83_FR_36581 83 FR 36435 - Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System: Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals From Electric Utilities; Amendments to the National Minimum Criteria (Phase One, Part One)

83 FR 36435 - Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System: Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals From Electric Utilities; Amendments to the National Minimum Criteria (Phase One, Part One)

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 146 (July 30, 2018)

Page Range36435-36456
FR Document2018-16262

On April 17, 2015, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or the Agency) promulgated national minimum criteria for existing and new coal combustion residuals (CCR) landfills and existing and new CCR surface impoundments. In March 2018, EPA proposed a number of revisions to the 2015 CCR rule and requested comment on additional issues. In this rulemaking EPA is acting to finalize certain revisions to those criteria. First, EPA is adopting two alternative performance standards that either Participating State Directors in states with approved CCR permit programs (participating states) or EPA where EPA is the permitting authority may apply to owners and operators of CCR units. Second, EPA is revising groundwater protection standards (GWPS) for four constituents which do not have an established Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL). Finally, the Agency is extending the deadline by which facilities must cease the placement of waste in CCR units closing for cause in two situations: Where the facility has detected a statistically significant increase above a GWPS from an unlined surface impoundment; and where the unit is unable to comply with the aquifer location restriction. Provisions from the proposed rule that are not addressed in this rule will be addressed in a subsequent action.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 146 (Monday, July 30, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 146 (Monday, July 30, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 36435-36456]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-16262]


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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Part 257

[EPA-HQ-OLEM-2017-0286; FRL-9981-18-OLEM]
RIN 2050-AG88


Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System: Disposal of Coal 
Combustion Residuals From Electric Utilities; Amendments to the 
National Minimum Criteria (Phase One, Part One)

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: On April 17, 2015, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or 
the Agency) promulgated national minimum criteria for existing and new 
coal combustion residuals (CCR) landfills and existing and new CCR 
surface impoundments. In March 2018, EPA proposed a number of revisions 
to the 2015 CCR rule and requested comment on additional issues. In 
this rulemaking EPA is acting to finalize certain revisions to those 
criteria. First, EPA is adopting two alternative performance standards 
that either Participating State Directors in states with approved CCR 
permit programs (participating states) or EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority may apply to owners and operators of CCR units. 
Second, EPA is revising groundwater protection standards (GWPS) for 
four constituents which do not have an established Maximum Contaminant 
Level (MCL). Finally, the Agency is extending the deadline by which 
facilities must cease the placement of waste in CCR units closing for 
cause in two situations: Where the facility has detected a 
statistically significant increase above a GWPS from an unlined surface 
impoundment; and where the unit is unable to comply with the aquifer 
location restriction. Provisions from the proposed rule that are not 
addressed in this rule will be addressed in a subsequent action.

DATES: This final rule is effective on August 29, 2018.

ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under 
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OLEM-2017-0286. The EPA has previously established 
a docket for the April 17, 2015, CCR final rule under Docket ID No. 
EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-0640. All documents in the docket are listed in the 
https://www.regulations.gov index. Although listed in the index, some 
information is not publicly available, e.g., Confidential Business 
Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted 
by statute. Certain other material, such as copyrighted material, will 
be publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket 
materials are available either electronically at https://www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), 
EPA WJC West Building, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW, 
Washington, DC. The Public Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 
p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. The telephone number 
for the Public Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the telephone number 
for the EPA Docket Center is (202) 566-1742.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For information concerning this final 
rule, contact Kirsten Hillyer, Office of Resource Conservation and 
Recovery, Environmental Protection Agency, 5304P, Washington, DC 20460; 
telephone number: (703) 347-0369; email address: 
[email protected]. For more information on this rulemaking please 
visit https://www.epa.gov/coalash.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Executive Summary

A. Purpose of the Regulatory Action

    EPA is finalizing certain revisions to the 2015 regulations for the 
disposal of CCR in landfills and surface impoundments to: (1) Provide 
States with approved CCR permit programs under the Water Infrastructure 
Improvements for the Nation (WIIN) Act or EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority the ability to use alternate performance 
standards; (2) revise the GWPS for four constituents in Appendix IV to 
part 257 \1\ for which maximum

[[Page 36436]]

contaminant levels (MCLs) under the Safe Drinking Water Act have not 
been established; and (3) provide facilities which are triggered into 
closure by the regulations additional time to cease receiving waste and 
initiate closure. This additional time will, among other things, better 
align the CCR rule compliance dates with the upcoming Effluent 
Limitations Guidelines and Standards Rule for the Steam Electric Power 
Generating Point Source Category (ELG rule). The ELG rule is currently 
scheduled to be proposed in December 2018 and finalized in December 
2019.
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    \1\ Unless other specified, all references to part 257 in this 
preamble are to title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
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B. Summary of the Provisions of the Regulatory Action

    EPA is finalizing certain revisions to the regulations at 40 CFR 
part 257, subpart D. In the March 2018 proposal, the Agency proposed 
six alternative performance standards which participating states (i.e., 
those which have an EPA-approved CCR permit program under the WIIN Act) 
may adopt and sought comment on additional alternatives. This action 
finalizes two of the proposed alternative performance standards. These 
final revisions will allow a Participating State Director or EPA where 
EPA is the permitting authority to: (1) Suspend groundwater monitoring 
requirements if there is evidence that there is no potential for 
migration of hazardous constituents to the uppermost aquifer during the 
active life of the unit and post-closure care; and (2) issue technical 
certifications in lieu of the current requirement to have professional 
engineers issue certifications. The Agency is also finalizing a 
revision of the GWPSs for the four constituents in Appendix IV to part 
257 without MCLs, in place of background levels under Sec.  
257.95(h)(2).
    In the March 2018 proposal, the Agency also took comment on 
revisions to several provisions of the 2015 CCR rule. Of those proposed 
changes, the Agency is now revising the deadline by which two 
categories of CCR units closing for cause must initiate closure: (1) 
Where the facility has detected a statistically significant increase 
from an unlined surface impoundment above a GWPS; and (2) where the 
unit is unable to comply with the aquifer location restriction.
    Of particular note, in the March 2018 action, the Agency proposed 
four changes from the 2015 CCR rule associated with the settlement 
agreement entered on April 18, 2016, which resolved four claims brought 
by two sets of plaintiffs against the final CCR rule. See USWAG et al v 
EPA, No. 15-1219 (DC Cir. 2015). In this action, Agency will not be 
taking final action on any of the proposed amendments. As explained 
previously, provisions from the proposed rule that are not addressed in 
this action will be addressed in a subsequent rule-making action.
1. Severability
    EPA intends that the provisions of this rule be severable. In the 
event any individual provision or part of this rule is invalidated, EPA 
intends that this would not render the entire rule invalid, and that 
any provision that can continue to operate will be left in place.

II. General Information

A. Does this action apply to me?

    This rule applies to all CCR generated by electric utilities and 
independent power producers that fall within the North American 
Industry Classification System (NAICS) code 221112 and may affect the 
following entities: Electric utility facilities and independent power 
producers that fall under the NAICS code 221112. This discussion is not 
intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a guide for readers 
regarding entities likely to be regulated by this action. This 
discussion lists the types of entities that EPA is now aware could 
potentially be regulated by this action. Other types of entities not 
described here could also be regulated. To determine whether your 
entity is regulated by this action, you should carefully examine the 
applicability criteria found in Sec.  257.50 of title 40 of the Code of 
Federal Regulations. If you have questions regarding the applicability 
of this action to a particular entity, consult the person listed in the 
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.

B. What action is the Agency taking?

    EPA is finalizing the following: (1) A provision that authorizes 
the Participating State Director to issue certifications in lieu of a 
professional engineer (PE); (2) a provision that authorizes the 
Participating State Director to approve the suspension of groundwater 
monitoring if a ``no migration'' demonstration can be made; and (3) a 
revision of the GWPSs for the four constituents in Appendix IV to part 
257 without MCLs, in place of background levels under Sec.  
257.95(h)(2). In addition, the Agency is finalizing an extension to the 
deadline by which facilities must cease the placement of waste in CCR 
units closing for cause in two situations: (1) Where the facility has 
detected a statistically significant increase over the groundwater 
protection standard from an unlined surface impoundment; and (2) where 
the unit is unable to comply with the aquifer location restriction. 
Provisions from the proposed rule that are not addressed in this rule 
will be addressed in a subsequent rulemaking action.

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

    These regulations are established under the authority of sections 
1006(b)(1), 1008(a), 2002(a), 4004, and 4005(a) and (d) of the Solid 
Waste Disposal Act of 1970, as amended by the Resource Conservation and 
Recovery Act of 1976 (RCRA), as amended by the Hazardous and Solid 
Waste Amendments of 1984 (HSWA) and the Water Infrastructure 
Improvements for the Nation (WIIN) Act of 2016, 42 U.S.C. 6905(b)(1), 
6907(a), 6912(a), 6944, and 6945(a) and (d). These authorities are 
discussed in more detail in Section III.C of this preamble.

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

    This action is expected to result in net cost savings amounting to 
between $27.8 million and $31.4 million per year when discounting at 7 
percent and annualized over 100 years. It is expected to result in net 
cost savings of between $15.5 million and $19.1 million per year when 
discounting at 3 percent and annualized over 100 years. Further 
information on the economic effects of this action can be found in 
Section V of this preamble.

III. Background

A. The ``2015 CCR Rule'' and the March 2018 Proposal

    On April 17, 2015, EPA finalized national minimum criteria for the 
disposal of CCR as solid waste under Subtitle D of the Resource 
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) titled, ``Hazardous and Solid 
Waste Management System; Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals from 
Electric Utilities,'' (80 FR 21302) (CCR rule). The CCR rule regulated 
existing and new CCR landfills and existing and new CCR surface 
impoundments and all lateral expansions of CCR units. It is codified in 
subpart D of part 257 of Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations. 
The criteria consist of location restrictions, design and operating 
criteria, groundwater monitoring and corrective action requirements, 
closure and post-closure care requirements, and record keeping, 
notification and internet posting requirements. These criteria were 
designed to be self-implementing. The rule also required any existing 
unlined CCR surface impoundment that is contaminating groundwater above 
a

[[Page 36437]]

regulated constituent's groundwater protection standard to stop 
receiving wastes and either retrofit or close, except in certain 
circumstances.
    The rule was challenged by several parties, including a coalition 
of regulated entities and a coalition of environmental organizations. 
See, USWAG et al. v. EPA, No. 15-1219 (D.C. Cir. 2015). Four of the 
claims, a subset of the provisions challenged by the industry and 
environmental Petitioners, were settled. The rest were briefed and are 
currently pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. 
Circuit, awaiting resolution. On November 7, 2017, EPA sought remand 
without vacatur of five additional subsections of the rule on the 
grounds that EPA intended to reconsider those provisions. That request 
is also pending before the court.
    The WIIN Act, which amends Section 4005 of the Resource 
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), was enacted in 2016 to provide 
EPA additional authorities including the authority to review and 
approve state CCR permit programs. It also requires EPA to establish 
and carry out a permit program for CCR units in Indian Country, and for 
units in nonparticipating States, to achieve compliance with the 
current CCR rule or successor regulations. The WIIN Act provided that 
EPA may use its information gathering and enforcement authorities under 
RCRA sections 3007 and 3008 to enforce the CCR rule or permit 
provisions.
    On September 13, 2017, EPA granted petitions from the Utility Solid 
Waste Activities Group (USWAG) and AES Puerto Rico LLP, requesting the 
Agency initiate rulemaking to reconsider provisions of the 2015 final 
rule.\2\ EPA determined that it was appropriate and in the public 
interest to reconsider provisions of the final rule addressed in the 
petitions, in light of the issues raised in the petitions as well as 
the new authorities in the WIIN Act.
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    \2\ A copy of both rulemaking petitions are included in the 
docket to this final rule.
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    In October 2017, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals directed EPA to 
file a status report with the court indicating its schedule for 
addressing issues contained in the petitions for reconsideration. In 
the status report filed in November 2017, EPA stated that it 
anticipated it would complete its reconsideration of all provisions in 
two phases. The first phase would be proposed in March 2018 and 
finalized no later than June 2019 and the second phase would be 
proposed no later than September 30, 2018 and finalized no later than 
December 2019. EPA indicated that in the first phase, the March 2018 
proposal, EPA would continue its process with respect to those 
provisions which were remanded back to EPA in June 2016. These are: (1) 
Requirements for use of vegetation as slope protection; (2) provisions 
to clarify the type and magnitude of non-groundwater releases that 
would require a facility to comply with some or all of the corrective 
action procedures set out in Sec. Sec.  257.96 through 257.98; and (3) 
the addition of Boron to the list of constituents in Appendix IV of 
part 257, the detection of which triggers assessment monitoring and 
corrective action requirements. EPA's March 2018 action contained 
proposals covering these remanded provisions.
    In March 2018, EPA also proposed certain provisions that would 
allow the approval of alternative performance standards by 
Participating State Directors. These proposed alternative performance 
standards would allow a state with an approved permit program or EPA 
to: (1) Use an alternative risk-based GWPS for Appendix IV constituents 
where no MCL exists; (2) modify the corrective action remedy in certain 
cases; (3) suspend groundwater monitoring requirements if a ``no 
migration'' demonstration can be made; (4) establish an alternate 
period of time to demonstrate compliance with the corrective action 
remedy; (5) modify the post-closure care period; and (6) allow 
Participating State Directors to issue technical certifications in lieu 
of the current requirement to have professional engineers issue 
certifications. For Tribal lands and in non-participating states where 
Congress has specifically provided appropriations for EPA, the proposal 
defined ``State Director'' to mean the ``EPA Administrator or their 
designee''. EPA also requested comment on potential revisions to 
several other provisions of the CCR rule and on other issues.
    One topic EPA took comment on in the March 2018 proposed rule was 
on the groundwater monitoring compliance dates and if 90-days was a 
sufficient amount of time. While the Agency is not taking any final 
action on this topic in this action, EPA wishes to ensure that all 
parties understand the current rule and the relevant implementation 
deadlines. The Agency responded to a letter from the Utility Solid 
Waste Activities Group clarifying the deadlines and timeframes related 
to detection monitoring and the necessary statistical analysis for the 
groundwater monitoring.\3\ EPA clarified that the alternate source 
demonstration in detection monitoring (Sec.  257.94(e)(2)) does not run 
concurrently with the 90-day time frame in Sec.  257.94(e)(1) or Sec.  
257.95(b). EPA also clarified that, assuming a facility elected to take 
advantage of the 90-day option in Sec.  257.94(e)(2) [to demonstrate 
that a source other than the CCR unit is the source of contamination], 
January 14, 2019 as the deadline for facilities to make their initial 
determination of whether there has been the detection of a 
statistically significant increase of an Appendix IV constituent above 
the relevant groundwater protection standard in the downgradient wells. 
EPA noted that conducting the statistical analysis on two sets of 
sampling occurs only in this first round of assessment monitoring. All 
other statistical analyses on subsequent rounds of on-going semi-annual 
or annual sampling under assessment monitoring must be conducted 
following the single set of samples obtained during that sampling 
event.
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    \3\ EPA responded to USWAG in letters dated January 26, 2018 and 
April 30, 2018.
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    EPA is taking final action on certain provisions in this 
rulemaking: (1) Allowing a Participating State Director to issue 
certifications in lieu of a professional engineer (PE); (2) allowing a 
Participating State Director to approve the suspension of groundwater 
monitoring if a demonstration of ``no migration'' can be made; and (3) 
establishing alternative GWPSs for four Appendix IV constituents 
without MCLs in place of the background levels required under Sec.  
257.95(h)(2). In addition, the Agency is extending the deadline by 
which facilities must cease the placement of waste in CCR units closing 
for cause in two situations: (1) Where the facility has detected a 
statistically significant increase over the GWPS from an unlined 
surface impoundment; and (2) where the unit is unable to comply with 
the aquifer location restriction. Provisions in the proposed rule that 
are not addressed in this rulemaking will be addressed in a subsequent 
rulemaking.

B. Comments Received on the Proposed Rule

    The agency received over 160,000 comments on the proposed rule. The 
majority of commenters focused on the four provisions remanded back to 
the Agency in 2016, as well as the six provisions proposed in response 
to passage of the WIIN Act. A number of commenters argued that no 
revisions were necessary to the April 2015 final CCR rule.
    The areas on which EPA received the most substantial industry and 
state comments were: Support for the

[[Page 36438]]

establishment of risk-based alternative GWPSs for constituents that do 
not have an MCL, support for the extension of compliance deadlines, 
support for modification of the alternative closure provisions, and 
allowing certifications by a Participating State Director in lieu of a 
PE. Most of the environmental organizations and individual citizens 
commented that the proposals would decrease protection of human health 
and the environment, especially if the facilities allow CCR units to 
leak contaminants into groundwater. Other comments related to topics 
that will be discussed in future rulemaking actions. Discussions of the 
specific comments germane to this rulemaking are provided in the 
relevant sections of this rule.
1. Public Hearing
    EPA conducted a public hearing on April 24, 2018, in Arlington, VA. 
There were 79 speakers and a total of 120 registered attendees. 
Testimony at the public hearing focused generally on the proposed 
amendments of allowing the use of alternative performance standards. 
Several speakers commented on: Allowing alternate performance standards 
for the groundwater protection standards where no MCL is established, 
allowing Participating State Directors to issue certifications in lieu 
of a PE, and the overall risks, especially health risks, related to 
CCR. In addition to the testimonies that were entered into the 
rulemaking record, over 25 additional documents were submitted in hard 
copy and entered into the docket (see EPA-HQ-OLEM-2017-0286).

C. Statutory Authority

    RCRA section 1006(b)(1) directs EPA to integrate the provisions of 
RCRA for purposes of administration and enforcement and to avoid 
duplication, to the maximum extent practicable, with the appropriate 
provisions of other EPA statutes. Section 1006(b) conditions EPA's 
authority to reduce or eliminate RCRA requirements on the Agency's 
ability to demonstrate that the integration can be done in a manner 
consistent with the goals and policies expressed in the chapter and in 
the other acts referred to in this subsection. 42 U.S.C. 6005(b)(1). 
See Chemical Waste Management v. EPA, 976 F.2d 2, 23, 25 (D.C. Cir. 
1992).
    RCRA section 1008(a) authorizes EPA to publish ``suggested 
guidelines for solid waste management.'' 42 U.S.C. 6907(a). RCRA 
defines solid waste management as ``the systematic administration of 
activities which provide for the collection, source separation, 
storage, transportation, transfer, processing, treatment, and disposal 
of solid waste.'' 42 U.S.C. 6903(28).
    Pursuant to section 1008(a)(3), the guidelines are to include the 
minimum criteria to be used by the states to define the solid waste 
management practices that constitute the open dumping of solid waste or 
hazardous waste and are prohibited as ``open dumping'' under section 
4005. Only those requirements promulgated under the authority of 
section 1008(a)(3) are enforceable under section 7002 of RCRA.
    RCRA section 4004(a) generally requires EPA to promulgate 
regulations containing criteria for determining which facilities shall 
be classified as sanitary landfills (and therefore not ``open dumps''). 
The statute directs that, ``at a minimum, the criteria are to ensure 
that units are classified as sanitary landfills only if there is no 
reasonable probability of adverse effects on health or the environment 
from disposal of solid wastes at such facility.'' 42 U.S.C. 6944(a).
    RCRA section 4005(a), entitled ``Closing or upgrading of existing 
open dumps'' generally establishes the key implementation and 
enforcement provisions applicable to EPA regulations issued under 
sections 1008(a) and 4004(a). Specifically, this section prohibits any 
solid waste management practices or disposal of solid waste that does 
not comply with EPA regulations issued under RCRA section 1008(a) and 
4004(a). 42 U.S.C. 6944(a). See also 42 U.S.C. 6903(14) (definition of 
``open dump''). As a general matter, this means that facilities must be 
in compliance with any EPA rules issued under section 4004(a) or be 
subject to suit for ``open dumping'' 42 U.S.C. 6945. RCRA section 4005 
also directs that open dumps, i.e., facilities out of compliance with 
EPA's criteria, must be ``closed or upgraded''.
    RCRA section 4005(d) provides that States may submit a program to 
EPA for approval, and permits issued pursuant to the approved state 
permit program operate in lieu of the Federal requirements 42 U.S.C. 
6945(d)(1)(A). To be approved, a State program must require each CCR 
unit to achieve compliance with the part 257 regulations (or successor 
regulations) or alternative State criteria that EPA has determined are 
``at least as protective as'' the part 257 regulations (or successor 
regulations). State permitting programs may be approved in whole or in 
part [42 U.S.C. 6945(d)(1)(B)]. States with approved CCR permitting 
programs are considered ``participating states''.
    In states without an approved program, EPA is to issue permits, 
subject to the availability of appropriations specifically provided to 
carry out this requirement 42 U.S.C. 6945(d)(2)(B). The FY 2018 Omnibus 
Appropriations Act provided $6 million to EPA for the purpose of 
developing and implementing a Federal permit program for the regulation 
of CCR in nonparticipating states. Public Law 115-141. In addition, EPA 
is the permitting authority for CCR units in Indian Country. The 
statute expressly provides that facilities are to continue to comply 
with the CCR rule or successor regulations until a permit (issued 
either by an approved state or by EPA) is in effect for that unit 42 
U.S.C. 6945(d)(3), (6).

IV. What amendments is EPA finalizing?

    During the rulemaking process for the 2015 CCR rule, EPA received 
numerous comments requesting that EPA authorize state permit programs 
and adopt alternative performance standards that would allow state 
regulators or facilities to ``tailor'' the requirements to particular 
site-specific conditions. Many requested EPA adopt particular 
alternative performance standards found in EPA's municipal solid waste 
landfill (MSWLF) regulations in 40 CFR part 258. \4\ Although the CCR 
rule was largely modeled on the MSWLF regulations, as explained in both 
the 2010 proposed and 2015 final rules, under the statutory provisions 
relevant to the CCR rule, EPA lacked the authority to establish a 
program analogous to part 258, which relies on approved states to 
implement the federal criteria through a permitting program. See, e.g., 
80 FR 21332-21334. In the absence of a state oversight mechanism to 
ensure that alternative standards would be appropriate, EPA concluded 
at that time it could not adopt many of the ``more flexible'' 
performance standards in part 258 that commenters requested. Id at 
21333.
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    \4\ Unless other specified, all references to part 258 of this 
preamble are to title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
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    However, in 2016, Congress, with the passage of the WIIN Act, 
amended RCRA to establish a permitting scheme, analogous to that 
established for MSWLFs. Under these new provisions, States may now 
apply to EPA for approval to operate a permit program to implement the 
CCR rule. As part of that process, a State program may also include 
alternative State standards, provided EPA has determined they are ``at 
least as protective as'' the CCR regulations in 40 CFR part 257. 42 
U.S.C. 6945(d)(1)(B), 6945(d)(1)(C).

[[Page 36439]]

    In light of the WIIN Act, EPA examined the existing 40 CFR part 258 
regulations to evaluate the performance standards that rely on a state 
permitting authority, to determine whether any of them could now be 
incorporated into the part 257 CCR regulations. To develop the proposed 
rule, EPA evaluated whether there was sufficient evidence in the record 
for those regulations to support incorporating either the part 258 
MSWLF provision or an analogue into the part 257 CCR regulations.
    Based on the results of this evaluation, EPA proposed to adopt six 
alternative performance standards modeled after part 258, which would 
allow a Participating State Director to: (1) Establish alternative 
risk-based GWPS for constituents where no MCL exists; (2) Modify the 
corrective action remedy in certain cases; (3) Suspend groundwater 
monitoring requirements if a ``no migration'' demonstration can be 
made; (4) Establish an alternate period of time to demonstrate 
compliance with the corrective action remedy; (5) Modify the post-
closure care period; and (6) Issue technical certifications in lieu of 
a professional engineers. Under the proposal, EPA would have the same 
authority to establish alternative performance standards in non-
participating states, subject to appropriations, and in Tribal Country, 
as a Participating State Director would. EPA explained that these 
alternative performance standards were modeled after part 258 
provisions in the MSWLF regulations that appeared to have been adopted 
based solely on a finding that they would protect human health and the 
environment; EPA believed that the facts supporting those original 
determinations would also support a finding that the provisions met the 
standard under RCRA section 4004(a).
    EPA received a number of comments on this overall approach. Several 
commenters agreed that the record supporting any of the current 
provisions under the part 258 regulations would support revisions to 
the part 257 regulations. EPA also received comments stating that the 
proposed alternative protection standards failed to satisfy the 
requirements of RCRA section 4004(a). These commenters claimed that the 
record on which the proposals had relied was inadequate. Specifically, 
the commenters argued that EPA had in fact considered facilities' 
``practicable capability in developing every provision of the rule, and 
so none were based exclusively on addressing the risks to health and 
the environment. These commenters also criticized the risk assessment 
conducted to support the part 258 regulations, claiming that it failed 
to consider the risks to sensitive subpopulations, that the only impact 
it evaluated was the risk to human health from drinking MSWLF-
contaminated groundwater, and only if drinking water wells were within 
one mile of the MSWLF, and that in any event the characteristics of 
(and therefore the risks posed by) MSWLF and CCR units are very 
different. These commenters also argued that EPA could not rely on the 
2014 risk assessment conducted for the CCR rule to support the 
proposals without first evaluating whether the assumptions in that 
assessment are consistent with the results of the recently conducted 
groundwater monitoring, which they claim shows that the groundwater at 
almost all facilities is contaminated by at least one of the 
constituents in Appendix IV.
    EPA is continuing to evaluate a number of technical issues raised 
in the comments. At the same time, the Agency recognizes the need to 
begin to implement the WIIN Act and to facilitate the transition to 
regulation of CCR through permit programs in a timely manner in order 
to address the urgent concerns presented by facilities that are faced 
with criteria that may be subject to change through this and other 
rulemaking actions and quickly approaching compliance deadlines that 
may require substantial investments and impact operational decision-
making. EPA is also mindful that States are in the process of 
considering whether to seek approval or their regulatory programs, and 
in some cases, are in the process of developing those programs; greater 
certainty regarding the kinds of provisions that EPA currently has the 
record to approve would consequently be highly desirable in order to 
effectuate the purpose behind the WIIN Act. Accordingly, while EPA 
continues to evaluate the concerns raised regarding the 1991 and 2014 
risk assessments, the Agency is finalizing at this time a select number 
of provisions that either do not rely on those materials for support to 
meet the standard in RCRA section 4004(a) or rely on portions that are 
not implicated by the technical issues under consideration.
    EPA is adopting two of the proposals modeled after the existing 
provisions in 40 CFR part 258: (1) The Participating State Director may 
suspend groundwater monitoring requirements if there is evidence that 
there is no potential for migration of hazardous constituents to the 
uppermost aquifer during the active life of the unit and the post-
closure care period; and (2) The Participating State Director may 
decide to certify that certain regulatory criteria have been met in 
lieu of the exclusive reliance on a qualified PE. EPA is also adopting 
revised GWPS for constituents without a MCL under Sec.  257.95(h)(2). 
After consideration of comments received, EPA has set risk-based values 
using the methodology discussed in the proposal. In addition, the 
Agency is finalizing an extension to the deadline by which facilities 
must cease the placement of waste in CCR units closing for cause in two 
situations: (1) Where the facility has detected a statistically 
significant increase over the groundwater protection standard from an 
unlined surface impoundment; and (2) where the unit is unable to comply 
with the aquifer location restriction. Further discussion of these 
comments received on these provisions and the bases on which EPA is 
adopting them is in their respective sections of this preamble.
    For any of the proposed performance standards, EPA requested 
comment on whether the facility or owner operator should be required to 
post the specific details of the modification of the performance 
standard to the facility's publicly accessible website or require any 
other recordkeeping options. Based on comments received, and to 
maintain transparency facilities with a site-specific performance 
standard, such as suspending groundwater monitoring in the event a no 
migration demonstration can be made, EPA is requiring posting of 
specific details of the modification to a publicly accessible website. 
This is discussed further below.

A. Extension to Certain Deadlines for the Closure or Retrofit of 
Existing CCR Surface Impoundments

    The CCR rule requires existing CCR surface impoundments and 
landfills to cease receiving waste and initiate closure under certain 
circumstances. For existing CCR surface impoundments, these situations 
include unlined CCR surface impoundments whose groundwater monitoring 
shows an exceedance of a GWPS (Sec.  257.101(a)(1)); CCR surface 
impoundments that do not comply with the location criteria (Sec.  
257.101(b)(1)); and CCR surface impoundments that are not designed and 
operated to achieve minimum safety factors (Sec.  257.101(b)(2)). The 
current CCR regulations also require existing CCR landfills that do not 
comply with the location criteria for unstable areas to close (Sec.  
257.101(d)(1)). In all of these situations, also referred to as 
``closure for cause'' in the preamble to 2015 CCR final rule, the 
current CCR regulations specify that the owner or operator of the

[[Page 36440]]

unit must cease placing any waste into the CCR unit and initiate 
closure activities within six months of making the relevant 
determination that the CCR unit must close.
    After considering comments received in response to the March 15, 
2018 proposed rule, as well as information in the rulemaking petitions 
submitted by USWAG and AES Puerto Rico,\5\ the agency finds it 
appropriate to finalize an extension to the deadline by when owners or 
operators must cease the placement of waste in existing CCR surface 
impoundments closing for cause in two situations. The two situations 
include the deadlines applicable to: (1) Existing CCR surface 
impoundments that are unable to comply with the location restriction 
regarding placement above the uppermost aquifer; and (2) Existing 
unlined CCR surface impoundments whose groundwater monitoring shows an 
exceedance of a groundwater protection standard. The agency is not at 
this time making any revisions to the other deadlines that apply to 
existing CCR surface impoundments or to any of the deadline 
requirements that apply to new and existing CCR landfills and new CCR 
surface impoundments. The two subunits below explain the approach and 
rationale for the amendments to certain deadlines for these two 
situations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ ``Utility Solid Waste Activities Group Petition for 
Rulemaking to Reconsider Provisions of the Coal Combustion Residuals 
Rule, 80 FR 21302 (April 17, 2015), and Request to Hold in Abeyance 
Challenge to Coal Combustion Residual Rule, No. 15-1219, et al. 
(D.C. Cir.)'' dated May 12, 2017; and ``AES Puerto Rico LP's 
Petition for Rulemaking to Reconsider Provisions of the Coal 
Combustion Residuals Rule, 80 FR 21302 (April 17, 2015), and Request 
to Hold in Abeyance Challenge to the Coal Combustion Residuals Rule, 
No. 15-1219, et al. (D.C. Cir.)'' dated May 31, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Revision of Sec.  257.101(b)(1) Regarding the Deadline for Waste 
Placement and Closure of Existing Surface Impoundments That Fail To 
Demonstrate Compliance With a Location Standard
    In the March 15, 2018 proposed rule, EPA solicited public comment 
on whether the deadlines to comply with the location restrictions at 
Sec. Sec.  257.60 through 257.64 are appropriate in light of the WIIN 
Act (83 FR 11598). The Agency sought comment on whether an alternative 
deadline, either through a permit program established under the WIIN 
Act or one that applies directly to the facility itself during an 
interim period, would be more appropriate to facilitate implementation 
of the WIIN Act. Owners and operators of existing CCR surface 
impoundments must complete the required demonstrations for five 
location restrictions \6\ no later than October 17, 2018.\7\ An owner 
or operator that fails to complete any one of the demonstrations by the 
deadline would trigger the closure requirements of Sec.  257.101(b)(1), 
which requires the owner or operator of the unit to cease placing CCR 
and non-CCR wastestreams into the impoundment and close the impoundment 
in accordance with the closure provisions of the regulations.
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    \6\ The five location restrictions are placement above the 
uppermost aquifer, wetlands, fault areas, seismic impact zones, and 
unstable areas.
    \7\ Inactive CCR surface impoundments are subject to a different 
deadline as specified in Sec.  257.100(e)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA received numerous comments regarding the current deadlines 
associated with the location restrictions. Many commenters stated their 
support for extending the current deadlines to complete the required 
demonstrations for the location restrictions and, in particular, the 
location restriction for placement above the uppermost aquifer. These 
commenters stated that deadline extensions would allow time for both 
the proper implementation of the WIIN Act and the finalization of other 
substantive CCR rule revisions contemplated in the March 15, 2018 
proposal, and would be consistent with the standard in RCRA section 
4004(a), while limiting facilities' expenditure of significant 
resources and avoiding the initiation of irreversible operational 
changes, including the forced closure of impoundments (and potentially 
the power plants themselves) under the current compliance deadlines. 
Commenters also stated that extensions of the location restriction 
deadlines is necessary to ensure alignment of key implementation and 
operational decisions under the CCR rule with EPA's schedule for 
issuing revisions to the effluent limitations guidelines (ELGs) and 
pretreatment standards for the Steam Electric Power Generating Point 
Source Category.\8\ Some commenters recommended that the deadline for 
determining whether existing impoundments meet the aquifer separation 
location restriction should be keyed to a specific time following EPA's 
issuance of a final rule allowing for an alternative risk-based option 
for meeting this location restriction. Other commenters supported 
extending deadlines until after EPA finalizes the amendments 
contemplated in the March 15, 2018 proposal and states have time to 
adopt the rule revisions into their state regulations. Some commenters 
suggested that deadlines be extended a specific amount of time 
following the effective date of a final rule or to specific dates. 
These commenters recommended extensions ranging from 120 days to 12 
months from the final rule's effective date and, while other commenters 
suggested deadlines be extended until November 2020. At a minimum, 
these commenters stated that EPA should extend the timeline related to 
the obligation to enter into forced closure under Sec.  257.101. 
Finally, commenters stated that it is common practice for an agency to 
extend regulatory deadlines in circumstances where a regulation is 
under reconsideration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ On May 2, 2018, EPA issued the Final 2016 Effluent 
Guidelines Program Plan (83 FR 19281), which identifies new or 
existing industrial categories selected for effluent guidelines 
rulemakings and provides a schedule for such rulemakings. This 2016 
Program Plan discusses that, in August 2017, EPA announced a 
rulemaking to potentially revise certain standards for existing 
sources in the Steam Electric Power Generating Point Source 
Category. The 2016 Program Plan also projects a schedule for such 
rulemaking, including a proposed rule in December 2018 and a final 
rule in December 2019. See page 6-1 of 2016 Program Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Other commenters opposed any extension of the compliance deadlines 
associated with the location restrictions. These commenters stated that 
an extension is unwarranted due to the long history of delays in 
setting federal standards and the adverse impacts to human health and 
the environment from improperly sited CCR units. Commenters stated that 
facilities have had several years to prepare for meeting the location 
restrictions and that an extension of the deadline is unnecessary 
because the facilities should already have sufficient information to 
determine whether their CCR units comply with the location 
restrictions. Finally, these commenters point out that several 
utilities have already sought approval from state regulators to close 
CCR units that are not in compliance with the location restrictions. A 
compliance extension would thus penalize companies that have made good-
faith efforts to comply with the current rule, while rewarding 
companies that have not prepared properly to comply.
    EPA first considered whether to extend the deadlines by which 
owners or operators of CCR surface impoundments must complete the 
location restrictions demonstrations in Sec. Sec.  257.60 through 
257.64. Such a rule revision would have the effect of delaying the date 
that facilities would need to determine whether its CCR units are in 
compliance with the location restrictions. Most of the commenters 
raised concern about the current deadlines based on the assumption that 
the technical performance standards would subsequently be revised, 
either

