83_FR_26321 83 FR 26212 - Higher Volume Port Area-State of Washington

83 FR 26212 - Higher Volume Port Area-State of Washington

DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Coast Guard

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 109 (June 6, 2018)

Page Range26212-26221
FR Document2018-12081

The Coast Guard is redefining the boundaries of the existing higher volume port area in the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Puget Sound, in Washington. This rulemaking is required to make the Code of Federal Regulations consistent with statute, and is related to the Coast Guard's maritime stewardship (environmental protection) mission.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 109 (Wednesday, June 6, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 109 (Wednesday, June 6, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 26212-26221]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-12081]


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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

Coast Guard

33 CFR Part 155

[Docket No. USCG-2011-0576]
RIN 1625-AB75


Higher Volume Port Area-State of Washington

AGENCY: Coast Guard, DHS.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Coast Guard is redefining the boundaries of the existing 
higher volume port area in the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Puget Sound, 
in Washington. This rulemaking is required to make the Code of Federal 
Regulations consistent with statute, and is related to the Coast 
Guard's maritime stewardship (environmental protection) mission.

DATES: This final rule is effective July 6, 2018.

ADDRESSES: Documents mentioned in this preamble as being available in 
the docket are part of docket USCG-2011-0576, which is available at 
http://www.regulations.gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have questions on this rule, 
call or email Mr. Christopher Friese, CG-MER-1, Coast Guard; telephone 
202-372-1227, email [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Table of Contents for Preamble

I. Abbreviations
II. Basis and Purpose
III. Regulatory History
IV. Background
V. Discussion of Comments on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
VI. Discussion of the Rule
VII. Regulatory Analyses
    A. Regulatory Planning and Review
    B. Small Entities
    C. Assistance for Small Entities
    D. Collection of Information
    E. Federalism
    F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    G. Taking of Private Property
    H. Civil Justice Reform
    I. Protection of Children
    J. Indian Tribal Governments
    K. Energy Effects
    L. Technical Standards
    M. Environment

I. Abbreviations

BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CGAA 2010 Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-281, 
124 Stat. 2905, Oct. 15, 2010)
CGAA 2015 Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2015 (Pub. L. 114-120, 
130 Stat. 27, Feb. 8, 2016)
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
COMDTINST Commandant Instruction
CRF Capital recovery factor
FR Federal Register
GSA General Services Administration
HVPA Higher volume port area
MISLE Marine Information for Safety and Law Enforcement
NAICS North American Industry Classification System
NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
NSFCC National Strike Force Coordination Center
OMB Office of Management and Budget

[[Page 26213]]

OSRO Oil spill removal organization
Pub. L. Public Law
SBA Small Business Administration
Stat. Statute
U.S.C. United States Code
VRP Vessel response plan

II. Basis and Purpose

    The purpose of this rule is to align the list of higher volume port 
areas (HVPAs) in 33 CFR 155.1020 with statutory changes made to the 
State of Washington's higher volume port area, the Washington HVPA. 
Section 316 of the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2015 (CGAA 2015) 
expanded the Washington HVPA.\1\ The Washington HVPA had included the 
Strait of Juan de Fuca seaward of Port Angeles, but section 316 
expanded it immediately to an area seaward of Cape Flattery, which is 
where the Strait of Juan de Fuca joins the Pacific Ocean. Regulations 
in 33 CFR 155.1020 still reflect the prior, Port Angeles location. 
Therefore, this rulemaking updates the Code of Federal Regulations 
(CFR) to match the statutory requirement already in force.
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    \1\ Public Law 114-120, 130 Stat. 27 (2016).
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    This rule is issued in accordance with section 316 of the CGAA 
2015. The legal basis to update the CFR is Title 33 of the United 
States Code (U.S.C.) section 1231 and 1321(j), which require the 
Secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is operating to 
issue regulations necessary for implementing the Ports and Waterways 
Safety Act, and require the President to issue regulations mandating 
response plans and other measures to protect against oil and hazardous 
substance spills. The President's authority under 33 U.S.C. 1321(j) is 
delegated to the Secretary by Executive Order 12777, and the 
Secretary's authority is delegated to the Coast Guard by DHS Delegation 
No. 0170.1(II)(70), (73), and (80).

III. Regulatory History

    On October 15, 2010, the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2010 
(CGAA 2010) directed the Coast Guard to initiate a rulemaking to modify 
the definition of ``higher volume port area'' in 33 CFR 155.1020, to 
expand the Washington HVPA past Cape Flattery.\2\ On December 7, 2011, 
the Coast Guard published a notification \3\ announcing our intent to 
comply with the mandate in section 710 of the CGAA 2010. On May 22, 
2015, the Coast Guard published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) 
\4\ to revise the boundaries of the existing HVPA in the Strait of Juan 
de Fuca and Puget Sound. The NPRM had a 90-day comment period that 
closed on August 20, 2015. No public meeting was requested, and none 
was held.
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    \2\ Public Law 111-281, section 710, 124 Stat. 2986 (2010).
    \3\ 76 FR 76299.
    \4\ 80 FR 29582.
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    After the close of the NPRM comment period, the CGAA 2015 expanded 
the HVPA immediately without requiring rulemaking before the change 
took effect. The Coast Guard applies the requirements of the expanded 
HVPA of the CGAA 2015 and has done so since the effective date of the 
Act. Although rulemaking is not required to implement the statute, a 
conforming change to the CFR is still necessary to ensure the 
regulations align with the statute. In this final rule, the Coast Guard 
is making conforming changes and responding to public comments received 
on the proposed rule. In Section V of this preamble, we discuss the 
comments that we received and how we addressed them.

IV. Background

    Oil or hazardous material pollution prevention regulations for U.S. 
and foreign vessels operating in U.S. waters, appear in Coast Guard 
regulations at 33 CFR part 155. Those regulations require a vessel 
response plan (VRP) describing measures that the vessel owner or 
operator has taken or will take to mitigate or respond to an oil spill 
from the vessel. The VRP must demonstrate the vessel's ability, 
following a spill, to secure response resources within given time 
periods. These measures typically include the services of nearby 
response resources under a contract between the vessel's owner or 
operator and an oil spill removal organization (OSRO) that owns the 
response resources. The regulations provide for three different 
timeframes within which a combination of required response resources 
must arrive on the scene, which are described as Tiers 1, 2, and 3.
    In 33 CFR part 155, subparts D (petroleum oil as cargo), F (animal 
fat or vegetable oil as cargo), G (non-petroleum oil as cargo), and J 
(petroleum oil as fuel or secondary cargo) all share the same 
definition of ``higher volume port area.'' Required response times are 
significantly reduced in HVPAs. For example, Tier 1 response times for 
an oil tanker within an HVPA are half of that required for the same 
vessel operating in open ocean. As defined in 33 CFR 155.1020, the 
Strait of Juan de Fuca and Puget Sound, WA, constitute one of the 14 
HVPAs designated around the country.
    Since 1996, 33 CFR 155.1020 has defined the seaward boundary of the 
Washington HVPA as an arc 50 nautical miles seaward of the entrance to 
Port Angeles, WA. Port Angeles is approximately 62 nautical miles 
inland from the Pacific Ocean entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca, 
at Cape Flattery, WA, and therefore the Washington HVPA, as defined in 
33 CFR 155.1020, did not include any Pacific Ocean waters. Section 710 
of the CGAA 2010 required the Coast Guard to initiate a rulemaking to 
relocate the HVPA's arc so that it extended seaward from Cape Flattery, 
not Port Angeles. This added 50 nautical miles of Pacific Ocean water 
and an additional 12 nautical miles in the western portion of the 
Strait of Juan de Fuca.\5\
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    \5\ Waters discussed in this preamble are shown on National 
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chart 18460 (Cape Flattery, 
WA) and chart 18465 (Port Angeles, WA).
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V. Discussion of Comments on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

    We received comments on our NPRM from five sources: An 
environmental group, two state environmental agencies, an Indian tribal 
council, and an individual resident of the region. These public 
comments could not anticipate the 2015 legislation that was enacted 
after the close of the comment period in August 2015, and which 
overwrote the 2010 legislation that prompted the Coast Guard to issue 
the NPRM. However, the Coast Guard addresses all the public comments 
here in order to improve clarity and foster better relationships with 
stakeholders.
    Legislative intent. The tribal council explained its role in 
developing the 2010 legislation mandating this rulemaking, and said the 
purpose of the legislation was to ``enhance oil spill response capacity 
in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, commensurate with the history of oil 
spills in this region, the sensitivity of the area's natural resources 
and the risk for future spills from increasing tank and non-tank vessel 
traffic.'' The council asserted that the NPRM did not reflect this 
intent in the proposed regulatory text.
    Response: We acknowledge the council's role in developing the 2010 
legislation. However, the text of section 710 is unambiguously limited 
to the expansion of the HVPA. Section 316 of CGAA 2015 expanded the 
Washington HVPA without the need for the Coast Guard to conduct a 
rulemaking. Neither Act gave the Coast Guard discretion to choose a 
different size or location for the Washington HVPA, or provided other 
direction regarding this HVPA.
    Adequacy of response resources. The environmental group, one of the 
state environmental agencies, the tribal council, and the local 
resident all expressed concern that expansion of the

[[Page 26214]]

HVPA would reduce the ability of OSROs to respond adequately to oil or 
other hazardous substance spills throughout the HVPA. The local 
resident and the state environmental agency said we did not provide 
sufficient details on how we will implement the expanded HVPA. The same 
group asked us to coordinate with governmental agencies and regional 
and tribal groups to collectively determine how best to balance 
response assets in the HVPA. The environmental group and the resident 
expressed concern over the potential impact of anticipated increases in 
the number of vessels carrying those substances in the HVPA.
    Response: Title 33 CFR part 155 does not allow the Coast Guard to 
direct OSROs where equipment must be staged, or require OSROs to 
purchase any additional equipment. The Coast Guard requires that OSROs 
demonstrate their ability to respond adequately to a spill within an 
HVPA's response timelines. Thus, there is no provision to coordinate 
with governmental agencies and regional and tribal groups to 
collectively determine how best to balance response assets in the HVPA.
    The Coast Guard National Strike Force Coordination Center (NSFCC) 
verifies OSRO capability through Preparedness Assessment Visits and 
response time calculations. The same method is used in classifying all 
OSROs. Two OSROs are currently classified for coverage in the HVPA. 
Vessel owners or operators need only reference the classified OSRO in 
their VRP. If an owner or operator chooses to use a non-classified 
OSRO, then they must list all the equipment and describe how they meet 
the requirements in appendix B to 33 CFR part 155. All VRPs receive the 
same detailed review for response adequacy to ensure the vessel's 
readiness for response in the geographic area it is operating.
    We acknowledge the concerns of commenters with regard to reduced 
response capabilities throughout the HVPA. This rulemaking in no way 
reduces or changes any response requirements that currently exist. 
Implementation of the revised HVPA does not change the requirement of 
vessel owners and operators to identify classified OSROs or identify 
their own equipment sufficient to meet part 155 appendix B 
requirements. This is required in order for the vessel to receive an 
approved VRP necessary for operating in the HVPA.
    We also acknowledge concerns about increased vessel transits and, 
it is implied, a higher likelihood of spills. VRPs are for response 
planning purposes. Consistent with the National Planning Criteria, they 
are evaluated using the worst-case discharge from a single vessel.
    Pre-NPRM tribal consultation. The tribal council ``strongly 
disagree[s]'' with our analysis of Executive Order 13175 (Indian Tribal 
Governments) requirements, which concluded that, for this rulemaking, 
tribal consultation is not required by the Executive Order. The council 
says we should have consulted with it because of our shared trust 
responsibility for the commenter's treaty protected area.
    Response: The Coast Guard enjoys a close working relationship with 
many tribal governments, including the council represented by the 
commenter. The Coast Guard welcomes ongoing communications and informal 
consultation, as well as suggestions for improving communications with 
tribes. The consultation described in section 5(b) of Executive Order 
13175 is triggered by a regulation that has tribal implications and 
imposes substantial direct compliance costs on Indian tribal 
governments. Section 5(b) Executive Order 13175 also only requires 
consultation when the regulation being developed ``is not required by 
statute.'' In this case, section 710 of CGAA 2010 required that the 
Coast Guard promulgate a regulation to expand the Washington HVPA. As 
discussed above, however, after the close of the NPRM comment period, 
section 316 of CGAA 2015 expanded the Washington HVPA by statutory 
mandate. Therefore, the Coast Guard maintains that the consultation 
described in Executive Order 13175 does not apply. As noted, however, 
we do not believe that the absence of Executive Order 13175 
consultation prevents the Coast Guard from receiving and incorporating 
input from tribal governments. In the 5 years between the 2010 
legislation and the 2015 publication of the NPRM, the Coast Guard met 
or spoke with tribal representatives about the Washington HVPA 
expansion. We appreciated the input and look forward to continued 
collaboration with the tribal representatives.
    Future tribal consultation. The tribal council asked us to enter 
into government-to-government consultation after the rule is adopted, 
and to develop a protocol for consultation and coordination going 
forward. The council also suggested that we consult with the State of 
Washington to ``establish a harmonized view about how industry and 
OSROs will be expected to comply with the HVPA shift.''
    Response: The Coast Guard invites communication and dialogue with 
tribal councils in order to maintain a positive working relationship. 
The Coast Guard's Thirteenth District, in particular, values its 
longstanding and ongoing relationship with the Makah Tribal Council. 
The Thirteenth District meets with tribes, and will continue to meet 
with tribes, to discuss a variety of issues. The involvement of local 
units like the Thirteenth District is essential for ensuring the Coast 
Guard's proper understanding of stakeholder input, and the Thirteenth 
District is best positioned to work with the council, through their 
longstanding and ongoing relationship as memorialized in their 2013 
Memorandum of Agreement, on any implementation arrangements that are 
appropriate for discussion with the public. Although the process 
described in Executive Order 13175 is not the appropriate mechanism for 
consultation and coordination after the rule becomes final, the Coast 
Guard is committed to addressing concerns raised by our regulations and 
their implementation.
    As described above, this rule makes no changes to the requirements 
for planholders or for classifying OSROs, so we do not anticipate a 
shift in implementation process. Through existing practices, the NSFCC 
confirms that classified OSROs meet their regulatory responsibilities. 
Owners or operators using non-classified OSROs must describe in their 
VRP how they meet appendix B requirements. Although we do not see a 
specific need for formal consultation with the State of Washington, the 
Thirteenth Coast Guard District maintains open lines of communication 
with the State. The Coast Guard will continue to work with its Federal, 
State, local, and tribal partners to ensure response readiness 
following publication of this final rule.
    Additional resources and Neah Bay restaging. One of the state 
environmental agencies said that the expanded HVPA ``should result in 
the acquisition and staging of additional equipment that is capable of 
open water recovery and storage in Neah Bay.'' The State agency also 
said that, in approving VRPs and evaluating OSROs identified by those 
VRPs, we should consider whether they reflect the restaging of response 
assets in Neah Bay. The tribal council said our rule should ensure that 
``additional equipment is purchased and staged in a geographic location 
to promptly respond to a spill in the western reaches of the expanded 
HVPA, without adversely impacting responses'' elsewhere in the HVPA, 
and said Neah Bay is the ``logical and appropriate'' staging area for 
additional response equipment, which should be rated for an open-ocean 
environment.

