric utility             RULE], the owner or operator of a                     operating procedures provided in
                                                   industry.                                               stationary source shall comply with the               § 68.52 that pertain to their duties.
                                                                                                           emergency response coordination                       * * *
                                                   J. National Technology Transfer and                     activities in § 68.93.                                   (b) Refresher training. Refresher
                                                   Advancement Act (NTTAA)                                                                                       training shall be provided at least every
                                                                                                           *      *     *    *    *
                                                                                                                                                                 three years, and more often if necessary,
                                                     This rulemaking does not involve                         (d) By [DATE 4 YEARS AFTER THE                     to each employee operating a process to
                                                   technical standards.                                    EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL                           ensure that the employee understands
                                                                                                           RULE], the owner or operator shall have               and adheres to the current operating
                                                   K. Executive Order 12898: Federal                       developed plans for conducting
                                                   Actions To Address Environmental                                                                              procedures of the process. * * *
                                                                                                           emergency response exercises in
                                                   Justice in Minority Populations and                     accordance with provisions of § 68.96.                *      *    *     *     *
                                                   Low-Income Populations                                     (e) After [DATE 2 YEARS AFTER THE                     (d) The owner or operator shall ensure
                                                                                                           EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL                           that operators are trained in any
                                                      The EPA believes that this action may                                                                      updated or new procedures prior to
                                                                                                           RULE] the owner or operator of a
                                                   have disproportionately high and                        stationary source shall comply with the               startup of a process after a major change.
                                                   adverse human health or environmental                                                                         ■ 7. Amend § 68.58 by revising
                                                                                                           public meeting requirement in
                                                   effects on minority populations, low-                   § 68.210(b) for any accident meeting the              paragraph (a) and removing paragraphs
                                                   income populations and/or indigenous                    five-year accident history requirements               (f) through (h) to read as follows:
                                                   peoples, as specified in Executive Order                of § 68.42 that occurs after [DATE 2                  § 68.58    Compliance audits.
                                                   12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).                  YEARS AFTER THE EFFECTIVE DATE                          (a) The owner or operator shall certify
                                                      The documentation for this decision                  OF THE FINAL RULE].                                   that they have evaluated compliance
                                                   is contained in chapter 8 of the                           (f) By [DATE 5 YEARS AFTER THE                     with the provisions of this subpart at
                                                   Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA), a                     EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL                           least every three years to verify that the
                                                   copy of which has been placed in the                    RULE], the owner or operator shall                    procedures and practices developed
                                                   public docket for this action.                          comply with § 68.160 (b)(21) of the risk
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                                                                                                                                 under this subpart are adequate and are
                                                                                                           management plan provisions of subpart                 being followed.
                                                   List of Subjects in 40 CFR part 68
                                                                                                           G of this part promulgated on
                                                                                                                                                                 *     *     *    *     *
                                                     Environmental protection,                             [PUBLICATION DATE OF FINAL
                                                   Administrative practice and procedure,                  RULE] and with § 68.180 of the risk                   § 68.59    [Removed]
                                                   Air pollution control, Chemicals,                       management plan provisions of subpart                 ■   8. Remove § 68.59.
                                                   Hazardous substances,                                   G of this part promulgated on January                 ■   9. Amend § 68.60 by:
                                                   Intergovernmental relations, Reporting                  13, 2017.                                             ■   a. Revising paragraph (a);
                                                   and recordkeeping requirements.                         *      *     *    *    *                              ■   b. Removing paragraph (c);


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00033   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM    30MYP2