[[Page 36441]]

because EPA was reconsidering those criteria or because States would 
revise them as part of their permit programs. The commenters provided 
no data or other information to suggest that compliance with the 
existing location restriction demonstration deadlines presents 
technical difficulties or is otherwise infeasible. Rather the primary 
technical concern raised by the comments was the need for more time to 
develop or find alternative capacity to replace any units that cannot 
comply with the location criteria. As one commenter explained. in a 
typical state, the process to modify a major wastewater discharge 
permit as required to reroute non-CCR waste water streams can take more 
than a year to complete. This commenter also provided concrete examples 
to support their contention that it may take 18-36 months to find 
alternate capacity for their non-CCR wastes streams.
    For a simple project--which the commenter described as a site that 
(1) does not provide base load generation, and thus there would be 
minimal impact to project timing due to planned unit outages to install 
the piping re-routes and associated mechanical and electrical 
connections; (2) has fewer streams to re-route, operates 
intermittently, and (3) has straightforward low volume waste steams 
(i.e., technically definable in terms of quantity and quality)--the 
overall duration (18 months) is three times the 6-month duration 
provided for by the existing regulations.
    By contrast, a more complex site the overall duration is 
approximately 36 months--nearly six times longer in duration than 
currently provided for in the existing CCR rule. For a more complex 
site, the current water balance may indicate there are over 50 non-CCR 
individual waste streams which go to the CCR impoundment. Additionally, 
each unit utilizes an FGD that produces a waste stream, which also goes 
to the CCR impoundment. The FGD waste water stream has the most complex 
water chemistry and variability of any water stream in the plant. 
Complex project in terms of the number of streams to re-route, its more 
consistent operation (and scheduled outages), and its complex water 
chemistry associated with several of the non-CCR wastestreams. 
Additionally, the large number of streams to deal with, some of which 
only flow intermittently, further complicates the process design of 
what treatment system is needed. The water treatment process equipment 
alone requires a schedule of 13 months to procure, fabricate, and 
deliver to the plant site (excluding construction). When these efforts 
are properly stacked and staggered consistent with accepted engineering 
and project management practice, the overall duration is approximately 
36 months.
    In both examples discussed previously, the commenter explained that 
the current regulation also provides inadequate time for proper start-
up and commissioning. Reports from industry indicate that it can take 
several months to properly tune and commission a large water treatment 
plant. The commenter stated that the six months in the existing rule 
is, at best, barely adequate to properly tune a complex wastewater 
treatment plant to steady state operation accounting for quantity and 
quality variations in the non-CCR water streams.
    After considering all of the comments, EPA considers that the 
potential for revisions to the technical criteria themselves is too 
speculative at this stage to form the basis for a regulatory revision. 
EPA received no concrete proposals or suggestions for possible 
modifications to the technical criteria themselves. Nor does EPA 
currently have any potential options under consideration. And none of 
the States that have submitted applications (or with whom EPA has had 
discussions) for program authorization included any alternative 
location criteria. Accordingly, EPA has determined not to revise the 
deadlines to complete the requisite demonstrations.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \9\ These deadlines are codified in Sec. Sec.  257.60(c)(1), 
257.61(c)(1), 257.62(c)(1), 257.63(c)(1), and 257.64(d)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    However, EPA acknowledges that legitimate concerns have been raised 
about the feasibility of complying with the current closure timeframes. 
EPA considers that the issues discussed above are not unique to the 
commenter, but are shared by facilities across the industry. And these 
concerns are equally relevant in this context, as units that do not 
comply with the location requirements must close pursuant to Sec.  
257.101(b)(1).
    EPA also takes very seriously the concern that facilities not be 
prematurely compelled to make potentially irreversible operational 
changes or otherwise be forced to invest in compliance measures that 
may subsequently need to be modified. This was part of the reason that 
EPA originally chose to align key implementation and operational 
decisions under the CCR rule with EPA's schedule for issuing the 
effluent limitations guidelines and pretreatment standards (ELGs) for 
the Steam Electric Power Generating Point Source Category to be 
appropriate. The ELG requirements will be highly relevant to facility's 
decisions regarding the development of alternative capacity to manage 
non-CCR wastestreams. EPA is currently in the process of rulemaking to 
consider revising certain standards for existing ELGs sources; that 
rulemaking is projected to be completed by December 2019. EPA recently 
changed the earliest ELG compliance date for FGD and bottom ash 
wastewater to October 2020 to account for these potential revisions. 
See 82 FR 43494. EPA's original concern thus continues to be highly 
relevant.
    To address these concerns, EPA therefore considered whether an 
extension of the deadline in the closure for cause provisions in Sec.  
257.101(b)(1) that would better coordinate the compliance and 
implementation deadlines between the CCR and ELGs rules, as suggested 
by many of the commenters, was warranted. Such a rule revision would 
still require facilities to make the requisite location restriction 
demonstrations by the deadlines specified earlier (i.e., October 17, 
2018), but would extend the timeframe during which the facility could 
continue to use the unit, and thereby provide the facility with more 
time to adjust its operations. This approach would allow facilities to 
better coordinate their engineering, financial and permitting 
activities under the two rules, and would account for EPA's on-going 
ELG rulemaking. Therefore, EPA is extending the closure for cause 
trigger from the six-month period currently specified in the rule until 
October 31, 2020, which increases that time period by approximately 18 
months. The agency selected the date to coordinate with the revised 
compliance date for the ELG requirements. The agency anticipates 
completing the ELGs rulemaking by December 2019 and providing nine 
months from the rule's likely publication in January 2020 would be 
sufficient for facilities to make informed decisions to meet the 
requirements of both rules. That 18-month period also corresponds with 
the lower end amount of time estimated to be needed to find alternative 
capacity for non-CCR watestreams.
    Finally, EPA considered whether to apply a time extension to all 
location restrictions, or a subset of them. Commenters consistently 
identified the placement above the uppermost aquifer location 
restriction as the critical standard, and so EPA has limited its 
revision to address this specific concern. This time extension does not 
affect other deadlines in the regulations, and facilities therefore are 
required to comply with all requirements of an

[[Page 36442]]

operating facility (e.g., inspections), which are designed to ensure 
that the facility operations will meet the statutory standard during 
this extension period.
2. Revision of Sec.  257.101(a)(1) Regarding the Deadline for Waste 
Placement and Closure or Retrofit of Existing Unlined CCR Surface 
Impoundments
    The agency solicited comment in the March 15, 2018, proposed rule 
on appropriate time frames for the assessment monitoring requirements 
(83 FR 11599). The 2015 regulation establishes a groundwater monitoring 
program consisting of detection monitoring, assessment monitoring and 
corrective action. Because the current assessment monitoring program 
includes a series of 90-day time periods in which an owner or operator 
is to perform the required analysis and demonstrations, EPA sought 
comment on whether 90 days is an appropriate time period for the 
assessment monitoring requirements in light of the WIIN Act. The agency 
specifically requested comment on whether alternative time periods are 
necessary to perform the required analysis and demonstrations and 
whether such alternative time periods would be more appropriate to 
facilitate implementation of the WIIN Act and any amendments to the CCR 
regulations as a result of the March 15, 2018 proposed rule.
    The groundwater monitoring program requires an owner or operator of 
a CCR unit to install a system of monitoring wells and specify 
procedures for sampling these wells, in addition to methods for 
analyzing the groundwater data collected, to detect the presence of 
specified constituents and other monitoring parameters released from 
the units. Among other requirements, the 2015 regulations required 
facilities to have installed the groundwater monitoring system and 
initiated detection monitoring no later than October 17, 2017.\10\ Some 
CCR units are currently operating under the assessment monitoring 
provisions of the regulations. Facilities monitoring groundwater under 
the assessment monitoring program are required to close or retrofit an 
unlined CCR surface impoundment if the monitoring results show that the 
concentrations of one or more of the constituents listed in Appendix IV 
to part 257 are detected at statistically significant levels above any 
GWPS. Sec.  257.101(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \10\ Inactive CCR surface impoundments are subject to a 
different deadline as specified in Sec.  257.100(e)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA received numerous comments on this issue. The general theme of 
those comments supportive of an extension was similar to that 
summarized in the previous subsection addressing location restrictions. 
Many commenters emphasized that an extension is needed to properly 
implement the objectives of the WIIN Act. Commenters stated that 
without an extension of the assessment monitoring deadlines, there 
would be little to no practical effect from the proposed revisions 
because facilities will have to make irreversible decisions and 
investments based on the 2015 rule. Many of these commenters identified 
two proposals of greatest concern: (1) The ability of facilities to 
establish risk-based GWPSs for Appendix IV constituents without MCLs; 
and (2) the incorporation of risk-based flexibility into the corrective 
action program. These commenters stated that the current schedule of 
the assessment monitoring program does not provide time for these 
provisions to take effect before some facilities will be compelled to 
initiate corrective action and/or forced to close could qualify for the 
new alternative closure provision. Some commenters also argued that the 
existing deadline associated with implementing the GWPS, in particular 
those associated with assessment monitoring are too short to adequately 
identify the source and extent of an exceedance. Commenters urged the 
Agency to extend these deadlines or, at a minimum, to defer the 
obligation to establish groundwater protection standards until after 
EPA adopts these two proposals.
    Commenters also stated that an extension is necessary to align key 
implementation and operational decisions under the CCR rule with EPA's 
schedule for revising the ELGs for the Steam Electric Power Generating 
Point Source Category. Other commenters suggested that deadlines be 
extended a specific amount of time following the effective date of a 
final rule. These commenters recommended extensions ranging from 120 
days to 12 months from the final rule's effective date.
    Other commenters opposed any extension of the deadlines associated 
with the assessment monitoring program. These commenters stated that an 
extension is unwarranted due to the long history of delays in setting 
federal standards and the adverse impacts to human health and the 
environment from improperly sited CCR units. Commenters stated their 
opposition to revising the regulations that would allow facilities to 
continue to CCR units that are unlined and already contaminating 
groundwater.
    EPA first considered the request to extend the assessment 
monitoring deadlines to allow States the opportunity to establish 
alternate risk-based GWPS under Sec.  257.95(h). Most of the commenters 
raised concern about the current deadlines based on the assumption that 
the GWPS would subsequently be revised as part of a State-approved 
permit program. But the requested extension would have delayed the 
initiation of closure under Sec.  257.101(a)(1) and corrective action 
provisions of Sec. Sec.  257.96 through 257.98 for all constituents, 
not merely for the four without MCLs that commenters believed were 
likely to be revised.
    As discussed Unit IV.B of this preamble, EPA is establishing 
health-based GWPSs for all four of the constituents in Appendix IV 
without established MCLs. These revised standards, because they are 
health-based standards, are not expected to be affected by State 
programs, which alleviate the concern that facilities will be forced to 
take action in response to standards that are likely to be revised. EPA 
therefore has no basis to revise the assessment monitoring deadlines.
    Nevertheless, as noted previously, numerous commenters raised 
concern that compliance with the current closure requirements is not 
technically feasible. These concerns, and the considerations motivating 
EPA to revise the deadlines for the aquifer location criterion, are 
equally relevant in this context, as unlined surface impoundments units 
that are leaking must close, in accordance with Sec.  257.101(a)(1). 
EPA therefore considered whether an extension of the deadline in Sec.  
257.101(a)(1) to initiate the closure of unlined surface impoundments, 
similar to the extension of the deadlines for the location 
restrictions, would address the commenters' concerns. Such a provision 
would require facilities to follow the assessment monitoring procedures 
and determine whether any contaminants have been detected at 
statistically significant levels above the GWPS established under Sec.  
257.95(h). A facility that makes such a determination would still be 
required to initiate corrective action to clean up the contamination in 
the aquifer, but could continue to use the unit for an extended period, 
which would provide the facility with more time to adjust their 
operations. This approach would allow facilities to better coordinate 
their engineering, financial and permitting activities under the two 
rules, and would align with EPA's recent and on-going ELG rulemakings.

[[Page 36443]]

Therefore, EPA has extended the closure for cause trigger by the same 
18-month period granted for the location restrictions. The agency 
selected the date October 31, 2020, to coordinate with the revised 
earliest compliance date for the ELG requirements. The Agency 
anticipates completing the ELG rulemaking by December 2019 and 
providing nine months from the rule's likely publication in January 
2020, for facilities to make appropriate decisions knowing the 
requirements of both rules.
    This time extension does not affect other deadlines or any other 
requirement in the regulations, and facilities therefore remain 
obligated to comply with all requirements of an operating facility 
(e.g., inspections), which are designed to ensure that the facility 
operations will meet the statutory standard during this extension 
period.

B. Alternative Risk-Based Groundwater Protection Standards

    The 2015 CCR rule required the CCR unit owner or operator to set 
the GWPS at the MCL or to background for all constituents in Appendix 
IV to part 257 that are detected at a statistically significant level 
above background. MCLs are levels of constituent concentrations 
promulgated under section 1412 of the Safe Drinking Water Act. If no 
MCL exists for a detected constituent, then the GWPS needed to be set 
at background. In cases where the background level is higher than the 
promulgated MCL for a constituent, the GWPS was to be set at the 
background level.
    In March 2018, EPA proposed to amend the 2015 CCR rule to 
incorporate certain requirements from 40 CFR part 258 that would allow 
Participating State Directors, and EPA where it is the permitting 
authority, flexibility to approve an alternative GWPS, which was 
required to be derived in a manner consistent with Agency guidelines. 
Some of the risk guidelines used to support establishment of the part 
258 regulations had since been replaced or supplemented, so the 
proposal referenced the updated versions. Specifically, EPA cited to 
the Supplementary Guidance for Conducting Health Risk Assessment of 
Chemical Mixtures,\11\ which supplements 51 FR 34014 (September 24, 
1986); the Guidelines for Developmental Toxicity Risk Assessment,\12\ 
which amends 51 FR 34028 (September 24, 1986); and the Guidelines for 
Carcinogen Risk Assessment,\13\ which amends 51 FR 33992 (September 24, 
1986). Also, EPA proposed to add guidance on deriving a reference dose, 
Reference Dose (RfD): Description and Use in Health Risk 
Assessments.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ USEPA, ``Supplementary Guidance for Conducting Health Risk 
Assessment of Chemical Mixtures'', EPA/630/R-00/002, August 2000. 
This document can be accessed in the docket.
    \12\ USEPA, ``Guidelines for Developmental Toxicity Risk 
Assessment'', EPA/600/FR-91/001, December 1991. This document can be 
accessed at https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/recordisplay.cfm?deid=23162.
    \13\ USEPA, ``Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment'', EPA/
630/P-03/001F, March 2005. This document can be accessed at https://www.epa.gov/risk/guidelines-carcinogen-risk-assessment.
    \14\ This document can be accessed at https://www.epa.gov/iris/reference-dose-rfd-description-and-use-health-risk-assessments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    EPA also proposed to incorporate the part 258 requirement that the 
alternative GWPS be based on scientifically valid studies conducted in 
accordance with the Toxic Substances Control Act Good Laboratory 
Practice Standards (40 CFR part 792) or the equivalent. For non-
carcinogens, EPA proposed to require that States use a reference dose 
with a hazard quotient (HQ) of 1 as the upper bound on risk, to 
establish the alternative GWPS. This methodology was the same as that 
used to establish the technical criteria in the 2015 CCR regulation. 
EPA's proposal explained that reliance on this methodology was 
reasonable as it would ensure that this provision (and any alternative 
GWPS eventually established under this provision) would meet the 
requisite statutory standard. Examples of groundwater values consistent 
with the proposed requirements were provided, including Action Levels 
promulgated under the Safe Drinking Water Act and the Regional 
Screening Levels for Chemical Contaminants at Superfund Sites.\15\ EPA 
solicited comment on the revised approach to establishing an 
alternative GWPS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ This document can be accessed at https://www.epa.gov/risk/regional-screening-levels-rsls.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Significant comments were received in support of the proposal to 
allow States to approve an alternative GWPS. Commenters stated that 
States have robust regulatory frameworks to regulate groundwater 
protection, that allowing this flexibility is consistent with how 
requirements for MSWLFs are implemented under Subtitle D, and that the 
oversight and enforcement authorities provided in the WIIN Act allow 
EPA to ensure States will set protective standards. Commenters also 
stated that risk-based alternative GWPS would be more appropriate than 
the current requirement to use background levels where no MCL has been 
established for an Appendix IV constituent.
    Comments were also received opposing the proposal to allow 
Participating State Directors to approve an alternative GWPS. Concerns 
raised included lack of resources or technical expertise at state 
agencies, and the failure to require any alternative GWPS to be 
protective of sensitive subgroups, which is included in the MSWLF 
regulations at 40 CFR 258.55(i). Commenters opposed to this proposal 
raised concerns that it would: Establish vague, unenforceable 
guidelines; fail to address ecological risk or cancer risk; ignore 
health-based exposure concentrations that are already developed; and 
would ultimately allow states to increase risks to human health and the 
environment above the statutory standard. Commenters also called 
attention to that allowing Participating State Directors to set 
alternative standards could result in variability in regulatory 
standards for chemicals that present the same health risks, regardless 
of geography. Commenters also raised concerns about protectiveness of 
the proposed approach and EPA's ability to use the part 258 record to 
support providing discretion to Participating State Directors. One 
group of commenters maintained that it is arbitrary and insufficiently 
protective to let states establish GWPS where EPA has already 
established risk-based levels for Appendix IV constituents with no 
established MCL, also citing the Superfund program's ``Regional 
Screening Levels'' (RSLs).
    Some comments requesting that EPA consider established, available 
health-protective benchmarks for Appendix IV constituents, such as 
RSLs, and well-established assessment methodology for developing more 
site-specific GWPS. One industry commenter maintained that ``Of 
particular relevance to the CCR Rule are the risk-based policies and 
resources for the protection and remediation of impacted groundwater 
that U.S. EPA has developed. Specifically, U.S. EPA has established 
Regional Screening Levels (RSLs) to assess potential human health risks 
from chemicals in soil, water, and air. . . . These values assist risk 
assessors in determining whether levels of constituents at a site may 
warrant further investigation or cleanup, or whether no further 
investigation is required.'' The commenter goes on to explain that 
RSLs, while protective, are significantly higher than background 
concentrations of cobalt, lithium, and molybdenum collected by USGS. 
Using the RSLs instead of background would

[[Page 36444]]

avoid corrective action costs of cleaning up to background levels 
without providing any health benefit. See EPA-HQ-OLEM-2017-0286-1314, 
Attachment 2, pp. 2. An environmental commenter, concerned about the 
potential for states to set their own standards, said, ``In the case of 
EPA's coal ash regulations, not only is EPA in a better position to 
establish health-protective levels for each non-MCL constituent, but 
the Agency has already done so.'' The commenter goes on to say that 
``If EPA chooses to allow groundwater protection standards other than 
background, those standards must be no less stringent than the EPA RSLs 
or health advisories.'' See EPA-HQ-OLEM-2017-0286-2136 pp. 134-139.
    In the proposal, EPA also solicited comment on whether an 
alternative risk-based GWPS could be established by an independent 
technical expert or experts where there is no approved permitting 
authority. Numerous commenters opposed this suggestion, for reasons 
including: (1) EPA previously rejected that approach in the 40 CFR part 
258 regulations, which restricted this provision to Participating State 
Directors; (2) EPA does not provide an adequate record to support such 
a proposal; (3) Such a regulation, if finalized, would fail to satisfy 
the protectiveness standard in RCRA section 4004(a). Commenters in 
support of this primarily cited the pending compliance dates in the CCR 
rule as a reason to allow an alternative GWPS to be established under 
the self-implementing program. Commenters expressed concern that by the 
time States receive approval of permitting programs and EPA establishes 
its own permitting program, groundwater monitoring deadlines would have 
passed and it would be too late to establish alternative GWPSs. To 
illustrate this point, one industry commenter stated that half of its 
CCR units could be forced to initiate alternate source demonstrations 
or corrective action assessment based solely on having detected 
Appendix IV constituents with no MCLs above background levels. 
Commenters stated that the oversight and enforcement authorities 
provided to EPA by the WIIN Act would ensure that site-specific 
alternative GWPS established by independent experts are protective.
    EPA agrees with commenters that State programs are unlikely to be 
developed and approved prior to the critical deadlines in the CCR rule. 
EPA continues to evaluate technical issues, and the various concerns 
raised by the commenters, but the Agency has developed the alternative 
adopted today that does not rely on the part 258 record for support, 
and also balances commenters' concerns. EPA has developed a specific 
GWPS for each of the four constituents in Appendix IV without an MCL, 
to be used in place of the default background concentrations currently 
required under Sec.  257.95(h)(2). Adopting national criteria will 
provide health-based standards available to facilities now to use to 
compare against monitored groundwater concentrations and develop 
cleanup goals. Note that a State Director may always seek approval for 
alternative State criteria as part of the process under the WIIN Act; 
this could, for example, include the establishment of alternative GWPS 
for the constituents listed in Appendix IV. See 42 U.S.C. 
6945(d)(1)(B)(ii), (C), requiring the Administrator to approve a State 
permit program that allows a State to include technical standards for 
individual permits or conditions of approval that differ from the 
criteria under part 257 of title 40, Code of Federal Regulations if, 
based on site-specific conditions, the Administrator determines that 
the technical standards established pursuant to a State permit program 
are at least as protective as the criteria under that part.
    Specifically, the Agency is adopting the following health-based 
levels as the GWPSs for the four Appendix IV constituents without a 
designated MCL: 6 micrograms per liter ([micro]g/L) for cobalt; 40 
[micro]g/L for lithium, and 100 [micro]g/L for molybdenum. EPA is 
adopting the alternative GWPS for lead at 15 [micro]g/L. These levels 
were derived using the same methodology that EPA proposed to require 
States to use to establish alternative GWPS (See, 83 FR 11598-11599, 
11613). The methodology follows Agency guidelines for assessment of 
human health risks of an environmental pollutant. This means that these 
GWPSs are expected to be concentrations to which the human population 
could be exposed to on a daily basis without an appreciable risk of 
deleterious effects during a lifetime.
    Specifically, EPA used the equations in the Risk Assessment 
Guidance for Superfund (RAGS) Part B to calculate these revised 
GWPS.\16\ RAGS Part B provides guidance on using drinking water 
ingestion rates and toxicity values to derive risk-based remediation 
goals. The use of these methods, consistent with EPA risk assessment 
guidelines addresses commenters' concerns about protecting sensitive 
populations. EPA relied upon relevant exposure information from the 
2008 Child-Specific Exposure Factors Handbook,\17\ the Exposure Factors 
Handbook: 2011 Edition \18\ and the 2014 Human Health Evaluation 
Manual, Supplemental Guidance: Update of Standard.\19\ Values based on 
residential receptors were used to capture the range of current and 
future potential receptors. EPA identified toxicity values according to 
the hierarchy established in the 2003 Office of Solid Waste and 
Emergency Response Directive 9285.7-53,\20\ which encourages 
prioritization of values from sources that are current, transparent and 
publicly available, and that have been peer reviewed. Finally, EPA used 
the same toxicity values (reference doses) that were used in the risk 
assessment supporting the 2015 CCR Rule. Cancer slope factors (CSF) 
were not identified for any of the relevant constituents. The finalized 
GWPS for cobalt, lithium, and molybdenum were set using a target based 
on a HQ = 1 for Participating State Directors to follow.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ Risk Assessment Guidance for Superfund (RAGS) Part B can be 
accessed at https://www.epa.gov/risk/risk-assessment-guidance-superfund-rags-part-b.
    \17\ USEPA ``Child-Specific Exposure Factors Handbook'' can be 
accessed in the docket or at https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/recordisplay.cfm?deid=199243.
    \18\ USEPA ``Exposure Facots Handbook: 2011 Edition'' can be 
accessed in the docket or at https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/recordisplay.cfm?deid=236252.
    \19\ 2014 Human Health Evaluation Manual, Supplemental Guidance: 
Update of Standard can be accessed in the docket or at https://www.epa.gov/risk/update-standard-default-exposure-factors.
    \20\ Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response Directive 
9285.7-53 can be accessed in the docket or at https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyNET.exe/91015CKS.TXT?ZyActionD=ZyDocument&Client=EPA&Index=2000+Thru+2005&Docs=&Query=&Time=&EndTime=&SearchMethod=1&TocRestrict=n&Toc=&TocEntry=&QField=&QFieldYear=&QFieldMonth=&QFieldDay=&IntQFieldOp=0&ExtQFieldOp=0&XmlQuery=&File=D%3A%5Czyfiles%5CIndex%20Data%5C00thru05%5CTxt%5C00000030%5C91015CKS.txt&User=ANONYMOUS&Password=anonymous&SortMethod=h%7C-&MaximumDocuments=1&FuzzyDegree=0&ImageQuality=r75g8/r75g8/x150y150g16/i425&Display=hpfr&DefSeekPage=x&SearchBack=ZyActionL&Back=ZyActionS&BackDesc=Results%20page&MaximumPages=1&ZyEntry=1&SeekPage=x&ZyPURL.
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    Commenters noted that a reference dose (RfD) has not been 
established for lead because of the difficulty in identifying a 
``threshold'' level, below which adverse effects are not known or 
anticipated to occur. EPA acknowledges the commenters' concern and has 
set the GWPS for lead at the Action Level established under section 
1412 of the Safe Drinking Water Act, which addresses comments received 
supporting the use of existing EPA risk-based standards. Because 
transport through ground water is the primary risk pathway identified 
in the 2014 Risk Assessment, this revised GWPS is

[[Page 36445]]

anticipated to be protective of human health at these sites.

C. Modification of Groundwater Monitoring Requirements

    The current regulations at Sec.  257.90 require all CCR units, 
without exception, to comply with the groundwater monitoring and 
corrective action requirements of Sec. Sec.  257.90 through 257.98. The 
final CCR rule at Sec.  257.91(a)(2) requires the installation of 
groundwater monitoring wells at the waste boundary of the CCR unit.
    EPA is adopting a final provision that incorporates only minimal 
revisions from the proposal. The Agency recognizes that certain 
hydrogeologic settings may preclude the migration of hazardous 
constituents from CCR disposal units to groundwater resources. 
Requiring groundwater monitoring in these settings would provide little 
or no additional protection to human health and the environment. EPA 
considers that the final criteria are sufficiently precise and 
determinate that they will ensure that waivers are granted only in 
those rare situations, and therefore, EPA is incorporating the revised 
provision into the part 257 regulations.
    As proposed, the Participating State Director would be allowed to 
suspend the groundwater monitoring requirements under Sec. Sec.  257.90 
through 257.95 if the owner or operator can demonstrate that there is 
no potential for migration of any CCR constituents from that CCR unit 
to the uppermost aquifer during the active life of the unit, closure, 
and the post-closure care period. The demonstration must be certified 
by a PE or approved by a Participating State Director or approved EPA 
where EPA is the permitting authority, and must be based upon:
    (1) Site-specific field collected measurements, sampling, and 
analysis of physical, chemical, and biological processes affecting 
contaminant fate and transport, and
    (2) Contaminant fate and transport predictions that maximize 
contaminant migration and consider impacts on human health and 
environment.

This would allow the Participating State Director or EPA where EPA is 
the permitting authority to suspend the groundwater monitoring 
requirements in Sec. Sec.  257.91 through 257.95 for a CCR unit upon 
demonstration by the owner or operator that there is no potential for 
migration of hazardous constituents from the unit to the uppermost 
aquifer during the active life, closure, or post-closure periods. 
However, the requirements of Sec. Sec.  257.96 through 257.98 would not 
be suspended. As discussed below, the provision being finalized for the 
part 257 regulations would be identical to that in the part 258 
regulations with the exception for the requirement to periodically 
demonstrate that conditions have not changed, that is, there is still 
no migration of Appendix III or IV constituents from the CCR unit to 
the uppermost aquifer.
    The proposal acknowledged the difficulties of meeting the ``no 
potential for migration'' standard (83 FR 11602). The suspension of 
monitoring requirements is intended only for those CCR units located in 
hydrogeologic settings in which the Appendix III and IV constituents 
will not migrate to groundwater during the active life of the unit, as 
well as closure and post-closure periods. The proposal also stressed 
that a ``no migration'' waiver from certain RCRA requirements has been 
a component of both the part 258 and the RCRA subtitle C groundwater 
monitoring programs for many years, and, based on its experience under 
these programs, the Agency expects that cases where the ``no 
migration'' criteria are met will be rare.
    There were many general comments supporting the suspension of 
groundwater monitoring requirements if it can be demonstrated that 
there is no potential for migration of hazardous constituents from the 
CCR unit to the uppermost aquifer. These commenters supported this 
provision because it allows for more site-specific flexibility and 
prevents burdensome monitoring requirements that are unnecessary for 
protection of human health and the environment. A commenter also stated 
that it is unnecessary to incur ongoing monitoring costs if a unit has 
no impact to groundwater.
    Supporters of the ``no migration'' waiver also stated that it 
should not be limited to facilities operating under a state or EPA CCR 
permit program, and should be broadened so that a qualified technical 
expert can make the no migration determination under the self-
implementing CCR program. Commenters stated that the potential for 
abuse no longer exists due to the public notification requirements and 
EPA's inspection and enforcement authority provided by the WIIN Act.
    Groundwater monitoring is one of the key provisions under the 
regulations that protect health and the environment, as it ensures that 
contamination is detected and remediated. If the unit does leak and 
contaminants migrate into the aquifer, without monitoring there is no 
guarantee that those contaminants will be detected quickly, or 
necessarily at all. The potential consequences of this provision are 
therefore significant. Moreover, the determinations required to support 
the waiver are highly technical, and thus not readily evaluated during 
an inspection, by an inspector who may be able to document that the 
supporting analyses exist but is unlikely to have the time or expertise 
necessary to evaluate their scientific adequacy. Consequently, this 
provision requires the additional layer of protection associated with 
having review by a regulatory authority, which would have the necessary 
technical expertise on staff, evaluate the request prior to its 
adoption.
    Some commenters did not support the ``no migration'' proposal. One 
commenter explained that groundwater monitoring for CCR units had just 
barely taken effect and the first round of groundwater monitoring data 
was first published on March 2, 2018. This commenter also stated that 
all CCR facilities should be required to do groundwater monitoring to 
establish a baseline. Another commenter stated that due to the nature 
of sedimentary geological formations, fractures and fissures may exist 
throughout a coal-mined site, mined areas may settle and surface 
impoundments may leak. Therefore, suspension of groundwater monitoring 
should not be allowed.
    EPA has determined that if a facility meets the criteria to 
demonstrate that there is no potential for migration at the unit, then 
the groundwater monitoring requirements of Sec. Sec.  257.90 through 
257.96 would not be necessary. However, the regulation requires that 
demonstrations of no potential for migration must be supported by both 
predictions that maximize contaminant migration and actual field data 
collected at the site. Field sampling is necessary to establish the 
site's hydrogeological characteristics and must include an evaluation 
of unsaturated and saturated zone characteristics to ascertain the flow 
rate and pathways by which contaminants may migrate to groundwater. 
Thus, facilities would be expected to collect site-specific data 
relating to conditions, geology, water levels, etc. as well as 
contaminant concentrations in the aquifer.
    The proposal included four conditions that would be required for a 
facility to receive a waiver from groundwater monitoring. The first 
condition is that the suspension of groundwater monitoring requirements 
in Sec. Sec.  257.91 through 257.95 is available only for owners and 
operators of CCR units located in participating states. As discussed 
previously the Agency has limited the availability of the waiver 
because of the need to review a no-migration demonstration prior to