[[Page 26215]]

    Response: While Neah Bay may be a logical and appropriate location 
for the staging of response equipment, other locations may also be 
logical and appropriate. The Coast Guard does not direct OSROs to where 
equipment must be staged, or require OSROs to purchase any additional 
equipment. The Coast Guard requires that OSROs demonstrate their 
ability to respond adequately to a spill within an HVPA's response 
timelines.
    Benefits. One of the state environmental agencies and the tribal 
council asked what basis we had for stating in the NPRM \6\ that of 283 
spills of oil or other hazardous substances in the affected area 
between 1995 and 2013, we could identify no spill response that would 
have benefitted from the HVPA's expansion. The council cited three oil 
spills that adversely affected the tribe including the General Meigs, 
the Nestucca, and the Tenyo Maru. The agency and the council both noted 
that we did not ask them for information that might have changed that 
conclusion. The council expressed concern over ``the limited historical 
oil spill data'' used in our analysis, and ``formally request[ed]'' 
that we conduct ``a more rigorous analysis of historical oil spills'' 
and give the commenter the ``opportunity to review the Coast Guard's 
methodology regarding'' what effect HVPA expansion might have had on 
the response to previous spills.
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    \6\ NPRM, 80 FR 29582 at 29586, col. 3 (May 22, 2015).
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    Response: Although Congress expanded the HVPA after these comments 
were submitted, making our spill analysis redundant, it may be helpful 
to explain the context for our regulatory analyses. The statement 
referred to by these commenters appeared in the ``regulatory analyses'' 
for the NPRM.\7\ As explained in the NPRM, based on information from 
Coast Guard personnel who have experience in casualty case 
investigations and analysis, we found none of the 283 cases or spills 
that would have benefited from the HVPA expansion. As for the three 
spills cited by the council, we cannot conclude that the expanded HVPA 
would have mitigated the damage caused by those incidents. The 33 CFR 
part 155 regulations do not apply to a warship or naval auxiliary 
vessel such as the troopship General Meigs.\8\ The Nestucca and Tenyo 
Maru incidents did not occur within the existing or expanded bounds of 
the HVPA. We were therefore unable to use these incidents in our 
benefit analysis for this rulemaking.
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    \7\ NPRM, 80 FR 29582 at 29586-29587 (May 22, 2015).
    \8\ 33 CFR 155.100(b)(1).
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VI. Discussion of the Rule

    This rule is substantively unchanged from what we proposed in the 
NPRM. It expands the boundaries of the Washington HVPA in the CFR to 
make those boundaries consistent with section 316 of the CGAA 2015. The 
old definition of ``higher volume port area'' in 33 CFR 155.1020 
includes any water area within 50 nautical miles seaward of the 
entrance to the Strait of Juan De Fuca at Port Angeles, WA to and 
including Cape Flattery, WA. In order to align the regulations with 
section 316 of the CGAA 2015, we are amending that definition by 
striking ``Port Angeles, WA'' and inserting ``Cape Flattery, WA'' in 
its place.
    Port Angeles lies about 62 nautical miles east of the entrance to 
the Strait of Juan de Fuca. By moving the arc so that it centers on 
Cape Flattery, which lies at the entrance to the Strait, the redefined 
Washington HVPA will cover an additional 50 nautical miles of Pacific 
Ocean water, while continuing to cover all the waters now included 
within the current HVPA. The larger Washington HVPA may affect the time 
and resources needed to respond to an oil spill from a vessel because 
it is harder and more time-consuming to transit rough Pacific Ocean 
waters than it is to transit the sheltered waters of the Strait and the 
Sound. We discuss these possibilities in more detail in the Regulatory 
Analyses section that follows.
    This rule also makes two editorial changes in 33 CFR 155.1020. 
First, we correct the spelling of ``Strait of Juan De Fuca'' to 
``Strait of Juan de Fuca.'' Second, we add a note to paragraph (13) of 
the definition of ``higher volume port area'' to highlight that the 
western boundary of the Washington HVPA in 33 CFR part 155 differs from 
that in 33 CFR part 154 for facilities transferring oil or hazardous 
materials in bulk. The difference stems from section 316 of the CGAA 
2015 (Pub. L. 114-120) and the statutory language that specifically 
addresses the definition in 33 CFR part 155. The statutory expansion in 
the CGAA 2015 is not written to address 33 CFR part 154, and therefore 
33 CFR subchapter O will contain two differing definitions of ``higher 
volume port area'' for the Straits of Juan de Fuca.

VII. Regulatory Analyses

    We developed this final rule after considering numerous statutes 
and Executive orders related to this rulemaking. Below we summarize our 
analyses based on these statutes or Executive orders.

A. Regulatory Planning and Review

    Executive Orders 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) and 13563 
(Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review) direct agencies to assess 
the costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if 
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize 
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public 
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive 
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and 
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting 
flexibility. Executive Order 13771 (Reducing Regulation and Controlling 
Regulatory Costs), directs agencies to reduce regulation and control 
regulatory costs and provides that ``for every one new regulation 
issued, at least two prior regulations be identified for elimination, 
and that the cost of planned regulations be prudently managed and 
controlled through a budgeting process.''
    The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has not designated this 
rule a significant regulatory action under section 3(f) of Executive 
Order 12866. Accordingly, OMB has not reviewed it. As this rule is not 
a significant regulatory action, this rule is exempt from the 
requirements of Executive Order 13771. See OMB's Memorandum ``Guidance 
Implementing Executive Order 13771, Titled `Reducing Regulation and 
Controlling Regulatory Costs''' (April 5, 2017). A regulatory analysis 
follows.
    We received no public comments on the estimated costs of the 
proposed rule, nor did we receive any additional information or data 
that alters our assessment of the proposed rule. However, we received 
two public comments on the benefit analysis presented in the proposed 
rule regarding the same topic. We presented our full response to these 
two public comments in section V of this preamble. Because no casualty 
case mentioned in one of the comments would have benefited from the 
expanded HVPA, we also determined that our assessment of the benefits 
of the proposed rule remains unchanged. Therefore, we adopt the 
preliminary regulatory analysis for the proposed rule as final. A 
summary of that analysis follows.
    This final rule is needed to conform Coast Guard regulations to the 
statutory changes made by section 316 of CGAA 2015. Currently, the CFR 
says the Washington HVPA boundary is

[[Page 26216]]

measured from Port Angeles in a 50 nautical mile seaward arc westward 
to the Pacific Ocean. This final rule will amend the definition of the 
term ``higher volume port area'' to match the relocated point at which 
the seaward arc is measured from Port Angeles to Cape Flattery, WA, an 
approximately 62 nautical mile westward shift. As a result, the 
Washington HVPA will cover an additional 50 nautical miles of open 
ocean and an additional 12 nautical miles in the western portion of the 
Strait of Juan de Fuca. A VRP must list the OSRO provider that the 
vessel owner or operator has contracted with and stipulate the vessel's 
ability to secure response resources within specific regulatory 
timeframes (Tiers 1, 2, and 3) in the event of an oil spill. This final 
rule will codify the changes delineated in the CGAA 2015 and it will 
not require changes to VRPs.
Affected Population
    Part 155 of 33 CFR directly applies to and regulates vessel owners 
and operators. The final rule has the potential to impact vessel 
response planholders covering vessels that transit the Washington HVPA 
and OSROs that provide response resources in the event of an oil spill. 
Based on the Coast Guard's review of VRPs, two OSROs may be impacted by 
the final rule. One OSRO has about 500 response resource contracts and 
the other OSRO has about 650 contracts with planholders that own 
vessels that call on the expanded Washington HVPA. For the OSRO that 
has 500 contracts, about 3 percent or 15 of those contracts are with 
U.S. planholders; for the OSRO that has 650 contracts, about 2 percent 
or 13 of those contracts are with U.S. planholders.
Costs
    Vessel owners and operators will not need to revise or modify a 
current VRP to take into account the expansion of the HVPA. Current 
VRPs already specify one or both of the OSROs that provide response 
resources to vessel owners and operators in the affected waters. Vessel 
owners and operators must only list the NSFCC-classified OSRO by name 
and include the contact information for each OSRO in the VRP; no other 
information or details regarding the geographic location of response 
equipment are required in the VRP.
    In addition to identifying the OSRO in the VRP, vessel owners and 
operators must ensure the availability of response resources from the 
OSRO through a contract or other approved means. Depending on how the 
contract language is formulated, a contract may need to be modified to 
reflect the change in the HVPA geographical definition. For example, 
one OSRO provided information which stated that contracts will need to 
be modified slightly to incorporate the geographic change of the 
expanded HVPA, while the other OSRO provided information which stated 
that no changes or modifications to existing contracts are necessary on 
the part of either OSRO or the planholders. For the purpose of this 
analysis, we estimate costs to modify a contract for the planholders of 
the OSRO that stated that changes are necessary. This OSRO has about 
500 planholders with written contractual agreements to secure response 
resource services in the event of an oil spill; of this amount, only 
about 3 percent or 15, are with U.S. planholders. Based on information 
we obtained from industry in formulating the Nontank Vessel Response 
Plan final rule (78 FR 60100), it will take a general and operations 
manager approximately 2 hours of planholder time to amend the contract 
and send the contract to the OSRO for approval. If a plan preparer 
amends the contract on behalf of the planholder, we estimate it will 
take the same amount of time. We found that 36 percent of planholders 
perform this work internally and 64 percent hire a plan preparer to 
perform this work on their behalf. The amendment of a contract is a 
one-time cost; we estimate little or no submission cost for planholders 
because nearly 100 percent of contracts are submitted by email to the 
responsible OSRO.
    Accounting for planholders who perform the work internally and 
using the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) May 2016 National Industry-
Specific Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for General and 
Operations Manager (Occupation Code 11-1021), we obtain a mean hourly 
wage rate of $73.98. We then use BLS' 2016 Employer Cost for Employee 
Compensation databases to calculate and apply a load factor of 1.52 to 
obtain a loaded hourly labor rate of about $112.45 for this 
occupation.\9\ For plan preparers, we obtained publicly available fully 
loaded billing rates for senior regulatory consultants and program 
managers from three environmental service companies using the General 
Services Administration's (GSA) Federal Acquisition eLibrary for 
service contracts.\10\ We took the average of these three rates to 
obtain a fully loaded hourly wage rate of $145.11[we used three labor 
categories: Senior Regulatory Consultant with a wage rate of $184.22 
for contract number GS-10F-0263U (page number 16), Program Manager with 
a wage rate of $115.86 for contract number GS-10F-0074T (page number 
4), and Senior Project Manager with a wage rate of $135.25 for contract 
number GS-10F-0335R (page number 32)]. Of about 500 planholders who 
have contracts with this OSRO, only about 15 are U.S. planholders. Of 
the 15 U.S. planholders, about 36 percent will amend the contract 
internally. We estimate the one-time cost to these planholders is about 
$1,214 ($112.45 x 2 hours x 500 planholders x 0.03 x 0.36, rounded). 
For the remaining 64 percent of U.S. planholders who have plan 
preparers amend the contracts on their behalf, we estimate the one-time 
cost is about $2,786 ($145.11 x 2 hours x 500 planholders x 0.03 x 
0.64, rounded); the total combined estimated one-time cost to U.S. 
planholders to amend the contracts is about $4,001, rounded and 
undiscounted. We estimate the average one-time or initial cost for each 
U.S. planholder to amend a contract is about $267 ($4,001/15 U.S. 
planholders). We estimate the 10-year discounted cost is about $3,739 
using a 7 percent discount rate and the annualized cost is about $532.
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    \9\ Information can be viewed at https://www.bls.gov/oes/2016/may/naics3_483000.htm. Once on this page, scroll down to review the 
wage rate for 11-1021, General and Operations Manager with a mean 
hourly wage of $73.98. A loaded labor rate is what a company pays 
per hour to employ a person, not the hourly wage. The loaded labor 
rate includes the cost of benefits (health insurance, vacation, 
etc.). The load factor for wages is calculated by dividing total 
compensation by wages and salaries. For this analysis, we used BLS' 
Employer Cost for Employee Compensation/Transportation and Materials 
Moving Occupations, Private Industry report (Series IDs, 
CMU2010000520000D and CMU2020000520000D for all workers using the 
multi-screen data search). Using 2016 Q4 (Quarter 4) data, we divide 
the total compensation amount of $28.15 by the wage and salary 
amount of $18.53 to get the load factor of 1.52. See the following 
website, http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ect/data.htm. Once on this page, 
scroll down to ``Pay and Benefits'' and click the multi-screen data 
search button to access the database, ``Employer Cost for Employee 
Compensation.'' We used the mean hourly wage rate of $73.98 and 
multiplied by 1.52 to obtain a loaded hourly wage rate of about 
$112.45.
    \10\ GSA Contract GS-10F-0263U accessed 05/24/2017, https://www.gsaadvantage.gov/ref_text/GS10F0263U/0ME78D.2QP6TJ_GS-10F-0263U_GSAADVANTAGEYR6.PDF; GSA Contract GS-10F-0074T accessed 05/24/
2017, https://www.gsaelibrary.gsa.gov/ElibMain/contractorInfo.do?contractNumber=GS-10F-0074T&contractorName=ENVIRONMENTAL+MANAGEMENT+SERVICES+INC&executeQuery=YES (once at the GSA eLibrary web page, the reader must use the 
hyperlink labeled ``Contractor T&Cs/Pricelist'' to obtain the wage 
rate used in this analysis), and https://www.gsaadvantage.gov/ref_text/GS10F0335R/0OMBPD.3723M6_GS-10F-0335R_ENVCOSTMGMTTANDC071315.PDF; accessed 05/24/2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The remaining 485 planholders are foreign. For 36 percent of them 
who will amend the contracts internally, we