                                                   24882                     Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   ■ c. Redesignating paragraph (d) as                        (c) * * *                                           fire department as appropriate to review
                                                   paragraph (c)                                              (2) The identification of any previous              and discuss those materials.
                                                   ■ d. In the newly designated paragraph                   incident which had a likely potential for             *      *     *     *     *
                                                   (c):                                                     catastrophic consequences;                               (d) Classified information. The
                                                   ■ 1. Revising the paragraph introductory                 *     *    *     *     *                              disclosure of information classified by
                                                   text, and paragraphs (1) and (3);                                                                              the Department of Defense or other
                                                   ■ 2. Removing paragraphs (4) through                     § 68.71   [Amended]                                   Federal agencies or contractors of such
                                                   (6);                                                     ■  12. Amend § 68.71 by removing                      agencies shall be controlled by
                                                   ■ 3. Redesignating paragraphs (7) and                    paragraph (d).                                        applicable laws, regulations, or
                                                   (8) as paragraphs (4) and (5); and                       ■ 13. Amend § 68.79 by revising                       executive orders concerning the release
                                                   ■ 4. Revising the newly designated
                                                                                                            paragraph (a) and removing paragraphs                 of classified information.
                                                   paragraphs (4) and (5);                                  (f) through (h) to read as follows:                      (e) CBI. An owner or operator
                                                   ■ e. Redesignating paragraphs (e)                                                                              asserting CBI for information required
                                                   through (g) as paragraphs (d) through (f);               § 68.79   Compliance audits.                          under this section shall provide a
                                                   and                                                        (a) The owner or operator shall certify             sanitized version to the local emergency
                                                   ■ f. Revising newly redesignated                         that they have evaluated compliance                   planning and response organizations.
                                                   paragraph (f).                                           with the provisions of this subpart at                Assertion of claims of CBI and
                                                      The revisions read as follows:                        least every three years to verify that                substantiation of CBI claims shall be in
                                                   § 68.60    Incident investigation.                       procedures and practices developed                    the same manner as required in
                                                      (a) The owner or operator shall                       under this subpart are adequate and are               §§ 68.151 and 68.152 for information
                                                   investigate each incident which resulted                 being followed.                                       contained in the RMP required under
                                                   in, or could reasonably have resulted in                 *     *     *    *     *                              subpart G. As provided under
                                                   a catastrophic release.                                                                                        § 68.151(b)(3), an owner or operator of a
                                                                                                            § 68.80   [Removed]                                   stationary source may not claim five-
                                                   *       *    *     *     *                                 14. Remove § 68.80.
                                                                                                            ■                                                     year accident history information as
                                                      (c) A summary shall be prepared at
                                                                                                            ■ 15. Amend § 68.81 by revising                       CBI. As provided in § 68.151(c)(2), an
                                                   the conclusion of the investigation
                                                                                                            paragraphs (a) and (d) to read as follows:            owner or operator of a stationary source
                                                   which includes at a minimum:
                                                                                                                                                                  asserting that a chemical name is CBI
                                                      (1) Date of incident;                                 § 68.81   Incident investigation.
                                                                                                                                                                  shall provide a generic category or class
                                                   *       *    *     *     *                                  (a) The owner or operator shall                    name as a substitute.
                                                      (3) A description of the incident;                    investigate each incident which resulted              ■ 17. Amend § 68.96 by:
                                                      (4) The factors that contributed to the               in, or could reasonably have resulted in              ■ a. Revising the first sentence of
                                                   incident; and,                                           a catastrophic release.                               paragraph (a);
                                                      (5) Any recommendations resulting                                                                           ■ b. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i) and (ii);
                                                                                                            *      *     *     *     *