[[Page 36446]]

granting a waiver from groundwater monitoring. However, in this final 
action, the Agency is expanding this provision to allow EPA the ability 
to review a no-migration demonstration to grant a waiver from 
groundwater monitoring where EPA is the permitting authority.
    The second condition is that the rule requires demonstrations of no 
potential for migration to be supported by both predictions that 
maximize contaminant migration and actual field data collected at the 
site. The proposal explained in great detail how the different 
properties should be measured, building on guidance developed for part 
258 (83 FR 11602). EPA explained in the proposal that the site-specific 
information called for under the proposed regulation to make the 
demonstration must include, at a minimum, the following information to 
evaluate or interpret the effects of the following properties or 
processes on contaminant fate and transport:
    (1) Aquifer Characteristics, including hydraulic conductivity, 
hydraulic gradient, effective porosity, aquifer thickness, degree of 
saturation, stratigraphy, degree of fracturing and secondary porosity 
of soils and bedrock, aquifer heterogeneity, groundwater discharge, and 
groundwater recharge areas;
    (2) Waste Characteristics, including quantity, type, and origin;
    (3) Climatic Conditions, including annual precipitation, leachate 
generation estimates, and effects on leachate quality;
    (4) Leachate Characteristics, including leachate composition, 
solubility, density, the presence of immiscible constituents, Eh, and 
pH;
    (5) Engineered Controls, including liners, cover systems, and 
aquifer controls (e.g., lowering the water table). These should be 
evaluated under design and failure conditions to estimate their long-
term residual performance;
    (6) Attenuation of contaminants in the subsurface, including 
adsorption/desorption reactions, ion exchange organic content of soil, 
soil water pH, and consideration of possible reactions causing chemical 
transformation or chelation; and
    (7) Microbiological Degradation, which may attenuate target 
compounds or cause transformations of compounds, potentially forming 
more toxic chemical species.
    No migration petitions will vary considerably. The petition content 
will be strongly influenced by the type of unit for which a variance is 
sought and the methods chosen to demonstrate that there is no potential 
for migration. EPA believes the categories listed above and other site-
specific information as required by the Participating State Director or 
EPA where EPA is the permitting authority will provide the necessary 
information, data, and analyses to determine the physical, chemical, 
and biological processes affecting the migration of CCR constituents. 
As discussed below, these criteria have largely been included in the 
final rule, with modifications to account for the differences between 
the Part 258 constituents, which include organics, and Appendix IV CCR 
constituents, which are metals.
    The third condition is that demonstrations be certified by a 
qualified PE and approved by the Participating State Director or EPA 
where EPA is the permitting authority to ensure that there is a high 
degree of confidence that no contamination will reach the uppermost 
aquifer.
    The fourth condition requires the owner or operator of the CCR unit 
to remake the demonstration every 10 years or sooner, if there is 
evidence migration has occurred, as determined by the Participating 
State Director or EPA where EPA is the permitting authority. This new 
demonstration is required to be submitted to the Participating State 
Director or EPA where EPA is the permitting authority one year before 
the existing groundwater monitoring suspension is due to expire. If the 
suspension expires for any reason, the unit must begin groundwater 
monitoring according to Sec.  257.90(a) within 90 days.
    EPA received several public comments both supporting and opposing 
this 10-year demonstration clause. A commenter stated that the 
provisions for the suspension of groundwater monitoring depart from the 
part 258 provisions on which they were modeled, by limiting any such 
suspension to a maximum 10-year term and requiring a re-demonstration 
for subsequent suspension approvals.
    One commenter stated that if any breakthrough occurs in the CCR 
unit, 10 years is too long and would allow contamination to move toward 
adjacent discharge points, including pumping wells at nearby homes, 
farms and businesses, as well as streams, potentially endangering human 
health and the environment.
    As discussed in more detail below, any site-specific demonstration 
to satisfy the ``no migration'' threshold involves several distinct 
criteria relating to site conditions. Because, as the commenter notes, 
engineered controls do fail facilities will be required to demonstrate 
that site conditions will collectively work to ensure there is no 
potential for migration. For example, the regulation also requires the 
evaluation of Climatic Conditions such as annual precipitation and 
leachate generation estimates. All of the regulatory factors together 
work to ensure that, when considering a ``no migration'' determination, 
in the event of a leak from a CCR unit, the constituents will not 
migrate to the uppermost aquifer during the lifetime of the unit and 
post-closure care.
    Another comment received on the 10-year interval is that if the 
existing monitoring wells remain in place during the 10-year interval, 
those wells may be neglected and not usable for sampling at the end of 
the 10-year interval. If the existing monitoring wells are filled and 
sealed and new monitoring wells are installed, the ability to 
effectively compare data at the same location over time may be lost. 
The commenter stated that EPA should consider either removing the 10-
year recurring demonstration requirement or add some minimum monitoring 
requirements at shorter intervals (e.g., groundwater elevations) to 
ensure maintenance of the monitoring wells.
    EPA does not agree that monitoring wells will necessarily be unused 
during the 10-year interval. The proposal discussed how the ``no 
migration'' demonstration involves complying with rigorous 
requirements. Modeling may be useful for assessing and verifying the 
potential for migration of hazardous constituents. Models used should 
be based on actual field collected data to adequately predict potential 
groundwater contamination. When owners or operators prepare to re-
certify a no migration demonstration, they must verify that the unit 
continues to meet the standard--i.e., that there is still no potential 
for migration of contaminants from the unit to the uppermost aquifer. 
To support this demonstration some type of field data, such as 
groundwater elevation measurements, would normally be collected during 
the 10-year period. The 10-year requirement to renew a waiver ensures 
that no dramatic changes have occurred that may cause contamination.
    One commenter stated that EPA should adopt separate standards for 
the suspension of groundwater monitoring for CCR landfills and CCR 
surface impoundments. The commenter stated that CCR landfills should 
not be required to conduct a new demonstration once every 10 years to 
show that suspension of groundwater monitoring continues to be 
appropriate. EPA disagrees with this comment as the ``no migration'' 
waiver is dependent

[[Page 36447]]

upon site-specific hydrogeology, which can potentially change overtime, 
and the criteria for the waiver are not specific to either landfills or 
surface impoundments.
    EPA considered the comments and is adopting the proposal with minor 
revisions to ensure that the regulatory language accurately reflects 
the principles reflected in the proposal. EPA discussed in the proposal 
why periodic renewals of ``no migration'' demonstrations were not 
required for MSW landfills. In part this is because the part 258 
regulations apply only to landfills, while the CCR regulations apply to 
both landfills and surface impoundments. Surface impoundments by their 
very nature pose a potential for releases to groundwater that is 
different than landfills (e.g., presence of a hydraulic head). The risk 
assessment for the CCR rule found that, even when key variables are 
controlled (e.g., liner type, waste type) for the long-term risks from 
surface impoundments are greater than from landfills. Based on these 
factors, EPA is requiring an owner or operator to conduct a new 
demonstration once every 10 years to show that the suspension of 
groundwater monitoring continues to be appropriate. See Sec.  
257.90(g). This new demonstration must be submitted to the 
Participating State Director or EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority one year before the existing groundwater monitoring 
suspension is due to expire. If the suspension expires for any reason, 
the unit must begin groundwater monitoring in accordance with Sec.  
257.90(a) within 90 days.
    To address concerns that the proposed language was insufficiently 
prescriptive EPA has added the phrase, ``based on the characteristics 
of the site in which the CCR unit is located,'' to the regulatory text. 
This is intended to clarify that the site characteristics are the key 
component of any determination that a waiver can be granted, rather 
than unit characteristics, such as the type of liner, which can (and 
do) fail. This is consistent with both the proposal and the original 
part 258 regulation. See 83 FR 11602; 56 FR 51061. EPA provided 
examples of locations that might be able to demonstrate no potential 
for migration in the preamble to the final MSWLF rule, such as 
extremely dry areas with little rainfall and great depths to 
groundwater, but acknowledged that these would be extremely rare. 56 FR 
51061. EPA expects this to be the case with respect to CCR units as 
well.
    For the same reason, EPA included in the regulation four of the 
seven categories of properties or processes on contaminant fate and 
transport that were discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule at 
83 FR 11602. EPA omitted two categories from this original list to 
account for the differences between the Part 258 constituents and the 
Appendix IV CCR constituents. The part 258 constituents include organic 
compounds, and so factors, such as natural attenuation, are relevant to 
evaluating the potential for migration at the site. But the CCR 
constituents are metals or metalloid compounds, which will remain in 
the environment if released. The remaining factors have been a 
component of the MSWLF program since the regulations were first adopted 
in 1991. 56 FR 51061. See OSWER Solid Waste Disposal Facility Criteria 
Technical Manual for MSWLFs (EPA530-R-93-017, 1993).\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \21\ USEPA OWSER ``Solid Waste Disposal Facility Criteria 
Technical Manual for MSWLFs'' (EPA530-R-93-017, 1993) can be found 
in the docket for this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The regulation does not include any consideration relating to 
current groundwater quality or potential future use of the aquifer EPA 
notes that, as with MSWLFs, this is not an appropriate factor for 
consideration under this provision. Further guidance for conducting 
these evaluations can be found in the OSWER Solid Waste Disposal 
Facility Criteria Technical Manual for MSWLFs (EPA530-R-93-017, 1993), 
the Ground-Water Monitoring Guidance Document for Owners and Operators 
of Interim Status Facilities (1983),\22\ and OSWER Preparing No-
Migration Demonstration for Municipal Solid Waste Disposal Facilities: 
A Screening Tool (EPA530-R-99-008 1999).\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ USEPA ``Ground-Water Monitoring Guidance for Owners and 
Operators of Interim Status Facilities'' (1983) can be found in the 
docket for this final rule.
    \23\ USEPA OWER ``Preparing No-Migration Demonstrations for 
Municipal Solid Waste Disposal facilities: A Screening Tool'' 
(EPA530-R-99-008, 1999 can be found in the docket for this rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Allow Participating State Directors or EPA Where EPA Is the 
Permitting Authority To Issue Certifications in Lieu of Requiring a PE 
Certification

    To ensure that the RCRA subtitle D requirements would achieve the 
statutory standard of ``no reasonable probability of adverse effects on 
health and the environment'' in the absence of regulatory oversight, 
the current CCR regulations require facilities to obtain third party 
certifications and to provide enhanced state and public notifications 
of actions taken to comply with the regulatory requirements. 
Specifically, in the final CCR rule EPA required numerous technical 
demonstrations made by the owner or operator be certified by a 
qualified professional engineer (PE) in order to provide verification 
of the facility's technical judgments and to otherwise ensure that the 
provisions of the rule were properly applied. While EPA acknowledged 
that relying upon a third-party certification was not the same as 
relying upon a state or federal regulatory authority and was not 
expected to provide the same level of independence as a state permit 
program, the availability of meaningful third-party verification 
provided critical support that the rule would achieve the statutory 
standard, as it would provide a degree of control over a facility's 
discretion in implementing the rule.
    However, the situation has changed with the passage of the WIIN 
Act, which offers the opportunity for State oversight under an approved 
permit program. To reflect that, EPA proposed that the regulations 
allow a ``State Director,'' the Director of a state with an approved 
CCR permit program (i.e., a ``participating state''), to certify that 
the regulatory criteria have been met in lieu of the exclusive reliance 
on a qualified PE. EPA expects that states will generally rely on the 
expertise of their own engineers to evaluate whether the technical 
criteria have been met. Alternatively, States might choose to retain 
the required certification by a qualified PE and use its own expertise 
to evaluate that certification. Finally, EPA noted that under the 
existing regulations, a facility may already rely on a certification 
provided by a qualified PE in a State agency, who reviews the facility 
actions as part of a purely State-law mandated process. Thus, EPA is 
confident that revising the regulation to authorize an approval from a 
Participating State Director will be at least as protective as the 
status quo under the existing regulations. To be clear an approved 
state may choose to provide certifications in lieu of a PE or may 
review and approve in addition to a PE. A participating state could 
also decide to solely rely on a certification by a facility's PE which 
would be the status quo based on the current regulations.
    As a component of this proposal, EPA also proposed definitions of 
``State Director'' and of a ``participating state'' in Sec.  257.53. 
The definition made clear that these provisions were restricted to 
State Directors (or their delegates) with an approved CCR permit 
program. The definition also included EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority (tribal lands and non-participating states). There are 
several changes to the proposed term of ``State Director.'' First, we 
are finalizing the term as ``Participating State Director.'' Currently

[[Page 36448]]

there is a definition for State Director in 40 CFR 257.53 and EPA did 
not intend for our proposed definition to replace or amend the current 
definition. Therefore, we are finalizing the term ``Participating State 
Director.'' This language is used throughout the preamble and 
regulatory text accordingly.
    Furthermore, EPA received numerous comments on state directors 
issuing certifications. The majority of comments supported granting a 
State Director this authority. One comment received from ASTSWMO 
suggested removing EPA from the definition of State Director. ASTSWMO 
felt it was not appropriate to include EPA in the definition because 
intermingling the State and EPA would lead to confusion on their 
implementation roles in CCR permit programs, and EPA agrees. EPA has 
therefore removed the sentence about EPA from the definition of 
Participating State Director and generally added ``or approval from EPA 
where EPA is the permitting authority'' after Participating State 
Director throughout the regulations.
    The definition of Participating State Director has also been 
modified to reflect the statutory term of a ``participating state'' 
rather than the proposed term of ``an approved state.'' EPA has also 
adopted the proposed definition of a participating state, without 
modification. The final rule also incorporates the statutory definition 
of a non-participating state.
    Finally, the regulatory text has been amended in 39 places to 
incorporate this change. These changes can be seen in the amended 
regulation text. Except for the regulations relating to structural 
stability, which continue to require the certification of a PE in all 
circumstances, the regulations have been modified to add the approval 
of Participating State Director or the approval from EPA where EPA is 
the permitting authority as an acceptable alternative. The structural 
stability evaluations, such as the periodic factors of safety 
assessment, require the specific expertise of a PE. As previously 
noted, EPA expects that a state will generally rely on the expertise of 
its own engineers to evaluate whether the technical criteria have been 
met, but to avoid any confusion, these regulations will continue to 
require certification by a PE. A state may, of course, require the 
facility to also obtain its approval as part of its own permit program.

E. Rationale for 30-Day Effective Date

    The effective date of this rule is 30 days after publication in the 
Federal Register. The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) provides that 
publication of a substantive rule shall be made not less than 30 days 
before its effective date and that this provision applies in the 
absence of a specific statutory provision establishing an effective 
date. See 5 U.S.C. 553(d) and 559. EPA has determined there is no 
specific provision of RCRA addressing the effective date of regulations 
that would apply here, and thus the APA's 30-day effective date 
applies.
    EPA has previously interpreted section 4004(c) of RCRA to generally 
establish a six-month effective date for rules issued under subtitle D. 
See 80 FR 37988, 37990. After further consideration, EPA interprets 
section 4004(c) to establish an effective date solely for the 
regulations that were required to be promulgated under subsection (a). 
Section 4004(c) is silent as to subsequent revisions to those 
regulations; EPA therefore believes section 4004(c) is ambiguous.
    Section 4004(c) states that the prohibition in subsection (b) shall 
take effect six months after promulgation of regulations under 
subsection (a). Subsection (a), in turn provides that ``[n]ot later 
than one year after October 21, 1976 . . . [EPA] shall promulgate 
regulations containing criteria for determining which facilities shall 
be classified as sanitary landfills and which shall be classified as 
open dumps within the meaning of this chapter.'' As noted, section 
4004(c) is silent as to revisions to those regulations.
    In response to Congress's mandate in section 4004(a), EPA 
promulgated regulations on September 13, 1979. 44 FR 53438. EPA 
interprets section 4004(c) to establish an effective date applicable 
only to that action, and not to future regulations the Agency might 
issue under this section. In the absence of a specific statutory 
provision establishing an effective date for this rule, APA section 
553(d) applies.
    EPA considers that its interpretation is reasonable because there 
is no indication in RCRA or its legislative history that Congress 
intended for the agency to have less discretion under RCRA subtitle D 
than it would have under the APA to establish a suitable effective date 
for subsequent rules issued under section 4004(c). Consistent with 
EPA's interpretation of the express language of section 4004, EPA 
interprets statements in the legislative history explaining that 
section 4004(c) provides that the effective date is to be 6 months 
after the date of promulgate of regulations, as referring to the 
initial set of regulations required by Congress to be promulgated not 
later than 1 year after October 21, 1976, and does not mandate a 6 
month effective date for every regulatory action that EPA takes under 
this section. This rule contains specific, targeted revisions to the 
2015 rule and the legislative history regarding section 4004 speaks 
only to these initial 1976 mandated regulations.
    This reading allows the agency to establish an effective date 
appropriate for the nature of the regulation promulgated, which is what 
EPA believes Congress intended. EPA further considers that the minimum 
30-day effective date under the APA is reasonable in this circumstance 
where none of the provisions being finalized require an extended period 
of time for regulated entities to comply.

V. The Projected Economic Impacts of This Action

A. Introduction

    EPA estimated the costs and benefits of this action in a Regulatory 
Impact Analysis (RIA) which is available in the docket for this action. 
The RIA estimates costs and cost savings attributable to the provisions 
of this action against the baseline costs and cost savings of the 2015 
CCR final rule. The RIA estimates that the net annualized impact of 
these five provisions over a 100-year period of analysis will be cost 
savings of between $27.8 million and $31.4 million when discounting at 
7 percent and cost savings between $15.5 million and $19.1 million when 
discounting at 3 percent. This action is not considered an economically 
significant action under Executive Order 12866.

B. Affected Universe

    The universe of affected entities for this rule consists of the 
same entities affected by EPA's 2015 CCR final rule. These entities are 
coal-fired electricity generating plants operated by the electric 
utility industry. They can be identified by their North American 
Industry Classification System (NAICS) designation 221112 ``Fossil Fuel 
Electric Power Generation''. The RIA estimates that there are 414 coal-
fired electricity generating plants operating 922 CCR management units 
(landfills, disposal impoundments, and storage impoundments) that will 
be affected by this rule.

C. Baseline Cost

    The baseline costs for this rule are the costs of compliance with 
EPA's 2015 CCR final rule, as the provisions of this rule modify the 
provisions of the 2015 CCR final rule or modify the implementation of 
the 2015 CCR rule by WIIN Act participating states. The RIA for the 
2015 CCR final rule estimated these costs at an annualized $509

[[Page 36449]]

million when discounting at 7 percent and an annualized $735 million 
when discounting at 3 percent.

D. Cost Savings, Other Benefits, and Adjustments to the Baseline

    The RIA estimates costs and costs savings for two proposals 
concerning the compliance deadlines for certain aspects of the 2015 CCR 
rule, as well as the two alternative performance standards that will 
apply in participating states under the WIIN Act, and the revision of 
the GWPSs for the four constituents in Appendix IV to part 257 without 
MCLs. The RIA estimates that the net annualized impact of these five 
provisions over a 100-year period of analysis will be an annualized 
cost savings of between $27.8 million and $31.4 million when 
discounting at 7 percent, and an annualized cost savings of between 
$15.5 million and $19.1 million when discounting at 3 percent. The 
majority of cost savings attributable to the rule come from the 
provisions extending the date by which facilities must cease placing 
waste in CCR units. These provisions delay the large capital costs 
associated with ceasing to place waste in a unit. These capital costs 
include the cost of closure capping, post-closure monitoring, and 
converting to dry handling of CCR from wet handling.
    The RIA also presents the adjustments to the baseline costs of the 
CCR final rule due to plant closures that occurred after the rule was 
published but before the effective date of the rule. The RIA 
accompanying the 2015 CCR final rule assigned compliance costs to these 
plants, which they are exempt from because they closed before the final 
rule's effective date. In all, 23 plants closed before the effective 
date of the final rule that were not accounted for in 2015 final rule 
RIA. The annualized compliance costs avoided for these plants equals 
between $21.4 million and $27.6 million per year when discounting at 7 
percent and between $21.7 million and $32.4 million when discounting at 
3 percent. This cost adjustment is detailed in the RIA that accompanies 
this rulemaking, however it is not factored into the baseline or the 
benefit estimates for this rule to keep comparisons with the 2015 CCR 
final rule straight forward. Also, the compliance costs not incurred by 
these plants would not be cost savings attributable to this rulemaking.

VI. Statutory and Executive Order (E.O.) Reviews

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

    This action is a significant regulatory action that was submitted 
to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review. Any changes 
made in response to OMB recommendations have been documented in the 
docket. The EPA prepared an analysis of the potential costs and 
benefits associated with this action. This Regulatory Impact Analysis 
(RIA), entitled Regulatory Impact Analysis; EPA's 2018 RCRA Final Rule; 
Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals from Electric Utilities; 
Amendments to the National Minimum Criteria (Phase One), is summarized 
in Unit V of this preamble and the RIA is available in the docket for 
this final rule.

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

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

C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)

    The information collection activities in this rule have been 
submitted for approval to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
under the PRA. The Information Collection Request (ICR) document that 
the EPA prepared has been assigned EPA ICR number 1189.28, OMB control 
number 2050-0053. This is an amendment to the ICR approved by OMB for 
the Final Rule: Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System; Disposal 
of Coal Combustion Residuals from Electric Utilities published April 
17, 2015 in the Federal Register at 80 FR 21302. You can find a copy of 
the ICR in the docket for this action, and it is briefly summarized 
here.
    Respondents/affected entities: Coal-fired electric utility plants 
that will be affected by the rule.
    Respondent's obligation to respond: The recordkeeping, 
notification, and posting are mandatory as part of the minimum national 
criteria being promulgated under sections 1008, 4004, and 4005(a) of 
RCRA.
    Estimated number of respondents: 414.
    Frequency of response: The frequency of response varies.
    Total estimated burden: EPA estimates the total annual burden to 
respondents to be a reduction in burden of approximately 16,690 hours 
from the currently approved burden. Burden is defined at 5 CFR 
1320.3(b).
    Total estimated cost: The total estimated annual cost of this rule 
is a cost savings of approximately $4,752,588. This cost savings is 
composed of approximately $1,045,091 in annualized avoided labor costs 
and $3,707,497 in avoided capital or operation and maintenance costs.
    An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required 
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a 
currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for the 
EPA's regulations in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.

D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)

    I certify that this action will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. In 
making this determination, the impact of concern is any significant 
adverse economic impact on small entities. An agency may certify that a 
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities if the rule relieves regulatory burden, has no 
net burden or otherwise has a positive economic effect on the small 
entities subject to the rule. This action is expected to result in net 
cost savings amounting to approximately $27.8 million per year to $31.4 
million per year when discounting at 7 percent and annualized over 100 
years. It is expected to result in net cost savings of between $15.5 
million and $19.1 million when discounting at 3 percent and annualized 
over 100 years. Savings will accrue to all regulated entities, 
including small entities. Further information on the economic effects 
of this action can be found in Unit V of this preamble and in the 
Regulatory Impact Analysis, which is available in the docket for this 
action. We have therefore concluded that this action will relieve 
regulatory burden for all directly regulated small entities.

E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)

    This action does not contain any unfunded mandate of $100 million 
or more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not 
significantly or uniquely affect small governments. This action imposes 
no enforceable duty on any state, local or tribal governments or the 
private sector. The costs involved in this action are imposed only by 
participation in a voluntary federal program. UMRA generally excludes 
from the definition of ``federal intergovernmental mandate'' duties 
that

[[Page 36450]]

arise from participation in a voluntary federal program.

F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism

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

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

    This action does not have tribal implications as specified in 
Executive Order 13175. For the ``Final Rule: Hazardous and Solid Waste 
Management System; Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals from Electric 
Utilities'' published April 17, 2015 in the Federal Register at 80 FR 
21302, EPA identified three of the 414 coal-fired electric utility 
plants (in operation as of 2012) which are located on tribal lands; 
however, they are not owned by tribal governments. These are: (1) 
Navajo Generating Station in Coconino County, Arizona, owned by the 
Arizona Salt River Project; (2) Bonanza Power Plant in Uintah County, 
Utah, owned by the Deseret Generation and Transmission Cooperative; and 
(3) Four Corners Power Plant in San Juan County, New Mexico owned by 
the Arizona Public Service Company. The Navajo Generating Station and 
the Four Corners Power Plant are on lands belonging to the Navajo 
Nation, while the Bonanza Power Plant is located on the Uintah and 
Ouray Reservation of the Ute Indian Tribe. Under the WIIN Act, EPA is 
the permitting authority for CCR unites located in Indian Country. 
Moreover, since this action is expected to result in net cost savings 
to affected entities amounting to approximately $27.8 million per year 
to $31.4 million per year when discounting at 7 percent and annualized 
over 100 years, or in net cost savings of between $15.5 million per 
year and $19.1 million per year when discounting at 3 percent and 
annualized over 100 years, it will not have substantial direct effects 
on one or more Indian tribes. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not 
apply to this action.

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

    This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it is 
not economically significant as defined in Executive Order 12866, and 
because the EPA does not believe the environmental health or safety 
risks addressed by this action present a disproportionate risk to 
children. This action's health and risk assessments are contained in 
the document titled ``Human and Ecological Risk Assessment of Coal 
Combustion Residuals'' which is available in the docket for the final 
rule as docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-0640-11993.
    As ordered by E.O. 13045 Section 1-101(a), for the ``Final Rule: 
Hazardous and Solid Waste Management System; Disposal of Coal 
Combustion Residuals from Electric Utilities'' published April 17, 2015 
in the Federal Register at 80 FR 21302, EPA identified and assessed 
environmental health risks and safety risks that may disproportionately 
affect children in the revised risk assessment. The results of the 
screening assessment found that risks fell below the criteria when 
wetting and run-on/runoff controls required by the rule are considered. 
Under the full probabilistic analysis, composite liners required by the 
rule for new waste management units showed the ability to reduce the 
90th percentile child cancer and non-cancer risks for the groundwater 
to drinking water pathway to well below EPA's criteria. Additionally, 
the groundwater monitoring and corrective action required by the rule 
reduced risks from current waste management units.

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

    This action is not a ``significant energy action'' because it is 
not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply, 
distribution or use of energy. For the 2015 CCR rule, EPA analyzed the 
potential impact on electricity prices relative to the ``in excess of 
one percent'' threshold. Using the Integrated Planning Model (IPM), EPA 
concluded that the 2015 CCR Rule may increase the weighted average 
nationwide wholesale price of electricity between 0.18 percent and 0.19 
percent in the years 2020 and 2030, respectively. As the final rule 
represents a cost savings rule relative to the 2015 CCR rule, this 
analysis concludes that any potential impact on wholesale electricity 
prices will be lower than the potential impact estimated of the 2015 
CCR rule; therefore, this final rule is not expected to meet the 
criteria of a ``significant adverse effect'' on the electricity markets 
as defined by Executive Order 13211.

J. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA)

    This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.

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

    The EPA believes that this action does not have disproportionately 
high and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority 
populations, low-income populations and/or indigenous peoples, as 
specified in Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
    The documentation for this decision is contained in EPA's 
Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) for the CCR rule which is available in 
the docket for the 2015 CCR final rule as docket item EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-
0640-12034.
    EPA's risk assessment did not separately evaluate either minority 
or low-income populations. However, to evaluate the demographic 
characteristics of communities that may be affected by the CCR rule, 
the RIA compares the demographic characteristics of populations 
surrounding coal-fired electric utility plants with broader population 
data for two geographic areas: (1) One-mile radius from CCR management 
units (i.e., landfills and impoundments) likely to be affected by 
groundwater releases from both landfills and impoundments; and (2) 
watershed catchment areas downstream of surface impoundments that 
receive surface water run-off and releases from CCR impoundments and 
are at risk of being contaminated from CCR impoundment discharges 
(e.g., unintentional overflows, structural failures, and intentional 
periodic discharges).
    For the population as a whole 24.8 percent belong to a minority 
group and 11.3 percent falls below the Federal Poverty Level. For the 
population living within one mile of plants with surface impoundments 
16.1 percent belong to a minority group and 13.2 percent live below the 
Federal Poverty Level. These minority and low-income populations are 
not disproportionately high compared to the general population. The 
percentage of minority residents of the entire population living within 
the catchment areas downstream of surface impoundments is 
disproportionately high relative to the general population, i.e., 28.7 
percent, versus 24.8 percent for the national population. Also, the 
percentage of the population within the catchment areas of surface 
impoundments that is below the Federal Poverty Level is 
disproportionately high compared with the general population, i.e., 
18.6 percent versus 11.3 percent nationally.
    Comparing the population percentages of minority and low income

[[Page 36451]]

residents within one mile of landfills to those percentages in the 
general population, EPA found that minority and low-income residents 
make up a smaller percentage of the populations near landfills than 
they do in the general population, i.e., minorities comprised 16.6 
percent of the population near landfills versus 24.8 percent nationwide 
and low-income residents comprised 8.6 percent of the population near 
landfills versus 11.3 percent nationwide. In summary, although 
populations within the catchment areas of plants with surface 
impoundments appear to have disproportionately high percentages of 
minority and low-income residents relative to the nationwide average, 
populations surrounding plants with landfills do not. Because landfills 
are less likely than impoundments to experience surface water run-off 
and releases, catchment areas were not considered for landfills.
    The CCR rule is risk-reducing with reductions in risk occurring 
largely within the surface water catchment zones around, and 
groundwater beneath, coal-fired electric utility plants. Since the CCR 
rule is risk-reducing and this action does not add to risks, this 
action will not result in new disproportionate risks to minority or 
low-income populations.

L. Congressional Review Act (CRA)

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

List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 257

    Environmental protection, Beneficial use, Coal combustion products, 
Coal combustion residuals, Coal combustion waste, Disposal, Hazardous 
waste, Landfill, Surface impoundment.

    Dated: July 17, 2018.
Andrew R. Wheeler,
Acting Administrator.

    For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 40, chapter I, of 
the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:

PART 257--CRITERIA FOR CLASSIFICATION OF SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL 
FACILITIES AND PRACTICES

0
1. The authority citation for part 257 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6907(a)(3), 6912(a)(1), 6944(a), 6945(d); 
33 U.S.C. 1345(d) and (e).


0
2. Section 257.53 is amended by adding the definitions of 
``Nonparticipating State'', ``Participating State'', and 
``Participating State Director'' in alphabetical order to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.53  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Nonparticipating State means a State--
    (1) For which the Administrator has not approved a State permit 
program or other system of prior approval and conditions under RCRA 
section 4005(d)(1)(B);
    (2) The Governor of which has not submitted to the Administrator 
for approval evidence to operate a State permit program or other system 
of prior approval and conditions under RCRA section 4005(d)(1)(A);
    (3) The Governor of which provides notice to the Administrator 
that, not fewer than 90 days after the date on which the Governor 
provides the notice to the Administrator, the State will relinquish an 
approval under RCRA section 4005(d)(1)(B) to operate a permit program 
or other system of prior approval and conditions; or
    (4) For which the Administrator has withdrawn approval for a permit 
program or other system of prior approval and conditions under RCRA 
section 4005(d)(1)(E).
* * * * *
    Participating State means a state with a state program for control 
of CCR that has been approved pursuant to RCRA section 4005(d).
    Participating State Director means the chief administrative officer 
of any state agency operating the CCR permit program in a participating 
state or the delegated representative of the Participating State 
Director. If responsibility is divided among two or more state 
agencies, Participating State Director means the chief administrative 
officer of the state agency authorized to perform the particular 
function or procedure to which reference is made.
* * * * *

0
3. Section 257.60 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.60   Placement above the uppermost aquifer.

* * * * *
    (b) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority stating that the demonstration meets the 
requirements of paragraph (a) of this section.
* * * * *

0
4. Section 257.61 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.61   Wetlands.

* * * * *
    (b) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority stating that the demonstration meets the 
requirements of paragraph (a) of this section.
* * * * *

0
5. Section 257.62 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.62  Fault areas.

* * * * *
    (b) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority stating that the demonstration meets the 
requirements of paragraph (a) of this section.
* * * * *

0
6. Section 257.63 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.63  Seismic impact zones.

* * * * *
    (b) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority stating that the demonstration meets the 
requirements of paragraph (a) of this section.
* * * * *

0
7. Section 257.64 is amended by revising paragraph (c) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.64   Unstable areas.

* * * * *
    (c) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority stating that the demonstration meets the 
requirements of paragraph (a) of this section.
* * * * *

0
8. Section 257.70 is amended by revising paragraphs (c)(2), (e), and 
(f) to read as follows:

[[Page 36452]]

Sec.  257.70  Design criteria for new CCR landfills and any lateral 
expansion of a CCR landfill.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (2) The owner or operator must obtain certification from a 
qualified professional engineer or approval from the Participating 
State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority that the liquid flow rate through the lower component of the 
alternative composite liner is no greater than the liquid flow rate 
through two feet of compacted soil with a hydraulic conductivity of 
1x10-\7\ cm/sec. The hydraulic conductivity for the two feet 
of compacted soil used in the comparison shall be no greater than 
1x10-\7\ cm/sec. The hydraulic conductivity of any 
alternative to the two feet of compacted soil must be determined using 
recognized and generally accepted methods. The liquid flow rate 
comparison must be made using Equation 1 of this section, which is 
derived from Darcy's Law for gravity flow through porous media.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30JY18.002

Where:

Q = flow rate (cubic centimeters/second);
A = surface area of the liner (squared centimeters);
q = flow rate per unit area (cubic centimeters/second/squared 
centimeter);
k = hydraulic conductivity of the liner (centimeters/second);
h = hydraulic head above the liner (centimeters); and
t = thickness of the liner (centimeters).
* * * * *
    (e) Prior to construction of the CCR landfill or any lateral 
expansion of a CCR landfill, the owner or operator must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority that the design of the composite liner (or, if 
applicable, alternative composite liner) and the leachate collection 
and removal system meets the requirements of this section.
    (f) Upon completion of construction of the CCR landfill or any 
lateral expansion of a CCR landfill, the owner or operator must obtain 
a certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority that the design of the composite liner (or, if 
applicable, alternative composite liner) and the leachate collection 
and removal system have been constructed in accordance with the 
requirements of this section.
* * * * *

0
9. Section 257.71 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.71  Liner design criteria for existing CCR surface 
impoundments.

* * * * *
    (b) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority attesting that the documentation as to whether a 
CCR unit meets the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section is 
accurate.
* * * * *

0
10. Section 257.72 is amended by revising paragraphs (c) and (d) to 
read as follows:


Sec.  257.72  Liner design criteria for new CCR surface impoundments 
and any lateral expansion of a CCR surface impoundment.

* * * * *
    (c) Prior to construction of the CCR surface impoundment or any 
lateral expansion of a CCR surface impoundment, the owner or operator 
must obtain certification from a qualified professional engineer or 
approval from the Participating State Director or approval from EPA 
where EPA is the permitting authority that the design of the composite 
liner or, if applicable, the design of an alternative composite liner 
complies with the requirements of this section.
    (d) Upon completion, the owner or operator must obtain 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority that the composite liner or if applicable, the 
alternative composite liner has been constructed in accordance with the 
requirements of this section.
* * * * *

0
11. Section 257.80 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(7) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.80  Air criteria.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (7) The owner or operator must obtain a certification from a 
qualified professional engineer or approval from the Participating 
State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority that the initial CCR fugitive dust control plan, or any 
subsequent amendment of it, meets the requirements of this section.
* * * * *

0
12. Section 257.81 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(5) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.81   Run-on and run-off controls for CCR landfills.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (5) The owner or operator must obtain a certification from a 
qualified professional engineer or approval from the Participating 
State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority stating that the initial and periodic run-on and run-off 
control system plans meet the requirements of this section.
* * * * *

0
13. Section 257.82 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(5) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.82   Hydrologic and hydraulic capacity requirements for CCR 
surface impoundments.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (5) The owner or operator must obtain a certification from a 
qualified professional engineer or approval from the Participating 
State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority stating that the initial and periodic inflow design flood 
control system plans meet the requirements of this section.
* * * * *

0
14. Section 257.90 is amended by revising paragraph (a) and adding 
paragraph (g) to read as follows:


Sec.  Sec.  257.90   Applicability.

