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Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Colorado; Designation of Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes, Canon City

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[Federal Register: May 30, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 104)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Page 34399-34404]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr30my00-6]

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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Parts 52 and 81

[CO0010037a; FRL67065]


Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
Colorado; Designation of Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes, Canon
City

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Direct final rule.

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SUMMARY: On September 22, 1997, the Governor of the State of Colorado
submitted a State Implementation Plan (SIP) revision for the purpose of
establishing a redesignation for the Canon City, Colorado area from
nonattainment to attainment for particulate matter with an aerodynamic
diameter less than or equal to a nominal 10 microns (PM10)
under the 1987 standards. The Colorado Air Pollution Control Division's
(Colorado) submittal, among other things, documents that the Canon City
area has attained the PM10 national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS), requests redesignation to attainment and includes a
maintenance plan for the area demonstrating maintenance of the
PM10 NAAQS for ten years. EPA is approving the redesignation
request and maintenance plan because the State has met the applicable
requirements of the Clean Air Act, as amended. Subsequent to this
approval, the Canon City area will be designated attainment for the
PM10 NAAQS. This action is being taken under sections 107,
110, and 175A of the Clean Air Act (Act).

DATES: This rule is effective on July 31, 2000, without further notice,
unless EPA receives adverse comment by June 29, 2000. If adverse
comment is received, EPA will publish a timely withdrawal of the direct
final rule in the Federal Register informing the public that the rule
will not take effect.

ADDRESSES: Written comments may be mailed to Richard R. Long, Director,
Air and Radiation Program, Mailcode 8PAR, Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), Region VIII, 999 18th Street, Suite 500, Denver,
Colorado, 80202. Copies of the documents relevant to this action are
available for public inspection during normal business hours at the Air
and Radiation Program, Environmental Protection Agency, Region VIII,
999 18th Street, Suite 500, Denver, Colorado, 80202. Copies of the
state documents relevant to this action are available for public
inspection at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Cindy Rosenberg, EPA, Region VIII,
(303) 3126436.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, wherever we, us,
or our are used, we mean the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

Table of Contents

I. EPA's Final Action
    What Action is EPA Taking in This Direct Final Rule?
II. Summary of Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan
    A. What Requirements Must Be Followed for Redesignations to
Attainment?
    B. Does the Canon City Redesignation Request and Maintenance
Plan Meet the CAA Requirements?
    C. Have the Transportation Conformity Requirements Been Met?
    D. Did Colorado Follow the Proper Procedures for Adopting This
Action?
III. Background
IV. Administrative Requirements

I. EPA's Final Action

What Action Is EPA Taking in This Direct Final Rule?

    We are approving the Governor's submittal of September 22, 1997,
that requests a redesignation for the Canon City nonattainment area to
attainment for the 1987 PM10 standards. We are also
approving the maintenance plan for the Canon City PM10
nonattainment area, which was submitted with the State's September 22,
1997 redesignation request. We are approving this request and
maintenance plan because Colorado has adequately addressed all of the
requirements of the Act for redesignation to attainment applicable to
the Canon City PM10 nonattainment area. Upon the effective
date of this action, the Canon City area's designation status under 40
CFR part 81 will be revised to attainment.
    We are publishing this rule without prior proposal because we view
this as a noncontroversial amendment and anticipate no adverse
comments. However, in the Proposed Rules section of today's Federal
Register publication, we are publishing a separate document that will
serve as the proposal to approve the SIP revision should adverse
comments be filed. This rule will be effective July 31, 2000, without
further notice unless the Agency receives adverse comments by June 29,
2000.
    If we receive such comments, then we will publish a timely
withdrawal of the direct final rule informing the public that the rule
will not take effect. All public comments received will then be
addressed in a subsequent final rule based on the proposed rule. We
will not institute a second comment period on this rule. Any parties
interested in commenting on this rule should do so at this time. If no
such comments are received, the public is advised that this rule will
be effective on July 31, 2000, and no further action will be taken on
the proposed rule.