                                                   from the investigation.                                                                                        ■ c. Revising paragraph (b)(2)(i) and (ii);
                                                                                                               (d) A report shall be prepared at the
                                                   *       *    *     *     *                               conclusion of the investigation which                 and
                                                      (f) Investigation summaries shall be                  includes at a minimum:                                ■ d. Revising paragraph (b)(3).
                                                   retained for five years.                                    (1) Date of incident;                                 The revisions read as follows:
                                                   ■ 10. Amend § 68.65 by revising the first
                                                                                                               (2) Date investigation began;                      § 68.96    Emergency response exercises.
                                                   sentence of paragraph (a) and revising
                                                                                                               (3) A description of the incident;                    (a) Notification exercises. At least
                                                   the note to paragraph (b) to read as
                                                                                                               (4) The factors that contributed to the            once each calendar year, the owner or
                                                   follows:
                                                                                                            incident; and,                                        operator of a stationary source with any
                                                   § 68.65    Process safety information.                      (5) Any recommendations resulting                  Program 2 or Program 3 process shall
                                                     (a) In accordance with the schedule                    from the investigation.                               conduct an exercise of the source’s
                                                   set forth in § 68.67, the owner or                       *      *     *     *     *                            emergency response notification
                                                   operator shall complete a compilation of                 ■ 16. Amend § 68.93 by revising                       mechanisms required under
                                                   written process safety information                       paragraph (b) and adding paragraphs (d)               § 68.90(b)(3) or § 68.95(a)(1)(i), as
                                                   before conducting any process hazard                     and (e) to read as follows:                           appropriate, before [DATE 5 YEARS
                                                   analysis required by the rule. * * *                                                                           AFTER EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL
                                                     (b) * * *                                              § 68.93 Emergency response coordination               RULE] and annually thereafter. * * *
                                                                                                            activities.
                                                     Note to paragraph (b): Safety Data Sheets                                                                       (b) * * *
                                                                                                            *     *     *     *    *                                 (1) * * *
                                                   (SDS) meeting the requirements of 29 CFR
                                                   1910.1200(g) may be used to comply with                    (b) Coordination shall include                         (i) Frequency. As part of coordination
                                                   this requirement to the extent they contain              providing to the local emergency                      with local emergency response officials
                                                   the information required by paragraph (b) of             planning and response organizations:                  required by § 68.93, the owner or
                                                   this section.                                            The stationary source’s emergency                     operator shall consult with these
                                                   ■ 11. Amend § 68.67 by:                                  response plan if one exists; emergency                officials to establish an appropriate
                                                   ■ a. Revising paragraphs (c)(2);                         action plan; and updated emergency                    frequency for field exercises.
                                                   ■ b. Amending (c)(6) by adding the                       contact information. For responding                      (ii) Scope. Field exercises should
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                                   word ‘‘and’’ at the end of the paragraph;                stationary sources, coordination shall                include: Tests of procedures to notify
                                                   ■ c. Amending paragraph (c)(7) by                        also include consulting with local                    the public and the appropriate Federal,
                                                   removing ‘‘, and ’’ and adding a period                  emergency response officials to                       state, and local emergency response
                                                   at the end of the paragraph; and                         establish appropriate schedules and                   agencies about an accidental release;
                                                   ■ d. Removing paragraph (c)(8).                          plans for field and tabletop exercises                tests of procedures and measures for
                                                      The revisions read as follows:                        required under § 68.96(b). The owner or               emergency response actions including
                                                                                                            operator shall request an opportunity to              evacuations and medical treatment; tests
                                                   § 68.67    Process hazard analysis.                      meet with the local emergency planning                of communications systems;
                                                   *      *      *       *      *                           committee (or equivalent) and/or local                mobilization of facility emergency