    (a) All CCR landfills, CCR surface impoundments, and lateral 
expansions of CCR units are subject to the groundwater monitoring and 
corrective action requirements under Sec. Sec.  257.90 through 257.99, 
except as provided in paragraph (g) of this section.
* * * * *
    (g) Suspension of groundwater monitoring requirements. (1) The 
Participating State Director or EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority may suspend the groundwater monitoring requirements under 
Sec. Sec.  257.90 through 257.95 for a CCR unit for a period of up to 
ten years, if the owner or operator provides written documentation 
that, based on the characteristics of the site in which the CCR unit is 
located, there is no potential for migration of any of the constituents 
listed in appendices III and IV to this part from that CCR unit to the 
uppermost aquifer during the active life of the CCR unit and the post-
closure care period. This demonstration must be certified by a 
qualified professional

[[Page 36453]]

engineer and approved by the Participating State Director or EPA where 
EPA is the permitting authority, and must be based upon:
    (i) Site-specific field collected measurements, sampling, and 
analysis of physical, chemical, and biological processes affecting 
contaminant fate and transport, including at a minimum, the information 
necessary to evaluate or interpret the effects of the following 
properties or processes on contaminant fate and transport:
    (A) Aquifer Characteristics, including hydraulic conductivity, 
hydraulic gradient, effective porosity, aquifer thickness, degree of 
saturation, stratigraphy, degree of fracturing and secondary porosity 
of soils and bedrock, aquifer heterogeneity, groundwater discharge, and 
groundwater recharge areas;
    (B) Waste Characteristics, including quantity, type, and origin;
    (C) Climatic Conditions, including annual precipitation, leachate 
generation estimates, and effects on leachate quality;
    (D) Leachate Characteristics, including leachate composition, 
solubility, density, the presence of immiscible constituents, Eh, and 
pH; and
    (E) Engineered Controls, including liners, cover systems, and 
aquifer controls (e.g., lowering the water table). These must be 
evaluated under design and failure conditions to estimate their long-
term residual performance.
    (ii) Contaminant fate and transport predictions that maximize 
contaminant migration and consider impacts on human health and the 
environment.
    (2) The owner or operator of the CCR unit may renew this suspension 
for additional ten year periods by submitting written documentation 
that the site characteristics continue to ensure there will be no 
potential for migration of any of the constituents listed in Appendices 
III and IV of this part. The documentation must include, at a minimum, 
the information specified in paragraphs (g)(1)(i) and (g)(1)(ii) of 
this section and a certification by a qualified professional engineer 
and approved by the State Director or EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority. The owner or operator must submit the documentation 
supporting their renewal request for the state's or EPA's review and 
approval of their extension one year before the groundwater monitoring 
suspension is due to expire. If the existing groundwater monitoring 
extension expires or is not approved, the owner or operator must begin 
groundwater monitoring according to paragraph (a) of this section 
within 90 days. The owner or operator may continue to renew the 
suspension for ten-year periods, provided the owner or operator 
demonstrate that the standard in paragraph (g)(1) of this section 
continues to be met for the unit. The owner or operator must place each 
completed demonstration in the facility's operating record.
    (3) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must include in the 
annual groundwater monitoring and corrective action report required by 
Sec.  257.90(e) or Sec.  257.100(e)(5)(ii) any approved no migration 
demonstration.

0
15. Section 257.91 is amended by revising paragraph (f) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.91  Groundwater monitoring systems.

* * * * *
    (f) The owner or operator must obtain a certification from a 
qualified professional engineer or approval from the Participating 
State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority stating that the groundwater monitoring system has been 
designed and constructed to meet the requirements of this section. If 
the groundwater monitoring system includes the minimum number of 
monitoring wells specified in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the 
certification must document the basis supporting this determination.
* * * * *

0
16. Section 257.93 is amended by revising paragraph (f)(6) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.93   Groundwater sampling and analysis requirements.

* * * * *
    (f) * * *
    (6) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority stating that the selected statistical method is 
appropriate for evaluating the groundwater monitoring data for the CCR 
management area. The certification must include a narrative description 
of the statistical method selected to evaluate the groundwater 
monitoring data.
* * * * *

0
17. Section 257.94 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(3) and (e)(2) 
to read as follows:


Sec.  257.94  Detection monitoring program.

* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (3) The owner or operator must obtain a certification from a 
qualified professional engineer or approval from the Participating 
State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority stating that the demonstration for an alternative groundwater 
sampling and analysis frequency meets the requirements of this section. 
The owner or operator must include the demonstration providing the 
basis for the alternative monitoring frequency and the certification by 
a qualified professional engineer or the approval from the 
Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority in the annual groundwater monitoring and 
corrective action report required by Sec.  257.90(e).
    (e) * * *
    (2) The owner or operator may demonstrate that a source other than 
the CCR unit caused the statistically significant increase over 
background levels for a constituent or that the statistically 
significant increase resulted from error in sampling, analysis, 
statistical evaluation, or natural variation in groundwater quality. 
The owner or operator must complete the written demonstration within 90 
days of detecting a statistically significant increase over background 
levels to include obtaining a certification from a qualified 
professional engineer or approval from the Participating State Director 
or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority verifying 
the accuracy of the information in the report. If a successful 
demonstration is completed within the 90-day period, the owner or 
operator of the CCR unit may continue with a detection monitoring 
program under this section. If a successful demonstration is not 
completed within the 90-day period, the owner or operator of the CCR 
unit must initiate an assessment monitoring program as required under 
Sec.  257.95. The owner or operator must also include the demonstration 
in the annual groundwater monitoring and corrective action report 
required by Sec.  257.90(e), in addition to the certification by a 
qualified professional engineer or approval from the Participating 
State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting 
authority.
* * * * *

0
18. Section 257.95 is amended by revising paragraphs (c)(3), 
(g)(3)(ii), (h)(2) and (3) to read as follows:


Sec.  257.95  Assessment monitoring program.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (3) The owner or operator must obtain a certification from a 
qualified

[[Page 36454]]

professional engineer or approval from the Participating State Director 
or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority stating that 
the demonstration for an alternative groundwater sampling and analysis 
frequency meets the requirements of this section. The owner or operator 
must include the demonstration providing the basis for the alternative 
monitoring frequency and the certification by a qualified professional 
engineer or the approval from the Participating State Director or the 
approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority in the annual 
groundwater monitoring and corrective action report required by Sec.  
257.90(e).
* * * * *
    (g) * * *
    (3) * * *
    (ii) Demonstrate that a source other than the CCR unit caused the 
contamination, or that the statistically significant increase resulted 
from error in sampling, analysis, statistical evaluation, or natural 
variation in groundwater quality. Any such demonstration must be 
supported by a report that includes the factual or evidentiary basis 
for any conclusions and must be certified to be accurate by a qualified 
professional engineer or approval from the Participating State Director 
or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority. If a 
successful demonstration is made, the owner or operator must continue 
monitoring in accordance with the assessment monitoring program 
pursuant to this section, and may return to detection monitoring if the 
constituents in Appendix III and Appendix IV of this part are at or 
below background as specified in paragraph (e) of this section. The 
owner or operator must also include the demonstration in the annual 
groundwater monitoring and corrective action report required by Sec.  
257.90(e), in addition to the certification by a qualified professional 
engineer or the approval from the Participating State Director or the 
approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority.
* * * * *
    (h) * * *
    (2) For the following constituents:
    (i) Cobalt 6 micrograms per liter ([mu]g/l);
    (ii) Lead 15 [mu]g/l;
    (iii) Lithium 40 [mu]g/l; and
    (iv) Molybdenum 100 [mu]g/l.
    (3) For constituents for which the background level is higher than 
the levels identified under paragraphs (h)(1) and (h)(2) of this 
section, the background concentration.
* * * * *

0
19. Section 257.96 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.96   Assessment of corrective measures.

    (a) Within 90 days of finding that any constituent listed in 
Appendix IV to this part has been detected at a statistically 
significant level exceeding the groundwater protection standard defined 
under Sec.  257.95(h), or immediately upon detection of a release from 
a CCR unit, the owner or operator must initiate an assessment of 
corrective measures to prevent further releases, to remediate any 
releases and to restore affected area to original conditions. The 
assessment of corrective measures must be completed within 90 days, 
unless the owner or operator demonstrates the need for additional time 
to complete the assessment of corrective measures due to site-specific 
conditions or circumstances. The owner or operator must obtain a 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority attesting that the demonstration is accurate. The 
90-day deadline to complete the assessment of corrective measures may 
be extended for no longer than 60 days. The owner or operator must also 
include the demonstration in the annual groundwater monitoring and 
corrective action report required by Sec.  257.90(e), in addition to 
the certification by a qualified professional engineer or the approval 
from the Participating State Director or the approval from EPA where 
EPA is the permitting authority.
* * * * *

0
20. Section 257.97 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.97  Selection of remedy.

    (a) Based on the results of the corrective measures assessment 
conducted under Sec.  257.96, the owner or operator must, as soon as 
feasible, select a remedy that, at a minimum, meets the standards 
listed in paragraph (b) of this section. This requirement applies in 
addition to, not in place of, any applicable standards under the 
Occupational Safety and Health Act. The owner or operator must prepare 
a semiannual report describing the progress in selecting and designing 
the remedy. Upon selection of a remedy, the owner or operator must 
prepare a final report describing the selected remedy and how it meets 
the standards specified in paragraph (b) of this section. The owner or 
operator must obtain a certification from a qualified professional 
engineer or approval from the Participating State Director or approval 
from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority that the remedy selected 
meets the requirements of this section. The report has been completed 
when it is placed in the operating record as required by Sec.  
257.105(h)(12).
* * * * *

0
21. Section 257.98 is amended by revising paragraph (e) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.98  Implementation of the corrective action program.

* * * * *
    (e) Upon completion of the remedy, the owner or operator must 
prepare a notification stating that the remedy has been completed. The 
owner or operator must obtain a certification from a qualified 
professional engineer or approval from the Participating State Director 
or approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority attesting 
that the remedy has been completed in compliance with the requirements 
of paragraph (c) of this section. The report has been completed when it 
is placed in the operating record as required by Sec.  257.105(h)(13).
* * * * *

0
22. Section 257.101 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (b)(1) 
to read as follows:


Sec.  257.101   Closure or retrofit of CCR units.

    (a) * * *
    (1) Except as provided by paragraph (a)(3) of this section, if at 
any time after October 19, 2015, an owner or operator of an existing 
unlined CCR surface impoundment determines in any sampling event that 
the concentrations of one or more constituents listed in appendix IV of 
this part are detected at statistically significant levels above the 
groundwater protection standard established under Sec.  257.95(h) for 
such CCR unit, within six months of making such determination or no 
later than October 31, 2020, whichever date is later, the owner or 
operator of the existing unlined CCR surface impoundment must cease 
placing CCR and non-CCR wastestreams into such CCR surface impoundment 
and either retrofit or close the CCR unit in accordance with the 
requirements of Sec.  257.102.
* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (1)(i) Location standard under Sec.  257.60. Except as provided by 
paragraph (b)(4) of this section, the owner or operator of an existing 
CCR surface impoundment that has not demonstrated compliance with the 
location standard specified in Sec.  257.60(a) must cease placing CCR 
and non-CCR wastestreams into such CCR

[[Page 36455]]

unit no later than October 31, 2020, and close the CCR unit in 
accordance with the requirements of Sec.  257.102.
    (ii) Location standards under Sec. Sec.  257.61 through 257.64. 
Except as provided by paragraph (b)(4) of this section, within six 
months of determining that an existing CCR surface impoundment has not 
demonstrated compliance with any location standard specified in 
Sec. Sec.  257.61(a), 257.62(a), 257.63(a), and 257.64(a), the owner or 
operator of the CCR surface impoundment must cease placing CCR and non-
CCR wastestreams into such CCR unit and close the CCR unit in 
accordance with the requirements of Sec.  257.102.
* * * * *

0
23. Section 257.102 is amended by revising paragraphs (b)(4), 
(d)(3)(iii), (f)(3), (g), (h), (k)(2)(iv), (k)(4) and (k)(6) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.102  Criteria for conducting the closure or retrofit of CCR 
units.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (4) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a written 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority that the initial and any amendment of the written 
closure plan meets the requirements of this section.
* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (3) * * *
    (iii) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a written 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or approval from 
the Participating State Director or approval from EPA where EPA is the 
permitting authority that the design of the final cover system meets 
the requirements of this section.
* * * * *
    (f) * * *
    (3) Upon completion, the owner or operator of the CCR unit must 
obtain a certification from a qualified professional engineer or 
approval from the Participating State Director or approval from EPA 
where EPA is the permitting authority verifying that closure has been 
completed in accordance with the closure plan specified in paragraph 
(b) of this section and the requirements of this section.
    (g) No later than the date the owner or operator initiates closure 
of a CCR unit, the owner or operator must prepare a notification of 
intent to close a CCR unit. The notification must include the 
certification by a qualified professional engineer or the approval from 
the Participating State Director or the approval from EPA where EPA is 
the permitting authority for the design of the final cover system as 
required by Sec.  257.102(d)(3)(iii), if applicable. The owner or 
operator has completed the notification when it has been placed in the 
facility's operating record as required by Sec.  257.105(i)(7).
    (h) Within 30 days of completion of closure of the CCR unit, the 
owner or operator must prepare a notification of closure of a CCR unit. 
The notification must include the certification by a qualified 
professional engineer or the approval from the Participating State 
Director or the approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority 
as required by Sec.  257.102(f)(3). The owner or operator has completed 
the notification when it has been placed in the facility's operating 
record as required by Sec.  257.105(i)(8).
    (k) * * *
    (2) * * *
    (iv) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a written 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or an approval 
from the Participating State Director or an approval from EPA where EPA 
is the permitting authority that the activities outlined in the written 
retrofit plan, including any amendment of the plan, meet the 
requirements of this section.
* * * * *
    (4) Upon completion, the owner or operator must obtain a written 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or an approval 
from the Participating State Director or an approval from EPA where EPA 
is the permitting authority verifying that the retrofit activities have 
been completed in accordance with the retrofit plan specified in 
paragraph (k)(2) of this section and the requirements of this section.
* * * * *
    (6) Within 30 days of completing the retrofit activities specified 
in paragraph (k)(1) of this section, the owner or operator must prepare 
a notification of completion of retrofit activities. The notification 
must include the certification from a qualified professional engineer 
or an approval from the Participating State Director or an approval 
from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority has is required by 
paragraph (k)(4) of this section. The owner or operator has completed 
the notification when it has been placed in the facility's operating 
record as required by Sec.  257.105(j)(6).
* * * * *

0
24. Section 257.104 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(1)(iii), 
(d)(4) and (e) to read as follows:


Sec.  257.104   Post-closure care requirements.

* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (iii) A description of the planned uses of the property during the 
post-closure period. Post-closure use of the property shall not disturb 
the integrity of the final cover, liner(s), or any other component of 
the containment system, or the function of the monitoring systems 
unless necessary to comply with the requirements in this subpart. Any 
other disturbance is allowed if the owner or operator of the CCR unit 
demonstrates that disturbance of the final cover, liner, or other 
component of the containment system, including any removal of CCR, will 
not increase the potential threat to human health or the environment. 
The demonstration must be certified by a qualified professional 
engineer or approved by the Participating State Director or approved 
from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority, and notification shall 
be provided to the State Director that the demonstration has been 
placed in the operating record and on the owners or operator's publicly 
accessible internet site.
* * * * *
    (4) The owner or operator of the CCR unit must obtain a written 
certification from a qualified professional engineer or an approval 
from the Participating State Director or an approval from EPA where EPA 
is the permitting authority that the initial and any amendment of the 
written post-closure plan meets the requirements of this section.
    (e) Notification of completion of post-closure care period. No 
later than 60 days following the completion of the post-closure care 
period, the owner or operator of the CCR unit must prepare a 
notification verifying that post-closure care has been completed. The 
notification must include the certification by a qualified professional 
engineer or the approval from the Participating State Director or the 
approval from EPA where EPA is the permitting authority verifying that 
post-closure care has been completed in accordance with the closure 
plan specified in paragraph (d) of this section and the requirements of 
this section. The owner or operator has completed the notification when 
it has been placed in the facility's operating record as required by 
Sec.  257.105(i)(13).
* * * * *

[[Page 36456]]


0
25. Section 257.105 is amended by adding paragraph (h)(14) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.105  Recordkeeping requirements.

* * * * *
    (h) * * *
    (14) The demonstration, including long-term performance data, 
supporting the suspension of groundwater monitoring requirements as 
required by Sec.  257.90(g).
* * * * *

0
26. Section 257.106 is amended by adding paragraph (h)(11) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.106   Notification requirements.

* * * * *
    (h) * * *
    (11) Provide the demonstration supporting the suspension of 
groundwater monitoring requirements specified under Sec.  
257.105(h)(14).
* * * * *

0
27. Section 257.107 is amended by adding paragraph (h)(11) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  257.107  Publicly accessible internet site requirements.

* * * * *
    (h) * * *
    (11) The demonstration supporting the suspension of groundwater 
monitoring requirements specified under Sec.  257.105(h)(14).
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2018-16262 Filed 7-27-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6560-50-P



                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                    36435

                                             the agency makes a good cause finding.                   This program consists of the UIC                      aquifer location restriction. Provisions
                                             The EPA has made a good cause finding                    program requirements of 40 CFR parts                  from the proposed rule that are not
                                             for making this final rule effective                     124, 144, 146, 148, and any additional                addressed in this rule will be addressed
                                             immediately upon publication, per                        requirements set forth in the remainder               in a subsequent action.
                                             section 553(d)(3) of the Administrative                  of this subpart. Injection well owners                DATES: This final rule is effective on
                                             Procedure Act, 5. U.S.C. 553(d)(3), as                   and operators, and the EPA shall                      August 29, 2018.
                                             discussed in section II, including the                   comply with these requirements.
                                                                                                                                                            ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
                                             basis for that finding.                                    (b) Effective dates. The effective date
                                                                                                                                                            docket for this action under Docket ID
                                                                                                      of the UIC program for Indian lands in
                                             List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 147                                                                            No. EPA–HQ–OLEM–2017–0286. The
                                                                                                      Idaho is June 11, 1984. The effective
                                               Environmental protection, Indian—                                                                            EPA has previously established a docket
                                                                                                      date of the UIC program for Class II
                                             lands, Intergovernmental relations,                                                                            for the April 17, 2015, CCR final rule
                                                                                                      wells on non-Indian lands in Idaho is
                                             Reporting and recordkeeping                                                                                    under Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–RCRA–
                                                                                                      July 30, 2018.
                                             requirements, Water supply.                                                                                    2009–0640. All documents in the docket
                                                                                                      [FR Doc. 2018–16245 Filed 7–27–18; 8:45 am]           are listed in the https://
                                              Dated: July 24, 2018.                                   BILLING CODE 6560–50–P                                www.regulations.gov index. Although
                                             Andrew R. Wheeler,                                                                                             listed in the index, some information is
                                             Acting Administrator.                                                                                          not publicly available, e.g., Confidential
                                               For the reasons set out in the                         ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION                              Business Information (CBI) or other
                                             preamble, the Environmental Protection                   AGENCY                                                information whose disclosure is
                                             Agency amends 40 CFR part 147 as                                                                               restricted by statute. Certain other
                                                                                                      40 CFR Part 257
                                             follows:                                                                                                       material, such as copyrighted material,
                                                                                                      [EPA–HQ–OLEM–2017–0286; FRL–9981–                     will be publicly available only in hard
                                             PART 147—STATE, TRIBAL, AND EPA-                         18–OLEM]                                              copy form. Publicly available docket
                                             ADMINISTERED UNDERGROUND                                                                                       materials are available either
                                             INJECTION CONTROL PROGRAMS                               RIN 2050–AG88
                                                                                                                                                            electronically at https://
                                                                                                      Hazardous and Solid Waste                             www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
                                             ■  1. The authority citation for part 147
                                                                                                      Management System: Disposal of Coal                   the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), EPA
                                             is revised to read as follows:
                                                                                                      Combustion Residuals From Electric                    WJC West Building, Room 3334, 1301
                                               Authority: 42 U.S.C. 300h et seq.; and 42              Utilities; Amendments to the National                 Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC.
                                             U.S.C. 6901 et seq.                                                                                            The Public Reading Room is open from
                                                                                                      Minimum Criteria (Phase One, Part
                                             Subpart N—Idaho                                          One)                                                  8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
                                                                                                                                                            Friday, excluding holidays. The
                                             ■ 2. In § 147.650 revise the section                     AGENCY:  Environmental Protection                     telephone number for the Public
                                             heading and the introductory text to                     Agency (EPA).                                         Reading Room is (202) 566–1744, and
                                             read as follows:                                         ACTION: Final rule.                                   the telephone number for the EPA
                                                                                                                                                            Docket Center is (202) 566–1742.
                                             § 147.650 State-administered program—                    SUMMARY:    On April 17, 2015, the
                                                                                                                                                            FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
                                             Class I, III, IV, and V wells.                           Environmental Protection Agency (EPA
                                                                                                      or the Agency) promulgated national                   information concerning this final rule,
                                                The UIC program for Class I, III, IV,
                                                                                                      minimum criteria for existing and new                 contact Kirsten Hillyer, Office of
                                             and V wells in the state of Idaho, other
                                                                                                      coal combustion residuals (CCR)                       Resource Conservation and Recovery,
                                             than those on Indian lands, is the
                                                                                                      landfills and existing and new CCR                    Environmental Protection Agency,
                                             program administered by the Idaho
                                                                                                      surface impoundments. In March 2018,                  5304P, Washington, DC 20460;
                                             Department of Water Resources,
                                                                                                      EPA proposed a number of revisions to                 telephone number: (703) 347–0369;
                                             approved by the EPA pursuant to
                                                                                                      the 2015 CCR rule and requested                       email address: hillyer.kirsten@epa.gov.
                                             section 1422 of the Safe Drinking Water
                                                                                                      comment on additional issues. In this                 For more information on this
                                             Act. Notice of this approval was
                                                                                                      rulemaking EPA is acting to finalize                  rulemaking please visit https://
                                             published in the Federal Register on
                                                                                                      certain revisions to those criteria. First,           www.epa.gov/coalash.
                                             June 7, 1985; the effective date of this
                                             program is July 22, 1985. This program                   EPA is adopting two alternative                       SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                             consists of the following elements, as                   performance standards that either                     I. Executive Summary
                                             submitted to the EPA in Idaho’s                          Participating State Directors in states
                                             program application. Note: Because the                   with approved CCR permit programs                     A. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
                                             EPA subsequently transferred the Class                   (participating states) or EPA where EPA                 EPA is finalizing certain revisions to
                                             II UIC program from the Idaho                            is the permitting authority may apply to              the 2015 regulations for the disposal of
                                             Department of Water Resources to the                     owners and operators of CCR units.                    CCR in landfills and surface
                                             EPA, references to Class II in the                       Second, EPA is revising groundwater                   impoundments to: (1) Provide States
                                             following elements are no longer                         protection standards (GWPS) for four                  with approved CCR permit programs
                                             relevant or applicable for federal UIC                   constituents which do not have an                     under the Water Infrastructure
                                             purposes.                                                established Maximum Contaminant                       Improvements for the Nation (WIIN) Act
                                             *     *     *     *    *                                 Level (MCL). Finally, the Agency is                   or EPA where EPA is the permitting
                                             ■ 3. Revise § 147.651 to read as follows:
                                                                                                      extending the deadline by which                       authority the ability to use alternate
                                                                                                      facilities must cease the placement of
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES




                                                                                                                                                            performance standards; (2) revise the
                                             § 147.651 EPA-administered program—                      waste in CCR units closing for cause in               GWPS for four constituents in Appendix
                                             Class II wells and all wells on Indian lands.            two situations: Where the facility has                IV to part 257 1 for which maximum
                                               (a) Contents. The EPA administers the                  detected a statistically significant
                                             UIC program for all classes of wells on                  increase above a GWPS from an unlined                   1 Unless other specified, all references to part 257
                                             Indian lands and for Class II wells on                   surface impoundment; and where the                    in this preamble are to title 40 of the Code of
                                             non-Indian lands in the state of Idaho.                  unit is unable to comply with the                     Federal Regulations (CFR).



                                        VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:02 Jul 27, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00037   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\30JYR1.SGM   30JYR1


                                             36436               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             contaminant levels (MCLs) under the                      on any of the proposed amendments. As                 the unit is unable to comply with the
                                             Safe Drinking Water Act have not been                    explained previously, provisions from                 aquifer location restriction. Provisions
                                             established; and (3) provide facilities                  the proposed rule that are not addressed              from the proposed rule that are not
                                             which are triggered into closure by the                  in this action will be addressed in a                 addressed in this rule will be addressed
                                             regulations additional time to cease                     subsequent rule-making action.                        in a subsequent rulemaking action.
                                             receiving waste and initiate closure.
                                             This additional time will, among other                   1. Severability                                       C. What is the Agency’s authority for
                                             things, better align the CCR rule                           EPA intends that the provisions of                 taking this action?
                                             compliance dates with the upcoming                       this rule be severable. In the event any                These regulations are established
                                             Effluent Limitations Guidelines and                      individual provision or part of this rule             under the authority of sections
                                             Standards Rule for the Steam Electric                    is invalidated, EPA intends that this                 1006(b)(1), 1008(a), 2002(a), 4004, and
                                             Power Generating Point Source Category                   would not render the entire rule invalid,             4005(a) and (d) of the Solid Waste
                                             (ELG rule). The ELG rule is currently                    and that any provision that can continue              Disposal Act of 1970, as amended by the
                                             scheduled to be proposed in December                     to operate will be left in place.                     Resource Conservation and Recovery
                                             2018 and finalized in December 2019.                                                                           Act of 1976 (RCRA), as amended by the
                                                                                                      II. General Information
                                             B. Summary of the Provisions of the                                                                            Hazardous and Solid Waste
                                             Regulatory Action                                        A. Does this action apply to me?                      Amendments of 1984 (HSWA) and the
                                                                                                         This rule applies to all CCR generated             Water Infrastructure Improvements for
                                                EPA is finalizing certain revisions to                                                                      the Nation (WIIN) Act of 2016, 42 U.S.C.
                                             the regulations at 40 CFR part 257,                      by electric utilities and independent
                                                                                                      power producers that fall within the                  6905(b)(1), 6907(a), 6912(a), 6944, and
                                             subpart D. In the March 2018 proposal,                                                                         6945(a) and (d). These authorities are
                                             the Agency proposed six alternative                      North American Industry Classification
                                                                                                      System (NAICS) code 221112 and may                    discussed in more detail in Section III.C
                                             performance standards which                                                                                    of this preamble.
                                             participating states (i.e., those which                  affect the following entities: Electric
                                             have an EPA-approved CCR permit                          utility facilities and independent power              D. What are the incremental costs and
                                             program under the WIIN Act) may adopt                    producers that fall under the NAICS                   benefits of this action?
                                             and sought comment on additional                         code 221112. This discussion is not
                                                                                                                                                              This action is expected to result in net
                                             alternatives. This action finalizes two of               intended to be exhaustive, but rather
                                                                                                                                                            cost savings amounting to between
                                             the proposed alternative performance                     provides a guide for readers regarding
                                                                                                                                                            $27.8 million and $31.4 million per year
                                             standards. These final revisions will                    entities likely to be regulated by this
                                                                                                                                                            when discounting at 7 percent and
                                             allow a Participating State Director or                  action. This discussion lists the types of
                                                                                                                                                            annualized over 100 years. It is expected
                                             EPA where EPA is the permitting                          entities that EPA is now aware could
                                                                                                                                                            to result in net cost savings of between
                                             authority to: (1) Suspend groundwater                    potentially be regulated by this action.
                                                                                                                                                            $15.5 million and $19.1 million per year
                                             monitoring requirements if there is                      Other types of entities not described
                                                                                                                                                            when discounting at 3 percent and
                                             evidence that there is no potential for                  here could also be regulated. To
                                                                                                                                                            annualized over 100 years. Further
                                             migration of hazardous constituents to                   determine whether your entity is
                                                                                                                                                            information on the economic effects of
                                             the uppermost aquifer during the active                  regulated by this action, you should
                                                                                                                                                            this action can be found in Section V of
                                             life of the unit and post-closure care;                  carefully examine the applicability
                                                                                                                                                            this preamble.
                                             and (2) issue technical certifications in                criteria found in § 257.50 of title 40 of
                                             lieu of the current requirement to have                  the Code of Federal Regulations. If you               III. Background
                                             professional engineers issue                             have questions regarding the
                                                                                                                                                            A. The ‘‘2015 CCR Rule’’ and the March
                                             certifications. The Agency is also                       applicability of this action to a
                                                                                                                                                            2018 Proposal
                                             finalizing a revision of the GWPSs for                   particular entity, consult the person
                                             the four constituents in Appendix IV to                  listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION                    On April 17, 2015, EPA finalized
                                             part 257 without MCLs, in place of                       CONTACT section.                                      national minimum criteria for the
                                             background levels under § 257.95(h)(2).                                                                        disposal of CCR as solid waste under
                                                                                                      B. What action is the Agency taking?                  Subtitle D of the Resource Conservation
                                                In the March 2018 proposal, the
                                             Agency also took comment on revisions                      EPA is finalizing the following: (1) A              and Recovery Act (RCRA) titled,
                                             to several provisions of the 2015 CCR                    provision that authorizes the                         ‘‘Hazardous and Solid Waste
                                             rule. Of those proposed changes, the                     Participating State Director to issue                 Management System; Disposal of Coal
                                             Agency is now revising the deadline by                   certifications in lieu of a professional              Combustion Residuals from Electric
                                             which two categories of CCR units                        engineer (PE); (2) a provision that                   Utilities,’’ (80 FR 21302) (CCR rule). The
                                             closing for cause must initiate closure:                 authorizes the Participating State                    CCR rule regulated existing and new
                                             (1) Where the facility has detected a                    Director to approve the suspension of                 CCR landfills and existing and new CCR
                                             statistically significant increase from an               groundwater monitoring if a ‘‘no                      surface impoundments and all lateral
                                             unlined surface impoundment above a                      migration’’ demonstration can be made;                expansions of CCR units. It is codified
                                             GWPS; and (2) where the unit is unable                   and (3) a revision of the GWPSs for the               in subpart D of part 257 of Title 40 of
                                             to comply with the aquifer location                      four constituents in Appendix IV to part              the Code of Federal Regulations. The
                                             restriction.                                             257 without MCLs, in place of                         criteria consist of location restrictions,
                                                Of particular note, in the March 2018                 background levels under § 257.95(h)(2).               design and operating criteria,
                                             action, the Agency proposed four                         In addition, the Agency is finalizing an              groundwater monitoring and corrective
                                             changes from the 2015 CCR rule                           extension to the deadline by which                    action requirements, closure and post-
                                             associated with the settlement                           facilities must cease the placement of                closure care requirements, and record
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                                             agreement entered on April 18, 2016,                     waste in CCR units closing for cause in               keeping, notification and internet
                                             which resolved four claims brought by                    two situations: (1) Where the facility has            posting requirements. These criteria
                                             two sets of plaintiffs against the final                 detected a statistically significant                  were designed to be self-implementing.
                                             CCR rule. See USWAG et al v EPA, No.                     increase over the groundwater                         The rule also required any existing
                                             15–1219 (DC Cir. 2015). In this action,                  protection standard from an unlined                   unlined CCR surface impoundment that
                                             Agency will not be taking final action                   surface impoundment; and (2) where                    is contaminating groundwater above a