II. Summary of Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan

A. What Requirements Must Be Followed for Redesignations to Attainment?

    In order for a nonattainment area to be redesignated to attainment,
the following conditions in section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act must be
met:
    (i) We must determine that the area has attained the NAAQS;
    (ii) The applicable implementation plan for the area must be fully
approved under section 110(k) of the Act;
    (iii) We must determine that the improvement in air quality is due
to permanent and enforceable reductions in emissions resulting from
implementation of the applicable implementation plan and applicable
Federal air pollutant control regulations and other permanent and
enforceable reductions;
    (iv) We must fully approve a maintenance plan for the area as
meeting the requirements of CAA section 175A; and,
    (v) The State containing such area must meet all requirements
applicable to the area under section 110 and part D of the CAA.

[[Page 34400]]

    Our September 4, 1992 guidance entitled Procedures for Processing
Requests to Redesignate Areas to Attainment outlines how to assess the
adequacy of redesignation requests against the conditions listed above.
    On September 22, 1997, the Governor of Colorado submitted a
revision to the SIP for the Canon City area and a request that we
redesignate the area to attainment for PM10. The following
is a brief discussion of how Colorado's redesignation request and
maintenance plan meets the requirements of the Act for redesignation of
the Canon City area to attainment for PM10.

B. Does the Canon City Redesignation Request and Maintenance Plan Meet
the CAA Requirements?

i. Attainment of the PM10 NAAQS
    A State must demonstrate that an area has attained the
PM10 NAAQS through submittal of ambient air quality data
from an ambient air monitoring network representing maximum
PM10 concentrations. The data, which must be quality assured
and recorded in the Aerometric Information Retrieval System (AIRS),
must show that the average annual number of expected exceedances for
the area is less than or equal to 1.0, pursuant to 40 CFR 50.6. In
making this showing, three consecutive years of complete air quality
data must be used.
    The State operates one PM10 monitoring site in the Canon
City PM10 nonattainment area. Colorado submitted ambient air
quality data from the monitoring site which demonstrates that the area
has attained the PM10 NAAQS. This air quality data was
quality-assured and placed in AIRS. Only one exceedance of the 24-hour
PM10 NAAQS was measured which occurred in 1988. Since that
time, no exceedances of the 24-hour or the annual PM10 NAAQS
have been measured. Officially, the State relied on the years 19931995
to show that the Canon City area had attained the PM10
NAAQS. The area has continued to attain the PM10 NAAQS since
1995. We believe that Colorado has adequately demonstrated, through
ambient air quality data, that the PM10 NAAQS has been
attained in the Canon City area.
ii. State Implementation Plan Approval
    Those States containing initial moderate PM10
nonattainment areas were required to submit a SIP by November 15, 1991
which demonstrated attainment of the PM10 NAAQS by December
31, 1994. To approve a redesignation request, the SIP for the area must
be fully approved under section 110(k) and must satisfy all
requirements that apply to that area. We approved the PM10
SIP for Canon City on December 23, 1993 (58 FR 68036) as meeting those
moderate PM10 nonattainment plan requirements that were due
to EPA on November 15, 1991.
iii. Improvement in Air Quality Due to Permanent and Enforceable
Measures
    The State must be able to reasonably attribute the improvement in
air quality to emission reductions which are permanent and enforceable.
However, Canon City is a unique case in which no area-specific
PM10 control measures were needed to bring the area into
attainment (or to ensure continued attainment), even when growth in
emissions through 1997 was considered, because the monitored ambient
PM10 concentrations were (and still are) so far below the