[[Page 26217]]

estimate the one-time cost is about $39,268 ($112.45 x 2 hours x 485 
planholders x 0.36, rounded). For the remaining 64 percent of foreign 
planholders who have a plan preparer amend the contracts on their 
behalf, we estimate the one-time cost is about $90,084 ($145.11 x 2 
hours x 485 planholders x 0.64, rounded); combined the total estimated 
one-time cost to foreign planholders to amend the contracts is about 
$129,352, rounded, or about $267 per planholder ($129,352/485 foreign 
planholders).
    The final category of potential costs relates to the OSROs' 
abilities to meet the specified response times in the new geographic 
area of the HVPA. Based on information provided to the Coast Guard, one 
OSRO stated that additional response equipment will not be required and 
capital expenditures will not be necessary as a result of the expanded 
HVPA under current Coast Guard OSRO classification guidelines. Based on 
data from the other OSRO, we estimate that total initial capital costs 
could be as high as $5.5 million for temporary storage equipment and 
warehousing with annual capital recurring costs of approximately 
$250,000 for equipment maintenance, and up to $1 million for barge 
recertification (included in the $5.5 million estimate), warehousing, 
and other necessary resource equipment. However, we lack independent 
methods to verify these estimates. Moreover, the actual costs the OSRO 
may incur depend considerably on how they choose to comply with our 
regulations, which give OSROs substantial flexibility with respect to 
pre-positioning response resources.
    To the extent one OSRO will incur additional costs due to this 
final rule (such as increased capitalization costs), we expect that 
these costs are generally passed onto their VRP planholders equally, 
although the OSRO that provided this information conceded that this was 
speculative at this point due to the uncertainty of expenditures that 
may be needed as described below. Using the highest value of capital 
costs provided to us of $5.5 million, we use the capital recovery cost 
factor to determine the amount needed annually to recover this payout 
since we assume the OSRO will finance the expenditures and attempt to 
recapture them equally over the life of the equipment. The capital 
recovery factor (CRF), or ratio as it is often referred to, is the 
ratio of a constant annuity to the present value of the annuity over a 
given period of time using an acceptable discount rate, as in this 
case, 7 percent. The ratio also includes the general life expectancy of 
the investment and can be simply described as the ``share of the net 
cost that must be recovered each year to `repay the cost of the fixed 
input at the end of its useful life.' '' \11\ If we use a standard life 
expectancy of 20 years, we calculate the net amount that must be 
recovered by the OSRO annually is about $519,161, undiscounted (The 
capital recovery factor is written as:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ See https://web.stanford.edu/group/FRI/indonesia/courses/manuals/pam/pam-book/Output/chap9.html.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06JN18.000

where i is the discount rate and n is the number of years or the life 
expectancy of the investment).\12\ If we assume this cost is 
distributed equally over the 650 planholders (U.S. and foreign 
planholders who own vessels that transit the HVPA) under contract with 
this OSRO, the amount needed to be recovered by the OSRO to recapture 
this initial investment is estimated is about $800 (rounded from 
$798.71) from each planholder annually, most likely in the form of 
higher retainer fees. However, only about 2 percent, or 13 of the 650 
planholders are U.S. planholders. Therefore, for the 13 U.S. 
planholders, we estimate the total capital cost of this final rule is 
about $10,400 (650 planholders x 0.02 x $800) annually, undiscounted, 
in addition to annual maintenance costs of about $385 per planholder 
($250,000/650 planholders), undiscounted, in years 2 through 10 of the 
analysis period. We estimate the total 10-year discounted cost to the 
13 U.S. planholders is about $75,390 using a 7 percent discount rate 
(the 10-year discounted cost is estimated is about $91,624 using a 3 
percent discount rate) and the annualized cost is about $10,741.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ We calculate the value of the numerator to be about 0.27 
and the value of the denominator to be about 2.87, rounded. The CRF 
is then calculated to be about 0.0944. Multiplying by the initial 
investment of $5.5 million, we obtain an annualized recovery amount 
of about $519,161 rounded, or the annualized amount the OSRO must 
recover to repay for its initial investment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For all 28 U.S. planholders, we estimate the total initial-year 
cost is about $14,401 ($4,001 + $10,400), undiscounted. We estimate the 
total annual recurring cost is about $10,785 ($10,400 + $385), 
undiscounted (see Table 1 for further details).
    It follows that the remaining 637 planholders are foreign. Again, 
if we assume this OSRO passes along its capital cost in the form of 
higher retainer fees to foreign planholders, we estimate the total 
capital cost of this final rule to foreign planholders is about 
$509,600 (637 x $800) annually, undiscounted, in addition to annual 
maintenance costs of about $245,000 (637 x $385), undiscounted, in 
years 2 through 10 of the analysis period. We estimate the total 10-
year discounted cost to foreign planholders is about $3.6 million using 
a 7 percent discount rate (the 10-year discounted cost is estimated is 
about $4.3 million using a 3 percent discount rate). As stated earlier, 
we neither have knowledge of the OSROs billing structure nor how costs 
are distributed among planholders, although in our discussion with one 
OSRO, we learned that the composition of a planholder's vessel fleet 
affects the amount of the retainer fee because vessels such as nontank 
ships require different response resources as opposed to towing 
vessels, for example.
    Table 1 summarizes the total estimated cost of the final rule to 28 
U.S. planholders over a 10-year period of analysis.

                                        Table 1--Summary of Estimated Costs of the Final Rule to U.S. Planholders
                                           [7 Percent discount rate, 10-year period of analysis, 2017 dollars]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                           Update contracts for 15 U.S.      OSRO equipment and other               Total costs
                                                                    planholders              capital costs for 13 U.S.   -------------------------------
                          Year                           --------------------------------           planholders
                                                                                         --------------------------------  Undiscounted     Discounted
                                                           Undiscounted     Discounted     Undiscounted     Discounted
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................................          $4,001          $3,739         $10,400          $9,720         $14,401         $13,459
2.......................................................               0               0          10,785           9,420          10,785           9,420
3.......................................................               0               0          10,785           8,804          10,785           8,804
4.......................................................               0               0          10,785           8,228          10,785           8,228

[[Page 26218]]

 
5.......................................................               0               0          10,785           7,690          10,785           7,690
6.......................................................               0               0          10,785           7,187          10,785           7,187
7.......................................................               0               0          10,785           6,716          10,785           6,716
8.......................................................               0               0          10,785           6,277          10,785           6,277
9.......................................................               0               0          10,785           5,866          10,785           5,866
10......................................................               0               0          10,785           5,483          10,785           5,483
                                                         -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total...............................................  ..............           3,739  ..............          75,390  ..............          79,129
        Annualized......................................  ..............             532  ..............          10,734  ..............          11,266
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Totals may not sum due to independent rounding.

    As Table 1 shows, for 15 U.S. planholders who may need to revise 
their contracts, we estimate the 10-year discounted cost of the final 
rule is about $3,739 at a 7 percent discount rate (using a 3 percent 
discount rate, we estimate the 10-year discounted cost is about 
$3,884). We estimate the annualized cost is about $532 for these 15 
planholders.
    For the OSRO that may incur capital costs as a result of this final 
rule and pass these costs along to its 13 U.S. planholders, we estimate 
the 10-year discounted cost is about $75,390 at a 7 percent discount 
rate (using a 3 percent discount rate, we estimate the 10-year 
discounted cost is about $91,624). We estimate the annualized cost is 
about $10,734 at a 7 percent discount rate for these 13 planholders.
    We estimate the total present discounted cost of the final rule to 
all 28 U.S. planholders about $79,129 at a 7 percent discount rate 
(using a 3 percent discount rate, is we estimate the total 10-year 
discounted cost is about $95,509). We estimate the annualized cost is 
about $11,266 at a 7 percent discount rate.
    We do not anticipate that this final rule will impose new costs on 
the Coast Guard or require the Coast Guard to expend additional 
resources because we do not expect any changes are required to the VRPs 
of vessels in the HVPA.
Alternatives
    Due to the specific nature of section 710(a) of the CGAA 2010 and 
section 316 of the CGAA 2015, we are limited in the alternative 
approaches we can use to comply with Congress' intent. We considered 
three alternatives (including the preferred alternative) in the 
development of the final rule: (1) Revise 33 CFR 155.1020 by striking 
``Port Angeles, WA'' in the definition of ``higher volume port area'' 
of that section and inserting ``Cape Flattery, WA''; (2) revise 33 CFR 
155.1020 by striking ``50 nautical miles'' in the definition of 
``higher volume port area'' and inserting ``110 nautical miles''; and 
(3) take no action. The Regulatory Analyses section further discusses 
the analysis of the preferred alternative (i.e., express adoption of 
the wording from section 710(a)) in comparison with other regulatory 
approaches considered.
Analysis of Alternatives
    We considered three alternatives (including the preferred 
alternative) in the development of this final rule. The key factors 
that we evaluated in considering each alternative included: (1) The 
degree to which the alternative comported with the congressional 
mandate in section 710 of the CGAA 2010; (2) what benefits, if any, are 
derived, such as enhancement of personal and environmental safety and 
security; and (3) cost effectiveness. The alternatives considered are 
as follows:
    Alternative 1: Revise 33 CFR 155.1020 by striking ``Port Angeles, 
WA'' in the definition of ``higher volume port area'' of that section 
and inserting ``Cape Flattery, WA.'' Since 1996, 33 CFR 155.1020 has 
defined the seaward boundary of the Washington HVPA as an arc 50 
nautical miles seaward of the entrance to Port Angeles, WA. The change 
will relocate the arc's center to Cape Flattery, covering approximately 
50 additional nautical miles of open ocean.
    Alternative 2: Revise 33 CFR 155.1020 by striking ``50 nautical 
miles'' in the definition of ``higher volume port area'' and inserting 
``110 nautical miles.'' This change would affect the other 13 HVPAs 
throughout the United States because the level of response resources 
required would cause significantly reduced response times resulting 
from a 110-mile outward shift of the existing HVPAs from their 
entrances. A shift of this distance would require the purchasing and 
positioning of heavier and more expensive equipment such as oceangoing 
tugs and barges. In addition, OSROs would incur considerable costs of 
potentially retrofitting existing HVPAs with shoreside docks. Since 
this would include all HVPAs, the economic impact on the response 
resource industry, as a whole, would be greater as opposed to a single 
HVPA. Furthermore, this option would be inconsistent with the existing 
boundaries of the expanded HVPA in section 710(a) of CGAA 2010 (Pub. L. 
111-281, 124 Stat. 2905) as amended by section 316 of the CGAA 2015.
    Alternative 3: Take no action. This option was not selected as it 
would not implement the intent of section 316 of the CGAA 2015, which 
specifically requires the Coast Guard to implement the modified 
definition of the term ``higher volume port area'' by striking ``Port 
Angeles, WA'' and inserting ``Cape Flattery, WA.'' It also precludes 
the protection intended by Congress for the waters at the entrance to 
and in the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
    We chose Alternative 1, which codifies the regulation directly and 
specifically implements section 316 of the CGAA 2015 as described 
earlier. We rejected Alternative 2, because it would result in 
different HVPA boundaries in regulation and statute and adds burden, 
both in the Puget Sound region and in the other HVPAs throughout the 
United States. We rejected Alternative 3, the ``no action'' 
alternative, because it would not implement section 316.
Benefits
    We did not identify any historic cases that could support the 
development of quantifiable benefits associated with this final rule. 
Using the Coast Guard's Marine Information for Safety and Law

[[Page 26219]]

Enforcement (MISLE) database with casualty cases transferred from 
MISLE's predecessor, the Marine Safety Management System database, we 
examined 283 spill cases from 1995 to 2013, beginning with the first 
spills that appeared in our database for this geographic region. We 
also examined 378 additional cases from 2014 through 2016. Based on 
information from Coast Guard personnel who have experience in casualty 
case investigations and analysis, we found no cases or spills that 
would have definitively benefitted from the expanded HVPA.
    Qualitatively, oil spills are likely to result in a negative impact 
to the ecosystem and the economy of the surrounding area. These social 
welfare effects are not accounted for solely by the amount of oil 
spilled into the water. In many cases, the scope of the impact is 
contingent on the vulnerability and resiliency of the affected area. 
Due to the sensitivity or vulnerability of a location, a barrel of 
spilled oil may not have the same impact in one area as it would in 
another. Depending on the ecosystem, VRPs could mitigate impacts to 
habitats that house multiple species. An area with an ecosystem that is 
damaged as a result of previous environmental incidents or damaged due 
to the cumulative effects of environmental injuries over time can be 
expected to have higher benefits from oil spill mitigation.
    The primary benefit of this final rule is to ensure that in the 
event of a spill, adequate response resources are available and can be 
mobilized within the expanded HVPA. This will ensure a timely response 
by vessel owners and operators and the OSROs in an effort to reduce the 
likelihood, and mitigate the impact of an oil spill on the marine 
environment that might occur in the expanded HVPA.

B. Small Entities

    Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612), we have 
considered whether this final rule will have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities. The term ``small 
entities'' comprises small businesses, not-for-profit organizations 
that are independently owned and operated and are not dominant in their 
fields, and governmental jurisdictions with populations of less than 
50,000.
    Regarding vessel owners and operators, as previously discussed, 
this final rule will codify the requirements in the CGAA 2015 of an 
expanded HVPA, and it will not require vessel owners and operators to 
make changes to VRPs. Therefore, owners and operators of vessels that 
transit the HVPA will not incur additional VRP modification costs as a 
result of this final rule. However, as assumed earlier for the purpose 
of this analysis, if contracts would need to be modified, as stated by 
one OSRO on the part of the planholders, U.S. planholders will bear 
some costs of this final rule as shown earlier in the ``Costs'' portion 
of section VII. A. of this preamble. We estimate that each of the 15 
U.S. planholders will incur an average one-time cost of about $267 to 
amend its contract with the OSRO.
    Also, regarding capital costs, it is unclear whether or how these 
costs impact vessel owners and operators without knowledge of the 
OSROs' billing structures. Additionally, proprietary information is not 
available that would allow us to determine the distribution of costs 
among many vessel owners and operators contracting with each OSRO. 
Nevertheless, in our earlier analysis, if we assume capital costs are 
incurred by one of the OSROs and we assume this cost would be passed 
along equally to U.S. planholders in the form of higher retainer fees, 
we estimate each of the 13 U.S. planholders will incur an annual cost 
of about $800 from one particular OSRO in addition to $385 in 
maintenance costs in years 2 through 10 of the analysis period for a 
total planholder cost of about $1,185 in years 2 through 10 of the 
analysis period.
    We assume for the purpose of this analysis that the two OSROs that 
provide response resource capabilities to the HVPA in Puget Sound may 
incur costs from this final rule and may likely pass along these costs 
to planholders in the form of higher retainer fees or planholders may 
incur one-time costs to amend their contracts with one of the OSROs. 
Using the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes 
for businesses and the Small Business Administration's (SBA) size 
standards for small businesses, we determined the size of each OSRO. 
One OSRO has a primary NAICS code of 541618 with an SBA size standard 
of $15 million, which is under the subsector group 541 of the NAICS 
code with the description of ``Professional, Scientific, and Technical 
Services.'' The other OSRO has a primary NAICS code of 562998 with an 
SBA size standard of $7.5 million, which is under the subsector group 
562 of the NAICS code with the description of ``Waste Management and 
Remediation Services.'' Based on the information discussed earlier in 
this section and annual revenue data from publicly available and 
proprietary sources, Manta and ReferenceUSA, neither OSRO is considered 
to be small.
    There are about 1,400 U.S. planholders that have either a tank, 
nontank, or combined VRP. Based on the affected population of this 
final rule relative to the size of the industry as a whole, in this 
case U.S. VRP owners (planholders), this final rule will potentially 
affect 28 or about 2 percent of the total population of U.S. 
planholders in the United States. As described earlier and dependent 
upon the OSRO considered, we estimate a U.S. planholder may incur an 
annual cost between $385 and $1,185 in years 2 through 10 of the 
analysis period (and between $267 and $800 in the initial year because 
we assume maintenance costs are not incurred in the initial year of the 
analysis period) as a result of this final rule. Therefore, the Coast 
Guard certifies under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that this rule will not have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

C. Assistance for Small Entities

    Under section 213(a) of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement 
Fairness Act of 1996,\13\ we want to assist small entities in 
understanding this final rule so that they can better evaluate its 
effects on them and participate in the rulemaking. If the final rule 
will affect your small business, organization, or governmental 
jurisdiction and you have questions concerning its provisions or 
options for compliance, please consult Mr. Christopher Friese (see FOR 
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT). The Coast Guard will not retaliate 
against small entities that question or complain about this rule or any 
policy or action of the Coast Guard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ Public Law 104-121.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Small businesses may send comments on the actions of Federal 
employees who enforce, or otherwise determine compliance with Federal 
regulations to the Small Business and Agriculture Regulatory 
Enforcement Ombudsman and the Regional Small Business Regulatory 
Fairness Boards. The Ombudsman evaluates these actions annually and 
rates each agency's responsiveness to small business. If you wish to 
comment on actions by employees of the Coast Guard, call 1-888-REG-FAIR 
(1-888-734-3247).

D. Collection of Information

    This final rule will call for no new collection of information 
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ 44 U.S.C. 3501-3520.