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           36437

                                             regulated constituent’s groundwater                      indicated that in the first phase, the                alternate source demonstration in
                                             protection standard to stop receiving                    March 2018 proposal, EPA would                        detection monitoring (§ 257.94(e)(2))
                                             wastes and either retrofit or close,                     continue its process with respect to                  does not run concurrently with the 90-
                                             except in certain circumstances.                         those provisions which were remanded                  day time frame in § 257.94(e)(1) or
                                                The rule was challenged by several                    back to EPA in June 2016. These are: (1)              § 257.95(b). EPA also clarified that,
                                             parties, including a coalition of                        Requirements for use of vegetation as                 assuming a facility elected to take
                                             regulated entities and a coalition of                    slope protection; (2) provisions to                   advantage of the 90-day option in
                                             environmental organizations. See,                        clarify the type and magnitude of non-                § 257.94(e)(2) [to demonstrate that a
                                             USWAG et al. v. EPA, No. 15–1219 (D.C.                   groundwater releases that would require               source other than the CCR unit is the
                                             Cir. 2015). Four of the claims, a subset                 a facility to comply with some or all of              source of contamination], January 14,
                                             of the provisions challenged by the                      the corrective action procedures set out              2019 as the deadline for facilities to
                                             industry and environmental Petitioners,                  in §§ 257.96 through 257.98; and (3) the              make their initial determination of
                                             were settled. The rest were briefed and                  addition of Boron to the list of                      whether there has been the detection of
                                             are currently pending before the U.S.                    constituents in Appendix IV of part 257,              a statistically significant increase of an
                                             Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit,                   the detection of which triggers                       Appendix IV constituent above the
                                             awaiting resolution. On November 7,                      assessment monitoring and corrective                  relevant groundwater protection
                                             2017, EPA sought remand without                          action requirements. EPA’s March 2018                 standard in the downgradient wells.
                                             vacatur of five additional subsections of                action contained proposals covering                   EPA noted that conducting the
                                             the rule on the grounds that EPA                         these remanded provisions.                            statistical analysis on two sets of
                                             intended to reconsider those provisions.                    In March 2018, EPA also proposed                   sampling occurs only in this first round
                                             That request is also pending before the                  certain provisions that would allow the               of assessment monitoring. All other
                                             court.                                                   approval of alternative performance                   statistical analyses on subsequent
                                                The WIIN Act, which amends Section                    standards by Participating State                      rounds of on-going semi-annual or
                                             4005 of the Resource Conservation and                    Directors. These proposed alternative                 annual sampling under assessment
                                             Recovery Act (RCRA), was enacted in                      performance standards would allow a                   monitoring must be conducted
                                             2016 to provide EPA additional                           state with an approved permit program                 following the single set of samples
                                             authorities including the authority to                   or EPA to: (1) Use an alternative risk-               obtained during that sampling event.
                                             review and approve state CCR permit                      based GWPS for Appendix IV                               EPA is taking final action on certain
                                             programs. It also requires EPA to                        constituents where no MCL exists; (2)                 provisions in this rulemaking: (1)
                                             establish and carry out a permit program                 modify the corrective action remedy in                Allowing a Participating State Director
                                             for CCR units in Indian Country, and for                 certain cases; (3) suspend groundwater                to issue certifications in lieu of a
                                             units in nonparticipating States, to                     monitoring requirements if a ‘‘no                     professional engineer (PE); (2) allowing
                                             achieve compliance with the current                      migration’’ demonstration can be made;                a Participating State Director to approve
                                             CCR rule or successor regulations. The                   (4) establish an alternate period of time             the suspension of groundwater
                                             WIIN Act provided that EPA may use its                   to demonstrate compliance with the                    monitoring if a demonstration of ‘‘no
                                             information gathering and enforcement                    corrective action remedy; (5) modify the              migration’’ can be made; and (3)
                                             authorities under RCRA sections 3007                     post-closure care period; and (6) allow               establishing alternative GWPSs for four
                                             and 3008 to enforce the CCR rule or                      Participating State Directors to issue                Appendix IV constituents without MCLs
                                             permit provisions.                                       technical certifications in lieu of the               in place of the background levels
                                                On September 13, 2017, EPA granted                    current requirement to have                           required under § 257.95(h)(2). In
                                             petitions from the Utility Solid Waste                   professional engineers issue                          addition, the Agency is extending the
                                             Activities Group (USWAG) and AES                         certifications. For Tribal lands and in               deadline by which facilities must cease
                                             Puerto Rico LLP, requesting the Agency                   non-participating states where Congress               the placement of waste in CCR units
                                             initiate rulemaking to reconsider                        has specifically provided appropriations              closing for cause in two situations: (1)
                                             provisions of the 2015 final rule.2 EPA                  for EPA, the proposal defined ‘‘State                 Where the facility has detected a
                                             determined that it was appropriate and                   Director’’ to mean the ‘‘EPA                          statistically significant increase over the
                                             in the public interest to reconsider                     Administrator or their designee’’. EPA                GWPS from an unlined surface
                                             provisions of the final rule addressed in                also requested comment on potential                   impoundment; and (2) where the unit is
                                             the petitions, in light of the issues raised             revisions to several other provisions of              unable to comply with the aquifer
                                             in the petitions as well as the new                      the CCR rule and on other issues.                     location restriction. Provisions in the
                                             authorities in the WIIN Act.                                One topic EPA took comment on in                   proposed rule that are not addressed in
                                                In October 2017, the D.C. Circuit                     the March 2018 proposed rule was on                   this rulemaking will be addressed in a
                                             Court of Appeals directed EPA to file a                  the groundwater monitoring compliance                 subsequent rulemaking.
                                             status report with the court indicating                  dates and if 90-days was a sufficient
                                                                                                                                                            B. Comments Received on the Proposed
                                             its schedule for addressing issues                       amount of time. While the Agency is not
                                                                                                                                                            Rule
                                             contained in the petitions for                           taking any final action on this topic in
                                             reconsideration. In the status report                    this action, EPA wishes to ensure that                  The agency received over 160,000
                                             filed in November 2017, EPA stated that                  all parties understand the current rule               comments on the proposed rule. The
                                             it anticipated it would complete its                     and the relevant implementation                       majority of commenters focused on the
                                             reconsideration of all provisions in two                 deadlines. The Agency responded to a                  four provisions remanded back to the
                                             phases. The first phase would be                         letter from the Utility Solid Waste                   Agency in 2016, as well as the six
                                             proposed in March 2018 and finalized                     Activities Group clarifying the                       provisions proposed in response to
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                                             no later than June 2019 and the second                   deadlines and timeframes related to                   passage of the WIIN Act. A number of
                                             phase would be proposed no later than                    detection monitoring and the necessary                commenters argued that no revisions
                                             September 30, 2018 and finalized no                      statistical analysis for the groundwater              were necessary to the April 2015 final
                                             later than December 2019. EPA                            monitoring.3 EPA clarified that the                   CCR rule.
                                                                                                                                                              The areas on which EPA received the
                                               2 A copy of both rulemaking petitions are                3 EPA responded to USWAG in letters dated           most substantial industry and state
                                             included in the docket to this final rule.               January 26, 2018 and April 30, 2018.                  comments were: Support for the


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                                             36438               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             establishment of risk-based alternative                  disposal of solid waste.’’ 42 U.S.C.                  appropriations specifically provided to
                                             GWPSs for constituents that do not have                  6903(28).                                             carry out this requirement 42 U.S.C.
                                             an MCL, support for the extension of                        Pursuant to section 1008(a)(3), the                6945(d)(2)(B). The FY 2018 Omnibus
                                             compliance deadlines, support for                        guidelines are to include the minimum                 Appropriations Act provided $6 million
                                             modification of the alternative closure                  criteria to be used by the states to define           to EPA for the purpose of developing
                                             provisions, and allowing certifications                  the solid waste management practices                  and implementing a Federal permit
                                             by a Participating State Director in lieu                that constitute the open dumping of                   program for the regulation of CCR in
                                             of a PE. Most of the environmental                       solid waste or hazardous waste and are                nonparticipating states. Public Law
                                             organizations and individual citizens                    prohibited as ‘‘open dumping’’ under                  115–141. In addition, EPA is the
                                             commented that the proposals would                       section 4005. Only those requirements                 permitting authority for CCR units in
                                             decrease protection of human health                      promulgated under the authority of                    Indian Country. The statute expressly
                                             and the environment, especially if the                   section 1008(a)(3) are enforceable under              provides that facilities are to continue to
                                             facilities allow CCR units to leak                       section 7002 of RCRA.                                 comply with the CCR rule or successor
                                             contaminants into groundwater. Other                        RCRA section 4004(a) generally                     regulations until a permit (issued either
                                             comments related to topics that will be                  requires EPA to promulgate regulations                by an approved state or by EPA) is in
                                             discussed in future rulemaking actions.                  containing criteria for determining                   effect for that unit 42 U.S.C. 6945(d)(3),
                                             Discussions of the specific comments                     which facilities shall be classified as               (6).
                                             germane to this rulemaking are provided                  sanitary landfills (and therefore not
                                             in the relevant sections of this rule.                   ‘‘open dumps’’). The statute directs that,            IV. What amendments is EPA
                                                                                                      ‘‘at a minimum, the criteria are to                   finalizing?
                                             1. Public Hearing                                        ensure that units are classified as
                                                EPA conducted a public hearing on                                                                              During the rulemaking process for the
                                                                                                      sanitary landfills only if there is no
                                             April 24, 2018, in Arlington, VA. There                  reasonable probability of adverse effects             2015 CCR rule, EPA received numerous
                                             were 79 speakers and a total of 120                      on health or the environment from                     comments requesting that EPA
                                             registered attendees. Testimony at the                   disposal of solid wastes at such                      authorize state permit programs and
                                             public hearing focused generally on the                  facility.’’ 42 U.S.C. 6944(a).                        adopt alternative performance standards
                                             proposed amendments of allowing the                         RCRA section 4005(a), entitled                     that would allow state regulators or
                                             use of alternative performance                           ‘‘Closing or upgrading of existing open               facilities to ‘‘tailor’’ the requirements to
                                             standards. Several speakers commented                    dumps’’ generally establishes the key                 particular site-specific conditions. Many
                                             on: Allowing alternate performance                       implementation and enforcement                        requested EPA adopt particular
                                             standards for the groundwater                            provisions applicable to EPA                          alternative performance standards found
                                             protection standards where no MCL is                     regulations issued under sections                     in EPA’s municipal solid waste landfill
                                             established, allowing Participating State                1008(a) and 4004(a). Specifically, this               (MSWLF) regulations in 40 CFR part
                                             Directors to issue certifications in lieu of             section prohibits any solid waste                     258. 4 Although the CCR rule was
                                             a PE, and the overall risks, especially                  management practices or disposal of                   largely modeled on the MSWLF
                                             health risks, related to CCR. In addition                solid waste that does not comply with                 regulations, as explained in both the
                                             to the testimonies that were entered into                EPA regulations issued under RCRA                     2010 proposed and 2015 final rules,
                                             the rulemaking record, over 25                           section 1008(a) and 4004(a). 42 U.S.C.                under the statutory provisions relevant
                                             additional documents were submitted in                   6944(a). See also 42 U.S.C. 6903(14)                  to the CCR rule, EPA lacked the
                                             hard copy and entered into the docket                    (definition of ‘‘open dump’’). As a                   authority to establish a program
                                             (see EPA–HQ–OLEM–2017–0286).                             general matter, this means that facilities            analogous to part 258, which relies on
                                                                                                      must be in compliance with any EPA                    approved states to implement the
                                             C. Statutory Authority                                   rules issued under section 4004(a) or be              federal criteria through a permitting
                                                RCRA section 1006(b)(1) directs EPA                   subject to suit for ‘‘open dumping’’ 42               program. See, e.g., 80 FR 21332–21334.
                                             to integrate the provisions of RCRA for                  U.S.C. 6945. RCRA section 4005 also                   In the absence of a state oversight
                                             purposes of administration and                           directs that open dumps, i.e., facilities             mechanism to ensure that alternative
                                             enforcement and to avoid duplication,                    out of compliance with EPA’s criteria,                standards would be appropriate, EPA
                                             to the maximum extent practicable, with                  must be ‘‘closed or upgraded’’.                       concluded at that time it could not
                                             the appropriate provisions of other EPA                     RCRA section 4005(d) provides that                 adopt many of the ‘‘more flexible’’
                                             statutes. Section 1006(b) conditions                     States may submit a program to EPA for                performance standards in part 258 that
                                             EPA’s authority to reduce or eliminate                   approval, and permits issued pursuant                 commenters requested. Id at 21333.
                                             RCRA requirements on the Agency’s                        to the approved state permit program                     However, in 2016, Congress, with the
                                             ability to demonstrate that the                          operate in lieu of the Federal                        passage of the WIIN Act, amended
                                             integration can be done in a manner                      requirements 42 U.S.C. 6945(d)(1)(A).                 RCRA to establish a permitting scheme,
                                             consistent with the goals and policies                   To be approved, a State program must                  analogous to that established for
                                             expressed in the chapter and in the                      require each CCR unit to achieve                      MSWLFs. Under these new provisions,
                                             other acts referred to in this subsection.               compliance with the part 257                          States may now apply to EPA for
                                             42 U.S.C. 6005(b)(1). See Chemical                       regulations (or successor regulations) or             approval to operate a permit program to
                                             Waste Management v. EPA, 976 F.2d 2,                     alternative State criteria that EPA has               implement the CCR rule. As part of that
                                             23, 25 (D.C. Cir. 1992).                                 determined are ‘‘at least as protective               process, a State program may also
                                                RCRA section 1008(a) authorizes EPA                   as’’ the part 257 regulations (or                     include alternative State standards,
                                             to publish ‘‘suggested guidelines for                    successor regulations). State permitting              provided EPA has determined they are
                                             solid waste management.’’ 42 U.S.C.
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                                                                                                      programs may be approved in whole or                  ‘‘at least as protective as’’ the CCR
                                             6907(a). RCRA defines solid waste                        in part [42 U.S.C. 6945(d)(1)(B)]. States             regulations in 40 CFR part 257. 42
                                             management as ‘‘the systematic                           with approved CCR permitting programs                 U.S.C. 6945(d)(1)(B), 6945(d)(1)(C).
                                             administration of activities which                       are considered ‘‘participating states’’.
                                             provide for the collection, source                          In states without an approved                        4 Unless other specified, all references to part 258
                                             separation, storage, transportation,                     program, EPA is to issue permits,                     of this preamble are to title 40 of the Code of
                                             transfer, processing, treatment, and                     subject to the availability of                        Federal Regulations (CFR).



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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           36439

                                                In light of the WIIN Act, EPA                         to support the part 258 regulations,                  to certify that certain regulatory criteria
                                             examined the existing 40 CFR part 258                    claiming that it failed to consider the               have been met in lieu of the exclusive
                                             regulations to evaluate the performance                  risks to sensitive subpopulations, that               reliance on a qualified PE. EPA is also
                                             standards that rely on a state permitting                the only impact it evaluated was the risk             adopting revised GWPS for constituents
                                             authority, to determine whether any of                   to human health from drinking MSWLF-                  without a MCL under § 257.95(h)(2).
                                             them could now be incorporated into                      contaminated groundwater, and only if                 After consideration of comments
                                             the part 257 CCR regulations. To                         drinking water wells were within one                  received, EPA has set risk-based values
                                             develop the proposed rule, EPA                           mile of the MSWLF, and that in any                    using the methodology discussed in the
                                             evaluated whether there was sufficient                   event the characteristics of (and                     proposal. In addition, the Agency is
                                             evidence in the record for those                         therefore the risks posed by) MSWLF                   finalizing an extension to the deadline
                                             regulations to support incorporating                     and CCR units are very different. These               by which facilities must cease the
                                             either the part 258 MSWLF provision or                   commenters also argued that EPA could                 placement of waste in CCR units closing
                                             an analogue into the part 257 CCR                        not rely on the 2014 risk assessment                  for cause in two situations: (1) Where
                                             regulations.                                             conducted for the CCR rule to support                 the facility has detected a statistically
                                                Based on the results of this                          the proposals without first evaluating                significant increase over the
                                             evaluation, EPA proposed to adopt six                    whether the assumptions in that                       groundwater protection standard from
                                             alternative performance standards                        assessment are consistent with the                    an unlined surface impoundment; and
                                             modeled after part 258, which would                      results of the recently conducted                     (2) where the unit is unable to comply
                                             allow a Participating State Director to:                 groundwater monitoring, which they                    with the aquifer location restriction.
                                             (1) Establish alternative risk-based                     claim shows that the groundwater at                   Further discussion of these comments
                                             GWPS for constituents where no MCL                       almost all facilities is contaminated by              received on these provisions and the
                                             exists; (2) Modify the corrective action                 at least one of the constituents in                   bases on which EPA is adopting them is
                                             remedy in certain cases; (3) Suspend                     Appendix IV.                                          in their respective sections of this
                                             groundwater monitoring requirements if                      EPA is continuing to evaluate a                    preamble.
                                             a ‘‘no migration’’ demonstration can be                  number of technical issues raised in the                 For any of the proposed performance
                                             made; (4) Establish an alternate period                  comments. At the same time, the                       standards, EPA requested comment on
                                             of time to demonstrate compliance with                   Agency recognizes the need to begin to                whether the facility or owner operator
                                             the corrective action remedy; (5) Modify                 implement the WIIN Act and to                         should be required to post the specific
                                             the post-closure care period; and (6)                    facilitate the transition to regulation of            details of the modification of the
                                             Issue technical certifications in lieu of a              CCR through permit programs in a                      performance standard to the facility’s
                                             professional engineers. Under the                        timely manner in order to address the                 publicly accessible website or require
                                             proposal, EPA would have the same                        urgent concerns presented by facilities               any other recordkeeping options. Based
                                             authority to establish alternative                       that are faced with criteria that may be              on comments received, and to maintain
                                             performance standards in non-                            subject to change through this and other              transparency facilities with a site-
                                             participating states, subject to                         rulemaking actions and quickly                        specific performance standard, such as
                                             appropriations, and in Tribal Country,                   approaching compliance deadlines that                 suspending groundwater monitoring in
                                             as a Participating State Director would.                 may require substantial investments and               the event a no migration demonstration
                                             EPA explained that these alternative                     impact operational decision-making.                   can be made, EPA is requiring posting
                                             performance standards were modeled                       EPA is also mindful that States are in                of specific details of the modification to
                                             after part 258 provisions in the MSWLF                   the process of considering whether to                 a publicly accessible website. This is
                                             regulations that appeared to have been                   seek approval or their regulatory                     discussed further below.
                                             adopted based solely on a finding that                   programs, and in some cases, are in the
                                                                                                                                                            A. Extension to Certain Deadlines for
                                             they would protect human health and                      process of developing those programs;
                                                                                                                                                            the Closure or Retrofit of Existing CCR
                                             the environment; EPA believed that the                   greater certainty regarding the kinds of
                                                                                                                                                            Surface Impoundments
                                             facts supporting those original                          provisions that EPA currently has the
                                             determinations would also support a                      record to approve would consequently                     The CCR rule requires existing CCR
                                             finding that the provisions met the                      be highly desirable in order to effectuate            surface impoundments and landfills to
                                             standard under RCRA section 4004(a).                     the purpose behind the WIIN Act.                      cease receiving waste and initiate
                                                EPA received a number of comments                     Accordingly, while EPA continues to                   closure under certain circumstances.
                                             on this overall approach. Several                        evaluate the concerns raised regarding                For existing CCR surface
                                             commenters agreed that the record                        the 1991 and 2014 risk assessments, the               impoundments, these situations include
                                             supporting any of the current provisions                 Agency is finalizing at this time a select            unlined CCR surface impoundments
                                             under the part 258 regulations would                     number of provisions that either do not               whose groundwater monitoring shows
                                             support revisions to the part 257                        rely on those materials for support to                an exceedance of a GWPS
                                             regulations. EPA also received                           meet the standard in RCRA section                     (§ 257.101(a)(1)); CCR surface
                                             comments stating that the proposed                       4004(a) or rely on portions that are not              impoundments that do not comply with
                                             alternative protection standards failed to               implicated by the technical issues under              the location criteria (§ 257.101(b)(1));
                                             satisfy the requirements of RCRA                         consideration.                                        and CCR surface impoundments that are
                                             section 4004(a). These commenters                           EPA is adopting two of the proposals               not designed and operated to achieve
                                             claimed that the record on which the                     modeled after the existing provisions in              minimum safety factors
                                             proposals had relied was inadequate.                     40 CFR part 258: (1) The Participating                (§ 257.101(b)(2)). The current CCR
                                             Specifically, the commenters argued                      State Director may suspend                            regulations also require existing CCR
                                                                                                                                                            landfills that do not comply with the
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                                             that EPA had in fact considered                          groundwater monitoring requirements if
                                             facilities’ ‘‘practicable capability in                  there is evidence that there is no                    location criteria for unstable areas to
                                             developing every provision of the rule,                  potential for migration of hazardous                  close (§ 257.101(d)(1)). In all of these
                                             and so none were based exclusively on                    constituents to the uppermost aquifer                 situations, also referred to as ‘‘closure
                                             addressing the risks to health and the                   during the active life of the unit and the            for cause’’ in the preamble to 2015 CCR
                                             environment. These commenters also                       post-closure care period; and (2) The                 final rule, the current CCR regulations
                                             criticized the risk assessment conducted                 Participating State Director may decide               specify that the owner or operator of the


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                                             36440               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             unit must cease placing any waste into                   complete the required demonstrations                   issuance of a final rule allowing for an
                                             the CCR unit and initiate closure                        for five location restrictions 6 no later              alternative risk-based option for meeting
                                             activities within six months of making                   than October 17, 2018.7 An owner or                    this location restriction. Other
                                             the relevant determination that the CCR                  operator that fails to complete any one                commenters supported extending
                                             unit must close.                                         of the demonstrations by the deadline                  deadlines until after EPA finalizes the
                                                After considering comments received                   would trigger the closure requirements                 amendments contemplated in the March
                                             in response to the March 15, 2018                        of § 257.101(b)(1), which requires the                 15, 2018 proposal and states have time
                                             proposed rule, as well as information in                 owner or operator of the unit to cease                 to adopt the rule revisions into their
                                             the rulemaking petitions submitted by                    placing CCR and non-CCR wastestreams                   state regulations. Some commenters
                                             USWAG and AES Puerto Rico,5 the                          into the impoundment and close the                     suggested that deadlines be extended a
                                             agency finds it appropriate to finalize an               impoundment in accordance with the                     specific amount of time following the
                                             extension to the deadline by when                        closure provisions of the regulations.                 effective date of a final rule or to
                                             owners or operators must cease the                         EPA received numerous comments                       specific dates. These commenters
                                             placement of waste in existing CCR                       regarding the current deadlines                        recommended extensions ranging from
                                             surface impoundments closing for cause                   associated with the location restrictions.             120 days to 12 months from the final
                                             in two situations. The two situations                    Many commenters stated their support                   rule’s effective date and, while other
                                             include the deadlines applicable to: (1)                 for extending the current deadlines to                 commenters suggested deadlines be
                                             Existing CCR surface impoundments                        complete the required demonstrations                   extended until November 2020. At a
                                             that are unable to comply with the                       for the location restrictions and, in                  minimum, these commenters stated that
                                             location restriction regarding placement                 particular, the location restriction for               EPA should extend the timeline related
                                             above the uppermost aquifer; and (2)                     placement above the uppermost aquifer.                 to the obligation to enter into forced
                                             Existing unlined CCR surface                             These commenters stated that deadline                  closure under § 257.101. Finally,
                                             impoundments whose groundwater                           extensions would allow time for both                   commenters stated that it is common
                                             monitoring shows an exceedance of a                      the proper implementation of the WIIN                  practice for an agency to extend
                                             groundwater protection standard. The                     Act and the finalization of other                      regulatory deadlines in circumstances
                                             agency is not at this time making any                    substantive CCR rule revisions                         where a regulation is under
                                             revisions to the other deadlines that                    contemplated in the March 15, 2018                     reconsideration.
                                             apply to existing CCR surface                            proposal, and would be consistent with                    Other commenters opposed any
                                             impoundments or to any of the deadline                   the standard in RCRA section 4004(a),                  extension of the compliance deadlines
                                             requirements that apply to new and                       while limiting facilities’ expenditure of              associated with the location restrictions.
                                             existing CCR landfills and new CCR                       significant resources and avoiding the                 These commenters stated that an
                                             surface impoundments. The two                            initiation of irreversible operational                 extension is unwarranted due to the
                                             subunits below explain the approach                      changes, including the forced closure of               long history of delays in setting federal
                                             and rationale for the amendments to                      impoundments (and potentially the                      standards and the adverse impacts to
                                             certain deadlines for these two                          power plants themselves) under the                     human health and the environment
                                             situations.                                              current compliance deadlines.                          from improperly sited CCR units.
                                                                                                      Commenters also stated that extensions                 Commenters stated that facilities have
                                             1. Revision of § 257.101(b)(1) Regarding                                                                        had several years to prepare for meeting
                                             the Deadline for Waste Placement and                     of the location restriction deadlines is
                                                                                                      necessary to ensure alignment of key                   the location restrictions and that an
                                             Closure of Existing Surface                                                                                     extension of the deadline is unnecessary
                                             Impoundments That Fail To                                implementation and operational
                                                                                                      decisions under the CCR rule with                      because the facilities should already
                                             Demonstrate Compliance With a                                                                                   have sufficient information to determine
                                             Location Standard                                        EPA’s schedule for issuing revisions to
                                                                                                      the effluent limitations guidelines                    whether their CCR units comply with
                                                In the March 15, 2018 proposed rule,                  (ELGs) and pretreatment standards for                  the location restrictions. Finally, these
                                             EPA solicited public comment on                          the Steam Electric Power Generating                    commenters point out that several
                                             whether the deadlines to comply with                     Point Source Category.8 Some                           utilities have already sought approval
                                             the location restrictions at §§ 257.60                   commenters recommended that the                        from state regulators to close CCR units
                                             through 257.64 are appropriate in light                  deadline for determining whether                       that are not in compliance with the
                                             of the WIIN Act (83 FR 11598). The                       existing impoundments meet the aquifer                 location restrictions. A compliance
                                             Agency sought comment on whether an                      separation location restriction should be              extension would thus penalize
                                             alternative deadline, either through a                   keyed to a specific time following EPA’s               companies that have made good-faith
                                             permit program established under the                                                                            efforts to comply with the current rule,
                                             WIIN Act or one that applies directly to                    6 The five location restrictions are placement      while rewarding companies that have
                                             the facility itself during an interim                    above the uppermost aquifer, wetlands, fault areas,    not prepared properly to comply.
                                             period, would be more appropriate to                     seismic impact zones, and unstable areas.                 EPA first considered whether to
                                             facilitate implementation of the WIIN                       7 Inactive CCR surface impoundments are subject     extend the deadlines by which owners
                                                                                                      to a different deadline as specified in                or operators of CCR surface
                                             Act. Owners and operators of existing                    § 257.100(e)(2).
                                             CCR surface impoundments must                               8 On May 2, 2018, EPA issued the Final 2016
                                                                                                                                                             impoundments must complete the
                                                                                                      Effluent Guidelines Program Plan (83 FR 19281),        location restrictions demonstrations in
                                                5 ‘‘Utility Solid Waste Activities Group Petition     which identifies new or existing industrial            §§ 257.60 through 257.64. Such a rule
                                             for Rulemaking to Reconsider Provisions of the Coal      categories selected for effluent guidelines            revision would have the effect of
                                             Combustion Residuals Rule, 80 FR 21302 (April 17,        rulemakings and provides a schedule for such           delaying the date that facilities would
                                             2015), and Request to Hold in Abeyance Challenge         rulemakings. This 2016 Program Plan discusses
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                                             to Coal Combustion Residual Rule, No. 15–1219, et        that, in August 2017, EPA announced a rulemaking
                                                                                                                                                             need to determine whether its CCR units
                                             al. (D.C. Cir.)’’ dated May 12, 2017; and ‘‘AES          to potentially revise certain standards for existing   are in compliance with the location
                                             Puerto Rico LP’s Petition for Rulemaking to              sources in the Steam Electric Power Generating         restrictions. Most of the commenters
                                             Reconsider Provisions of the Coal Combustion             Point Source Category. The 2016 Program Plan also      raised concern about the current
                                             Residuals Rule, 80 FR 21302 (April 17, 2015), and        projects a schedule for such rulemaking, including
                                             Request to Hold in Abeyance Challenge to the Coal        a proposed rule in December 2018 and a final rule
                                                                                                                                                             deadlines based on the assumption that
                                             Combustion Residuals Rule, No. 15–1219, et al.           in December 2019. See page 6–1 of 2016 Program         the technical performance standards
                                             (D.C. Cir.)’’ dated May 31, 2017.                        Plan.                                                  would subsequently be revised, either


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                            36441

                                             because EPA was reconsidering those                      When these efforts are properly stacked                to be appropriate. The ELG
                                             criteria or because States would revise                  and staggered consistent with accepted                 requirements will be highly relevant to
                                             them as part of their permit programs.                   engineering and project management                     facility’s decisions regarding the
                                             The commenters provided no data or                       practice, the overall duration is                      development of alternative capacity to
                                             other information to suggest that                        approximately 36 months.                               manage non-CCR wastestreams. EPA is
                                             compliance with the existing location                       In both examples discussed                          currently in the process of rulemaking
                                             restriction demonstration deadlines                      previously, the commenter explained                    to consider revising certain standards
                                             presents technical difficulties or is                    that the current regulation also provides              for existing ELGs sources; that
                                             otherwise infeasible. Rather the primary                 inadequate time for proper start-up and                rulemaking is projected to be completed
                                             technical concern raised by the                          commissioning. Reports from industry                   by December 2019. EPA recently
                                             comments was the need for more time                      indicate that it can take several months               changed the earliest ELG compliance
                                             to develop or find alternative capacity to               to properly tune and commission a large                date for FGD and bottom ash wastewater
                                             replace any units that cannot comply                     water treatment plant. The commenter                   to October 2020 to account for these
                                             with the location criteria. As one                       stated that the six months in the existing             potential revisions. See 82 FR 43494.
                                             commenter explained. in a typical state,                 rule is, at best, barely adequate to                   EPA’s original concern thus continues
                                             the process to modify a major                            properly tune a complex wastewater                     to be highly relevant.
                                             wastewater discharge permit as required                  treatment plant to steady state operation                 To address these concerns, EPA
                                             to reroute non-CCR waste water streams                   accounting for quantity and quality                    therefore considered whether an
                                             can take more than a year to complete.                   variations in the non-CCR water                        extension of the deadline in the closure
                                             This commenter also provided concrete                    streams.                                               for cause provisions in § 257.101(b)(1)
                                             examples to support their contention                        After considering all of the comments,              that would better coordinate the
                                             that it may take 18–36 months to find                    EPA considers that the potential for                   compliance and implementation
                                             alternate capacity for their non-CCR                     revisions to the technical criteria                    deadlines between the CCR and ELGs
                                             wastes streams.                                          themselves is too speculative at this                  rules, as suggested by many of the
                                                For a simple project—which the                        stage to form the basis for a regulatory               commenters, was warranted. Such a rule
                                             commenter described as a site that (1)                   revision. EPA received no concrete                     revision would still require facilities to
                                             does not provide base load generation,                   proposals or suggestions for possible                  make the requisite location restriction
                                             and thus there would be minimal                          modifications to the technical criteria                demonstrations by the deadlines
                                             impact to project timing due to planned                  themselves. Nor does EPA currently                     specified earlier (i.e., October 17, 2018),
                                             unit outages to install the piping re-                   have any potential options under                       but would extend the timeframe during
                                             routes and associated mechanical and                     consideration. And none of the States                  which the facility could continue to use
                                             electrical connections; (2) has fewer                    that have submitted applications (or                   the unit, and thereby provide the facility
                                             streams to re-route, operates                            with whom EPA has had discussions)                     with more time to adjust its operations.
                                             intermittently, and (3) has                              for program authorization included any                 This approach would allow facilities to
                                             straightforward low volume waste                         alternative location criteria.                         better coordinate their engineering,
                                             steams (i.e., technically definable in                   Accordingly, EPA has determined not to                 financial and permitting activities under
                                             terms of quantity and quality)—the                       revise the deadlines to complete the                   the two rules, and would account for
                                             overall duration (18 months) is three                    requisite demonstrations.9                             EPA’s on-going ELG rulemaking.
                                             times the 6-month duration provided for                     However, EPA acknowledges that                      Therefore, EPA is extending the closure
                                             by the existing regulations.                             legitimate concerns have been raised                   for cause trigger from the six-month
                                                By contrast, a more complex site the                  about the feasibility of complying with                period currently specified in the rule
                                             overall duration is approximately 36                     the current closure timeframes. EPA                    until October 31, 2020, which increases
                                             months—nearly six times longer in                        considers that the issues discussed                    that time period by approximately 18
                                             duration than currently provided for in                  above are not unique to the commenter,                 months. The agency selected the date to
                                             the existing CCR rule. For a more                        but are shared by facilities across the                coordinate with the revised compliance
                                             complex site, the current water balance                  industry. And these concerns are                       date for the ELG requirements. The
                                             may indicate there are over 50 non-CCR                   equally relevant in this context, as units             agency anticipates completing the ELGs
                                             individual waste streams which go to                     that do not comply with the location                   rulemaking by December 2019 and
                                             the CCR impoundment. Additionally,                       requirements must close pursuant to                    providing nine months from the rule’s
                                             each unit utilizes an FGD that produces                  § 257.101(b)(1).                                       likely publication in January 2020
                                             a waste stream, which also goes to the                      EPA also takes very seriously the                   would be sufficient for facilities to make
                                             CCR impoundment. The FGD waste                           concern that facilities not be                         informed decisions to meet the
                                             water stream has the most complex                        prematurely compelled to make                          requirements of both rules. That 18-
                                             water chemistry and variability of any                   potentially irreversible operational                   month period also corresponds with the
                                             water stream in the plant. Complex                       changes or otherwise be forced to invest               lower end amount of time estimated to
                                             project in terms of the number of                        in compliance measures that may                        be needed to find alternative capacity
                                             streams to re-route, its more consistent                 subsequently need to be modified. This                 for non-CCR watestreams.
                                             operation (and scheduled outages), and                   was part of the reason that EPA                           Finally, EPA considered whether to
                                             its complex water chemistry associated                   originally chose to align key                          apply a time extension to all location
                                             with several of the non-CCR                              implementation and operational                         restrictions, or a subset of them.
                                             wastestreams. Additionally, the large                    decisions under the CCR rule with                      Commenters consistently identified the
                                             number of streams to deal with, some of                  EPA’s schedule for issuing the effluent                placement above the uppermost aquifer
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                                             which only flow intermittently, further                  limitations guidelines and pretreatment                location restriction as the critical
                                             complicates the process design of what                   standards (ELGs) for the Steam Electric                standard, and so EPA has limited its
                                             treatment system is needed. The water                    Power Generating Point Source Category                 revision to address this specific
                                             treatment process equipment alone                                                                               concern. This time extension does not
                                             requires a schedule of 13 months to                        9 These deadlines are codified in §§ 257.60(c)(1),   affect other deadlines in the regulations,
                                             procure, fabricate, and deliver to the                   257.61(c)(1), 257.62(c)(1), 257.63(c)(1), and          and facilities therefore are required to
                                             plant site (excluding construction).                     257.64(d)(1).                                          comply with all requirements of an


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                                             36442               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             operating facility (e.g., inspections),                     EPA received numerous comments on                  that are unlined and already
                                             which are designed to ensure that the                    this issue. The general theme of those                contaminating groundwater.
                                             facility operations will meet the                        comments supportive of an extension                      EPA first considered the request to
                                             statutory standard during this extension                 was similar to that summarized in the                 extend the assessment monitoring
                                             period.                                                  previous subsection addressing location               deadlines to allow States the
                                                                                                      restrictions. Many commenters                         opportunity to establish alternate risk-
                                             2. Revision of § 257.101(a)(1) Regarding                                                                       based GWPS under § 257.95(h). Most of
                                                                                                      emphasized that an extension is needed
                                             the Deadline for Waste Placement and                                                                           the commenters raised concern about
                                                                                                      to properly implement the objectives of
                                             Closure or Retrofit of Existing Unlined                                                                        the current deadlines based on the
                                                                                                      the WIIN Act. Commenters stated that
                                             CCR Surface Impoundments                                                                                       assumption that the GWPS would
                                                                                                      without an extension of the assessment
                                                The agency solicited comment in the                   monitoring deadlines, there would be                  subsequently be revised as part of a
                                             March 15, 2018, proposed rule on                         little to no practical effect from the                State-approved permit program. But the
                                             appropriate time frames for the                          proposed revisions because facilities                 requested extension would have
                                             assessment monitoring requirements (83                   will have to make irreversible decisions              delayed the initiation of closure under
                                             FR 11599). The 2015 regulation                           and investments based on the 2015 rule.               § 257.101(a)(1) and corrective action
                                             establishes a groundwater monitoring                     Many of these commenters identified                   provisions of §§ 257.96 through 257.98
                                             program consisting of detection                          two proposals of greatest concern: (1)                for all constituents, not merely for the
                                             monitoring, assessment monitoring and                    The ability of facilities to establish risk-          four without MCLs that commenters
                                                                                                      based GWPSs for Appendix IV                           believed were likely to be revised.
                                             corrective action. Because the current
                                                                                                      constituents without MCLs; and (2) the                   As discussed Unit IV.B of this
                                             assessment monitoring program
                                                                                                      incorporation of risk-based flexibility               preamble, EPA is establishing health-
                                             includes a series of 90-day time periods                                                                       based GWPSs for all four of the
                                             in which an owner or operator is to                      into the corrective action program.
                                                                                                      These commenters stated that the                      constituents in Appendix IV without
                                             perform the required analysis and                                                                              established MCLs. These revised
                                             demonstrations, EPA sought comment                       current schedule of the assessment
                                                                                                      monitoring program does not provide                   standards, because they are health-based
                                             on whether 90 days is an appropriate                                                                           standards, are not expected to be
                                             time period for the assessment                           time for these provisions to take effect
                                                                                                      before some facilities will be compelled              affected by State programs, which
                                             monitoring requirements in light of the                                                                        alleviate the concern that facilities will
                                             WIIN Act. The agency specifically                        to initiate corrective action and/or
                                                                                                      forced to close could qualify for the new             be forced to take action in response to
                                             requested comment on whether                                                                                   standards that are likely to be revised.
                                             alternative time periods are necessary to                alternative closure provision. Some
                                                                                                      commenters also argued that the                       EPA therefore has no basis to revise the
                                             perform the required analysis and                                                                              assessment monitoring deadlines.
                                             demonstrations and whether such                          existing deadline associated with
                                                                                                                                                               Nevertheless, as noted previously,
                                             alternative time periods would be more                   implementing the GWPS, in particular
                                                                                                                                                            numerous commenters raised concern
                                             appropriate to facilitate implementation                 those associated with assessment                      that compliance with the current
                                             of the WIIN Act and any amendments to                    monitoring are too short to adequately                closure requirements is not technically
                                             the CCR regulations as a result of the                   identify the source and extent of an                  feasible. These concerns, and the
                                             March 15, 2018 proposed rule.                            exceedance. Commenters urged the                      considerations motivating EPA to revise
                                                                                                      Agency to extend these deadlines or, at               the deadlines for the aquifer location
                                                The groundwater monitoring program
                                                                                                      a minimum, to defer the obligation to                 criterion, are equally relevant in this
                                             requires an owner or operator of a CCR
                                                                                                      establish groundwater protection                      context, as unlined surface
                                             unit to install a system of monitoring
                                                                                                      standards until after EPA adopts these                impoundments units that are leaking
                                             wells and specify procedures for
                                                                                                      two proposals.                                        must close, in accordance with
                                             sampling these wells, in addition to
                                             methods for analyzing the groundwater                       Commenters also stated that an                     § 257.101(a)(1). EPA therefore
                                             data collected, to detect the presence of                extension is necessary to align key                   considered whether an extension of the
                                             specified constituents and other                         implementation and operational                        deadline in § 257.101(a)(1) to initiate the
                                             monitoring parameters released from the                  decisions under the CCR rule with                     closure of unlined surface
                                             units. Among other requirements, the                     EPA’s schedule for revising the ELGs for              impoundments, similar to the extension
                                             2015 regulations required facilities to                  the Steam Electric Power Generating                   of the deadlines for the location
                                             have installed the groundwater                           Point Source Category. Other                          restrictions, would address the
                                             monitoring system and initiated                          commenters suggested that deadlines be                commenters’ concerns. Such a provision
                                             detection monitoring no later than                       extended a specific amount of time                    would require facilities to follow the
                                             October 17, 2017.10 Some CCR units are                   following the effective date of a final               assessment monitoring procedures and
                                             currently operating under the                            rule. These commenters recommended                    determine whether any contaminants
                                             assessment monitoring provisions of the                  extensions ranging from 120 days to 12                have been detected at statistically
                                             regulations. Facilities monitoring                       months from the final rule’s effective                significant levels above the GWPS
                                             groundwater under the assessment                         date.                                                 established under § 257.95(h). A facility
                                             monitoring program are required to                          Other commenters opposed any                       that makes such a determination would
                                             close or retrofit an unlined CCR surface                 extension of the deadlines associated                 still be required to initiate corrective
                                             impoundment if the monitoring results                    with the assessment monitoring                        action to clean up the contamination in
                                             show that the concentrations of one or                   program. These commenters stated that                 the aquifer, but could continue to use
                                             more of the constituents listed in                       an extension is unwarranted due to the                the unit for an extended period, which
                                                                                                      long history of delays in setting federal             would provide the facility with more
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                                             Appendix IV to part 257 are detected at
                                             statistically significant levels above any               standards and the adverse impacts to                  time to adjust their operations. This
                                             GWPS. § 257.101(b)(1).                                   human health and the environment                      approach would allow facilities to better
                                                                                                      from improperly sited CCR units.                      coordinate their engineering, financial
                                                10 Inactive CCR surface impoundments are subject      Commenters stated their opposition to                 and permitting activities under the two
                                             to a different deadline as specified in                  revising the regulations that would                   rules, and would align with EPA’s
                                             § 257.100(e)(5).                                         allow facilities to continue to CCR units             recent and on-going ELG rulemakings.