NAAQS. Colorado's September 22, 1997 submittal did cite several State-
wide regulations, including SIP-approved regulations for particulates
(Regulation No. 1), new source review permitting (Regulation No. 3),
and residential wood burning (Regulation No. 4), as being responsible
for the improvement in air quality in Canon City. Thus, we believe the
Canon City area satisfies this requirement.
iv. Fully Approved Maintenance Plan Under Section 175A of the Act
    Section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires that, for a nonattainment
area to be redesignated to attainment, we must fully approve a
maintenance plan which meets the requirements of section 175A of the
Act. The plan must demonstrate continued attainment of the relevant
NAAQS in the area for at least 10 years after our approval of the
redesignation. Eight years after our approval of a redesignation, the
State must submit a revised maintenance plan demonstrating attainment
for the 10 years following the initial 10 year period. The maintenance
plan must also contain a contingency plan to ensure prompt correction
of any violation of the NAAQS. (See sections 175A(b) and (d).) Our
September 4, 1992 guidance outlines 5 core elements that are necessary
to ensure maintenance of the relevant NAAQS in an area seeking
redesignation from nonattainment to attainment. Those elements, as well
as guidelines for subsequent maintenance plan revisions, are as
follows:
    a. Attainment Inventory. The maintenance plan should include an
attainment emission inventory to identify the level of emissions in the
area which is sufficient to attain the NAAQS. An emissions inventory
was developed and submitted with the moderate PM10
nonattainment plan for the Canon City area on April 9, 1992. As
detailed in the TSD for EPA's December 23, 1993 approval of the
moderate PM10 nonattainment plan for Canon City, the plan
contained a comprehensive emissions inventory for mobile source
emissions (including re-entrained road dust), residential wood and coal
combustion emissions, and stationary source emissions for wintertime
emissions in the base year of 1990. The Canon City area was in
attainment of the PM10 NAAQS in 1990, based on three
complete years of data. Thus, we believe Colorado has prepared an
adequate attainment inventory for the area.
    b. Maintenance Demonstration. A State may generally demonstrate
maintenance of the NAAQS by either showing that future emissions of a
pollutant or its precursors will not exceed the level of the attainment
inventory, or by modeling to show that the future mix of sources and
emission rates will not cause a violation of the NAAQS. Colorado chose
the modeling approach. The maintenance demonstration for the Canon City
area uses emissions rollback, which was the same level of modeling used
in the original attainment demonstration for the moderate
PM10 SIP for Canon City. The State's rollback approach takes
the design day PM10 value for 1989/1990 of 93 g/
m3, subtracts the background concentration, and divides the
remainder by the total design day actual emissions for 1989/1990. This
ratio is then applied to 2015 projected emissions to calculate the
projected concentration without background. The background value is
then added back in to give the total 2015 projected concentration of
141 /m3. Since this is below the 24-hour PM10
NAAQS of 150 /m3, the maintenance plan demonstrates
maintenance. Although EPA would normally insist on some interim year
projections between 2000 and 2015, EPA has no reason to believe that
total emissions will be greater than the 2015 projections in any of the
interim years. The State applied simple, environmentally conservative,
growth rates to all source categories other than stationary sources,
and stationary sources were projected at allowable emissions. Thus,
total emissions in all years before 2015 should be less than 2015 total
emissions.
    Since no violations of the annual PM10 NAAQS have ever
occurred in Canon City and since the maintenance demonstration clearly
shows maintenance of the 24-hour PM10 NAAQS in Canon City
through the year 2015, it is reasonable and adequate to assume that
protection of the 24-hour

[[Page 34401]]