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

[[Page 26220]]

E. Federalism

    A rule has implications for federalism under Executive Order 13132 
(Federalism), if it has a substantial direct effect on 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. We have analyzed this rule under that Order and have 
determined that it is consistent with the fundamental federalism 
principles and preemption requirements described in Executive Order 
13132. Our analysis is explained below.
    As noted earlier in the preamble, this rule implements section 710 
of the CGAA 2010, as amended by section 316 of the CGAA 2015, which 
specifically directs the Coast Guard to amend 33 CFR 155.1020 by 
removing ``Port Angeles, WA'' and replacing it with ``Cape Flattery, 
WA.'' This rule carries out the Congressional mandate by amending the 
regulations to reflect this required change. Furthermore, this rule 
does not appear to have a substantial direct effect upon the laws or 
regulations of the State of Washington. Additionally, nothing in this 
rule preempts or prohibits state removal activities related to the 
discharge of oil or hazardous substances under the Federal Water 
Pollution Control Act.\15\ Therefore, this rule is consistent with the 
fundamental federalism principles and preemption requirements described 
in Executive Order 13132.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ Section 311, codified at 33 U.S.C. 1321(o).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 \16\ requires Federal 
agencies to assess the effects of their discretionary regulatory 
actions. In particular, the Act addresses actions that may result in 
the expenditure by a State, local, or tribal government, in the 
aggregate, or by the private sector of $100,000,000 (adjusted for 
inflation) or more in any one year. Although this final rule will not 
result in such an expenditure, we do discuss the effects of this rule 
elsewhere in this preamble.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

G. Taking of Private Property

    This final rule will not cause a taking of private property or 
otherwise have taking implications under Executive Order 12630 
(Governmental Actions and Interference with Constitutionally Protected 
Property Rights).

H. Civil Justice Reform

    This final rule meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and 
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform) to minimize 
litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden.

I. Protection of Children

    We have analyzed this final rule under Executive Order 13045 
(Protection of Children from Environmental Health Risks and Safety 
Risks). This rule is not an economically significant rule and will not 
create an environmental risk to health or risk to safety that might 
disproportionately affect children.

J. Indian Tribal Governments

    This rule does not have tribal implications under Executive Order 
13175 (Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments), 
because it will not have a substantial direct effect on one or more 
Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and 
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities 
between the Federal Government and Indian tribes. We discuss Executive 
Order 13175 in more detail in section V of this preamble.

K. Energy Effects

    We have analyzed this final rule under Executive Order 13211 
(Actions Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy 
Supply, Distribution, or Use). We have determined that it is not a 
``significant energy action'' under that order because it is not a 
``significant regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866 and is 
not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply, 
distribution, or use of energy.

L. Technical Standards

    The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act \17\ directs 
agencies to use voluntary consensus standards in their regulatory 
activities unless the agency provides Congress, through OMB, with an 
explanation of why using these standards will be inconsistent with 
applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary consensus standards 
are technical standards (e.g., specifications of materials, 
performance, design, or operation; test methods; sampling procedures; 
and related management systems practices) that are developed or adopted 
by voluntary consensus standards bodies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ 15 U.S.C. 272 note.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This final rule does not use technical standards. Therefore, we did 
not consider the use of voluntary consensus standards.

M. Environment

    We have analyzed this final rule under Department of Homeland 
Security Management Directive 023-01 and Commandant Instruction 
M16475.lD (COMDTINST M16475.1D), which guide the Coast Guard in 
complying with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969,\18\ and 
have made a determination that this is one of a category of actions 
that do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on 
the human environment. A Record of Environmental Consideration 
supporting this determination is available in the docket where 
indicated under the ADDRESSES section of this preamble. This rule is 
categorically excluded under section 6(b) of the ``Appendix to National 
Environmental Policy Act: Coast Guard Procedures for Categorical 
Exclusions, Notice of Final Agency Policy.'' \19\ This rule involves 
Congressionally-mandated regulations designed to protect the 
environment, specifically, regulations implementing the requirements of 
the Act (redefining and enlarging the boundaries of the existing 
Washington HVPA in the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Puget Sound).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ 42 U.S.C. 4321-4370f.
    \19\ 67 FR 48244 (July 23, 2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 155

    Alaska, Hazardous substances, Oil pollution, Reporting and 
recordkeeping requirements.

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Coast Guard amends 
33 CFR part 155 as follows:

Title 33--Navigation and Navigable Waters

PART 155--OIL OR HAZARDOUS MATERIAL POLLUTION PREVENTION 
REGULATIONS FOR VESSELS

0
1. The authority citation for part 155 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority:  3 U.S.C. 301 through 303; 33 U.S.C. 1225, 1231, 
1321(j), 1903(b), 2735; E.O. 12777, 56 FR 54757, 3 CFR, 1991 Comp., 
p. 351; Department of Homeland Security Delegation No. 0170.1. 
Section 155.1020 also issued under section 316 of Pub. L. 114-120. 
Section 155.480 also issued under section 4110(b) of Pub. L. 101-
380.

0
2. In Sec.  155.1020, paragraph (13) of the definition of ``Higher 
volume port area'':
0
a. Remove the words ``Strait of Juan De Fuca at Port Angeles'' and add 
in their place the words ``Strait of Juan de Fuca at Cape Flattery''.
0
b. Add a note to read as follows:


Sec.  155.1020  Definitions.

* * * * *

[[Page 26221]]

    Higher volume port area * * *
    (13) * * *

    Note 1 to paragraph (13) of this definition: The western 
boundary of the Strait of Juan de Fuca higher volume port area in 
this part differs from that in Sec.  154.1020 of this chapter. The 
difference stems from section 316(b) of the Coast Guard 
Authorization Act of 2015 (Pub. L. 114-120), which expands only the 
definition in this part.

* * * * *

    Dated: May 31, 2018.
Dana S. Tulis,
Director of Incident Management and Preparedness Policy.
[FR Doc. 2018-12081 Filed 6-5-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110-04-P



                                             26212                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Obstruction angle
                                                                              Vessel                                                                               Number                                                   relative ship’s
                                                                                                                                                                                                                               headings

                                                    *                     *                                 *                           *                                 *                                *                         *
                                             USS CHARLESTON .............................................................    LCS 18 ..................................................................................   72° thru 74°.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                         286° thru 288°.

                                                         *                         *                          *                              *                              *                               *                       *



                                             *       *       *       *       *                                 27. * * *

                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Obstruction angle
                                                                              Vessel                                                                               Number                                                relative ship heading


                                                    *                     *                                 *                           *                                 *                                *                         *
                                             USS CHARLESTON .............................................................    LCS 18 ..................................................................................   47° thru 59°.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                         301° thru 313°.


                                                                                                                                   TABLE FIVE
                                                                                                                                                                                                          After
                                                                                                                                                                                                      mast-head
                                                                                                                                      Masthead                         Forward                         light less
                                                                                                                                 lights not over all                                                                            Percentage
                                                                                                                                                                      masthead                     than 1⁄2 ship’s
                                                                                                                                   other lights and                                                                              horizontal
                                                                   Vessel                                   Number                                               light not in forward                length aft of
                                                                                                                                    obstructions.                                                                               separation
                                                                                                                                                                    quarter of ship.                    forward
                                                                                                                                      annex I,                                                                                    attained
                                                                                                                                                                  annex I, sec. 3(a)                  masthead
                                                                                                                                      sec. 2(f)                                                    light. annex I,
                                                                                                                                                                                                       sec. 3(a)


                                                    *                     *                                *                                 *                              *                               *                       *
                                             USS CHARLESTON ..................................        LCS 18 .............      ..............................              X                               X                      15.2

                                                         *                         *                          *                              *                              *                               *                       *



                                               Approved: May 24, 2018.                                      Fuca and Puget Sound, in Washington.                                        B. Small Entities
                                             Christopher J. Spain,                                          This rulemaking is required to make the                                     C. Assistance for Small Entities
                                                                                                            Code of Federal Regulations consistent                                      D. Collection of Information
                                             Deputy Assistant Judge Advocate General
                                                                                                                                                                                        E. Federalism
                                             (Admiralty and Maritime Law), Acting.                          with statute, and is related to the Coast                                   F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                               Dated: May 31, 2018.                                         Guard’s maritime stewardship                                                G. Taking of Private Property
                                             E.K. Baldini,                                                  (environmental protection) mission.                                         H. Civil Justice Reform
                                             Lieutenant Commander, Judge Advocate                           DATES: This final rule is effective July 6,                                 I. Protection of Children
                                             General’s Corps, U.S. Navy, Federal Register                   2018.                                                                       J. Indian Tribal Governments
                                             Liaison Officer.                                                                                                                           K. Energy Effects
                                                                                                            ADDRESSES: Documents mentioned in
                                                                                                                                                                                        L. Technical Standards
                                             [FR Doc. 2018–12136 Filed 6–5–18; 8:45 am]                     this preamble as being available in the                                     M. Environment
                                             BILLING CODE 3810–FF–P                                         docket are part of docket USCG–2011–
                                                                                                            0576, which is available at http://                                     I. Abbreviations
                                                                                                            www.regulations.gov.                                                    BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
                                             DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND                                         FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:     If                                 CGAA 2010 Coast Guard Authorization Act
                                             SECURITY                                                                                                                                 of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–281, 124 Stat. 2905,
                                                                                                            you have questions on this rule, call or                                  Oct. 15, 2010)
                                                                                                            email Mr. Christopher Friese, CG–MER–                                   CGAA 2015 Coast Guard Authorization Act
                                             Coast Guard
                                                                                                            1, Coast Guard; telephone 202–372–                                        of 2015 (Pub. L. 114–120, 130 Stat. 27, Feb.
                                                                                                            1227, email Christopher.R.Friese@                                         8, 2016)
                                             33 CFR Part 155                                                                                                                        CFR Code of Federal Regulations
                                                                                                            uscg.mil.
                                             [Docket No. USCG–2011–0576]                                                                                                            COMDTINST Commandant Instruction
                                                                                                            SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                                              CRF Capital recovery factor
                                             RIN 1625–AB75                                                                                                                          FR Federal Register
                                                                                                            Table of Contents for Preamble
                                                                                                                                                                                    GSA General Services Administration
                                             Higher Volume Port Area–State of                               I. Abbreviations                                                        HVPA Higher volume port area
                                             Washington                                                     II. Basis and Purpose                                                   MISLE Marine Information for Safety and
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                                                                                                            III. Regulatory History                                                   Law Enforcement
                                             AGENCY:      Coast Guard, DHS.                                 IV. Background                                                          NAICS North American Industry
                                             ACTION:     Final rule.                                        V. Discussion of Comments on the Notice of                                Classification System
                                                                                                                  Proposed Rulemaking                                               NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
                                             SUMMARY: The Coast Guard is redefining                         VI. Discussion of the Rule                                              NSFCC National Strike Force Coordination
                                             the boundaries of the existing higher                          VII. Regulatory Analyses                                                  Center
                                             volume port area in the Strait of Juan de                         A. Regulatory Planning and Review                                    OMB Office of Management and Budget



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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                 26213

                                             OSRO Oil spill removal organization                       Sound. The NPRM had a 90-day                           approximately 62 nautical miles inland
                                             Pub. L. Public Law                                        comment period that closed on August                   from the Pacific Ocean entrance to the
                                             SBA Small Business Administration                         20, 2015. No public meeting was                        Strait of Juan de Fuca, at Cape Flattery,
                                             Stat. Statute
                                                                                                       requested, and none was held.                          WA, and therefore the Washington
                                             U.S.C. United States Code
                                             VRP Vessel response plan
                                                                                                          After the close of the NPRM comment                 HVPA, as defined in 33 CFR 155.1020,
                                                                                                       period, the CGAA 2015 expanded the                     did not include any Pacific Ocean
                                             II. Basis and Purpose                                     HVPA immediately without requiring                     waters. Section 710 of the CGAA 2010
                                                The purpose of this rule is to align the               rulemaking before the change took                      required the Coast Guard to initiate a
                                             list of higher volume port areas (HVPAs)                  effect. The Coast Guard applies the                    rulemaking to relocate the HVPA’s arc
                                             in 33 CFR 155.1020 with statutory                         requirements of the expanded HVPA of                   so that it extended seaward from Cape
                                             changes made to the State of                              the CGAA 2015 and has done so since                    Flattery, not Port Angeles. This added
                                             Washington’s higher volume port area,                     the effective date of the Act. Although                50 nautical miles of Pacific Ocean water
                                             the Washington HVPA. Section 316 of                       rulemaking is not required to implement                and an additional 12 nautical miles in
                                             the Coast Guard Authorization Act of                      the statute, a conforming change to the                the western portion of the Strait of Juan
                                             2015 (CGAA 2015) expanded the                             CFR is still necessary to ensure the                   de Fuca.5
                                             Washington HVPA.1 The Washington                          regulations align with the statute. In this
                                                                                                       final rule, the Coast Guard is making                  V. Discussion of Comments on the
                                             HVPA had included the Strait of Juan de
                                                                                                       conforming changes and responding to                   Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
                                             Fuca seaward of Port Angeles, but
                                             section 316 expanded it immediately to                    public comments received on the                           We received comments on our NPRM
                                             an area seaward of Cape Flattery, which                   proposed rule. In Section V of this                    from five sources: An environmental
                                             is where the Strait of Juan de Fuca joins                 preamble, we discuss the comments that                 group, two state environmental
                                             the Pacific Ocean. Regulations in 33                      we received and how we addressed                       agencies, an Indian tribal council, and
                                             CFR 155.1020 still reflect the prior, Port                them.                                                  an individual resident of the region.
                                             Angeles location. Therefore, this                         IV. Background                                         These public comments could not
                                             rulemaking updates the Code of Federal                                                                           anticipate the 2015 legislation that was
                                                                                                          Oil or hazardous material pollution                 enacted after the close of the comment
                                             Regulations (CFR) to match the statutory
                                                                                                       prevention regulations for U.S. and                    period in August 2015, and which
                                             requirement already in force.
                                                                                                       foreign vessels operating in U.S. waters,              overwrote the 2010 legislation that
                                                This rule is issued in accordance with
                                                                                                       appear in Coast Guard regulations at 33                prompted the Coast Guard to issue the
                                             section 316 of the CGAA 2015. The legal
                                                                                                       CFR part 155. Those regulations require                NPRM. However, the Coast Guard
                                             basis to update the CFR is Title 33 of the
                                                                                                       a vessel response plan (VRP) describing                addresses all the public comments here
                                             United States Code (U.S.C.) section 1231
                                                                                                       measures that the vessel owner or                      in order to improve clarity and foster
                                             and 1321(j), which require the Secretary
                                                                                                       operator has taken or will take to
                                             of the department in which the Coast                                                                             better relationships with stakeholders.
                                                                                                       mitigate or respond to an oil spill from
                                             Guard is operating to issue regulations                                                                             Legislative intent. The tribal council
                                                                                                       the vessel. The VRP must demonstrate
                                             necessary for implementing the Ports                                                                             explained its role in developing the
                                                                                                       the vessel’s ability, following a spill, to
                                             and Waterways Safety Act, and require                                                                            2010 legislation mandating this
                                                                                                       secure response resources within given
                                             the President to issue regulations                                                                               rulemaking, and said the purpose of the
                                                                                                       time periods. These measures typically
                                             mandating response plans and other                                                                               legislation was to ‘‘enhance oil spill
                                                                                                       include the services of nearby response
                                             measures to protect against oil and                                                                              response capacity in the Strait of Juan
                                                                                                       resources under a contract between the
                                             hazardous substance spills. The                                                                                  de Fuca, commensurate with the history
                                                                                                       vessel’s owner or operator and an oil
                                             President’s authority under 33 U.S.C.                                                                            of oil spills in this region, the sensitivity
                                                                                                       spill removal organization (OSRO) that
                                             1321(j) is delegated to the Secretary by                                                                         of the area’s natural resources and the
                                                                                                       owns the response resources. The
                                             Executive Order 12777, and the                                                                                   risk for future spills from increasing
                                                                                                       regulations provide for three different
                                             Secretary’s authority is delegated to the                                                                        tank and non-tank vessel traffic.’’ The
                                                                                                       timeframes within which a combination
                                             Coast Guard by DHS Delegation No.                                                                                council asserted that the NPRM did not
                                                                                                       of required response resources must
                                             0170.1(II)(70), (73), and (80).                                                                                  reflect this intent in the proposed
                                                                                                       arrive on the scene, which are described
                                                                                                                                                              regulatory text.
                                             III. Regulatory History                                   as Tiers 1, 2, and 3.
                                                                                                          In 33 CFR part 155, subparts D                         Response: We acknowledge the
                                                On October 15, 2010, the Coast Guard                                                                          council’s role in developing the 2010
                                                                                                       (petroleum oil as cargo), F (animal fat or
                                             Authorization Act of 2010 (CGAA 2010)                                                                            legislation. However, the text of section
                                                                                                       vegetable oil as cargo), G (non-
                                             directed the Coast Guard to initiate a                                                                           710 is unambiguously limited to the
                                                                                                       petroleum oil as cargo), and J
                                             rulemaking to modify the definition of                                                                           expansion of the HVPA. Section 316 of
                                                                                                       (petroleum oil as fuel or secondary
                                             ‘‘higher volume port area’’ in 33 CFR                                                                            CGAA 2015 expanded the Washington
                                                                                                       cargo) all share the same definition of
                                             155.1020, to expand the Washington                                                                               HVPA without the need for the Coast
                                                                                                       ‘‘higher volume port area.’’ Required
                                             HVPA past Cape Flattery.2 On December                                                                            Guard to conduct a rulemaking. Neither
                                                                                                       response times are significantly reduced
                                             7, 2011, the Coast Guard published a                                                                             Act gave the Coast Guard discretion to
                                                                                                       in HVPAs. For example, Tier 1 response
                                             notification 3 announcing our intent to                                                                          choose a different size or location for
                                                                                                       times for an oil tanker within an HVPA
                                             comply with the mandate in section 710                                                                           the Washington HVPA, or provided
                                                                                                       are half of that required for the same
                                             of the CGAA 2010. On May 22, 2015,                                                                               other direction regarding this HVPA.
                                                                                                       vessel operating in open ocean. As
                                             the Coast Guard published a notice of                                                                               Adequacy of response resources. The
                                                                                                       defined in 33 CFR 155.1020, the Strait
                                             proposed rulemaking (NPRM) 4 to revise                                                                           environmental group, one of the state
                                                                                                       of Juan de Fuca and Puget Sound, WA,
                                             the boundaries of the existing HVPA in                                                                           environmental agencies, the tribal
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                                                                                                       constitute one of the 14 HVPAs
                                             the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Puget                                                                             council, and the local resident all
                                                                                                       designated around the country.
                                                                                                          Since 1996, 33 CFR 155.1020 has                     expressed concern that expansion of the
                                               1 Public   Law 114–120, 130 Stat. 27 (2016).
                                               2 Public   Law 111–281, section 710, 124 Stat. 2986
                                                                                                       defined the seaward boundary of the                      5 Waters discussed in this preamble are shown on
                                             (2010).                                                   Washington HVPA as an arc 50 nautical                  National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
                                               3 76 FR 76299.                                          miles seaward of the entrance to Port                  chart 18460 (Cape Flattery, WA) and chart 18465
                                               4 80 FR 29582.                                          Angeles, WA. Port Angeles is                           (Port Angeles, WA).