                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014    17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00034   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM    30MYP2


                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 104 / Wednesday, May 30, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                  24883

                                                   response personnel, including                           ■ 18. Amend § 68.160 by revising                      and response organizations with which
                                                   contractors, as appropriate; coordination               paragraph (b)(21) and removing                        the stationary source last coordinated
                                                   with local emergency responders;                        paragraph (b)(22) to read as follows:                 emergency response efforts, pursuant to
                                                   emergency response equipment                                                                                  § 68.10(g)(3) or § 68.93.
                                                                                                           § 68.160   Registration.
                                                   deployment; and any other action                                                                              *     *     *     *     *
                                                   identified in the emergency response                    *     *    *      *    *
                                                                                                                                                                 ■ 22. Amend § 68.190 by revising
                                                   program, as appropriate.                                  (b) * * *
                                                                                                             (21) Whether a public meeting has                   paragraph (c) to read as follows:
                                                      (2) * * *
                                                      (i) Frequency. As part of coordination               been held following an RMP reportable                 § 68.190   Updates.
                                                   with local emergency response officials                 accident, pursuant to § 68.210(b).
                                                                                                           ■ 19. Amend § 68.170 by revising
                                                                                                                                                                 *     *      *     *    *
                                                   required by § 68.93, the owner or                                                                               (c) If a stationary source is no longer
                                                                                                           paragraph (i) to read as follows:
                                                   operator shall consult with these                                                                             subject to this part, the owner or
                                                   officials to establish an appropriate                   § 68.170   Prevention program/Program 2.              operator shall submit a de-registration to
                                                   frequency for tabletop exercises, and                   *      *    *      *    *                             EPA within six months indicating that
                                                   shall conduct a tabletop exercise before                   (i) The date of the most recent                    the stationary source is no longer
                                                   [DATE 7 YEARS AFTER THE                                 compliance audit, the expected date of                covered.
                                                   EFFECTIVE DATE OF THE FINAL                             completion of any changes resulting                   ■ 23. Amend § 68.210 by:
                                                   RULE] and at a minimum of at least                      from the compliance audit.                            ■ a. Removing paragraphs (b), (c), (d),
                                                   once every three years thereafter.                      *      *    *      *    *                             and (g);
                                                      (ii) Scope. The exercise should                      ■ 20. Amend § 68.175 by:
                                                   include discussions of: Procedures to                                                                         ■ b. Redesignating paragraph (e) and (f)
                                                                                                           ■ a. Revising paragraph (e) introductory
                                                   notify the public and the appropriate                                                                         as paragraphs (b) and (c); and
                                                                                                           text and paragraphs (e)(1), (5) and (6);
                                                   Federal, state, and local emergency                                                                           ■ c. Revising newly redesignated
                                                                                                           ■ b. Removing paragraph (e)(7); and
                                                   response agencies; procedures and                       ■ c. Revising paragraph (k).                          paragraph (b).
                                                   measures for emergency response                            The revisions read as follows:                       The revision reads as follows:
                                                   including evacuations and medical
                                                                                                           § 68.175   Prevention program/Program 3.              § 68.210   Availability of information to the
                                                   treatment; identification of facility                                                                         public.
                                                   emergency response personnel and/or                     *      *    *     *     *
                                                   contractors and their responsibilities;                    (e) The date of completion of the most             *     *     *     *     *
                                                   coordination with local emergency                       recent PHA or update and the technique                  (b) Public meetings. The owner or
                                                   responders; procedures for emergency                    used.                                                 operator of a stationary source shall
                                                   response equipment deployment; and                         (1) The expected date of completion                hold a public meeting to provide
                                                   any other action identified in the                      of any changes resulting from the PHA;                information required under § 68.42 (b),
                                                   emergency response plan, as                                * * *                                              no later than 90 days after any accident
                                                                                                              (5) Monitoring and detection systems               subject to reporting under § 68.42.
                                                   appropriate.
                                                                                                           in use; and                                           *     *     *     *     *
                                                      (3) Documentation. The owner/                           (6) Changes since the last PHA.
                                                   operator shall prepare an evaluation                                                                          ■ 24. Amend § 68.215 by revising
                                                   report within 90 days of each exercise.                 *      *    *     *     *                             paragraph (a)(2)(i) to read as follows:
                                                                                                              (k) The date of the most recent
                                                   The report should include: A
                                                                                                           compliance audit and the expected date                § 68.215 Permit content and air permitting
                                                   description of the exercise scenario;
                                                                                                           of completion of any changes resulting                authority or designated agency
                                                   names and organizations of each                                                                               requirements.
                                                                                                           from the compliance audit.
                                                   participant; an evaluation of the
                                                   exercise results including lessons                      *      *    *     *     *                               (a) * * *
                                                   learned; recommendations for                            ■ 21. Amend § 68.180 by revising                        (2) * * *
                                                   improvement or revisions to the                         paragraph (a)(1) to read as follows:                    (i) A compliance schedule for meeting
                                                   emergency response exercise program                     § 68.180 Emergency response program                   the requirements of this part by the date
                                                   and emergency response program, and a                   and exercises.                                        provided in § 68.10(a) through (f).
                                                   schedule to promptly address and                          (a) * * *                                           *     *    *    *     *
                                                   resolve recommendations.                                  (1) Name, phone number and email                    [FR Doc. 2018–11059 Filed 5–29–18; 8:45 am]
                                                   *       *    *     *    *                               address of local emergency planning                   BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2




                                              VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:34 May 29, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00035   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 9990   E:\FR\FM\30MYP2.SGM   30MYP2



Document Created: 2018-05-30 01:01:36
Document Modified: 2018-05-30 01:01:36
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionProposed rule.
DatesComments. Comments and additional material must be received on or before July 30, 2018. Under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), comments on the information collection provisions are best assured of consideration if the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) receives a copy of your comments on or before June 29, 2018.
ContactJames Belke, United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Land and Emergency Management, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW (Mail Code 5104A), Washington, DC
FR Citation83 FR 24850 
RIN Number2050-AG95
CFR AssociatedEnvironmental Protection; Administrative Practice and Procedure; Air Pollution Control; Chemicals; Hazardous Substances; Intergovernmental Relations and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

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