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                          36443

                                             Therefore, EPA has extended the closure                  Assessment,12 which amends 51 FR                      levels where no MCL has been
                                             for cause trigger by the same 18-month                   34028 (September 24, 1986); and the                   established for an Appendix IV
                                             period granted for the location                          Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk                        constituent.
                                             restrictions. The agency selected the                    Assessment,13 which amends 51 FR                         Comments were also received
                                             date October 31, 2020, to coordinate                     33992 (September 24, 1986). Also, EPA                 opposing the proposal to allow
                                             with the revised earliest compliance                     proposed to add guidance on deriving a                Participating State Directors to approve
                                             date for the ELG requirements. The                       reference dose, Reference Dose (RfD):                 an alternative GWPS. Concerns raised
                                             Agency anticipates completing the ELG                    Description and Use in Health Risk                    included lack of resources or technical
                                             rulemaking by December 2019 and                          Assessments.14                                        expertise at state agencies, and the
                                             providing nine months from the rule’s                       EPA also proposed to incorporate the               failure to require any alternative GWPS
                                             likely publication in January 2020, for                  part 258 requirement that the alternative             to be protective of sensitive subgroups,
                                             facilities to make appropriate decisions                 GWPS be based on scientifically valid                 which is included in the MSWLF
                                             knowing the requirements of both rules.                  studies conducted in accordance with                  regulations at 40 CFR 258.55(i).
                                                                                                      the Toxic Substances Control Act Good                 Commenters opposed to this proposal
                                                This time extension does not affect
                                                                                                      Laboratory Practice Standards (40 CFR                 raised concerns that it would: Establish
                                             other deadlines or any other
                                                                                                      part 792) or the equivalent. For non-                 vague, unenforceable guidelines; fail to
                                             requirement in the regulations, and
                                                                                                      carcinogens, EPA proposed to require                  address ecological risk or cancer risk;
                                             facilities therefore remain obligated to
                                                                                                      that States use a reference dose with a               ignore health-based exposure
                                             comply with all requirements of an
                                                                                                      hazard quotient (HQ) of 1 as the upper                concentrations that are already
                                             operating facility (e.g., inspections),
                                                                                                      bound on risk, to establish the                       developed; and would ultimately allow
                                             which are designed to ensure that the
                                                                                                      alternative GWPS. This methodology                    states to increase risks to human health
                                             facility operations will meet the
                                                                                                      was the same as that used to establish                and the environment above the statutory
                                             statutory standard during this extension                                                                       standard. Commenters also called
                                             period.                                                  the technical criteria in the 2015 CCR
                                                                                                      regulation. EPA’s proposal explained                  attention to that allowing Participating
                                             B. Alternative Risk-Based Groundwater                    that reliance on this methodology was                 State Directors to set alternative
                                             Protection Standards                                     reasonable as it would ensure that this               standards could result in variability in
                                                                                                      provision (and any alternative GWPS                   regulatory standards for chemicals that
                                                The 2015 CCR rule required the CCR                    eventually established under this                     present the same health risks, regardless
                                             unit owner or operator to set the GWPS                   provision) would meet the requisite                   of geography. Commenters also raised
                                             at the MCL or to background for all                      statutory standard. Examples of                       concerns about protectiveness of the
                                             constituents in Appendix IV to part 257                  groundwater values consistent with the                proposed approach and EPA’s ability to
                                             that are detected at a statistically                     proposed requirements were provided,                  use the part 258 record to support
                                             significant level above background.                      including Action Levels promulgated                   providing discretion to Participating
                                             MCLs are levels of constituent                           under the Safe Drinking Water Act and                 State Directors. One group of
                                             concentrations promulgated under                         the Regional Screening Levels for                     commenters maintained that it is
                                             section 1412 of the Safe Drinking Water                  Chemical Contaminants at Superfund                    arbitrary and insufficiently protective to
                                             Act. If no MCL exists for a detected                     Sites.15 EPA solicited comment on the                 let states establish GWPS where EPA
                                             constituent, then the GWPS needed to                     revised approach to establishing an                   has already established risk-based levels
                                             be set at background. In cases where the                 alternative GWPS.                                     for Appendix IV constituents with no
                                             background level is higher than the                         Significant comments were received                 established MCL, also citing the
                                             promulgated MCL for a constituent, the                   in support of the proposal to allow                   Superfund program’s ‘‘Regional
                                             GWPS was to be set at the background                     States to approve an alternative GWPS.                Screening Levels’’ (RSLs).
                                             level.                                                   Commenters stated that States have                       Some comments requesting that EPA
                                                In March 2018, EPA proposed to                        robust regulatory frameworks to regulate              consider established, available health-
                                             amend the 2015 CCR rule to incorporate                   groundwater protection, that allowing                 protective benchmarks for Appendix IV
                                             certain requirements from 40 CFR part                    this flexibility is consistent with how               constituents, such as RSLs, and well-
                                             258 that would allow Participating State                 requirements for MSWLFs are                           established assessment methodology for
                                             Directors, and EPA where it is the                       implemented under Subtitle D, and that                developing more site-specific GWPS.
                                             permitting authority, flexibility to                     the oversight and enforcement                         One industry commenter maintained
                                             approve an alternative GWPS, which                       authorities provided in the WIIN Act                  that ‘‘Of particular relevance to the CCR
                                             was required to be derived in a manner                   allow EPA to ensure States will set                   Rule are the risk-based policies and
                                             consistent with Agency guidelines.                       protective standards. Commenters also                 resources for the protection and
                                             Some of the risk guidelines used to                      stated that risk-based alternative GWPS               remediation of impacted groundwater
                                             support establishment of the part 258                    would be more appropriate than the                    that U.S. EPA has developed.
                                             regulations had since been replaced or                   current requirement to use background                 Specifically, U.S. EPA has established
                                             supplemented, so the proposal                                                                                  Regional Screening Levels (RSLs) to
                                             referenced the updated versions.                           12 USEPA, ‘‘Guidelines for Developmental            assess potential human health risks
                                             Specifically, EPA cited to the                           Toxicity Risk Assessment’’, EPA/600/FR–91/001,        from chemicals in soil, water, and
                                             Supplementary Guidance for                               December 1991. This document can be accessed at       air. . . . These values assist risk
                                                                                                      https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/recordisplay.         assessors in determining whether levels
                                             Conducting Health Risk Assessment of                     cfm?deid=23162.
                                             Chemical Mixtures,11 which                                 13 USEPA, ‘‘Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk
                                                                                                                                                            of constituents at a site may warrant
                                                                                                                                                            further investigation or cleanup, or
                                             supplements 51 FR 34014 (September                       Assessment’’, EPA/630/P–03/001F, March 2005.
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                                                                                                      This document can be accessed at https://             whether no further investigation is
                                             24, 1986); the Guidelines for
                                                                                                      www.epa.gov/risk/guidelines-carcinogen-risk-          required.’’ The commenter goes on to
                                             Developmental Toxicity Risk                              assessment.                                           explain that RSLs, while protective, are
                                                                                                        14 This document can be accessed at https://
                                                                                                                                                            significantly higher than background
                                               11 USEPA, ‘‘Supplementary Guidance for                 www.epa.gov/iris/reference-dose-rfd-description-
                                             Conducting Health Risk Assessment of Chemical            and-use-health-risk-assessments.                      concentrations of cobalt, lithium, and
                                             Mixtures’’, EPA/630/R–00/002, August 2000. This            15 This document can be accessed at https://        molybdenum collected by USGS. Using
                                             document can be accessed in the docket.                  www.epa.gov/risk/regional-screening-levels-rsls.      the RSLs instead of background would


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                                             36444               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             avoid corrective action costs of cleaning                that does not rely on the part 258 record             relied upon relevant exposure
                                             up to background levels without                          for support, and also balances                        information from the 2008 Child-
                                             providing any health benefit. See EPA–                   commenters’ concerns. EPA has                         Specific Exposure Factors Handbook,17
                                             HQ–OLEM–2017–0286–1314,                                  developed a specific GWPS for each of                 the Exposure Factors Handbook: 2011
                                             Attachment 2, pp. 2. An environmental                    the four constituents in Appendix IV                  Edition 18 and the 2014 Human Health
                                             commenter, concerned about the                           without an MCL, to be used in place of                Evaluation Manual, Supplemental
                                             potential for states to set their own                    the default background concentrations                 Guidance: Update of Standard.19 Values
                                             standards, said, ‘‘In the case of EPA’s                  currently required under § 257.95(h)(2).              based on residential receptors were used
                                             coal ash regulations, not only is EPA in                 Adopting national criteria will provide               to capture the range of current and
                                             a better position to establish health-                   health-based standards available to                   future potential receptors. EPA
                                             protective levels for each non-MCL                       facilities now to use to compare against              identified toxicity values according to
                                             constituent, but the Agency has already                  monitored groundwater concentrations                  the hierarchy established in the 2003
                                             done so.’’ The commenter goes on to say                  and develop cleanup goals. Note that a                Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
                                             that ‘‘If EPA chooses to allow                           State Director may always seek approval               Response Directive 9285.7–53,20 which
                                             groundwater protection standards other                   for alternative State criteria as part of             encourages prioritization of values from
                                             than background, those standards must                    the process under the WIIN Act; this                  sources that are current, transparent and
                                             be no less stringent than the EPA RSLs                   could, for example, include the                       publicly available, and that have been
                                             or health advisories.’’ See EPA–HQ–                      establishment of alternative GWPS for                 peer reviewed. Finally, EPA used the
                                             OLEM–2017–0286–2136 pp. 134–139.                         the constituents listed in Appendix IV.               same toxicity values (reference doses)
                                                In the proposal, EPA also solicited                   See 42 U.S.C. 6945(d)(1)(B)(ii), (C),                 that were used in the risk assessment
                                             comment on whether an alternative risk-                  requiring the Administrator to approve                supporting the 2015 CCR Rule. Cancer
                                             based GWPS could be established by an                    a State permit program that allows a                  slope factors (CSF) were not identified
                                             independent technical expert or experts                  State to include technical standards for              for any of the relevant constituents. The
                                             where there is no approved permitting                    individual permits or conditions of                   finalized GWPS for cobalt, lithium, and
                                             authority. Numerous commenters                           approval that differ from the criteria                molybdenum were set using a target
                                             opposed this suggestion, for reasons                     under part 257 of title 40, Code of                   based on a HQ = 1 for Participating State
                                             including: (1) EPA previously rejected                   Federal Regulations if, based on site-                Directors to follow.
                                             that approach in the 40 CFR part 258                     specific conditions, the Administrator                   Commenters noted that a reference
                                             regulations, which restricted this                       determines that the technical standards               dose (RfD) has not been established for
                                             provision to Participating State                         established pursuant to a State permit                lead because of the difficulty in
                                             Directors; (2) EPA does not provide an                   program are at least as protective as the             identifying a ‘‘threshold’’ level, below
                                             adequate record to support such a                        criteria under that part.                             which adverse effects are not known or
                                             proposal; (3) Such a regulation, if                         Specifically, the Agency is adopting               anticipated to occur. EPA acknowledges
                                             finalized, would fail to satisfy the                     the following health-based levels as the              the commenters’ concern and has set the
                                             protectiveness standard in RCRA                          GWPSs for the four Appendix IV                        GWPS for lead at the Action Level
                                             section 4004(a). Commenters in support                   constituents without a designated MCL:                established under section 1412 of the
                                             of this primarily cited the pending                      6 micrograms per liter (mg/L) for cobalt;             Safe Drinking Water Act, which
                                             compliance dates in the CCR rule as a                    40 mg/L for lithium, and 100 mg/L for                 addresses comments received
                                             reason to allow an alternative GWPS to                   molybdenum. EPA is adopting the                       supporting the use of existing EPA risk-
                                             be established under the self-                           alternative GWPS for lead at 15 mg/L.                 based standards. Because transport
                                             implementing program. Commenters                         These levels were derived using the                   through ground water is the primary
                                             expressed concern that by the time                       same methodology that EPA proposed to                 risk pathway identified in the 2014 Risk
                                             States receive approval of permitting                    require States to use to establish                    Assessment, this revised GWPS is
                                             programs and EPA establishes its own                     alternative GWPS (See, 83 FR 11598–
                                             permitting program, groundwater                          11599, 11613). The methodology                           17 USEPA ‘‘Child-Specific Exposure Factors

                                             monitoring deadlines would have                          follows Agency guidelines for                         Handbook’’ can be accessed in the docket or at
                                             passed and it would be too late to                                                                             https://cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/recordisplay.
                                                                                                      assessment of human health risks of an                cfm?deid=199243.
                                             establish alternative GWPSs. To
                                                                                                      environmental pollutant. This means                      18 USEPA ‘‘Exposure Facots Handbook: 2011
                                             illustrate this point, one industry
                                                                                                      that these GWPSs are expected to be                   Edition’’ can be accessed in the docket or at https://
                                             commenter stated that half of its CCR                                                                          cfpub.epa.gov/ncea/risk/recordisplay.cfm?deid=
                                                                                                      concentrations to which the human
                                             units could be forced to initiate                                                                              236252.
                                                                                                      population could be exposed to on a
                                             alternate source demonstrations or                                                                                19 2014 Human Health Evaluation Manual,
                                                                                                      daily basis without an appreciable risk               Supplemental Guidance: Update of Standard can be
                                             corrective action assessment based
                                                                                                      of deleterious effects during a lifetime.             accessed in the docket or at https://www.epa.gov/
                                             solely on having detected Appendix IV                       Specifically, EPA used the equations               risk/update-standard-default-exposure-factors.
                                             constituents with no MCLs above                                                                                   20 Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response
                                                                                                      in the Risk Assessment Guidance for
                                             background levels. Commenters stated                                                                           Directive 9285.7–53 can be accessed in the docket
                                                                                                      Superfund (RAGS) Part B to calculate                  or at https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyNET.exe/
                                             that the oversight and enforcement
                                                                                                      these revised GWPS.16 RAGS Part B                     91015CKS.TXT?ZyActionD=ZyDocument&
                                             authorities provided to EPA by the WIIN
                                                                                                      provides guidance on using drinking                   Client=EPA&Index=2000+Thru+2005&Docs=&
                                             Act would ensure that site-specific                                                                            Query=&Time=&EndTime=&SearchMethod=1&
                                                                                                      water ingestion rates and toxicity values
                                             alternative GWPS established by                                                                                TocRestrict=n&Toc=&TocEntry=&QField=&
                                                                                                      to derive risk-based remediation goals.
                                             independent experts are protective.                                                                            QFieldYear=&QFieldMonth=&QFieldDay=&
                                                EPA agrees with commenters that                       The use of these methods, consistent                  IntQFieldOp=0&ExtQFieldOp=0&XmlQuery=&
                                                                                                      with EPA risk assessment guidelines                   File=D%3A%5Czyfiles%5CIndex%20Data%
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                                             State programs are unlikely to be                                                                              5C00thru05%5CTxt%5C00000030%5C91015CKS
                                             developed and approved prior to the                      addresses commenters’ concerns about
                                                                                                                                                            .txt&User=ANONYMOUS&Password=anonymous&
                                             critical deadlines in the CCR rule. EPA                  protecting sensitive populations. EPA                 SortMethod=h%7C-&MaximumDocuments=1&
                                             continues to evaluate technical issues,                                                                        FuzzyDegree=0&ImageQuality=r75g8/r75g8/x150y
                                                                                                        16 Risk Assessment Guidance for Superfund           150g16/i425&Display=hpfr&DefSeekPage
                                             and the various concerns raised by the                   (RAGS) Part B can be accessed at https://             =x&SearchBack=ZyActionL&Back=ZyActionS&
                                             commenters, but the Agency has                           www.epa.gov/risk/risk-assessment-guidance-            BackDesc=Results%20page&MaximumPages=1&
                                             developed the alternative adopted today                  superfund-rags-part-b.                                ZyEntry=1&SeekPage=x&ZyPURL.



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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                          36445

                                             anticipated to be protective of human                    finalized for the part 257 regulations                Moreover, the determinations required
                                             health at these sites.                                   would be identical to that in the part                to support the waiver are highly
                                                                                                      258 regulations with the exception for                technical, and thus not readily
                                             C. Modification of Groundwater
                                                                                                      the requirement to periodically                       evaluated during an inspection, by an
                                             Monitoring Requirements
                                                                                                      demonstrate that conditions have not                  inspector who may be able to document
                                                The current regulations at § 257.90                   changed, that is, there is still no                   that the supporting analyses exist but is
                                             require all CCR units, without                           migration of Appendix III or IV                       unlikely to have the time or expertise
                                             exception, to comply with the                            constituents from the CCR unit to the                 necessary to evaluate their scientific
                                             groundwater monitoring and corrective                    uppermost aquifer.                                    adequacy. Consequently, this provision
                                             action requirements of §§ 257.90                            The proposal acknowledged the                      requires the additional layer of
                                             through 257.98. The final CCR rule at                    difficulties of meeting the ‘‘no potential            protection associated with having
                                             § 257.91(a)(2) requires the installation of              for migration’’ standard (83 FR 11602).               review by a regulatory authority, which
                                             groundwater monitoring wells at the                      The suspension of monitoring                          would have the necessary technical
                                             waste boundary of the CCR unit.                          requirements is intended only for those               expertise on staff, evaluate the request
                                                EPA is adopting a final provision that                CCR units located in hydrogeologic                    prior to its adoption.
                                             incorporates only minimal revisions                      settings in which the Appendix III and                   Some commenters did not support the
                                             from the proposal. The Agency                            IV constituents will not migrate to                   ‘‘no migration’’ proposal. One
                                             recognizes that certain hydrogeologic                    groundwater during the active life of the             commenter explained that groundwater
                                             settings may preclude the migration of                   unit, as well as closure and post-closure             monitoring for CCR units had just barely
                                             hazardous constituents from CCR                          periods. The proposal also stressed that              taken effect and the first round of
                                             disposal units to groundwater resources.                 a ‘‘no migration’’ waiver from certain                groundwater monitoring data was first
                                             Requiring groundwater monitoring in                      RCRA requirements has been a                          published on March 2, 2018. This
                                             these settings would provide little or no                component of both the part 258 and the                commenter also stated that all CCR
                                             additional protection to human health                    RCRA subtitle C groundwater                           facilities should be required to do
                                             and the environment. EPA considers                       monitoring programs for many years,                   groundwater monitoring to establish a
                                             that the final criteria are sufficiently                 and, based on its experience under these              baseline. Another commenter stated that
                                             precise and determinate that they will                   programs, the Agency expects that cases               due to the nature of sedimentary
                                             ensure that waivers are granted only in                  where the ‘‘no migration’’ criteria are               geological formations, fractures and
                                             those rare situations, and therefore, EPA                met will be rare.                                     fissures may exist throughout a coal-
                                             is incorporating the revised provision                      There were many general comments                   mined site, mined areas may settle and
                                             into the part 257 regulations.                           supporting the suspension of                          surface impoundments may leak.
                                                As proposed, the Participating State                  groundwater monitoring requirements if                Therefore, suspension of groundwater
                                             Director would be allowed to suspend                     it can be demonstrated that there is no               monitoring should not be allowed.
                                             the groundwater monitoring                               potential for migration of hazardous                     EPA has determined that if a facility
                                             requirements under §§ 257.90 through                     constituents from the CCR unit to the                 meets the criteria to demonstrate that
                                             257.95 if the owner or operator can                      uppermost aquifer. These commenters                   there is no potential for migration at the
                                             demonstrate that there is no potential                   supported this provision because it                   unit, then the groundwater monitoring
                                             for migration of any CCR constituents                    allows for more site-specific flexibility             requirements of §§ 257.90 through
                                             from that CCR unit to the uppermost                      and prevents burdensome monitoring                    257.96 would not be necessary.
                                             aquifer during the active life of the unit,              requirements that are unnecessary for                 However, the regulation requires that
                                             closure, and the post-closure care                       protection of human health and the                    demonstrations of no potential for
                                             period. The demonstration must be                        environment. A commenter also stated                  migration must be supported by both
                                             certified by a PE or approved by a                       that it is unnecessary to incur ongoing               predictions that maximize contaminant
                                             Participating State Director or approved                 monitoring costs if a unit has no impact              migration and actual field data collected
                                             EPA where EPA is the permitting                          to groundwater.                                       at the site. Field sampling is necessary
                                             authority, and must be based upon:                          Supporters of the ‘‘no migration’’                 to establish the site’s hydrogeological
                                                (1) Site-specific field collected                     waiver also stated that it should not be              characteristics and must include an
                                             measurements, sampling, and analysis                     limited to facilities operating under a               evaluation of unsaturated and saturated
                                             of physical, chemical, and biological                    state or EPA CCR permit program, and                  zone characteristics to ascertain the flow
                                             processes affecting contaminant fate and                 should be broadened so that a qualified               rate and pathways by which
                                             transport, and                                           technical expert can make the no                      contaminants may migrate to
                                                (2) Contaminant fate and transport                    migration determination under the self-               groundwater. Thus, facilities would be
                                             predictions that maximize contaminant                    implementing CCR program.                             expected to collect site-specific data
                                             migration and consider impacts on                        Commenters stated that the potential for              relating to conditions, geology, water
                                             human health and environment.                            abuse no longer exists due to the public              levels, etc. as well as contaminant
                                             This would allow the Participating State                 notification requirements and EPA’s                   concentrations in the aquifer.
                                             Director or EPA where EPA is the                         inspection and enforcement authority                     The proposal included four
                                             permitting authority to suspend the                      provided by the WIIN Act.                             conditions that would be required for a
                                             groundwater monitoring requirements                         Groundwater monitoring is one of the               facility to receive a waiver from
                                             in §§ 257.91 through 257.95 for a CCR                    key provisions under the regulations                  groundwater monitoring. The first
                                             unit upon demonstration by the owner                     that protect health and the environment,              condition is that the suspension of
                                             or operator that there is no potential for               as it ensures that contamination is                   groundwater monitoring requirements
                                             migration of hazardous constituents                      detected and remediated. If the unit                  in §§ 257.91 through 257.95 is available
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                                             from the unit to the uppermost aquifer                   does leak and contaminants migrate into               only for owners and operators of CCR
                                             during the active life, closure, or post-                the aquifer, without monitoring there is              units located in participating states. As
                                             closure periods. However, the                            no guarantee that those contaminants                  discussed previously the Agency has
                                             requirements of §§ 257.96 through                        will be detected quickly, or necessarily              limited the availability of the waiver
                                             257.98 would not be suspended. As                        at all. The potential consequences of                 because of the need to review a no-
                                             discussed below, the provision being                     this provision are therefore significant.             migration demonstration prior to


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                                             36446               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             granting a waiver from groundwater                       believes the categories listed above and              collectively work to ensure there is no
                                             monitoring. However, in this final                       other site-specific information as                    potential for migration. For example, the
                                             action, the Agency is expanding this                     required by the Participating State                   regulation also requires the evaluation
                                             provision to allow EPA the ability to                    Director or EPA where EPA is the                      of Climatic Conditions such as annual
                                             review a no-migration demonstration to                   permitting authority will provide the                 precipitation and leachate generation
                                             grant a waiver from groundwater                          necessary information, data, and                      estimates. All of the regulatory factors
                                             monitoring where EPA is the permitting                   analyses to determine the physical,                   together work to ensure that, when
                                             authority.                                               chemical, and biological processes                    considering a ‘‘no migration’’
                                                The second condition is that the rule                 affecting the migration of CCR                        determination, in the event of a leak
                                             requires demonstrations of no potential                  constituents. As discussed below, these               from a CCR unit, the constituents will
                                             for migration to be supported by both                    criteria have largely been included in                not migrate to the uppermost aquifer
                                             predictions that maximize contaminant                    the final rule, with modifications to                 during the lifetime of the unit and post-
                                             migration and actual field data collected                account for the differences between the               closure care.
                                             at the site. The proposal explained in                   Part 258 constituents, which include                     Another comment received on the 10-
                                             great detail how the different properties                organics, and Appendix IV CCR                         year interval is that if the existing
                                             should be measured, building on                          constituents, which are metals.                       monitoring wells remain in place during
                                             guidance developed for part 258 (83 FR                      The third condition is that                        the 10-year interval, those wells may be
                                             11602). EPA explained in the proposal                    demonstrations be certified by a                      neglected and not usable for sampling at
                                             that the site-specific information called                qualified PE and approved by the                      the end of the 10-year interval. If the
                                             for under the proposed regulation to                     Participating State Director or EPA                   existing monitoring wells are filled and
                                             make the demonstration must include,                     where EPA is the permitting authority to              sealed and new monitoring wells are
                                             at a minimum, the following                              ensure that there is a high degree of                 installed, the ability to effectively
                                             information to evaluate or interpret the                 confidence that no contamination will                 compare data at the same location over
                                             effects of the following properties or                   reach the uppermost aquifer.                          time may be lost. The commenter stated
                                             processes on contaminant fate and                           The fourth condition requires the                  that EPA should consider either
                                             transport:                                               owner or operator of the CCR unit to                  removing the 10-year recurring
                                                (1) Aquifer Characteristics, including                remake the demonstration every 10                     demonstration requirement or add some
                                             hydraulic conductivity, hydraulic                        years or sooner, if there is evidence                 minimum monitoring requirements at
                                             gradient, effective porosity, aquifer                    migration has occurred, as determined                 shorter intervals (e.g., groundwater
                                             thickness, degree of saturation,                         by the Participating State Director or                elevations) to ensure maintenance of the
                                             stratigraphy, degree of fracturing and                   EPA where EPA is the permitting                       monitoring wells.
                                             secondary porosity of soils and bedrock,                 authority. This new demonstration is                     EPA does not agree that monitoring
                                             aquifer heterogeneity, groundwater                       required to be submitted to the                       wells will necessarily be unused during
                                             discharge, and groundwater recharge                      Participating State Director or EPA                   the 10-year interval. The proposal
                                             areas;                                                   where EPA is the permitting authority                 discussed how the ‘‘no migration’’
                                                (2) Waste Characteristics, including                  one year before the existing                          demonstration involves complying with
                                             quantity, type, and origin;                              groundwater monitoring suspension is                  rigorous requirements. Modeling may be
                                                (3) Climatic Conditions, including                    due to expire. If the suspension expires              useful for assessing and verifying the
                                             annual precipitation, leachate                           for any reason, the unit must begin                   potential for migration of hazardous
                                             generation estimates, and effects on                     groundwater monitoring according to                   constituents. Models used should be
                                             leachate quality;                                        § 257.90(a) within 90 days.                           based on actual field collected data to
                                                (4) Leachate Characteristics, including                  EPA received several public                        adequately predict potential
                                             leachate composition, solubility,                        comments both supporting and                          groundwater contamination. When
                                             density, the presence of immiscible                      opposing this 10-year demonstration                   owners or operators prepare to re-certify
                                             constituents, Eh, and pH;                                clause. A commenter stated that the                   a no migration demonstration, they
                                                (5) Engineered Controls, including                    provisions for the suspension of                      must verify that the unit continues to
                                             liners, cover systems, and aquifer                       groundwater monitoring depart from the                meet the standard—i.e., that there is still
                                             controls (e.g., lowering the water table).               part 258 provisions on which they were                no potential for migration of
                                             These should be evaluated under design                   modeled, by limiting any such                         contaminants from the unit to the
                                             and failure conditions to estimate their                 suspension to a maximum 10-year term                  uppermost aquifer. To support this
                                             long-term residual performance;                          and requiring a re-demonstration for                  demonstration some type of field data,
                                                (6) Attenuation of contaminants in the                subsequent suspension approvals.                      such as groundwater elevation
                                             subsurface, including adsorption/                           One commenter stated that if any                   measurements, would normally be
                                             desorption reactions, ion exchange                       breakthrough occurs in the CCR unit, 10               collected during the 10-year period. The
                                             organic content of soil, soil water pH,                  years is too long and would allow                     10-year requirement to renew a waiver
                                             and consideration of possible reactions                  contamination to move toward adjacent                 ensures that no dramatic changes have
                                             causing chemical transformation or                       discharge points, including pumping                   occurred that may cause contamination.
                                             chelation; and                                           wells at nearby homes, farms and                         One commenter stated that EPA
                                                (7) Microbiological Degradation,                      businesses, as well as streams,                       should adopt separate standards for the
                                             which may attenuate target compounds                     potentially endangering human health                  suspension of groundwater monitoring
                                             or cause transformations of compounds,                   and the environment.                                  for CCR landfills and CCR surface
                                             potentially forming more toxic chemical                     As discussed in more detail below,                 impoundments. The commenter stated
                                                                                                      any site-specific demonstration to                    that CCR landfills should not be
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                                             species.
                                                No migration petitions will vary                      satisfy the ‘‘no migration’’ threshold                required to conduct a new
                                             considerably. The petition content will                  involves several distinct criteria relating           demonstration once every 10 years to
                                             be strongly influenced by the type of                    to site conditions. Because, as the                   show that suspension of groundwater
                                             unit for which a variance is sought and                  commenter notes, engineered controls                  monitoring continues to be appropriate.
                                             the methods chosen to demonstrate that                   do fail facilities will be required to                EPA disagrees with this comment as the
                                             there is no potential for migration. EPA                 demonstrate that site conditions will                 ‘‘no migration’’ waiver is dependent