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                                             26214             Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             HVPA would reduce the ability of                        Planning Criteria, they are evaluated                  working relationship. The Coast Guard’s
                                             OSROs to respond adequately to oil or                   using the worst-case discharge from a                  Thirteenth District, in particular, values
                                             other hazardous substance spills                        single vessel.                                         its longstanding and ongoing
                                             throughout the HVPA. The local                             Pre-NPRM tribal consultation. The                   relationship with the Makah Tribal
                                             resident and the state environmental                    tribal council ‘‘strongly disagree[s]’’                Council. The Thirteenth District meets
                                             agency said we did not provide                          with our analysis of Executive Order                   with tribes, and will continue to meet
                                             sufficient details on how we will                       13175 (Indian Tribal Governments)                      with tribes, to discuss a variety of
                                             implement the expanded HVPA. The                        requirements, which concluded that, for                issues. The involvement of local units
                                             same group asked us to coordinate with                  this rulemaking, tribal consultation is                like the Thirteenth District is essential
                                             governmental agencies and regional and                  not required by the Executive Order.                   for ensuring the Coast Guard’s proper
                                             tribal groups to collectively determine                 The council says we should have                        understanding of stakeholder input, and
                                             how best to balance response assets in                  consulted with it because of our shared                the Thirteenth District is best positioned
                                             the HVPA. The environmental group                       trust responsibility for the commenter’s               to work with the council, through their
                                             and the resident expressed concern over                 treaty protected area.                                 longstanding and ongoing relationship
                                             the potential impact of anticipated                        Response: The Coast Guard enjoys a                  as memorialized in their 2013
                                             increases in the number of vessels                      close working relationship with many                   Memorandum of Agreement, on any
                                             carrying those substances in the HVPA.                  tribal governments, including the                      implementation arrangements that are
                                                Response: Title 33 CFR part 155 does                 council represented by the commenter.                  appropriate for discussion with the
                                             not allow the Coast Guard to direct                     The Coast Guard welcomes ongoing                       public. Although the process described
                                             OSROs where equipment must be                           communications and informal                            in Executive Order 13175 is not the
                                             staged, or require OSROs to purchase                    consultation, as well as suggestions for               appropriate mechanism for consultation
                                             any additional equipment. The Coast                     improving communications with tribes.                  and coordination after the rule becomes
                                             Guard requires that OSROs demonstrate                   The consultation described in section                  final, the Coast Guard is committed to
                                             their ability to respond adequately to a                5(b) of Executive Order 13175 is                       addressing concerns raised by our
                                             spill within an HVPA’s response                         triggered by a regulation that has tribal              regulations and their implementation.
                                             timelines. Thus, there is no provision to               implications and imposes substantial
                                                                                                                                                               As described above, this rule makes
                                             coordinate with governmental agencies                   direct compliance costs on Indian tribal
                                                                                                                                                            no changes to the requirements for
                                             and regional and tribal groups to                       governments. Section 5(b) Executive
                                                                                                                                                            planholders or for classifying OSROs, so
                                             collectively determine how best to                      Order 13175 also only requires
                                                                                                                                                            we do not anticipate a shift in
                                             balance response assets in the HVPA.                    consultation when the regulation being
                                                                                                                                                            implementation process. Through
                                                The Coast Guard National Strike                      developed ‘‘is not required by statute.’’
                                                                                                                                                            existing practices, the NSFCC confirms
                                             Force Coordination Center (NSFCC)                       In this case, section 710 of CGAA 2010
                                             verifies OSRO capability through                        required that the Coast Guard                          that classified OSROs meet their
                                             Preparedness Assessment Visits and                      promulgate a regulation to expand the                  regulatory responsibilities. Owners or
                                             response time calculations. The same                    Washington HVPA. As discussed above,                   operators using non-classified OSROs
                                             method is used in classifying all OSROs.                however, after the close of the NPRM                   must describe in their VRP how they
                                             Two OSROs are currently classified for                  comment period, section 316 of CGAA                    meet appendix B requirements.
                                             coverage in the HVPA. Vessel owners or                  2015 expanded the Washington HVPA                      Although we do not see a specific need
                                             operators need only reference the                       by statutory mandate. Therefore, the                   for formal consultation with the State of
                                             classified OSRO in their VRP. If an                     Coast Guard maintains that the                         Washington, the Thirteenth Coast Guard
                                             owner or operator chooses to use a non-                 consultation described in Executive                    District maintains open lines of
                                             classified OSRO, then they must list all                Order 13175 does not apply. As noted,                  communication with the State. The
                                             the equipment and describe how they                     however, we do not believe that the                    Coast Guard will continue to work with
                                             meet the requirements in appendix B to                  absence of Executive Order 13175                       its Federal, State, local, and tribal
                                             33 CFR part 155. All VRPs receive the                   consultation prevents the Coast Guard                  partners to ensure response readiness
                                             same detailed review for response                       from receiving and incorporating input                 following publication of this final rule.
                                             adequacy to ensure the vessel’s                         from tribal governments. In the 5 years                   Additional resources and Neah Bay
                                             readiness for response in the geographic                between the 2010 legislation and the                   restaging. One of the state
                                             area it is operating.                                   2015 publication of the NPRM, the                      environmental agencies said that the
                                                We acknowledge the concerns of                       Coast Guard met or spoke with tribal                   expanded HVPA ‘‘should result in the
                                             commenters with regard to reduced                       representatives about the Washington                   acquisition and staging of additional
                                             response capabilities throughout the                    HVPA expansion. We appreciated the                     equipment that is capable of open water
                                             HVPA. This rulemaking in no way                         input and look forward to continued                    recovery and storage in Neah Bay.’’ The
                                             reduces or changes any response                         collaboration with the tribal                          State agency also said that, in approving
                                             requirements that currently exist.                      representatives.                                       VRPs and evaluating OSROs identified
                                             Implementation of the revised HVPA                         Future tribal consultation. The tribal              by those VRPs, we should consider
                                             does not change the requirement of                      council asked us to enter into                         whether they reflect the restaging of
                                             vessel owners and operators to identify                 government-to-government consultation                  response assets in Neah Bay. The tribal
                                             classified OSROs or identify their own                  after the rule is adopted, and to develop              council said our rule should ensure that
                                             equipment sufficient to meet part 155                   a protocol for consultation and                        ‘‘additional equipment is purchased and
                                             appendix B requirements. This is                        coordination going forward. The council                staged in a geographic location to
                                             required in order for the vessel to                     also suggested that we consult with the                promptly respond to a spill in the
                                                                                                                                                            western reaches of the expanded HVPA,
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                                             receive an approved VRP necessary for                   State of Washington to ‘‘establish a
                                             operating in the HVPA.                                  harmonized view about how industry                     without adversely impacting responses’’
                                                We also acknowledge concerns about                   and OSROs will be expected to comply                   elsewhere in the HVPA, and said Neah
                                             increased vessel transits and, it is                    with the HVPA shift.’’                                 Bay is the ‘‘logical and appropriate’’
                                             implied, a higher likelihood of spills.                    Response: The Coast Guard invites                   staging area for additional response
                                             VRPs are for response planning                          communication and dialogue with tribal                 equipment, which should be rated for
                                             purposes. Consistent with the National                  councils in order to maintain a positive               an open-ocean environment.


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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                          26215

                                               Response: While Neah Bay may be a                      were therefore unable to use these                     analyses based on these statutes or
                                             logical and appropriate location for the                 incidents in our benefit analysis for this             Executive orders.
                                             staging of response equipment, other                     rulemaking.
                                                                                                                                                             A. Regulatory Planning and Review
                                             locations may also be logical and
                                                                                                      VI. Discussion of the Rule                                Executive Orders 12866 (Regulatory
                                             appropriate. The Coast Guard does not
                                             direct OSROs to where equipment must                        This rule is substantively unchanged                Planning and Review) and 13563
                                             be staged, or require OSROs to purchase                  from what we proposed in the NPRM.                     (Improving Regulation and Regulatory
                                             any additional equipment. The Coast                      It expands the boundaries of the                       Review) direct agencies to assess the
                                             Guard requires that OSROs demonstrate                    Washington HVPA in the CFR to make                     costs and benefits of available regulatory
                                             their ability to respond adequately to a                 those boundaries consistent with                       alternatives and, if regulation is
                                             spill within an HVPA’s response                          section 316 of the CGAA 2015. The old                  necessary, to select regulatory
                                             timelines.                                               definition of ‘‘higher volume port area’’              approaches that maximize net benefits
                                               Benefits. One of the state                             in 33 CFR 155.1020 includes any water                  (including potential economic,
                                             environmental agencies and the tribal                    area within 50 nautical miles seaward of               environmental, public health and safety
                                             council asked what basis we had for                      the entrance to the Strait of Juan De                  effects, distributive impacts, and
                                             stating in the NPRM 6 that of 283 spills                 Fuca at Port Angeles, WA to and                        equity). Executive Order 13563
                                             of oil or other hazardous substances in                  including Cape Flattery, WA. In order to               emphasizes the importance of
                                             the affected area between 1995 and                       align the regulations with section 316 of              quantifying both costs and benefits, of
                                             2013, we could identify no spill                         the CGAA 2015, we are amending that                    reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
                                             response that would have benefitted                      definition by striking ‘‘Port Angeles,                 and of promoting flexibility. Executive
                                             from the HVPA’s expansion. The                           WA’’ and inserting ‘‘Cape Flattery, WA’’               Order 13771 (Reducing Regulation and
                                             council cited three oil spills that                      in its place.                                          Controlling Regulatory Costs), directs
                                             adversely affected the tribe including                      Port Angeles lies about 62 nautical                 agencies to reduce regulation and
                                             the General Meigs, the Nestucca, and                     miles east of the entrance to the Strait               control regulatory costs and provides
                                             the Tenyo Maru. The agency and the                       of Juan de Fuca. By moving the arc so                  that ‘‘for every one new regulation
                                             council both noted that we did not ask                   that it centers on Cape Flattery, which                issued, at least two prior regulations be
                                             them for information that might have                     lies at the entrance to the Strait, the                identified for elimination, and that the
                                             changed that conclusion. The council                     redefined Washington HVPA will cover                   cost of planned regulations be prudently
                                             expressed concern over ‘‘the limited                     an additional 50 nautical miles of                     managed and controlled through a
                                             historical oil spill data’’ used in our                  Pacific Ocean water, while continuing                  budgeting process.’’
                                                                                                      to cover all the waters now included                      The Office of Management and Budget
                                             analysis, and ‘‘formally request[ed]’’
                                                                                                      within the current HVPA. The larger                    (OMB) has not designated this rule a
                                             that we conduct ‘‘a more rigorous
                                                                                                      Washington HVPA may affect the time                    significant regulatory action under
                                             analysis of historical oil spills’’ and give
                                                                                                      and resources needed to respond to an                  section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866.
                                             the commenter the ‘‘opportunity to
                                                                                                      oil spill from a vessel because it is                  Accordingly, OMB has not reviewed it.
                                             review the Coast Guard’s methodology
                                                                                                      harder and more time-consuming to                      As this rule is not a significant
                                             regarding’’ what effect HVPA expansion
                                                                                                      transit rough Pacific Ocean waters than                regulatory action, this rule is exempt
                                             might have had on the response to
                                                                                                      it is to transit the sheltered waters of the           from the requirements of Executive
                                             previous spills.
                                                                                                      Strait and the Sound. We discuss these                 Order 13771. See OMB’s Memorandum
                                                Response: Although Congress
                                                                                                      possibilities in more detail in the                    ‘‘Guidance Implementing Executive
                                             expanded the HVPA after these
                                                                                                      Regulatory Analyses section that                       Order 13771, Titled ‘Reducing
                                             comments were submitted, making our
                                                                                                      follows.                                               Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
                                             spill analysis redundant, it may be
                                                                                                         This rule also makes two editorial                  Costs’’’ (April 5, 2017). A regulatory
                                             helpful to explain the context for our
                                                                                                      changes in 33 CFR 155.1020. First, we                  analysis follows.
                                             regulatory analyses. The statement                                                                                 We received no public comments on
                                             referred to by these commenters                          correct the spelling of ‘‘Strait of Juan De
                                                                                                      Fuca’’ to ‘‘Strait of Juan de Fuca.’’                  the estimated costs of the proposed rule,
                                             appeared in the ‘‘regulatory analyses’’                                                                         nor did we receive any additional
                                             for the NPRM.7 As explained in the                       Second, we add a note to paragraph (13)
                                                                                                      of the definition of ‘‘higher volume port              information or data that alters our
                                             NPRM, based on information from Coast                                                                           assessment of the proposed rule.
                                                                                                      area’’ to highlight that the western
                                             Guard personnel who have experience                                                                             However, we received two public
                                                                                                      boundary of the Washington HVPA in
                                             in casualty case investigations and                                                                             comments on the benefit analysis
                                                                                                      33 CFR part 155 differs from that in 33
                                             analysis, we found none of the 283 cases                                                                        presented in the proposed rule
                                                                                                      CFR part 154 for facilities transferring
                                             or spills that would have benefited from                                                                        regarding the same topic. We presented
                                                                                                      oil or hazardous materials in bulk. The
                                             the HVPA expansion. As for the three                                                                            our full response to these two public
                                                                                                      difference stems from section 316 of the
                                             spills cited by the council, we cannot                                                                          comments in section V of this preamble.
                                                                                                      CGAA 2015 (Pub. L. 114–120) and the
                                             conclude that the expanded HVPA                                                                                 Because no casualty case mentioned in
                                                                                                      statutory language that specifically
                                             would have mitigated the damage                                                                                 one of the comments would have
                                                                                                      addresses the definition in 33 CFR part
                                             caused by those incidents. The 33 CFR                                                                           benefited from the expanded HVPA, we
                                                                                                      155. The statutory expansion in the
                                             part 155 regulations do not apply to a                                                                          also determined that our assessment of
                                                                                                      CGAA 2015 is not written to address 33
                                             warship or naval auxiliary vessel such                                                                          the benefits of the proposed rule
                                                                                                      CFR part 154, and therefore 33 CFR
                                             as the troopship General Meigs.8 The                                                                            remains unchanged. Therefore, we
                                                                                                      subchapter O will contain two differing
                                             Nestucca and Tenyo Maru incidents did                                                                           adopt the preliminary regulatory
                                                                                                      definitions of ‘‘higher volume port area’’
                                             not occur within the existing or
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                                                                                                      for the Straits of Juan de Fuca.                       analysis for the proposed rule as final.
                                             expanded bounds of the HVPA. We                                                                                 A summary of that analysis follows.
                                                                                                      VII. Regulatory Analyses                                  This final rule is needed to conform
                                               6 NPRM,   80 FR 29582 at 29586, col. 3 (May 22,
                                             2015).
                                                                                                        We developed this final rule after                   Coast Guard regulations to the statutory
                                               7 NPRM, 80 FR 29582 at 29586–29587 (May 22,            considering numerous statutes and                      changes made by section 316 of CGAA
                                             2015).                                                   Executive orders related to this                       2015. Currently, the CFR says the
                                               8 33 CFR 155.100(b)(1).                                rulemaking. Below we summarize our                     Washington HVPA boundary is


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                                             26216             Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             measured from Port Angeles in a 50                      change in the HVPA geographical                        preparers, we obtained publicly
                                             nautical mile seaward arc westward to                   definition. For example, one OSRO                      available fully loaded billing rates for
                                             the Pacific Ocean. This final rule will                 provided information which stated that                 senior regulatory consultants and
                                             amend the definition of the term                        contracts will need to be modified                     program managers from three
                                             ‘‘higher volume port area’’ to match the                slightly to incorporate the geographic                 environmental service companies using
                                             relocated point at which the seaward arc                change of the expanded HVPA, while                     the General Services Administration’s
                                             is measured from Port Angeles to Cape                   the other OSRO provided information                    (GSA) Federal Acquisition eLibrary for
                                             Flattery, WA, an approximately 62                       which stated that no changes or                        service contracts.10 We took the average
                                             nautical mile westward shift. As a                      modifications to existing contracts are                of these three rates to obtain a fully
                                             result, the Washington HVPA will cover                  necessary on the part of either OSRO or                loaded hourly wage rate of $145.11[we
                                             an additional 50 nautical miles of open                 the planholders. For the purpose of this               used three labor categories: Senior
                                             ocean and an additional 12 nautical                     analysis, we estimate costs to modify a                Regulatory Consultant with a wage rate
                                             miles in the western portion of the Strait              contract for the planholders of the                    of $184.22 for contract number GS–10F–
                                             of Juan de Fuca. A VRP must list the                    OSRO that stated that changes are                      0263U (page number 16), Program
                                             OSRO provider that the vessel owner or                  necessary. This OSRO has about 500                     Manager with a wage rate of $115.86 for
                                             operator has contracted with and                        planholders with written contractual                   contract number GS–10F–0074T (page
                                             stipulate the vessel’s ability to secure                agreements to secure response resource                 number 4), and Senior Project Manager
                                             response resources within specific                      services in the event of an oil spill; of              with a wage rate of $135.25 for contract
                                             regulatory timeframes (Tiers 1, 2, and 3)               this amount, only about 3 percent or 15,               number GS–10F–0335R (page number
                                             in the event of an oil spill. This final                are with U.S. planholders. Based on                    32)]. Of about 500 planholders who
                                             rule will codify the changes delineated                 information we obtained from industry                  have contracts with this OSRO, only
                                             in the CGAA 2015 and it will not                        in formulating the Nontank Vessel                      about 15 are U.S. planholders. Of the 15
                                             require changes to VRPs.                                Response Plan final rule (78 FR 60100),                U.S. planholders, about 36 percent will
                                                                                                     it will take a general and operations                  amend the contract internally. We
                                             Affected Population
                                                                                                     manager approximately 2 hours of                       estimate the one-time cost to these
                                               Part 155 of 33 CFR directly applies to                planholder time to amend the contract                  planholders is about $1,214 ($112.45 ×
                                             and regulates vessel owners and                         and send the contract to the OSRO for                  2 hours × 500 planholders × 0.03 × 0.36,
                                             operators. The final rule has the                       approval. If a plan preparer amends the                rounded). For the remaining 64 percent
                                             potential to impact vessel response                     contract on behalf of the planholder, we               of U.S. planholders who have plan
                                             planholders covering vessels that transit               estimate it will take the same amount of               preparers amend the contracts on their
                                             the Washington HVPA and OSROs that                      time. We found that 36 percent of                      behalf, we estimate the one-time cost is
                                             provide response resources in the event                 planholders perform this work                          about $2,786 ($145.11 × 2 hours × 500
                                             of an oil spill. Based on the Coast                     internally and 64 percent hire a plan                  planholders × 0.03 × 0.64, rounded); the
                                             Guard’s review of VRPs, two OSROs                       preparer to perform this work on their                 total combined estimated one-time cost
                                             may be impacted by the final rule. One                  behalf. The amendment of a contract is                 to U.S. planholders to amend the
                                             OSRO has about 500 response resource                    a one-time cost; we estimate little or no              contracts is about $4,001, rounded and
                                             contracts and the other OSRO has about                  submission cost for planholders because                undiscounted. We estimate the average
                                             650 contracts with planholders that own                 nearly 100 percent of contracts are                    one-time or initial cost for each U.S.
                                             vessels that call on the expanded                       submitted by email to the responsible                  planholder to amend a contract is about
                                             Washington HVPA. For the OSRO that                      OSRO.                                                  $267 ($4,001/15 U.S. planholders). We
                                             has 500 contracts, about 3 percent or 15                   Accounting for planholders who
                                                                                                                                                            estimate the 10-year discounted cost is
                                             of those contracts are with U.S.                        perform the work internally and using
                                                                                                                                                            about $3,739 using a 7 percent discount
                                             planholders; for the OSRO that has 650                  the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) May
                                                                                                                                                            rate and the annualized cost is about
                                             contracts, about 2 percent or 13 of those               2016 National Industry-Specific
                                                                                                                                                            $532.
                                             contracts are with U.S. planholders.                    Occupational Employment and Wage
                                                                                                                                                              The remaining 485 planholders are
                                                                                                     Estimates for General and Operations
                                             Costs                                                                                                          foreign. For 36 percent of them who will
                                                                                                     Manager (Occupation Code 11–1021),
                                               Vessel owners and operators will not                                                                         amend the contracts internally, we
                                                                                                     we obtain a mean hourly wage rate of
                                             need to revise or modify a current VRP                  $73.98. We then use BLS’ 2016                          compensation amount of $28.15 by the wage and
                                             to take into account the expansion of the               Employer Cost for Employee                             salary amount of $18.53 to get the load factor of
                                             HVPA. Current VRPs already specify                      Compensation databases to calculate                    1.52. See the following website, http://www.bls.gov/
                                             one or both of the OSROs that provide                   and apply a load factor of 1.52 to obtain              ncs/ect/data.htm. Once on this page, scroll down to
                                             response resources to vessel owners and                                                                        ‘‘Pay and Benefits’’ and click the multi-screen data
                                                                                                     a loaded hourly labor rate of about                    search button to access the database, ‘‘Employer
                                             operators in the affected waters. Vessel                $112.45 for this occupation.9 For plan                 Cost for Employee Compensation.’’ We used the
                                             owners and operators must only list the                                                                        mean hourly wage rate of $73.98 and multiplied by
                                             NSFCC-classified OSRO by name and                         9 Information can be viewed at https://              1.52 to obtain a loaded hourly wage rate of about
                                             include the contact information for each                www.bls.gov/oes/2016/may/naics3_483000.htm.            $112.45.
                                             OSRO in the VRP; no other information                   Once on this page, scroll down to review the wage         10 GSA Contract GS–10F–0263U accessed 05/24/

                                                                                                     rate for 11–1021, General and Operations Manager       2017, https://www.gsaadvantage.gov/ref_text/
                                             or details regarding the geographic                     with a mean hourly wage of $73.98. A loaded labor      GS10F0263U/0ME78D.2QP6TJ_GS-10F-0263U_
                                             location of response equipment are                      rate is what a company pays per hour to employ         GSAADVANTAGEYR6.PDF; GSA Contract GS–
                                             required in the VRP.                                    a person, not the hourly wage. The loaded labor rate   10F–0074T accessed 05/24/2017, https://www.
                                               In addition to identifying the OSRO in                includes the cost of benefits (health insurance,       gsaelibrary.gsa.gov/ElibMain/contractorInfo.do?
                                                                                                     vacation, etc.). The load factor for wages is          contractNumber=GS-10F-0074T&contractorName=
                                             the VRP, vessel owners and operators
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                                                                                                     calculated by dividing total compensation by wages     ENVIRONMENTAL+MANAGEMENT+SERVICES+
                                             must ensure the availability of response                and salaries. For this analysis, we used BLS’          INC&executeQuery=YES (once at the GSA eLibrary
                                             resources from the OSRO through a                       Employer Cost for Employee Compensation/               web page, the reader must use the hyperlink labeled
                                             contract or other approved means.                       Transportation and Materials Moving Occupations,       ‘‘Contractor T&Cs/Pricelist’’ to obtain the wage rate
                                                                                                     Private Industry report (Series IDs,                   used in this analysis), and https://www.
                                             Depending on how the contract                           CMU2010000520000D and CMU2020000520000D                gsaadvantage.gov/ref_text/GS10F0335R/0OMBPD.
                                             language is formulated, a contract may                  for all workers using the multi-screen data search).   3723M6_GS-10F-0335R_ENVCOSTMGMTTANDC
                                             need to be modified to reflect the                      Using 2016 Q4 (Quarter 4) data, we divide the total    071315.PDF; accessed 05/24/2017.



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                                                                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                             26217

                                             estimate the one-time cost is about                                        the uncertainty of expenditures that                     maintenance costs of about $385 per
                                             $39,268 ($112.45 × 2 hours × 485                                           may be needed as described below.                        planholder ($250,000/650 planholders),
                                             planholders × 0.36, rounded). For the                                      Using the highest value of capital costs                 undiscounted, in years 2 through 10 of
                                             remaining 64 percent of foreign                                            provided to us of $5.5 million, we use                   the analysis period. We estimate the
                                             planholders who have a plan preparer                                       the capital recovery cost factor to                      total 10-year discounted cost to the 13
                                             amend the contracts on their behalf, we                                    determine the amount needed annually                     U.S. planholders is about $75,390 using
                                             estimate the one-time cost is about                                        to recover this payout since we assume                   a 7 percent discount rate (the 10-year
                                             $90,084 ($145.11 × 2 hours × 485                                           the OSRO will finance the expenditures                   discounted cost is estimated is about
                                             planholders × 0.64, rounded); combined                                     and attempt to recapture them equally                    $91,624 using a 3 percent discount rate)
                                             the total estimated one-time cost to                                       over the life of the equipment. The                      and the annualized cost is about
                                             foreign planholders to amend the                                           capital recovery factor (CRF), or ratio as               $10,741.
                                             contracts is about $129,352, rounded, or                                   it is often referred to, is the ratio of a                  For all 28 U.S. planholders, we
                                             about $267 per planholder ($129,352/                                       constant annuity to the present value of                 estimate the total initial-year cost is
                                             485 foreign planholders).                                                  the annuity over a given period of time                  about $14,401 ($4,001 + $10,400),
                                                The final category of potential costs                                   using an acceptable discount rate, as in                 undiscounted. We estimate the total
                                             relates to the OSROs’ abilities to meet                                    this case, 7 percent. The ratio also                     annual recurring cost is about $10,785
                                             the specified response times in the new                                    includes the general life expectancy of                  ($10,400 + $385), undiscounted (see
                                             geographic area of the HVPA. Based on                                      the investment and can be simply                         Table 1 for further details).
                                             information provided to the Coast                                          described as the ‘‘share of the net cost
                                             Guard, one OSRO stated that additional                                     that must be recovered each year to                         It follows that the remaining 637
                                             response equipment will not be required                                    ‘repay the cost of the fixed input at the                planholders are foreign. Again, if we
                                             and capital expenditures will not be                                       end of its useful life.’ ’’ 11 If we use a               assume this OSRO passes along its
                                             necessary as a result of the expanded                                      standard life expectancy of 20 years, we                 capital cost in the form of higher
                                             HVPA under current Coast Guard OSRO                                        calculate the net amount that must be                    retainer fees to foreign planholders, we
                                             classification guidelines. Based on data                                   recovered by the OSRO annually is                        estimate the total capital cost of this
                                             from the other OSRO, we estimate that                                      about $519,161, undiscounted (The                        final rule to foreign planholders is about
                                             total initial capital costs could be as                                    capital recovery factor is written as:                   $509,600 (637 × $800) annually,
                                             high as $5.5 million for temporary                                                                                                  undiscounted, in addition to annual
                                             storage equipment and warehousing                                                                                                   maintenance costs of about $245,000
                                             with annual capital recurring costs of                                                                                              (637 × $385), undiscounted, in years 2
                                             approximately $250,000 for equipment                                                                                                through 10 of the analysis period. We
                                             maintenance, and up to $1 million for                                      where i is the discount rate and n is the                estimate the total 10-year discounted
                                             barge recertification (included in the                                     number of years or the life expectancy                   cost to foreign planholders is about $3.6
                                             $5.5 million estimate), warehousing,                                       of the investment).12 If we assume this                  million using a 7 percent discount rate
                                             and other necessary resource                                               cost is distributed equally over the 650                 (the 10-year discounted cost is
                                             equipment. However, we lack                                                planholders (U.S. and foreign                            estimated is about $4.3 million using a
                                             independent methods to verify these                                        planholders who own vessels that                         3 percent discount rate). As stated
                                             estimates. Moreover, the actual costs the                                  transit the HVPA) under contract with                    earlier, we neither have knowledge of
                                             OSRO may incur depend considerably                                         this OSRO, the amount needed to be                       the OSROs billing structure nor how
                                             on how they choose to comply with our                                      recovered by the OSRO to recapture this                  costs are distributed among planholders,
                                             regulations, which give OSROs                                              initial investment is estimated is about                 although in our discussion with one
                                             substantial flexibility with respect to                                    $800 (rounded from $798.71) from each                    OSRO, we learned that the composition
                                             pre-positioning response resources.                                        planholder annually, most likely in the                  of a planholder’s vessel fleet affects the
                                                To the extent one OSRO will incur                                       form of higher retainer fees. However,                   amount of the retainer fee because
                                             additional costs due to this final rule                                    only about 2 percent, or 13 of the 650                   vessels such as nontank ships require
                                             (such as increased capitalization costs),                                  planholders are U.S. planholders.                        different response resources as opposed
                                             we expect that these costs are generally                                   Therefore, for the 13 U.S. planholders,                  to towing vessels, for example.
                                             passed onto their VRP planholders                                          we estimate the total capital cost of this                  Table 1 summarizes the total
                                             equally, although the OSRO that                                            final rule is about $10,400 (650                         estimated cost of the final rule to 28
                                             provided this information conceded that                                    planholders × 0.02 × $800) annually,                     U.S. planholders over a 10-year period
                                             this was speculative at this point due to                                  undiscounted, in addition to annual                      of analysis.