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                36447

                                             upon site-specific hydrogeology, which                   were discussed in the preamble to the                     certified by a qualified professional
                                             can potentially change overtime, and                     proposed rule at 83 FR 11602. EPA                         engineer (PE) in order to provide
                                             the criteria for the waiver are not                      omitted two categories from this original                 verification of the facility’s technical
                                             specific to either landfills or surface                  list to account for the differences                       judgments and to otherwise ensure that
                                             impoundments.                                            between the Part 258 constituents and                     the provisions of the rule were properly
                                                EPA considered the comments and is                    the Appendix IV CCR constituents. The                     applied. While EPA acknowledged that
                                             adopting the proposal with minor                         part 258 constituents include organic                     relying upon a third-party certification
                                             revisions to ensure that the regulatory                  compounds, and so factors, such as                        was not the same as relying upon a state
                                             language accurately reflects the                         natural attenuation, are relevant to                      or federal regulatory authority and was
                                             principles reflected in the proposal.                    evaluating the potential for migration at                 not expected to provide the same level
                                             EPA discussed in the proposal why                        the site. But the CCR constituents are                    of independence as a state permit
                                             periodic renewals of ‘‘no migration’’                    metals or metalloid compounds, which                      program, the availability of meaningful
                                             demonstrations were not required for                     will remain in the environment if                         third-party verification provided critical
                                             MSW landfills. In part this is because                   released. The remaining factors have                      support that the rule would achieve the
                                             the part 258 regulations apply only to                   been a component of the MSWLF                             statutory standard, as it would provide
                                             landfills, while the CCR regulations                     program since the regulations were first                  a degree of control over a facility’s
                                             apply to both landfills and surface                      adopted in 1991. 56 FR 51061. See                         discretion in implementing the rule.
                                             impoundments. Surface impoundments                       OSWER Solid Waste Disposal Facility                          However, the situation has changed
                                             by their very nature pose a potential for                Criteria Technical Manual for MSWLFs                      with the passage of the WIIN Act, which
                                             releases to groundwater that is different                (EPA530–R–93–017, 1993).21                                offers the opportunity for State oversight
                                             than landfills (e.g., presence of a                         The regulation does not include any                    under an approved permit program. To
                                             hydraulic head). The risk assessment for                 consideration relating to current                         reflect that, EPA proposed that the
                                             the CCR rule found that, even when key                   groundwater quality or potential future                   regulations allow a ‘‘State Director,’’ the
                                             variables are controlled (e.g., liner type,              use of the aquifer EPA notes that, as                     Director of a state with an approved
                                             waste type) for the long-term risks from                 with MSWLFs, this is not an                               CCR permit program (i.e., a
                                             surface impoundments are greater than                    appropriate factor for consideration                      ‘‘participating state’’), to certify that the
                                             from landfills. Based on these factors,                  under this provision. Further guidance                    regulatory criteria have been met in lieu
                                             EPA is requiring an owner or operator                    for conducting these evaluations can be                   of the exclusive reliance on a qualified
                                             to conduct a new demonstration once                      found in the OSWER Solid Waste                            PE. EPA expects that states will
                                             every 10 years to show that the                          Disposal Facility Criteria Technical                      generally rely on the expertise of their
                                             suspension of groundwater monitoring                     Manual for MSWLFs (EPA530–R–93–                           own engineers to evaluate whether the
                                             continues to be appropriate. See                         017, 1993), the Ground-Water                              technical criteria have been met.
                                             § 257.90(g). This new demonstration                      Monitoring Guidance Document for                          Alternatively, States might choose to
                                             must be submitted to the Participating                   Owners and Operators of Interim Status                    retain the required certification by a
                                             State Director or EPA where EPA is the                   Facilities (1983),22 and OSWER                            qualified PE and use its own expertise
                                             permitting authority one year before the                 Preparing No-Migration Demonstration                      to evaluate that certification. Finally,
                                             existing groundwater monitoring                          for Municipal Solid Waste Disposal                        EPA noted that under the existing
                                             suspension is due to expire. If the                      Facilities: A Screening Tool (EPA530–                     regulations, a facility may already rely
                                             suspension expires for any reason, the                   R–99–008 1999).23                                         on a certification provided by a
                                             unit must begin groundwater                                                                                        qualified PE in a State agency, who
                                                                                                      D. Allow Participating State Directors or
                                             monitoring in accordance with                                                                                      reviews the facility actions as part of a
                                                                                                      EPA Where EPA Is the Permitting
                                             § 257.90(a) within 90 days.                                                                                        purely State-law mandated process.
                                                To address concerns that the                          Authority To Issue Certifications in Lieu
                                                                                                                                                                Thus, EPA is confident that revising the
                                             proposed language was insufficiently                     of Requiring a PE Certification
                                                                                                                                                                regulation to authorize an approval from
                                             prescriptive EPA has added the phrase,                     To ensure that the RCRA subtitle D                      a Participating State Director will be at
                                             ‘‘based on the characteristics of the site               requirements would achieve the                            least as protective as the status quo
                                             in which the CCR unit is located,’’ to the               statutory standard of ‘‘no reasonable                     under the existing regulations. To be
                                             regulatory text. This is intended to                     probability of adverse effects on health                  clear an approved state may choose to
                                             clarify that the site characteristics are                and the environment’’ in the absence of                   provide certifications in lieu of a PE or
                                             the key component of any determination                   regulatory oversight, the current CCR                     may review and approve in addition to
                                             that a waiver can be granted, rather than                regulations require facilities to obtain                  a PE. A participating state could also
                                             unit characteristics, such as the type of                third party certifications and to provide                 decide to solely rely on a certification
                                             liner, which can (and do) fail. This is                  enhanced state and public notifications                   by a facility’s PE which would be the
                                             consistent with both the proposal and                    of actions taken to comply with the                       status quo based on the current
                                             the original part 258 regulation. See 83                 regulatory requirements. Specifically, in                 regulations.
                                             FR 11602; 56 FR 51061. EPA provided                      the final CCR rule EPA required                              As a component of this proposal, EPA
                                             examples of locations that might be able                 numerous technical demonstrations                         also proposed definitions of ‘‘State
                                             to demonstrate no potential for                          made by the owner or operator be                          Director’’ and of a ‘‘participating state’’
                                             migration in the preamble to the final                                                                             in § 257.53. The definition made clear
                                             MSWLF rule, such as extremely dry                           21 USEPA OWSER ‘‘Solid Waste Disposal Facility
                                                                                                                                                                that these provisions were restricted to
                                             areas with little rainfall and great depths              Criteria Technical Manual for MSWLFs’’ (EPA530–           State Directors (or their delegates) with
                                                                                                      R–93–017, 1993) can be found in the docket for this
                                             to groundwater, but acknowledged that                    final rule.                                               an approved CCR permit program. The
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                                             these would be extremely rare. 56 FR                        22 USEPA ‘‘Ground-Water Monitoring Guidance            definition also included EPA where
                                             51061. EPA expects this to be the case                   for Owners and Operators of Interim Status                EPA is the permitting authority (tribal
                                             with respect to CCR units as well.                       Facilities’’ (1983) can be found in the docket for this   lands and non-participating states).
                                                For the same reason, EPA included in                  final rule.                                               There are several changes to the
                                                                                                         23 USEPA OWER ‘‘Preparing No-Migration
                                             the regulation four of the seven                         Demonstrations for Municipal Solid Waste Disposal
                                                                                                                                                                proposed term of ‘‘State Director.’’ First,
                                             categories of properties or processes on                 facilities: A Screening Tool’’ (EPA530–R–99–008,          we are finalizing the term as
                                             contaminant fate and transport that                      1999 can be found in the docket for this rule.            ‘‘Participating State Director.’’ Currently


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                                             36448               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             there is a definition for State Director in              a substantive rule shall be made not less             every regulatory action that EPA takes
                                             40 CFR 257.53 and EPA did not intend                     than 30 days before its effective date                under this section. This rule contains
                                             for our proposed definition to replace or                and that this provision applies in the                specific, targeted revisions to the 2015
                                             amend the current definition. Therefore,                 absence of a specific statutory provision             rule and the legislative history regarding
                                             we are finalizing the term ‘‘Participating               establishing an effective date. See 5                 section 4004 speaks only to these initial
                                             State Director.’’ This language is used                  U.S.C. 553(d) and 559. EPA has                        1976 mandated regulations.
                                             throughout the preamble and regulatory                   determined there is no specific                          This reading allows the agency to
                                             text accordingly.                                        provision of RCRA addressing the                      establish an effective date appropriate
                                                Furthermore, EPA received numerous                    effective date of regulations that would              for the nature of the regulation
                                             comments on state directors issuing                      apply here, and thus the APA’s 30-day                 promulgated, which is what EPA
                                             certifications. The majority of comments                 effective date applies.                               believes Congress intended. EPA further
                                             supported granting a State Director this                    EPA has previously interpreted                     considers that the minimum 30-day
                                             authority. One comment received from                     section 4004(c) of RCRA to generally                  effective date under the APA is
                                             ASTSWMO suggested removing EPA                           establish a six-month effective date for              reasonable in this circumstance where
                                             from the definition of State Director.                   rules issued under subtitle D. See 80 FR              none of the provisions being finalized
                                             ASTSWMO felt it was not appropriate                      37988, 37990. After further                           require an extended period of time for
                                             to include EPA in the definition because                 consideration, EPA interprets section                 regulated entities to comply.
                                             intermingling the State and EPA would                    4004(c) to establish an effective date
                                             lead to confusion on their                               solely for the regulations that were                  V. The Projected Economic Impacts of
                                             implementation roles in CCR permit                       required to be promulgated under                      This Action
                                             programs, and EPA agrees. EPA has                        subsection (a). Section 4004(c) is silent             A. Introduction
                                             therefore removed the sentence about                     as to subsequent revisions to those
                                             EPA from the definition of Participating                 regulations; EPA therefore believes                      EPA estimated the costs and benefits
                                             State Director and generally added ‘‘or                  section 4004(c) is ambiguous.                         of this action in a Regulatory Impact
                                             approval from EPA where EPA is the                          Section 4004(c) states that the                    Analysis (RIA) which is available in the
                                             permitting authority’’ after Participating               prohibition in subsection (b) shall take              docket for this action. The RIA estimates
                                             State Director throughout the                            effect six months after promulgation of               costs and cost savings attributable to the
                                             regulations.                                             regulations under subsection (a).                     provisions of this action against the
                                                The definition of Participating State                 Subsection (a), in turn provides that                 baseline costs and cost savings of the
                                             Director has also been modified to                       ‘‘[n]ot later than one year after October             2015 CCR final rule. The RIA estimates
                                             reflect the statutory term of a                          21, 1976 . . . [EPA] shall promulgate                 that the net annualized impact of these
                                             ‘‘participating state’’ rather than the                  regulations containing criteria for                   five provisions over a 100-year period of
                                             proposed term of ‘‘an approved state.’’                  determining which facilities shall be                 analysis will be cost savings of between
                                             EPA has also adopted the proposed                        classified as sanitary landfills and                  $27.8 million and $31.4 million when
                                             definition of a participating state,                     which shall be classified as open dumps               discounting at 7 percent and cost
                                             without modification. The final rule                     within the meaning of this chapter.’’ As              savings between $15.5 million and
                                             also incorporates the statutory                          noted, section 4004(c) is silent as to                $19.1 million when discounting at 3
                                             definition of a non-participating state.                 revisions to those regulations.                       percent. This action is not considered
                                                Finally, the regulatory text has been                    In response to Congress’s mandate in               an economically significant action
                                             amended in 39 places to incorporate                      section 4004(a), EPA promulgated                      under Executive Order 12866.
                                             this change. These changes can be seen                   regulations on September 13, 1979. 44
                                                                                                                                                            B. Affected Universe
                                             in the amended regulation text. Except                   FR 53438. EPA interprets section
                                             for the regulations relating to structural               4004(c) to establish an effective date                   The universe of affected entities for
                                             stability, which continue to require the                 applicable only to that action, and not               this rule consists of the same entities
                                             certification of a PE in all                             to future regulations the Agency might                affected by EPA’s 2015 CCR final rule.
                                             circumstances, the regulations have                      issue under this section. In the absence              These entities are coal-fired electricity
                                             been modified to add the approval of                     of a specific statutory provision                     generating plants operated by the
                                             Participating State Director or the                      establishing an effective date for this               electric utility industry. They can be
                                             approval from EPA where EPA is the                       rule, APA section 553(d) applies.                     identified by their North American
                                             permitting authority as an acceptable                       EPA considers that its interpretation              Industry Classification System (NAICS)
                                             alternative. The structural stability                    is reasonable because there is no                     designation 221112 ‘‘Fossil Fuel Electric
                                             evaluations, such as the periodic factors                indication in RCRA or its legislative                 Power Generation’’. The RIA estimates
                                             of safety assessment, require the specific               history that Congress intended for the                that there are 414 coal-fired electricity
                                             expertise of a PE. As previously noted,                  agency to have less discretion under                  generating plants operating 922 CCR
                                             EPA expects that a state will generally                  RCRA subtitle D than it would have                    management units (landfills, disposal
                                             rely on the expertise of its own                         under the APA to establish a suitable                 impoundments, and storage
                                             engineers to evaluate whether the                        effective date for subsequent rules                   impoundments) that will be affected by
                                             technical criteria have been met, but to                 issued under section 4004(c). Consistent              this rule.
                                             avoid any confusion, these regulations                   with EPA’s interpretation of the express
                                                                                                      language of section 4004, EPA interprets              C. Baseline Cost
                                             will continue to require certification by
                                             a PE. A state may, of course, require the                statements in the legislative history                   The baseline costs for this rule are the
                                             facility to also obtain its approval as                  explaining that section 4004(c) provides              costs of compliance with EPA’s 2015
                                                                                                      that the effective date is to be 6 months             CCR final rule, as the provisions of this
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                                             part of its own permit program.
                                                                                                      after the date of promulgate of                       rule modify the provisions of the 2015
                                             E. Rationale for 30-Day Effective Date                   regulations, as referring to the initial set          CCR final rule or modify the
                                               The effective date of this rule is 30                  of regulations required by Congress to                implementation of the 2015 CCR rule by
                                             days after publication in the Federal                    be promulgated not later than 1 year                  WIIN Act participating states. The RIA
                                             Register. The Administrative Procedure                   after October 21, 1976, and does not                  for the 2015 CCR final rule estimated
                                             Act (APA) provides that publication of                   mandate a 6 month effective date for                  these costs at an annualized $509


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           36449

                                             million when discounting at 7 percent                    VI. Statutory and Executive Order                     of approximately 16,690 hours from the
                                             and an annualized $735 million when                      (E.O.) Reviews                                        currently approved burden. Burden is
                                             discounting at 3 percent.                                                                                      defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
                                                                                                      A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
                                                                                                      Planning and Review and Executive                       Total estimated cost: The total
                                             D. Cost Savings, Other Benefits, and
                                                                                                      Order 13563: Improving Regulation and                 estimated annual cost of this rule is a
                                             Adjustments to the Baseline                                                                                    cost savings of approximately
                                                                                                      Regulatory Review
                                                The RIA estimates costs and costs                                                                           $4,752,588. This cost savings is
                                                                                                        This action is a significant regulatory             composed of approximately $1,045,091
                                             savings for two proposals concerning                     action that was submitted to the Office
                                             the compliance deadlines for certain                                                                           in annualized avoided labor costs and
                                                                                                      of Management and Budget (OMB) for                    $3,707,497 in avoided capital or
                                             aspects of the 2015 CCR rule, as well as                 review. Any changes made in response                  operation and maintenance costs.
                                             the two alternative performance                          to OMB recommendations have been
                                             standards that will apply in                                                                                     An agency may not conduct or
                                                                                                      documented in the docket. The EPA                     sponsor, and a person is not required to
                                             participating states under the WIIN Act,                 prepared an analysis of the potential                 respond to, a collection of information
                                             and the revision of the GWPSs for the                    costs and benefits associated with this               unless it displays a currently valid OMB
                                             four constituents in Appendix IV to part                 action. This Regulatory Impact Analysis               control number. The OMB control
                                             257 without MCLs. The RIA estimates                      (RIA), entitled Regulatory Impact                     numbers for the EPA’s regulations in 40
                                             that the net annualized impact of these                  Analysis; EPA’s 2018 RCRA Final Rule;                 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
                                             five provisions over a 100-year period of                Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals
                                             analysis will be an annualized cost                      from Electric Utilities; Amendments to                D. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
                                             savings of between $27.8 million and                     the National Minimum Criteria (Phase                     I certify that this action will not have
                                             $31.4 million when discounting at 7                      One), is summarized in Unit V of this                 a significant economic impact on a
                                             percent, and an annualized cost savings                  preamble and the RIA is available in the              substantial number of small entities
                                             of between $15.5 million and $19.1                       docket for this final rule.                           under the RFA. In making this
                                             million when discounting at 3 percent.                   B. Executive Order 13771: Reducing                    determination, the impact of concern is
                                             The majority of cost savings attributable                Regulation and Controlling Regulatory                 any significant adverse economic
                                             to the rule come from the provisions                     Costs                                                 impact on small entities. An agency may
                                             extending the date by which facilities                                                                         certify that a rule will not have a
                                                                                                        This action is considered an
                                             must cease placing waste in CCR units.                                                                         significant economic impact on a
                                                                                                      Executive Order 13771 deregulatory
                                             These provisions delay the large capital                                                                       substantial number of small entities if
                                                                                                      action. Details on the estimated cost
                                             costs associated with ceasing to place                                                                         the rule relieves regulatory burden, has
                                                                                                      savings of this final rule can be found
                                             waste in a unit. These capital costs                                                                           no net burden or otherwise has a
                                                                                                      in EPA’s analysis of the potential costs
                                             include the cost of closure capping,                                                                           positive economic effect on the small
                                                                                                      and benefits associated with this action.
                                             post-closure monitoring, and converting                                                                        entities subject to the rule. This action
                                             to dry handling of CCR from wet                          C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)                      is expected to result in net cost savings
                                             handling.                                                   The information collection activities              amounting to approximately $27.8
                                                                                                      in this rule have been submitted for                  million per year to $31.4 million per
                                                The RIA also presents the adjustments                                                                       year when discounting at 7 percent and
                                             to the baseline costs of the CCR final                   approval to the Office of Management
                                                                                                      and Budget (OMB) under the PRA. The                   annualized over 100 years. It is expected
                                             rule due to plant closures that occurred                                                                       to result in net cost savings of between
                                                                                                      Information Collection Request (ICR)
                                             after the rule was published but before                                                                        $15.5 million and $19.1 million when
                                                                                                      document that the EPA prepared has
                                             the effective date of the rule. The RIA                                                                        discounting at 3 percent and annualized
                                                                                                      been assigned EPA ICR number 1189.28,
                                             accompanying the 2015 CCR final rule                     OMB control number 2050–0053. This                    over 100 years. Savings will accrue to
                                             assigned compliance costs to these                       is an amendment to the ICR approved                   all regulated entities, including small
                                             plants, which they are exempt from                       by OMB for the Final Rule: Hazardous                  entities. Further information on the
                                             because they closed before the final                     and Solid Waste Management System;                    economic effects of this action can be
                                             rule’s effective date. In all, 23 plants                 Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals                 found in Unit V of this preamble and in
                                             closed before the effective date of the                  from Electric Utilities published April               the Regulatory Impact Analysis, which
                                             final rule that were not accounted for in                17, 2015 in the Federal Register at 80                is available in the docket for this action.
                                             2015 final rule RIA. The annualized                      FR 21302. You can find a copy of the                  We have therefore concluded that this
                                             compliance costs avoided for these                       ICR in the docket for this action, and it             action will relieve regulatory burden for
                                             plants equals between $21.4 million and                  is briefly summarized here.                           all directly regulated small entities.
                                             $27.6 million per year when                                 Respondents/affected entities: Coal-               E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                             discounting at 7 percent and between                     fired electric utility plants that will be            (UMRA)
                                             $21.7 million and $32.4 million when                     affected by the rule.
                                             discounting at 3 percent. This cost                         Respondent’s obligation to respond:                   This action does not contain any
                                             adjustment is detailed in the RIA that                   The recordkeeping, notification, and                  unfunded mandate of $100 million or
                                                                                                      posting are mandatory as part of the                  more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C.
                                             accompanies this rulemaking, however
                                                                                                      minimum national criteria being                       1531–1538, and does not significantly or
                                             it is not factored into the baseline or the
                                                                                                      promulgated under sections 1008, 4004,                uniquely affect small governments. This
                                             benefit estimates for this rule to keep
                                                                                                      and 4005(a) of RCRA.                                  action imposes no enforceable duty on
                                             comparisons with the 2015 CCR final                                                                            any state, local or tribal governments or
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                                                                                                         Estimated number of respondents:
                                             rule straight forward. Also, the                                                                               the private sector. The costs involved in
                                                                                                      414.
                                             compliance costs not incurred by these                      Frequency of response: The frequency               this action are imposed only by
                                             plants would not be cost savings                         of response varies.                                   participation in a voluntary federal
                                             attributable to this rulemaking.                            Total estimated burden: EPA                        program. UMRA generally excludes
                                                                                                      estimates the total annual burden to                  from the definition of ‘‘federal
                                                                                                      respondents to be a reduction in burden               intergovernmental mandate’’ duties that


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                                             36450               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             arise from participation in a voluntary                  health or safety risks addressed by this              K. Executive Order 12898: Federal
                                             federal program.                                         action present a disproportionate risk to             Actions To Address Environmental
                                                                                                      children. This action’s health and risk               Justice in Minority Populations and
                                             F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
                                                                                                      assessments are contained in the                      Low-Income Populations
                                               This action does not have federalism                   document titled ‘‘Human and Ecological
                                             implications. It will not have substantial                                                                        The EPA believes that this action does
                                                                                                      Risk Assessment of Coal Combustion                    not have disproportionately high and
                                             direct effects on the states, on the                     Residuals’’ which is available in the
                                             relationship between the national                                                                              adverse human health or environmental
                                                                                                      docket for the final rule as docket item              effects on minority populations, low-
                                             government and the states, or on the                     EPA–HQ–RCRA–2009–0640–11993.
                                             distribution of power and                                                                                      income populations and/or indigenous
                                                                                                         As ordered by E.O. 13045 Section 1–
                                             responsibilities among the various                                                                             peoples, as specified in Executive Order
                                                                                                      101(a), for the ‘‘Final Rule: Hazardous
                                             levels of government.                                                                                          12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
                                                                                                      and Solid Waste Management System;
                                                                                                                                                               The documentation for this decision
                                             G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation                   Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals
                                                                                                                                                            is contained in EPA’s Regulatory Impact
                                             and Coordination With Indian Tribal                      from Electric Utilities’’ published April
                                                                                                                                                            Analysis (RIA) for the CCR rule which
                                             Governments                                              17, 2015 in the Federal Register at 80
                                                                                                                                                            is available in the docket for the 2015
                                                                                                      FR 21302, EPA identified and assessed
                                                This action does not have tribal                                                                            CCR final rule as docket item EPA–HQ–
                                                                                                      environmental health risks and safety
                                             implications as specified in Executive                   risks that may disproportionately affect              RCRA–2009–0640–12034.
                                             Order 13175. For the ‘‘Final Rule:                                                                                EPA’s risk assessment did not
                                                                                                      children in the revised risk assessment.
                                             Hazardous and Solid Waste                                                                                      separately evaluate either minority or
                                                                                                      The results of the screening assessment
                                             Management System; Disposal of Coal                                                                            low-income populations. However, to
                                                                                                      found that risks fell below the criteria
                                             Combustion Residuals from Electric                       when wetting and run-on/runoff                        evaluate the demographic
                                             Utilities’’ published April 17, 2015 in                  controls required by the rule are                     characteristics of communities that may
                                             the Federal Register at 80 FR 21302,                     considered. Under the full probabilistic              be affected by the CCR rule, the RIA
                                             EPA identified three of the 414 coal-                    analysis, composite liners required by                compares the demographic
                                             fired electric utility plants (in operation              the rule for new waste management                     characteristics of populations
                                             as of 2012) which are located on tribal                  units showed the ability to reduce the                surrounding coal-fired electric utility
                                             lands; however, they are not owned by                    90th percentile child cancer and non-                 plants with broader population data for
                                             tribal governments. These are: (1)                       cancer risks for the groundwater to                   two geographic areas: (1) One-mile
                                             Navajo Generating Station in Coconino                    drinking water pathway to well below                  radius from CCR management units (i.e.,
                                             County, Arizona, owned by the Arizona                    EPA’s criteria. Additionally, the                     landfills and impoundments) likely to
                                             Salt River Project; (2) Bonanza Power                    groundwater monitoring and corrective                 be affected by groundwater releases
                                             Plant in Uintah County, Utah, owned by                   action required by the rule reduced risks             from both landfills and impoundments;
                                             the Deseret Generation and                               from current waste management units.                  and (2) watershed catchment areas
                                             Transmission Cooperative; and (3) Four                                                                         downstream of surface impoundments
                                             Corners Power Plant in San Juan                          I. Executive Order 13211: Actions                     that receive surface water run-off and
                                             County, New Mexico owned by the                          Concerning Regulations That                           releases from CCR impoundments and
                                             Arizona Public Service Company. The                      Significantly Affect Energy Supply,                   are at risk of being contaminated from
                                             Navajo Generating Station and the Four                   Distribution or Use                                   CCR impoundment discharges (e.g.,
                                             Corners Power Plant are on lands                            This action is not a ‘‘significant                 unintentional overflows, structural
                                             belonging to the Navajo Nation, while                    energy action’’ because it is not likely to           failures, and intentional periodic
                                             the Bonanza Power Plant is located on                    have a significant adverse effect on the              discharges).
                                             the Uintah and Ouray Reservation of the                  supply, distribution or use of energy.                   For the population as a whole 24.8
                                             Ute Indian Tribe. Under the WIIN Act,                    For the 2015 CCR rule, EPA analyzed                   percent belong to a minority group and
                                             EPA is the permitting authority for CCR                  the potential impact on electricity prices            11.3 percent falls below the Federal
                                             unites located in Indian Country.                        relative to the ‘‘in excess of one                    Poverty Level. For the population living
                                             Moreover, since this action is expected                  percent’’ threshold. Using the Integrated             within one mile of plants with surface
                                             to result in net cost savings to affected                Planning Model (IPM), EPA concluded                   impoundments 16.1 percent belong to a
                                             entities amounting to approximately                      that the 2015 CCR Rule may increase the               minority group and 13.2 percent live
                                             $27.8 million per year to $31.4 million                  weighted average nationwide wholesale                 below the Federal Poverty Level. These
                                             per year when discounting at 7 percent                   price of electricity between 0.18 percent             minority and low-income populations
                                             and annualized over 100 years, or in net                 and 0.19 percent in the years 2020 and                are not disproportionately high
                                             cost savings of between $15.5 million                    2030, respectively. As the final rule                 compared to the general population.
                                             per year and $19.1 million per year                      represents a cost savings rule relative to            The percentage of minority residents of
                                             when discounting at 3 percent and                        the 2015 CCR rule, this analysis                      the entire population living within the
                                             annualized over 100 years, it will not                   concludes that any potential impact on                catchment areas downstream of surface
                                             have substantial direct effects on one or                wholesale electricity prices will be                  impoundments is disproportionately
                                             more Indian tribes. Thus, Executive                      lower than the potential impact                       high relative to the general population,
                                             Order 13175 does not apply to this                       estimated of the 2015 CCR rule;                       i.e., 28.7 percent, versus 24.8 percent for
                                             action.                                                  therefore, this final rule is not expected            the national population. Also, the
                                                                                                      to meet the criteria of a ‘‘significant               percentage of the population within the
                                             H. Executive Order 13045: Protection of                                                                        catchment areas of surface
                                                                                                      adverse effect’’ on the electricity
                                             Children From Environmental Health                                                                             impoundments that is below the Federal
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                                                                                                      markets as defined by Executive Order
                                             Risk and Safety Risks                                                                                          Poverty Level is disproportionately high
                                                                                                      13211.
                                               This action is not subject to Executive                                                                      compared with the general population,
                                             Order 13045 because it is not                            J. National Technology Transfer and                   i.e., 18.6 percent versus 11.3 percent
                                             economically significant as defined in                   Advancement Act (NTTAA)                               nationally.
                                             Executive Order 12866, and because the                      This rulemaking does not involve                      Comparing the population
                                             EPA does not believe the environmental                   technical standards.                                  percentages of minority and low income


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                            36451

                                             residents within one mile of landfills to                ■ 2. Section 257.53 is amended by                     requirements of paragraph (a) of this
                                             those percentages in the general                         adding the definitions of                             section.
                                             population, EPA found that minority                      ‘‘Nonparticipating State’’, ‘‘Participating           *     *    *     *      *
                                             and low-income residents make up a                       State’’, and ‘‘Participating State
                                                                                                                                                            ■ 4. Section 257.61 is amended by
                                             smaller percentage of the populations                    Director’’ in alphabetical order to read
                                                                                                                                                            revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
                                             near landfills than they do in the                       as follows:
                                             general population, i.e., minorities                                                                           § 257.61    Wetlands.
                                             comprised 16.6 percent of the                            § 257.53   Definitions.
                                                                                                                                                            *     *    *     *      *
                                             population near landfills versus 24.8                    *      *     *     *    *
                                                                                                                                                              (b) The owner or operator of the CCR
                                             percent nationwide and low-income                           Nonparticipating State means a
                                                                                                                                                            unit must obtain a certification from a
                                             residents comprised 8.6 percent of the                   State—
                                                                                                                                                            qualified professional engineer or
                                             population near landfills versus 11.3                       (1) For which the Administrator has                approval from the Participating State
                                             percent nationwide. In summary,                          not approved a State permit program or                Director or approval from EPA where
                                             although populations within the                          other system of prior approval and                    EPA is the permitting authority stating
                                             catchment areas of plants with surface                   conditions under RCRA section                         that the demonstration meets the
                                             impoundments appear to have                              4005(d)(1)(B);                                        requirements of paragraph (a) of this
                                             disproportionately high percentages of                      (2) The Governor of which has not                  section.
                                             minority and low-income residents                        submitted to the Administrator for
                                             relative to the nationwide average,                                                                            *     *    *     *      *
                                                                                                      approval evidence to operate a State
                                             populations surrounding plants with                      permit program or other system of prior               ■ 5. Section 257.62 is amended by
                                             landfills do not. Because landfills are                  approval and conditions under RCRA                    revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
                                             less likely than impoundments to                         section 4005(d)(1)(A);                                § 257.62    Fault areas.
                                             experience surface water run-off and                        (3) The Governor of which provides
                                             releases, catchment areas were not                                                                             *     *    *     *      *
                                                                                                      notice to the Administrator that, not
                                             considered for landfills.                                fewer than 90 days after the date on                    (b) The owner or operator of the CCR
                                                The CCR rule is risk-reducing with                    which the Governor provides the notice                unit must obtain a certification from a
                                             reductions in risk occurring largely                     to the Administrator, the State will                  qualified professional engineer or
                                             within the surface water catchment                       relinquish an approval under RCRA                     approval from the Participating State
                                             zones around, and groundwater                            section 4005(d)(1)(B) to operate a permit             Director or approval from EPA where
                                             beneath, coal-fired electric utility                     program or other system of prior                      EPA is the permitting authority stating
                                             plants. Since the CCR rule is risk-                      approval and conditions; or                           that the demonstration meets the
                                             reducing and this action does not add to                                                                       requirements of paragraph (a) of this
                                                                                                         (4) For which the Administrator has                section.
                                             risks, this action will not result in new                withdrawn approval for a permit
                                             disproportionate risks to minority or                    program or other system of prior                      *     *    *     *      *
                                             low-income populations.                                  approval and conditions under RCRA                    ■ 6. Section 257.63 is amended by
                                             L. Congressional Review Act (CRA)                        section 4005(d)(1)(E).                                revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
                                                                                                      *      *     *     *    *                             § 257.63    Seismic impact zones.
                                               This action is subject to the CRA, and
                                             the EPA will submit a rule report to                        Participating State means a state with             *     *    *     *      *
                                             each House of the Congress and to the                    a state program for control of CCR that
                                                                                                                                                              (b) The owner or operator of the CCR
                                             Comptroller General of the United                        has been approved pursuant to RCRA
                                                                                                                                                            unit must obtain a certification from a
                                             States. This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’              section 4005(d).
                                                                                                                                                            qualified professional engineer or
                                             as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).                              Participating State Director means the             approval from the Participating State
                                                                                                      chief administrative officer of any state             Director or approval from EPA where
                                             List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 257                      agency operating the CCR permit                       EPA is the permitting authority stating
                                               Environmental protection, Beneficial                   program in a participating state or the               that the demonstration meets the
                                             use, Coal combustion products, Coal                      delegated representative of the                       requirements of paragraph (a) of this
                                             combustion residuals, Coal combustion                    Participating State Director. If                      section.
                                             waste, Disposal, Hazardous waste,                        responsibility is divided among two or
                                                                                                      more state agencies, Participating State              *     *    *     *      *
                                             Landfill, Surface impoundment.
                                                                                                      Director means the chief administrative               ■ 7. Section 257.64 is amended by
                                              Dated: July 17, 2018.                                   officer of the state agency authorized to             revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
                                             Andrew R. Wheeler,                                       perform the particular function or
                                             Acting Administrator.                                                                                          § 257.64    Unstable areas.
                                                                                                      procedure to which reference is made.
                                                                                                                                                            *     *     *    *      *
                                               For the reasons set out in the                         *      *     *     *    *
                                                                                                                                                              (c) The owner or operator of the CCR
                                             preamble, title 40, chapter I, of the Code               ■ 3. Section 257.60 is amended by                     unit must obtain a certification from a
                                             of Federal Regulations is amended as                     revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:            qualified professional engineer or
                                             follows:                                                                                                       approval from the Participating State
                                                                                                      § 257.60   Placement above the uppermost
                                             PART 257—CRITERIA FOR                                    aquifer.                                              Director or approval from EPA where
                                             CLASSIFICATION OF SOLID WASTE                            *     *    *     *     *                              EPA is the permitting authority stating
                                             DISPOSAL FACILITIES AND                                                                                        that the demonstration meets the
                                                                                                        (b) The owner or operator of the CCR
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                                             PRACTICES                                                                                                      requirements of paragraph (a) of this
                                                                                                      unit must obtain a certification from a
                                                                                                                                                            section.
                                                                                                      qualified professional engineer or
                                             ■  1. The authority citation for part 257                approval from the Participating State                 *     *     *    *      *
                                             is revised to read as follows:                           Director or approval from EPA where                   ■ 8. Section 257.70 is amended by
                                               Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6907(a)(3), 6912(a)(1),           EPA is the permitting authority stating               revising paragraphs (c)(2), (e), and (f) to
                                             6944(a), 6945(d); 33 U.S.C. 1345(d) and (e).             that the demonstration meets the                      read as follows:


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                                             36452               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             § 257.70 Design criteria for new CCR                     system have been constructed in                       ■ 12. Section 257.81 is amended by
                                             landfills and any lateral expansion of a CCR             accordance with the requirements of                   revising paragraph (c)(5) to read as
                                             landfill.                                                this section.                                         follows:
                                             *      *    *     *    *                                 *     *     *    *      *
                                                (c) * * *                                                                                                   § 257.81 Run-on and run-off controls for
                                                                                                      ■ 9. Section 257.71 is amended by                     CCR landfills.
                                                (2) The owner or operator must obtain
                                                                                                      revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:            *     *      *     *    *
                                             certification from a qualified
                                             professional engineer or approval from                   § 257.71 Liner design criteria for existing             (c) * * *
                                             the Participating State Director or                      CCR surface impoundments.                               (5) The owner or operator must obtain
                                             approval from EPA where EPA is the                                                                             a certification from a qualified
                                                                                                      *     *     *    *     *
                                             permitting authority that the liquid flow                  (b) The owner or operator of the CCR                professional engineer or approval from
                                             rate through the lower component of the                  unit must obtain a certification from a               the Participating State Director or
                                             alternative composite liner is no greater                qualified professional engineer or                    approval from EPA where EPA is the
                                             than the liquid flow rate through two                    approval from the Participating State                 permitting authority stating that the
                                             feet of compacted soil with a hydraulic                  Director or approval from EPA where                   initial and periodic run-on and run-off
                                             conductivity of 1x10¥7 cm/sec. The                       EPA is the permitting authority attesting             control system plans meet the
                                             hydraulic conductivity for the two feet                  that the documentation as to whether a                requirements of this section.
                                             of compacted soil used in the                            CCR unit meets the requirements of                    *     *      *     *    *
                                             comparison shall be no greater than                      paragraph (a) of this section is accurate.            ■ 13. Section 257.82 is amended by
                                             1x10¥7 cm/sec. The hydraulic                             *     *     *    *     *                              revising paragraph (c)(5) to read as
                                             conductivity of any alternative to the                   ■ 10. Section 257.72 is amended by
                                                                                                                                                            follows:
                                             two feet of compacted soil must be                       revising paragraphs (c) and (d) to read               § 257.82 Hydrologic and hydraulic
                                             determined using recognized and                          as follows:                                           capacity requirements for CCR surface
                                             generally accepted methods. The liquid                                                                         impoundments.
                                             flow rate comparison must be made                        § 257.72 Liner design criteria for new CCR
                                                                                                      surface impoundments and any lateral                  *     *      *     *    *
                                             using Equation 1 of this section, which                                                                          (c) * * *
                                             is derived from Darcy’s Law for gravity                  expansion of a CCR surface impoundment.
                                                                                                                                                              (5) The owner or operator must obtain
                                             flow through porous media.                               *      *     *     *    *
                                                                                                         (c) Prior to construction of the CCR               a certification from a qualified
                                                                                                      surface impoundment or any lateral                    professional engineer or approval from
                                                                                                      expansion of a CCR surface                            the Participating State Director or
                                                                                                      impoundment, the owner or operator                    approval from EPA where EPA is the
                                                                                                      must obtain certification from a                      permitting authority stating that the
                                                                                                      qualified professional engineer or                    initial and periodic inflow design flood
                                             Where:                                                                                                         control system plans meet the
                                                                                                      approval from the Participating State
                                             Q = flow rate (cubic centimeters/second);                Director or approval from EPA where                   requirements of this section.
                                             A = surface area of the liner (squared                                                                         *     *      *     *    *
                                                  centimeters);
                                                                                                      EPA is the permitting authority that the
                                             q = flow rate per unit area (cubic centimeters/          design of the composite liner or, if                  ■ 14. Section 257.90 is amended by
                                                  second/squared centimeter);                         applicable, the design of an alternative              revising paragraph (a) and adding
                                             k = hydraulic conductivity of the liner                  composite liner complies with the                     paragraph (g) to read as follows:
                                                  (centimeters/second);                               requirements of this section.
                                             h = hydraulic head above the liner                          (d) Upon completion, the owner or                  § § 257.90   Applicability.
                                                  (centimeters); and                                  operator must obtain certification from                  (a) All CCR landfills, CCR surface
                                             t = thickness of the liner (centimeters).                a qualified professional engineer or                  impoundments, and lateral expansions
                                             *      *     *     *    *                                approval from the Participating State                 of CCR units are subject to the
                                                (e) Prior to construction of the CCR                  Director or approval from EPA where                   groundwater monitoring and corrective
                                             landfill or any lateral expansion of a                   EPA is the permitting authority that the              action requirements under §§ 257.90
                                             CCR landfill, the owner or operator                      composite liner or if applicable, the                 through 257.99, except as provided in
                                             must obtain a certification from a                       alternative composite liner has been                  paragraph (g) of this section.
                                             qualified professional engineer or                       constructed in accordance with the                    *      *    *     *     *
                                             approval from the Participating State                    requirements of this section.                            (g) Suspension of groundwater
                                             Director or approval from EPA where                      *      *     *     *    *                             monitoring requirements. (1) The
                                             EPA is the permitting authority that the                 ■ 11. Section 257.80 is amended by                    Participating State Director or EPA
                                             design of the composite liner (or, if                    revising paragraph (b)(7) to read as                  where EPA is the permitting authority
                                             applicable, alternative composite liner)                 follows:                                              may suspend the groundwater
                                             and the leachate collection and removal                                                                        monitoring requirements under
                                             system meets the requirements of this                    § 257.80   Air criteria.                              §§ 257.90 through 257.95 for a CCR unit
                                             section.                                                 *     *      *     *    *                             for a period of up to ten years, if the
                                                (f) Upon completion of construction                     (b) * * *                                           owner or operator provides written
                                             of the CCR landfill or any lateral                         (7) The owner or operator must obtain               documentation that, based on the
                                             expansion of a CCR landfill, the owner                   a certification from a qualified                      characteristics of the site in which the
                                             or operator must obtain a certification                  professional engineer or approval from                CCR unit is located, there is no potential
                                             from a qualified professional engineer or                the Participating State Director or                   for migration of any of the constituents
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                                             approval from the Participating State                    approval from EPA where EPA is the                    listed in appendices III and IV to this
                                             Director or approval from EPA where                      permitting authority that the initial CCR             part from that CCR unit to the
                                             EPA is the permitting authority that the                 fugitive dust control plan, or any                    uppermost aquifer during the active life
                                             design of the composite liner (or, if                    subsequent amendment of it, meets the                 of the CCR unit and the post-closure
                                             applicable, alternative composite liner)                 requirements of this section.                         care period. This demonstration must be
                                             and the leachate collection and removal                  *     *      *     *    *                             certified by a qualified professional
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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           36453

                                             engineer and approved by the                             days. The owner or operator may                       professional engineer or approval from
                                             Participating State Director or EPA                      continue to renew the suspension for                  the Participating State Director or
                                             where EPA is the permitting authority,                   ten-year periods, provided the owner or               approval from EPA where EPA is the
                                             and must be based upon:                                  operator demonstrate that the standard                permitting authority stating that the
                                                (i) Site-specific field collected                     in paragraph (g)(1) of this section                   demonstration for an alternative
                                             measurements, sampling, and analysis                     continues to be met for the unit. The                 groundwater sampling and analysis
                                             of physical, chemical, and biological                    owner or operator must place each                     frequency meets the requirements of
                                             processes affecting contaminant fate and                 completed demonstration in the                        this section. The owner or operator must
                                             transport, including at a minimum, the                   facility’s operating record.                          include the demonstration providing the
                                             information necessary to evaluate or                       (3) The owner or operator of the CCR                basis for the alternative monitoring
                                             interpret the effects of the following                   unit must include in the annual                       frequency and the certification by a
                                             properties or processes on contaminant                   groundwater monitoring and corrective                 qualified professional engineer or the
                                             fate and transport:                                      action report required by § 257.90(e) or              approval from the Participating State
                                                (A) Aquifer Characteristics, including                § 257.100(e)(5)(ii) any approved no                   Director or approval from EPA where
                                             hydraulic conductivity, hydraulic                        migration demonstration.                              EPA is the permitting authority in the
                                             gradient, effective porosity, aquifer                    ■ 15. Section 257.91 is amended by                    annual groundwater monitoring and
                                             thickness, degree of saturation,                         revising paragraph (f) to read as follows:            corrective action report required by
                                             stratigraphy, degree of fracturing and                                                                         § 257.90(e).
                                             secondary porosity of soils and bedrock,                 § 257.91 Groundwater monitoring
                                                                                                      systems.
                                                                                                                                                               (e) * * *
                                             aquifer heterogeneity, groundwater                                                                                (2) The owner or operator may
                                             discharge, and groundwater recharge                      *      *     *     *     *                            demonstrate that a source other than the
                                             areas;                                                      (f) The owner or operator must obtain
                                                                                                                                                            CCR unit caused the statistically
                                                (B) Waste Characteristics, including                  a certification from a qualified
                                                                                                                                                            significant increase over background
                                             quantity, type, and origin;                              professional engineer or approval from
                                                                                                                                                            levels for a constituent or that the
                                                (C) Climatic Conditions, including                    the Participating State Director or
                                                                                                                                                            statistically significant increase resulted
                                             annual precipitation, leachate                           approval from EPA where EPA is the
                                                                                                                                                            from error in sampling, analysis,
                                             generation estimates, and effects on                     permitting authority stating that the
                                                                                                                                                            statistical evaluation, or natural
                                             leachate quality;                                        groundwater monitoring system has
                                                (D) Leachate Characteristics,                                                                               variation in groundwater quality. The
                                                                                                      been designed and constructed to meet
                                             including leachate composition,                                                                                owner or operator must complete the
                                                                                                      the requirements of this section. If the
                                             solubility, density, the presence of                                                                           written demonstration within 90 days of
                                                                                                      groundwater monitoring system
                                             immiscible constituents, Eh, and pH;                                                                           detecting a statistically significant
                                                                                                      includes the minimum number of
                                             and                                                                                                            increase over background levels to
                                                                                                      monitoring wells specified in paragraph
                                                (E) Engineered Controls, including                                                                          include obtaining a certification from a
                                                                                                      (c)(1) of this section, the certification
                                             liners, cover systems, and aquifer                                                                             qualified professional engineer or
                                                                                                      must document the basis supporting
                                             controls (e.g., lowering the water table).                                                                     approval from the Participating State
                                                                                                      this determination.
                                             These must be evaluated under design                                                                           Director or approval from EPA where
                                                                                                      *      *     *     *     *                            EPA is the permitting authority
                                             and failure conditions to estimate their                 ■ 16. Section 257.93 is amended by
                                             long-term residual performance.                                                                                verifying the accuracy of the
                                                                                                      revising paragraph (f)(6) to read as                  information in the report. If a successful
                                                (ii) Contaminant fate and transport
                                                                                                      follows:                                              demonstration is completed within the
                                             predictions that maximize contaminant
                                             migration and consider impacts on                        § 257.93 Groundwater sampling and                     90-day period, the owner or operator of
                                             human health and the environment.                        analysis requirements.                                the CCR unit may continue with a
                                                (2) The owner or operator of the CCR                                                                        detection monitoring program under
                                                                                                      *     *      *    *     *
                                             unit may renew this suspension for                         (f) * * *                                           this section. If a successful
                                             additional ten year periods by                             (6) The owner or operator of the CCR                demonstration is not completed within
                                             submitting written documentation that                    unit must obtain a certification from a               the 90-day period, the owner or operator
                                             the site characteristics continue to                     qualified professional engineer or                    of the CCR unit must initiate an
                                             ensure there will be no potential for                    approval from the Participating State                 assessment monitoring program as
                                             migration of any of the constituents                     Director or approval from EPA where                   required under § 257.95. The owner or
                                             listed in Appendices III and IV of this                  EPA is the permitting authority stating               operator must also include the
                                             part. The documentation must include,                    that the selected statistical method is               demonstration in the annual
                                             at a minimum, the information specified                  appropriate for evaluating the                        groundwater monitoring and corrective
                                             in paragraphs (g)(1)(i) and (g)(1)(ii) of                groundwater monitoring data for the                   action report required by § 257.90(e), in
                                             this section and a certification by a                    CCR management area. The certification                addition to the certification by a
                                             qualified professional engineer and                      must include a narrative description of               qualified professional engineer or
                                             approved by the State Director or EPA                    the statistical method selected to                    approval from the Participating State
                                             where EPA is the permitting authority.                   evaluate the groundwater monitoring                   Director or approval from EPA where
                                             The owner or operator must submit the                    data.                                                 EPA is the permitting authority.
                                             documentation supporting their renewal                   *     *      *    *     *                             *      *     *     *    *
                                             request for the state’s or EPA’s review                  ■ 17. Section 257.94 is amended by                    ■ 18. Section 257.95 is amended by
                                             and approval of their extension one year                 revising paragraphs (d)(3) and (e)(2) to              revising paragraphs (c)(3), (g)(3)(ii),
                                             before the groundwater monitoring
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                                                                                                      read as follows:                                      (h)(2) and (3) to read as follows:
                                             suspension is due to expire. If the
                                             existing groundwater monitoring                          § 257.94   Detection monitoring program.              § 257.95    Assessment monitoring program.
                                             extension expires or is not approved,                    *     *      *     *    *                             *     *      *     *    *
                                             the owner or operator must begin                           (d) * * *                                             (c) * * *
                                             groundwater monitoring according to                        (3) The owner or operator must obtain                 (3) The owner or operator must obtain
                                             paragraph (a) of this section within 90                  a certification from a qualified                      a certification from a qualified


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                                             36454               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             professional engineer or approval from                   ■ 19. Section 257.96 is amended by                    approval from EPA where EPA is the
                                             the Participating State Director or                      revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:            permitting authority that the remedy
                                             approval from EPA where EPA is the                                                                             selected meets the requirements of this
                                                                                                      § 257.96 Assessment of corrective
                                             permitting authority stating that the                                                                          section. The report has been completed
                                                                                                      measures.
                                             demonstration for an alternative                                                                               when it is placed in the operating record
                                             groundwater sampling and analysis                           (a) Within 90 days of finding that any             as required by § 257.105(h)(12).
                                             frequency meets the requirements of                      constituent listed in Appendix IV to this
                                                                                                      part has been detected at a statistically             *     *    *     *     *
                                             this section. The owner or operator must                                                                       ■ 21. Section 257.98 is amended by
                                             include the demonstration providing the                  significant level exceeding the
                                                                                                      groundwater protection standard                       revising paragraph (e) to read as follows:
                                             basis for the alternative monitoring
                                             frequency and the certification by a                     defined under § 257.95(h), or                         § 257.98 Implementation of the corrective
                                             qualified professional engineer or the                   immediately upon detection of a release               action program.
                                             approval from the Participating State                    from a CCR unit, the owner or operator
                                                                                                                                                            *     *     *     *     *
                                             Director or the approval from EPA                        must initiate an assessment of corrective
                                                                                                                                                              (e) Upon completion of the remedy,
                                             where EPA is the permitting authority                    measures to prevent further releases, to
                                                                                                                                                            the owner or operator must prepare a
                                             in the annual groundwater monitoring                     remediate any releases and to restore
                                                                                                                                                            notification stating that the remedy has
                                             and corrective action report required by                 affected area to original conditions. The
                                                                                                                                                            been completed. The owner or operator
                                             § 257.90(e).                                             assessment of corrective measures must
                                                                                                                                                            must obtain a certification from a
                                                                                                      be completed within 90 days, unless the
                                             *        *     *    *    *                               owner or operator demonstrates the                    qualified professional engineer or
                                                 (g) * * *                                                                                                  approval from the Participating State
                                                 (3) * * *                                            need for additional time to complete the
                                                                                                      assessment of corrective measures due                 Director or approval from EPA where
                                                 (ii) Demonstrate that a source other                                                                       EPA is the permitting authority attesting
                                             than the CCR unit caused the                             to site-specific conditions or
                                                                                                      circumstances. The owner or operator                  that the remedy has been completed in
                                             contamination, or that the statistically                                                                       compliance with the requirements of
                                             significant increase resulted from error                 must obtain a certification from a
                                                                                                      qualified professional engineer or                    paragraph (c) of this section. The report
                                             in sampling, analysis, statistical                                                                             has been completed when it is placed in
                                             evaluation, or natural variation in                      approval from the Participating State
                                                                                                      Director or approval from EPA where                   the operating record as required by
                                             groundwater quality. Any such                                                                                  § 257.105(h)(13).
                                             demonstration must be supported by a                     EPA is the permitting authority attesting
                                                                                                      that the demonstration is accurate. The               *     *     *     *     *
                                             report that includes the factual or
                                             evidentiary basis for any conclusions                    90-day deadline to complete the                       ■ 22. Section 257.101 is amended by
                                             and must be certified to be accurate by                  assessment of corrective measures may                 revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (b)(1) to
                                             a qualified professional engineer or                     be extended for no longer than 60 days.               read as follows:
                                             approval from the Participating State                    The owner or operator must also
                                                                                                      include the demonstration in the annual               § 257.101    Closure or retrofit of CCR units.
                                             Director or approval from EPA where
                                                                                                      groundwater monitoring and corrective                    (a) * * *
                                             EPA is the permitting authority. If a
                                                                                                      action report required by § 257.90(e), in                (1) Except as provided by paragraph
                                             successful demonstration is made, the
                                                                                                      addition to the certification by a                    (a)(3) of this section, if at any time after
                                             owner or operator must continue
                                                                                                      qualified professional engineer or the                October 19, 2015, an owner or operator
                                             monitoring in accordance with the
                                                                                                      approval from the Participating State                 of an existing unlined CCR surface
                                             assessment monitoring program
                                                                                                      Director or the approval from EPA                     impoundment determines in any
                                             pursuant to this section, and may return
                                                                                                      where EPA is the permitting authority.                sampling event that the concentrations
                                             to detection monitoring if the
                                                                                                      *      *    *     *     *                             of one or more constituents listed in
                                             constituents in Appendix III and
                                                                                                      ■ 20. Section 257.97 is amended by
                                                                                                                                                            appendix IV of this part are detected at
                                             Appendix IV of this part are at or below
                                                                                                      revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:            statistically significant levels above the
                                             background as specified in paragraph (e)
                                             of this section. The owner or operator                                                                         groundwater protection standard
                                             must also include the demonstration in                   § 257.97   Selection of remedy.                       established under § 257.95(h) for such
                                             the annual groundwater monitoring and                       (a) Based on the results of the                    CCR unit, within six months of making
                                             corrective action report required by                     corrective measures assessment                        such determination or no later than
                                             § 257.90(e), in addition to the                          conducted under § 257.96, the owner or                October 31, 2020, whichever date is
                                             certification by a qualified professional                operator must, as soon as feasible, select            later, the owner or operator of the
                                             engineer or the approval from the                        a remedy that, at a minimum, meets the                existing unlined CCR surface
                                             Participating State Director or the                      standards listed in paragraph (b) of this             impoundment must cease placing CCR
                                             approval from EPA where EPA is the                       section. This requirement applies in                  and non-CCR wastestreams into such
                                             permitting authority.                                    addition to, not in place of, any                     CCR surface impoundment and either
                                                                                                      applicable standards under the                        retrofit or close the CCR unit in
                                             *        *     *    *    *
                                                                                                      Occupational Safety and Health Act.                   accordance with the requirements of
                                                 (h) * * *
                                                 (2) For the following constituents:                  The owner or operator must prepare a                  § 257.102.
                                                 (i) Cobalt 6 micrograms per liter (mg/               semiannual report describing the                      *      *     *     *     *
                                             l);                                                      progress in selecting and designing the                  (b) * * *
                                                 (ii) Lead 15 mg/l;                                   remedy. Upon selection of a remedy, the                  (1)(i) Location standard under
                                                 (iii) Lithium 40 mg/l; and                           owner or operator must prepare a final                § 257.60. Except as provided by
                                                 (iv) Molybdenum 100 mg/l.                            report describing the selected remedy                 paragraph (b)(4) of this section, the
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                                                 (3) For constituents for which the                   and how it meets the standards                        owner or operator of an existing CCR
                                             background level is higher than the                      specified in paragraph (b) of this                    surface impoundment that has not
                                             levels identified under paragraphs (h)(1)                section. The owner or operator must                   demonstrated compliance with the
                                             and (h)(2) of this section, the                          obtain a certification from a qualified               location standard specified in
                                             background concentration.                                professional engineer or approval from                § 257.60(a) must cease placing CCR and
                                             *        *     *    *    *                               the Participating State Director or                   non-CCR wastestreams into such CCR


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                             36455

                                             unit no later than October 31, 2020, and                 from the Participating State Director or              ■ 24. Section 257.104 is amended by
                                             close the CCR unit in accordance with                    the approval from EPA where EPA is the                revising paragraphs (d)(1)(iii), (d)(4) and
                                             the requirements of § 257.102.                           permitting authority for the design of                (e) to read as follows:
                                                (ii) Location standards under                         the final cover system as required by
                                             §§ 257.61 through 257.64. Except as                      § 257.102(d)(3)(iii), if applicable. The              § 257.104    Post-closure care requirements.
                                             provided by paragraph (b)(4) of this                     owner or operator has completed the                   *       *    *     *     *
                                             section, within six months of                            notification when it has been placed in                  (d) * * *
                                             determining that an existing CCR                         the facility’s operating record as                       (1) * * *
                                             surface impoundment has not                              required by § 257.105(i)(7).                             (iii) A description of the planned uses
                                             demonstrated compliance with any                           (h) Within 30 days of completion of                 of the property during the post-closure
                                             location standard specified in                           closure of the CCR unit, the owner or                 period. Post-closure use of the property
                                             §§ 257.61(a), 257.62(a), 257.63(a), and                  operator must prepare a notification of               shall not disturb the integrity of the
                                             257.64(a), the owner or operator of the                  closure of a CCR unit. The notification               final cover, liner(s), or any other
                                             CCR surface impoundment must cease                       must include the certification by a                   component of the containment system,
                                             placing CCR and non-CCR wastestreams                     qualified professional engineer or the                or the function of the monitoring
                                             into such CCR unit and close the CCR                     approval from the Participating State                 systems unless necessary to comply
                                             unit in accordance with the                              Director or the approval from EPA                     with the requirements in this subpart.
                                             requirements of § 257.102.                               where EPA is the permitting authority                 Any other disturbance is allowed if the
                                             *       *     *      *     *                             as required by § 257.102(f)(3). The                   owner or operator of the CCR unit
                                             ■ 23. Section 257.102 is amended by                      owner or operator has completed the                   demonstrates that disturbance of the
                                             revising paragraphs (b)(4), (d)(3)(iii),                 notification when it has been placed in               final cover, liner, or other component of
                                             (f)(3), (g), (h), (k)(2)(iv), (k)(4) and (k)(6)          the facility’s operating record as                    the containment system, including any
                                             to read as follows:                                      required by § 257.105(i)(8).                          removal of CCR, will not increase the
                                                                                                        (k) * * *                                           potential threat to human health or the
                                             § 257.102 Criteria for conducting the
                                             closure or retrofit of CCR units.                          (2) * * *                                           environment. The demonstration must
                                                                                                                                                            be certified by a qualified professional
                                             *       *    *     *    *                                  (iv) The owner or operator of the CCR               engineer or approved by the
                                                (b) * * *                                             unit must obtain a written certification              Participating State Director or approved
                                                (4) The owner or operator of the CCR                  from a qualified professional engineer or             from EPA where EPA is the permitting
                                             unit must obtain a written certification                 an approval from the Participating State              authority, and notification shall be
                                             from a qualified professional engineer or                Director or an approval from EPA where                provided to the State Director that the
                                             approval from the Participating State                    EPA is the permitting authority that the              demonstration has been placed in the
                                             Director or approval from EPA where                      activities outlined in the written retrofit           operating record and on the owners or
                                             EPA is the permitting authority that the                 plan, including any amendment of the                  operator’s publicly accessible internet
                                             initial and any amendment of the                         plan, meet the requirements of this                   site.
                                             written closure plan meets the                           section.
                                             requirements of this section.                                                                                  *       *    *     *     *
                                                                                                      *     *      *     *     *
                                             *       *    *     *    *                                                                                         (4) The owner or operator of the CCR
                                                                                                        (4) Upon completion, the owner or                   unit must obtain a written certification
                                                (d) * * *                                             operator must obtain a written
                                                (3) * * *                                                                                                   from a qualified professional engineer or
                                                                                                      certification from a qualified                        an approval from the Participating State
                                                (iii) The owner or operator of the CCR                professional engineer or an approval
                                             unit must obtain a written certification                                                                       Director or an approval from EPA where
                                                                                                      from the Participating State Director or              EPA is the permitting authority that the
                                             from a qualified professional engineer or                an approval from EPA where EPA is the
                                             approval from the Participating State                                                                          initial and any amendment of the
                                                                                                      permitting authority verifying that the               written post-closure plan meets the
                                             Director or approval from EPA where                      retrofit activities have been completed
                                             EPA is the permitting authority that the                                                                       requirements of this section.
                                                                                                      in accordance with the retrofit plan
                                             design of the final cover system meets                                                                            (e) Notification of completion of post-
                                                                                                      specified in paragraph (k)(2) of this
                                             the requirements of this section.                                                                              closure care period. No later than 60
                                                                                                      section and the requirements of this
                                             *       *    *     *    *                                                                                      days following the completion of the
                                                                                                      section.
                                                (f) * * *                                                                                                   post-closure care period, the owner or
                                                                                                      *     *      *     *     *                            operator of the CCR unit must prepare
                                                (3) Upon completion, the owner or
                                             operator of the CCR unit must obtain a                     (6) Within 30 days of completing the                a notification verifying that post-closure
                                             certification from a qualified                           retrofit activities specified in paragraph            care has been completed. The
                                             professional engineer or approval from                   (k)(1) of this section, the owner or                  notification must include the
                                             the Participating State Director or                      operator must prepare a notification of               certification by a qualified professional
                                             approval from EPA where EPA is the                       completion of retrofit activities. The                engineer or the approval from the
                                             permitting authority verifying that                      notification must include the                         Participating State Director or the
                                             closure has been completed in                            certification from a qualified                        approval from EPA where EPA is the
                                             accordance with the closure plan                         professional engineer or an approval                  permitting authority verifying that post-
                                             specified in paragraph (b) of this section               from the Participating State Director or              closure care has been completed in
                                             and the requirements of this section.                    an approval from EPA where EPA is the                 accordance with the closure plan
                                                (g) No later than the date the owner                  permitting authority has is required by               specified in paragraph (d) of this section
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                                             or operator initiates closure of a CCR                   paragraph (k)(4) of this section. The                 and the requirements of this section.
                                             unit, the owner or operator must                         owner or operator has completed the                   The owner or operator has completed
                                             prepare a notification of intent to close                notification when it has been placed in               the notification when it has been placed
                                             a CCR unit. The notification must                        the facility’s operating record as                    in the facility’s operating record as
                                             include the certification by a qualified                 required by § 257.105(j)(6).                          required by § 257.105(i)(13).
                                             professional engineer or the approval                    *     *      *     *     *                            *       *    *     *     *


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                                             36456               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                             ■ 25. Section 257.105 is amended by                      benefit years. Accordingly, HHS is                    parameters related to the risk
                                             adding paragraph (h)(14) to read as                      issuing this final rule to allow charges              adjustment program (proposed 2014
                                             follows:                                                 to be collected and payments to be made               Payment Notice). We published the
                                                                                                      for the 2017 benefit year. We hereby                  2014 Payment Notice final rule in the
                                             § 257.105   Recordkeeping requirements.                  adopt the final rules set out in the                  March 11, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR
                                             *     *    *     *    *                                  publication in the Federal Register on                15409). In the June 19, 2013 Federal
                                               (h) * * *                                              March 23, 2012 and the publication in                 Register (78 FR 37032), we proposed a
                                               (14) The demonstration, including                      the Federal Register on March 8, 2016.                modification to the HHS-operated
                                             long-term performance data, supporting                   DATES: These provisions of this final                 methodology related to community
                                             the suspension of groundwater                            rule are effective on July 30, 2018.                  rating states. In the October 30, 2013,
                                             monitoring requirements as required by                   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                      Federal Register (78 FR 65046), we
                                             § 257.90(g).                                             Abigail Walker, (410) 786–1725; Adam                  finalized the proposed modification to
                                             *     *    *     *    *                                  Shaw, (410) 786–1091; Jaya Ghildiyal,                 the HHS-operated methodology related
                                             ■ 26. Section 257.106 is amended by                      (301) 492–5149; or Adrianne Patterson,                to community rating states. We
                                             adding paragraph (h)(11) to read as                      (410) 786–0686.                                       published a correcting amendment to
                                             follows:                                                 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                                                                                                                            the 2014 Payment Notice final rule in
                                                                                                                                                            the November 6, 2013 Federal Register
                                             § 257.106   Notification requirements.                   I. Background                                         (78 FR 66653) to address how an
                                             *     *    *     *    *                                  A. Legislative and Regulatory Overview                enrollee’s age for the risk score
                                               (h) * * *                                                                                                    calculation would be determined under
                                               (11) Provide the demonstration                            The Patient Protection and Affordable              the HHS-operated risk adjustment
                                             supporting the suspension of                             Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148), was enacted               methodology.
                                             groundwater monitoring requirements                      on March 23, 2010; the Health Care and                   In the December 2, 2013 Federal
                                             specified under § 257.105(h)(14).                        Education Reconciliation Act of 2010                  Register (78 FR 72321), we published a
                                                                                                      (Pub. L. 111–152) was enacted on March                proposed rule outlining the Federally
                                             *     *    *     *    *                                  30, 2010. These statutes are collectively             certified risk adjustment methodologies
                                             ■ 27. Section 257.107 is amended by                      referred to as ‘‘PPACA’’ in this final                for the 2015 benefit year and other
                                             adding paragraph (h)(11) to read as                      rule. Section 1343 of the PPACA                       parameters related to the risk
                                             follows:                                                 established an annual permanent risk                  adjustment program (proposed 2015
                                                                                                      adjustment program under which                        Payment Notice). We published the
                                             § 257.107 Publicly accessible internet site
                                             requirements.                                            payments are collected from health                    2015 Payment Notice final rule in the
                                                                                                      insurance issuers that enroll relatively              March 11, 2014 Federal Register (79 FR
                                             *     *    *    *     *                                  low-risk populations, and payments are
                                               (h) * * *                                                                                                    13743). In the May 27, 2014 Federal
                                                                                                      made to health insurance issuers that                 Register (79 FR 30240), the 2015 fiscal
                                               (11) The demonstration supporting                      enroll relatively higher-risk populations.
                                             the suspension of groundwater                                                                                  year sequestration rate for the risk
                                                                                                      Consistent with section 1321(c)(1) of the             adjustment program was announced.
                                             monitoring requirements specified                        PPACA, the Secretary is responsible for
                                             under § 257.105(h)(14).                                                                                           In the November 26, 2014 Federal
                                                                                                      operating the risk adjustment program                 Register (79 FR 70673), we published a
                                             *     *    *    *     *                                  on behalf of any state that elected not               proposed rule outlining the proposed
                                             [FR Doc. 2018–16262 Filed 7–27–18; 8:45 am]              to do so. For the 2017 benefit year, HHS              Federally certified risk adjustment
                                             BILLING CODE 6560–50–P                                   is responsible for operation of the risk              methodologies for the 2016 benefit year
                                                                                                      adjustment program in all 50 states and               and other parameters related to the risk
                                                                                                      the District of Columbia.                             adjustment program (proposed 2016
                                             DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND                                    HHS sets the risk adjustment                       Payment Notice). We published the
                                             HUMAN SERVICES                                           methodology that it uses in states that               2016 Payment Notice final rule in the
                                                                                                      elect not to operate the program in                   February 27, 2015 Federal Register (80
                                             45 CFR Part 153                                          advance of each benefit year through a                FR 10749).
                                             [CMS–9920–F]                                             notice-and-comment rulemaking                            In the December 2, 2015 Federal
                                                                                                      process with the intention that issuers               Register (80 FR 75487), we published a
                                             RIN 0938–AT65                                            will be able to rely on the methodology               proposed rule outlining the Federally
                                             Adoption of the Methodology for the                      to price their plans appropriately (45                certified risk adjustment methodology
                                             HHS-Operated Permanent Risk                              CFR 153.320; 76 FR 41930, 41932                       for the 2017 benefit year and other
                                             Adjustment Program Under the Patient                     through 41933; 81 FR 94058, 94702                     parameters related to the risk
                                             Protection and Affordable Care Act for                   (explaining the importance of setting                 adjustment program (proposed 2017
                                             the 2017 Benefit Year                                    rules ahead of time and describing                    Payment Notice). We published the
                                                                                                      comments supporting that practice)).                  2017 Payment Notice final rule in the
                                             AGENCY:  Centers for Medicare &                             In the July 15, 2011 Federal Register              March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR
                                             Medicaid Services (CMS), Department                      (76 FR 41929), we published a proposed                12204).
                                             of Health and Human Services (HHS).                      rule outlining the framework for the risk                In the September 6, 2016 Federal
                                             ACTION: Final rule.                                      adjustment program. We implemented                    Register (81 FR 61455), we published a
                                                                                                      the risk adjustment program in a final                proposed rule outlining the Federally
                                             SUMMARY:   This final rule adopts the risk               rule, published in the March 23, 2012                 certified risk adjustment methodology
                                             adjustment methodology that HHS                          Federal Register (77 FR 17219)                        for the 2018 benefit year and other
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                                             previously established for the 2017                      (Premium Stabilization Rule). In the                  parameters related to the risk
                                             benefit year. In February 2018, a district               December 7, 2012 Federal Register (77                 adjustment program (proposed 2018
                                             court vacated the use of statewide                       FR 73117), we published a proposed                    Payment Notice). We published the
                                             average premium as a basis for the HHS-                  rule outlining the proposed Federally                 2018 Payment Notice final rule in the
                                             operated risk adjustment methodology                     certified risk adjustment methodologies               December 22, 2016 Federal Register (81
                                             for the 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018                 for the 2014 benefit year and other                   FR 94058).


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Document Created: 2018-07-28 01:43:36
Document Modified: 2018-07-28 01:43:36
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis final rule is effective on August 29, 2018.
ContactFor information concerning this final rule, contact Kirsten Hillyer, Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery, Environmental Protection Agency, 5304P, Washington, DC 20460;
FR Citation83 FR 36435 
RIN Number2050-AG88
CFR AssociatedEnvironmental Protection; Beneficial Use; Coal Combustion Products; Coal Combustion Residuals; Coal Combustion Waste; Disposal; Hazardous Waste; Landfill and Surface Impoundment

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