                                                                              TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF ESTIMATED COSTS OF THE FINAL RULE TO U.S. PLANHOLDERS
                                                                                                             [7 Percent discount rate, 10-year period of analysis, 2017 dollars]

                                                                                                                    Update contracts for 15 U.S.              OSRO equipment and other                     Total costs
                                                                                                                            planholders                        capital costs for 13 U.S.
                                                                          Year                                                                                        planholders
                                                                                                                                                                                                   Undiscounted      Discounted
                                                                                                                   Undiscounted            Discounted       Undiscounted        Discounted

                                             1   ...............................................................              $4,001             $3,739             $10,400              $9,720         $14,401            $13,459
                                             2   ...............................................................                   0                  0              10,785               9,420          10,785              9,420
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                                             3   ...............................................................                   0                  0              10,785               8,804          10,785              8,804
                                             4   ...............................................................                   0                  0              10,785               8,228          10,785              8,228

                                               11 See https://web.stanford.edu/group/FRI/                                 12 We calculate the value of the numerator to be       investment of $5.5 million, we obtain an annualized
                                             indonesia/courses/manuals/pam/pam-book/                                    about 0.27 and the value of the denominator to be        recovery amount of about $519,161 rounded, or the
                                             Output/chap9.html.                                                         about 2.87, rounded. The CRF is then calculated to       annualized amount the OSRO must recover to repay
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       ER06JN18.000</GPH>




                                                                                                                        be about 0.0944. Multiplying by the initial              for its initial investment.



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                                             26218                     Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                 TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF ESTIMATED COSTS OF THE FINAL RULE TO U.S. PLANHOLDERS—Continued
                                                                                                           [7 Percent discount rate, 10-year period of analysis, 2017 dollars]

                                                                                                                   Update contracts for 15 U.S.                 OSRO equipment and other                                Total costs
                                                                                                                           planholders                           capital costs for 13 U.S.
                                                                         Year                                                                                           planholders
                                                                                                                                                                                                        Undiscounted               Discounted
                                                                                                                 Undiscounted               Discounted       Undiscounted               Discounted

                                             5 ...............................................................                        0                  0                10,785              7,690                 10,785               7,690
                                             6 ...............................................................                        0                  0                10,785              7,187                 10,785               7,187
                                             7 ...............................................................                        0                  0                10,785              6,716                 10,785               6,716
                                             8 ...............................................................                        0                  0                10,785              6,277                 10,785               6,277
                                             9 ...............................................................                        0                  0                10,785              5,866                 10,785               5,866
                                             10 .............................................................                         0                  0                10,785              5,483                 10,785               5,483

                                                   Total ..................................................      ........................          3,739     ........................        75,390     ........................        79,129
                                                       Annualized .................................              ........................            532     ........................        10,734     ........................        11,266
                                                Totals may not sum due to independent rounding.


                                               As Table 1 shows, for 15 U.S.                                             section and inserting ‘‘Cape Flattery,                         HVPAs from their entrances. A shift of
                                             planholders who may need to revise                                          WA’’; (2) revise 33 CFR 155.1020 by                            this distance would require the
                                             their contracts, we estimate the 10-year                                    striking ‘‘50 nautical miles’’ in the                          purchasing and positioning of heavier
                                             discounted cost of the final rule is about                                  definition of ‘‘higher volume port area’’                      and more expensive equipment such as
                                             $3,739 at a 7 percent discount rate                                         and inserting ‘‘110 nautical miles’’; and                      oceangoing tugs and barges. In addition,
                                             (using a 3 percent discount rate, we                                        (3) take no action. The Regulatory                             OSROs would incur considerable costs
                                             estimate the 10-year discounted cost is                                     Analyses section further discusses the                         of potentially retrofitting existing
                                             about $3,884). We estimate the                                              analysis of the preferred alternative (i.e.,                   HVPAs with shoreside docks. Since this
                                             annualized cost is about $532 for these                                     express adoption of the wording from                           would include all HVPAs, the economic
                                             15 planholders.                                                             section 710(a)) in comparison with other                       impact on the response resource
                                               For the OSRO that may incur capital                                       regulatory approaches considered.                              industry, as a whole, would be greater
                                             costs as a result of this final rule and                                                                                                   as opposed to a single HVPA.
                                                                                                                         Analysis of Alternatives
                                             pass these costs along to its 13 U.S.                                                                                                      Furthermore, this option would be
                                             planholders, we estimate the 10-year                                           We considered three alternatives                            inconsistent with the existing
                                             discounted cost is about $75,390 at a 7                                     (including the preferred alternative) in                       boundaries of the expanded HVPA in
                                             percent discount rate (using a 3 percent                                    the development of this final rule. The                        section 710(a) of CGAA 2010 (Pub. L.
                                             discount rate, we estimate the 10-year                                      key factors that we evaluated in                               111–281, 124 Stat. 2905) as amended by
                                             discounted cost is about $91,624). We                                       considering each alternative included:                         section 316 of the CGAA 2015.
                                             estimate the annualized cost is about                                       (1) The degree to which the alternative                           Alternative 3: Take no action. This
                                             $10,734 at a 7 percent discount rate for                                    comported with the congressional                               option was not selected as it would not
                                             these 13 planholders.                                                       mandate in section 710 of the CGAA                             implement the intent of section 316 of
                                               We estimate the total present                                             2010; (2) what benefits, if any, are                           the CGAA 2015, which specifically
                                             discounted cost of the final rule to all                                    derived, such as enhancement of                                requires the Coast Guard to implement
                                             28 U.S. planholders about $79,129 at a                                      personal and environmental safety and                          the modified definition of the term
                                             7 percent discount rate (using a 3                                          security; and (3) cost effectiveness. The                      ‘‘higher volume port area’’ by striking
                                             percent discount rate, is we estimate the                                   alternatives considered are as follows:                        ‘‘Port Angeles, WA’’ and inserting
                                             total 10-year discounted cost is about                                         Alternative 1: Revise 33 CFR 155.1020                       ‘‘Cape Flattery, WA.’’ It also precludes
                                             $95,509). We estimate the annualized                                        by striking ‘‘Port Angeles, WA’’ in the                        the protection intended by Congress for
                                             cost is about $11,266 at a 7 percent                                        definition of ‘‘higher volume port area’’                      the waters at the entrance to and in the
                                             discount rate.                                                              of that section and inserting ‘‘Cape                           Strait of Juan de Fuca.
                                               We do not anticipate that this final                                      Flattery, WA.’’ Since 1996, 33 CFR                                We chose Alternative 1, which
                                             rule will impose new costs on the Coast                                     155.1020 has defined the seaward                               codifies the regulation directly and
                                             Guard or require the Coast Guard to                                         boundary of the Washington HVPA as                             specifically implements section 316 of
                                             expend additional resources because we                                      an arc 50 nautical miles seaward of the                        the CGAA 2015 as described earlier. We
                                             do not expect any changes are required                                      entrance to Port Angeles, WA. The                              rejected Alternative 2, because it would
                                             to the VRPs of vessels in the HVPA.                                         change will relocate the arc’s center to                       result in different HVPA boundaries in
                                                                                                                         Cape Flattery, covering approximately                          regulation and statute and adds burden,
                                             Alternatives                                                                50 additional nautical miles of open                           both in the Puget Sound region and in
                                                Due to the specific nature of section                                    ocean.                                                         the other HVPAs throughout the United
                                             710(a) of the CGAA 2010 and section                                            Alternative 2: Revise 33 CFR 155.1020                       States. We rejected Alternative 3, the
                                             316 of the CGAA 2015, we are limited                                        by striking ‘‘50 nautical miles’’ in the                       ‘‘no action’’ alternative, because it
                                             in the alternative approaches we can use                                    definition of ‘‘higher volume port area’’                      would not implement section 316.
                                             to comply with Congress’ intent. We                                         and inserting ‘‘110 nautical miles.’’ This
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                                             considered three alternatives (including                                    change would affect the other 13 HVPAs                         Benefits
                                             the preferred alternative) in the                                           throughout the United States because                             We did not identify any historic cases
                                             development of the final rule: (1) Revise                                   the level of response resources required                       that could support the development of
                                             33 CFR 155.1020 by striking ‘‘Port                                          would cause significantly reduced                              quantifiable benefits associated with
                                             Angeles, WA’’ in the definition of                                          response times resulting from a 110-                           this final rule. Using the Coast Guard’s
                                             ‘‘higher volume port area’’ of that                                         mile outward shift of the existing                             Marine Information for Safety and Law


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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           26219

                                             Enforcement (MISLE) database with                       operators of vessels that transit the                  Manta and ReferenceUSA, neither
                                             casualty cases transferred from MISLE’s                 HVPA will not incur additional VRP                     OSRO is considered to be small.
                                             predecessor, the Marine Safety                          modification costs as a result of this                    There are about 1,400 U.S.
                                             Management System database, we                          final rule. However, as assumed earlier                planholders that have either a tank,
                                             examined 283 spill cases from 1995 to                   for the purpose of this analysis, if                   nontank, or combined VRP. Based on
                                             2013, beginning with the first spills that              contracts would need to be modified, as                the affected population of this final rule
                                             appeared in our database for this                       stated by one OSRO on the part of the                  relative to the size of the industry as a
                                             geographic region. We also examined                     planholders, U.S. planholders will bear                whole, in this case U.S. VRP owners
                                             378 additional cases from 2014 through                  some costs of this final rule as shown                 (planholders), this final rule will
                                             2016. Based on information from Coast                   earlier in the ‘‘Costs’’ portion of section            potentially affect 28 or about 2 percent
                                             Guard personnel who have experience                     VII. A. of this preamble. We estimate                  of the total population of U.S.
                                             in casualty case investigations and                     that each of the 15 U.S. planholders will              planholders in the United States. As
                                             analysis, we found no cases or spills                   incur an average one-time cost of about                described earlier and dependent upon
                                             that would have definitively benefitted                 $267 to amend its contract with the                    the OSRO considered, we estimate a
                                             from the expanded HVPA.                                 OSRO.                                                  U.S. planholder may incur an annual
                                                Qualitatively, oil spills are likely to                 Also, regarding capital costs, it is                cost between $385 and $1,185 in years
                                             result in a negative impact to the                      unclear whether or how these costs                     2 through 10 of the analysis period (and
                                             ecosystem and the economy of the                        impact vessel owners and operators                     between $267 and $800 in the initial
                                             surrounding area. These social welfare                  without knowledge of the OSROs’                        year because we assume maintenance
                                             effects are not accounted for solely by                 billing structures. Additionally,                      costs are not incurred in the initial year
                                             the amount of oil spilled into the water.               proprietary information is not available               of the analysis period) as a result of this
                                             In many cases, the scope of the impact                  that would allow us to determine the                   final rule. Therefore, the Coast Guard
                                             is contingent on the vulnerability and                  distribution of costs among many vessel                certifies under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that this
                                             resiliency of the affected area. Due to                 owners and operators contracting with                  rule will not have a significant
                                             the sensitivity or vulnerability of a                   each OSRO. Nevertheless, in our earlier                economic impact on a substantial
                                             location, a barrel of spilled oil may not               analysis, if we assume capital costs are               number of small entities.
                                             have the same impact in one area as it                  incurred by one of the OSROs and we
                                             would in another. Depending on the                                                                             C. Assistance for Small Entities
                                                                                                     assume this cost would be passed along
                                             ecosystem, VRPs could mitigate impacts                  equally to U.S. planholders in the form                   Under section 213(a) of the Small
                                             to habitats that house multiple species.                                                                       Business Regulatory Enforcement
                                                                                                     of higher retainer fees, we estimate each
                                             An area with an ecosystem that is
                                                                                                     of the 13 U.S. planholders will incur an               Fairness Act of 1996,13 we want to assist
                                             damaged as a result of previous
                                                                                                     annual cost of about $800 from one                     small entities in understanding this
                                             environmental incidents or damaged
                                                                                                     particular OSRO in addition to $385 in                 final rule so that they can better
                                             due to the cumulative effects of
                                                                                                     maintenance costs in years 2 through 10                evaluate its effects on them and
                                             environmental injuries over time can be
                                                                                                     of the analysis period for a total                     participate in the rulemaking. If the
                                             expected to have higher benefits from
                                                                                                     planholder cost of about $1,185 in years               final rule will affect your small
                                             oil spill mitigation.
                                                The primary benefit of this final rule               2 through 10 of the analysis period.                   business, organization, or governmental
                                             is to ensure that in the event of a spill,                 We assume for the purpose of this                   jurisdiction and you have questions
                                             adequate response resources are                         analysis that the two OSROs that                       concerning its provisions or options for
                                             available and can be mobilized within                   provide response resource capabilities                 compliance, please consult Mr.
                                             the expanded HVPA. This will ensure a                   to the HVPA in Puget Sound may incur                   Christopher Friese (see FOR FURTHER
                                                                                                     costs from this final rule and may likely              INFORMATION CONTACT). The Coast Guard
                                             timely response by vessel owners and
                                             operators and the OSROs in an effort to                 pass along these costs to planholders in               will not retaliate against small entities
                                             reduce the likelihood, and mitigate the                 the form of higher retainer fees or                    that question or complain about this
                                             impact of an oil spill on the marine                    planholders may incur one-time costs to                rule or any policy or action of the Coast
                                             environment that might occur in the                     amend their contracts with one of the                  Guard.
                                             expanded HVPA.                                          OSROs. Using the North American                           Small businesses may send comments
                                                                                                     Industry Classification System (NAICS)                 on the actions of Federal employees
                                             B. Small Entities                                       codes for businesses and the Small                     who enforce, or otherwise determine
                                                Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act                 Business Administration’s (SBA) size                   compliance with Federal regulations to
                                             (5 U.S.C. 601–612), we have considered                  standards for small businesses, we                     the Small Business and Agriculture
                                             whether this final rule will have a                     determined the size of each OSRO. One                  Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
                                             significant economic impact on a                        OSRO has a primary NAICS code of                       and the Regional Small Business
                                             substantial number of small entities.                   541618 with an SBA size standard of                    Regulatory Fairness Boards. The
                                             The term ‘‘small entities’’ comprises                   $15 million, which is under the                        Ombudsman evaluates these actions
                                             small businesses, not-for-profit                        subsector group 541 of the NAICS code                  annually and rates each agency’s
                                             organizations that are independently                    with the description of ‘‘Professional,                responsiveness to small business. If you
                                             owned and operated and are not                          Scientific, and Technical Services.’’ The              wish to comment on actions by
                                             dominant in their fields, and                           other OSRO has a primary NAICS code                    employees of the Coast Guard, call 1–
                                             governmental jurisdictions with                         of 562998 with an SBA size standard of                 888–REG–FAIR (1–888–734–3247).
                                             populations of less than 50,000.                        $7.5 million, which is under the
                                                                                                                                                            D. Collection of Information
                                                Regarding vessel owners and                          subsector group 562 of the NAICS code
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                                             operators, as previously discussed, this                with the description of ‘‘Waste                          This final rule will call for no new
                                             final rule will codify the requirements                 Management and Remediation                             collection of information under the
                                             in the CGAA 2015 of an expanded                         Services.’’ Based on the information                   Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.14
                                             HVPA, and it will not require vessel                    discussed earlier in this section and
                                             owners and operators to make changes                    annual revenue data from publicly                       13 Public   Law 104–121.
                                             to VRPs. Therefore, owners and                          available and proprietary sources,                      14 44   U.S.C. 3501–3520.



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                                             26220                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             E. Federalism                                              Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice                    M. Environment
                                                A rule has implications for federalism                  Reform) to minimize litigation,                            We have analyzed this final rule
                                             under Executive Order 13132                                eliminate ambiguity, and reduce                         under Department of Homeland
                                             (Federalism), if it has a substantial                      burden.                                                 Security Management Directive 023–01
                                             direct effect on States, on the                            I. Protection of Children                               and Commandant Instruction
                                             relationship between the national                                                                                  M16475.lD (COMDTINST M16475.1D),
                                             government and the States, or on the                          We have analyzed this final rule
                                                                                                                                                                which guide the Coast Guard in
                                             distribution of power and                                  under Executive Order 13045
                                                                                                                                                                complying with the National
                                             responsibilities among the various                         (Protection of Children from
                                                                                                                                                                Environmental Policy Act of 1969,18
                                             levels of government. We have analyzed                     Environmental Health Risks and Safety
                                                                                                                                                                and have made a determination that this
                                             this rule under that Order and have                        Risks). This rule is not an economically
                                                                                                                                                                is one of a category of actions that do
                                             determined that it is consistent with the                  significant rule and will not create an
                                                                                                                                                                not individually or cumulatively have a
                                             fundamental federalism principles and                      environmental risk to health or risk to
                                                                                                                                                                significant effect on the human
                                             preemption requirements described in                       safety that might disproportionately
                                                                                                                                                                environment. A Record of
                                             Executive Order 13132. Our analysis is                     affect children.
                                                                                                                                                                Environmental Consideration
                                             explained below.                                           J. Indian Tribal Governments                            supporting this determination is
                                                As noted earlier in the preamble, this                                                                          available in the docket where indicated
                                             rule implements section 710 of the                            This rule does not have tribal
                                                                                                        implications under Executive Order                      under the ADDRESSES section of this
                                             CGAA 2010, as amended by section 316                                                                               preamble. This rule is categorically
                                             of the CGAA 2015, which specifically                       13175 (Consultation and Coordination
                                                                                                        with Indian Tribal Governments),                        excluded under section 6(b) of the
                                             directs the Coast Guard to amend 33                                                                                ‘‘Appendix to National Environmental
                                             CFR 155.1020 by removing ‘‘Port                            because it will not have a substantial
                                                                                                        direct effect on one or more Indian                     Policy Act: Coast Guard Procedures for
                                             Angeles, WA’’ and replacing it with                                                                                Categorical Exclusions, Notice of Final
                                             ‘‘Cape Flattery, WA.’’ This rule carries                   tribes, on the relationship between the
                                                                                                        Federal Government and Indian tribes,                   Agency Policy.’’ 19 This rule involves
                                             out the Congressional mandate by                                                                                   Congressionally-mandated regulations
                                             amending the regulations to reflect this                   or on the distribution of power and
                                                                                                        responsibilities between the Federal                    designed to protect the environment,
                                             required change. Furthermore, this rule                                                                            specifically, regulations implementing
                                             does not appear to have a substantial                      Government and Indian tribes. We
                                                                                                        discuss Executive Order 13175 in more                   the requirements of the Act (redefining
                                             direct effect upon the laws or                                                                                     and enlarging the boundaries of the
                                             regulations of the State of Washington.                    detail in section V of this preamble.
                                                                                                                                                                existing Washington HVPA in the Strait
                                             Additionally, nothing in this rule                         K. Energy Effects                                       of Juan de Fuca and Puget Sound).
                                             preempts or prohibits state removal
                                                                                                           We have analyzed this final rule                     List of Subjects in 33 CFR Part 155
                                             activities related to the discharge of oil
                                                                                                        under Executive Order 13211 (Actions
                                             or hazardous substances under the                                                                                    Alaska, Hazardous substances, Oil
                                                                                                        Concerning Regulations That
                                             Federal Water Pollution Control Act.15                                                                             pollution, Reporting and recordkeeping
                                                                                                        Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
                                             Therefore, this rule is consistent with                                                                            requirements.
                                                                                                        Distribution, or Use). We have
                                             the fundamental federalism principles                                                                                For the reasons discussed in the
                                                                                                        determined that it is not a ‘‘significant
                                             and preemption requirements described                                                                              preamble, the Coast Guard amends 33
                                                                                                        energy action’’ under that order because
                                             in Executive Order 13132.                                                                                          CFR part 155 as follows:
                                                                                                        it is not a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
                                             F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                            under Executive Order 12866 and is not                  Title 33—Navigation and Navigable
                                               The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                         likely to have a significant adverse effect             Waters
                                             of 1995 16 requires Federal agencies to                    on the supply, distribution, or use of
                                             assess the effects of their discretionary                  energy.                                                 PART 155—OIL OR HAZARDOUS
                                             regulatory actions. In particular, the Act                                                                         MATERIAL POLLUTION PREVENTION
                                                                                                        L. Technical Standards
                                             addresses actions that may result in the                                                                           REGULATIONS FOR VESSELS
                                             expenditure by a State, local, or tribal                      The National Technology Transfer
                                                                                                        and Advancement Act 17 directs                          ■  1. The authority citation for part 155
                                             government, in the aggregate, or by the                                                                            is revised to read as follows:
                                             private sector of $100,000,000 (adjusted                   agencies to use voluntary consensus
                                             for inflation) or more in any one year.                    standards in their regulatory activities                   Authority: 3 U.S.C. 301 through 303; 33
                                             Although this final rule will not result                   unless the agency provides Congress,                    U.S.C. 1225, 1231, 1321(j), 1903(b), 2735;
                                                                                                        through OMB, with an explanation of                     E.O. 12777, 56 FR 54757, 3 CFR, 1991 Comp.,
                                             in such an expenditure, we do discuss                                                                              p. 351; Department of Homeland Security
                                             the effects of this rule elsewhere in this                 why using these standards will be
                                                                                                        inconsistent with applicable law or                     Delegation No. 0170.1. Section 155.1020 also
                                             preamble.                                                                                                          issued under section 316 of Pub. L. 114–120.
                                                                                                        otherwise impractical. Voluntary                        Section 155.480 also issued under section
                                             G. Taking of Private Property                              consensus standards are technical                       4110(b) of Pub. L. 101–380.
                                               This final rule will not cause a taking                  standards (e.g., specifications of                      ■ 2. In § 155.1020, paragraph (13) of the
                                             of private property or otherwise have                      materials, performance, design, or                      definition of ‘‘Higher volume port area’’:
                                             taking implications under Executive                        operation; test methods; sampling                       ■ a. Remove the words ‘‘Strait of Juan
                                             Order 12630 (Governmental Actions and                      procedures; and related management                      De Fuca at Port Angeles’’ and add in
                                             Interference with Constitutionally                         systems practices) that are developed or                their place the words ‘‘Strait of Juan de
                                             Protected Property Rights).                                adopted by voluntary consensus                          Fuca at Cape Flattery’’.
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                                                                                                        standards bodies.                                       ■ b. Add a note to read as follows:
                                             H. Civil Justice Reform                                       This final rule does not use technical
                                               This final rule meets applicable                         standards. Therefore, we did not                        § 155.1020         Definitions.
                                             standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of                  consider the use of voluntary consensus                 *           *     *      *        *
                                                                                                        standards.
                                               15 Section   311, codified at 33 U.S.C. 1321(o).                                                                     18 42   U.S.C. 4321–4370f.
                                               16 2   U.S.C. 1531–1538.                                   17 15   U.S.C. 272 note.                                  19 67   FR 48244 (July 23, 2002).



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 109 / Wednesday, June 6, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           26221

                                                 Higher volume port area * * *                       FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                       IV. Final Action
                                                 (13) * * *                                          Maria A. Pino, (215) 814–2181, or by                     EPA is approving the Commonwealth
                                               Note 1 to paragraph (13) of this definition:          email at pino.maria@epa.gov.                           of Pennsylvania’s November 3, 2017 SIP
                                             The western boundary of the Strait of Juan              SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                             revision submittal, which addresses the
                                             de Fuca higher volume port area in this part                                                                   2008 8-hour ozone NAAQS emissions
                                             differs from that in § 154.1020 of this chapter.        I. Background
                                             The difference stems from section 316(b) of
                                                                                                                                                            statement requirement, as a revision to
                                             the Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2015                 On March 12, 2018 (83 FR 10650),                     the Pennsylvania SIP.
                                             (Pub. L. 114–120), which expands only the               EPA published a notice of proposed
                                                                                                     rulemaking (NPR) for the                               V. Statutory and Executive Order
                                             definition in this part.
                                                                                                     Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. In the                   Reviews
                                             *      *     *       *      *                           NPR, EPA proposed approval of                          A. General Requirements
                                               Dated: May 31, 2018.                                  Pennsylvania’s certification that                         Under the CAA, the Administrator is
                                             Dana S. Tulis,                                          Pennsylvania’s SIP-approved emissions                  required to approve a SIP submission
                                             Director of Incident Management and                     statement regulation meets the                         that complies with the provisions of the
                                             Preparedness Policy.                                    emissions statement requirement of                     CAA and applicable federal regulations.
                                             [FR Doc. 2018–12081 Filed 6–5–18; 8:45 am]              section 182(a)(3)(B) of the CAA for the                42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
                                             BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
                                                                                                     2008 ozone NAAQS. The formal SIP                       Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
                                                                                                     revision was submitted by                              EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
                                                                                                     Pennsylvania, through the Pennsylvania                 provided that they meet the criteria of
                                                                                                     Department of the Environmental                        the CAA. Accordingly, this action
                                             ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
                                                                                                     Protection (PADEP), on November 3,                     merely approves state law as meeting
                                             AGENCY
                                                                                                     2017.                                                  federal requirements and does not
                                             40 CFR Part 52                                          II. Summary of SIP Revision and EPA                    impose additional requirements beyond
                                             [EPA–R03–OAR–2017–0739; FRL–9978–98–                    Analysis                                               those imposed by state law. For that
                                             Region 3]                                                                                                      reason, this action:
                                                                                            In Pennsylvania’s November 3, 2017                                 • Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
                                             Approval and Promulgation of Air            SIP  revision submittal, Pennsylvania                              action’’ subject to review by the Office
                                             Quality Implementation Plans; PA;           states that the existing, SIP-approved                             of Management and Budget under
                                             Emissions Statement Requirement for         rule found at 25 Pa. Code 135.21,                                  Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,
                                             the 2008 Ozone Standard                     ‘‘Emissions Statements,’’ satisfies CAA                            October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
                                                                                         section 182(a)(3)(B) for the 2008 ozone                            January 21, 2011);
                                             AGENCY: Environmental Protection            NAAQS. Under CAA section                                              • Is not an Executive Order 13771 (82
                                             Agency (EPA).                               182(a)(3)(B), states are required to have                          FR 9339, February 2, 2017) regulatory
                                             ACTION: Final rule.                         an emission statements rule for ozone                              action because SIP approvals are
                                                                                         nonattainment areas. In addition, states                           exempted under Executive Order 12866.
                                             SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection in the ozone transport region are
                                             Agency (EPA) is approving a state                                                                                 • Does not impose an information
                                                                                         required to have an emission statement                             collection burden under the provisions
                                             implementation plan (SIP) revision          rule statewide, including for attainment
                                             submitted by the Commonwealth of                                                                               of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
                                                                                         areas. See CAA sections 182(a)(3)(B),                              U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
                                             Pennsylvania. This SIP revision fulfills    182(f), and 184(b)(2). EPA previously                                 • Is certified as not having a
                                             Pennsylvania’s emissions statement          approved Pennsylvania’s emissions                                  significant economic impact on a
                                             requirement for the 2008 ozone national statement rule for the 1979 1-hour ozone
                                                                                                                                                            substantial number of small entities
                                             ambient air quality standard (NAAQS).       standard, 25 Pa. Code 135.21, into the                             under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
                                             EPA is approving these revisions in         Pennsylvania SIP. See 60 FR 2881                                   U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
                                             accordance with the requirements of the (January 12, 1995). EPA has determined
                                                                                                                                                               • Does not contain any unfunded
                                             Clean Air Act (CAA).                        that 25 Pa. Code 135.21, which is                                  mandate or significantly or uniquely
                                             DATES: This final rule is effective on July currently in the Pennsylvania SIP, is                              affect small governments, as described
                                             6, 2018.                                    appropriate to address the emissions                               in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                             ADDRESSES: EPA has established a            statement requirement for the 2008                                 of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
                                             docket for this action under Docket ID      ozone NAAQS. Therefore, EPA is                                        • Does not have federalism
                                             Number EPA–R03–OAR–2017–0739. All approving this SIP revision that certifies                                   implications as specified in Executive
                                             documents in the docket are listed on       that 25 Pa. Code 135.21 is adequate to                             Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
                                             the http://www.regulations.gov website. satisfy the emissions statement                                        1999);
                                             Although listed in the index, some          requirement for the 2008 ozone NAAQS.                                 • Is not an economically significant
                                             information is not publicly available,      Other specific requirements of the                                 regulatory action based on health or
                                             e.g., confidential business information     Pennsylvania’s emissions statement rule                            safety risks subject to Executive Order
                                             (CBI) or other information whose            and the rationale for EPA’s proposed                               13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
                                             disclosure is restricted by statute.        action are explained in the NPR and                                   • Is not a significant regulatory action
                                             Certain other material, such as             will not be restated here.                                         subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
                                             copyrighted material, is not placed on                                                                         28355, May 22, 2001);
                                                                                         III. Public Comments
                                             the internet and will be publicly                                                                                 • Is not subject to requirements of
                                             available only in hard copy form.              EPA received twenty-three public
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                                                                                                                                                            section 12(d) of the National
                                             Publicly available docket materials are     comments on our March 12, 2018 NPR                                 Technology Transfer and Advancement
                                             available through http://                   proposing to approve Pennsylvania’s                                Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
                                             www.regulations.gov, or please contact      November 3, 2017 submittal. All                                    application of those requirements would
                                             the person identified in the FOR FURTHER comments received were not specific to                                be inconsistent with the CAA; and
                                             INFORMATION CONTACT section for             this action, and thus are not addressed                               • Does not provide EPA with the
                                             additional availability information.        here.                                                              discretionary authority to address, as


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Document Created: 2018-06-06 00:53:53
Document Modified: 2018-06-06 00:53:53
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis final rule is effective July 6, 2018.
ContactIf you have questions on this rule, call or email Mr. Christopher Friese, CG-MER-1, Coast Guard; telephone 202-372-1227, email [email protected]
FR Citation83 FR 26212 
RIN Number1625-AB75
CFR AssociatedAlaska; Hazardous Substances; Oil Pollution and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

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