standard will be sufficient to protect the annual standard as well.
Thus, EPA believes the State has adequately demonstrated that the Canon
City area will maintain the PM10 NAAQS for at least the next
ten years.
    c. Monitoring Network. Once a nonattainment area has been
redesignated to attainment, the State must continue to operate an
appropriate air quality monitoring network, in accordance with 40 CFR
part 58, to verify the attainment status of the area. The maintenance
plan should contain provisions for continued operation of air quality
monitors that will provide such verification. Colorado operates one
PM10 monitoring site in the Canon City area. We approve this
site annually, and any future change would require discussion with us.
In its September 22, 1997 submittal, Colorado committed to continue to
operate the PM10 monitoring station in Canon City, in
accordance with 40 CFR part 58.
    d. Verification of Continued Attainment. The State's maintenance
plan submittal should indicate how the State will track the progress of
the maintenance plan. This is necessary due to the fact that the
emissions projections made for the maintenance demonstration depend on
assumptions of point and area source growth. Colorado has committed in
the Canon City maintenance plan to analyze the three most recent
consecutive years of ambient air quality data on an annual basis to
verify continued attainment of the PM10 NAAQS in Canon City.
In addition, they committed to conduct periodic emission inventory
reviews every three years to determine if any adjustments to the
assumptions used in the maintenance demonstration need to be made. The
first such report will be submitted to us in October 2001 for the year
2000.
    e. Contingency Plan. Section 175A(d) of the Act requires that a
maintenance plan also include contingency provisions, as necessary, to
promptly correct any violation of the NAAQS that occurs after
redesignation of the area. For the purposes of section 175A, a State is
not required to have fully adopted contingency measures that will take
effect without further action by the State in order for the maintenance
plan to be approved. However, the contingency plan is an enforceable
part of the SIP and should ensure that contingency measures are adopted
expeditiously once they are triggered. The plan should discuss the
measures to be adopted and a schedule and procedure for adoption and
implementation. The State should also identify the specific indicators,
or triggers, which will be used to determine when the contingency plan
will be implemented.
    The Canon City contingency plan will be triggered upon our
determination that a PM10 NAAQS violation has occurred in
Canon City. The Canon City contingency plan provides that, within one
month of our determination that a violation has occurred, Colorado and
the Canon City and Fremont County governments and other interested
parties will convene a contingency plan subcommittee. The subcommittee
will identify the cause(s) of the violation within one month of
convening. The subcommittee will then select one of the following
potential contingency measures for the area to bring to the Colorado
Air Quality Control Commission (AQCC) for adoption: street sweeping
requirements, road paving requirements, street sand specifications,
woodburning curtailment, use of liquid de-icers, re-establishing
nonattainment new source review requirements, or other measures as
deemed appropriate. The Canon City contingency plan provides that the
contingency measures should become effective within 10 months of our
determination that a violation has occurred in the Canon City area. In
a letter dated April 24, 2000, from Margie Perkins, Director, Colorado
Air Pollution Control Division, to Richard Long, Director, EPA Region
VIII Air and Radiation Program, Colorado commits to adopt and implement
contingency measures for the Canon City area within one year of a
violation of either the 24-hour or annual PM10 standard. EPA
relies on this commitment in approving the Canon City contingency plan.
    f. Subsequent Maintenance Plan Revisions. In accordance with
section 175A(b) of the Act, the State of Colorado is required to submit
a revision to the maintenance plan eight years after the redesignation
of the Canon City area to attainment for PM10. This revision
is to provide for maintenance of the NAAQS for an additional ten years
following the first ten year period. The State committed in the Canon
City redesignation request to submit a revised maintenance plan in
2006. EPA notes that the State chose 2006 based on an assumption that
EPA would approve the redesignation request in 1998. Because EPA is
approving the redesignation request in 2000, the State must submit the
revised maintenance plan in 2008. See section 175A(b) of the Act.
v. Meeting Applicable Requirements of Section 110 and Part D of the Act
    In order for an area to be redesignated to attainment, section
107(d)(3)(E) requires that it must have met all applicable requirements
of section 110 and part D of the Act. We interpret this to mean that,
for a redesignation request to be approved, the State must have met all
requirements that applied to the subject area prior to, or at the time
of, submitting a complete redesignation request. In our evaluation of a
redesignation request, we don't need to consider other requirements of
the CAA that became due after the date of the submission of a complete
redesignation request.
    a. Section 110 Requirements. Section 110(a)(2) contains general
requirements for nonattainment plans. For purposes of redesignation,
the Colorado SIP was reviewed to ensure that all applicable
requirements under the amended Act were satisfied. These requirements
were met with the Colorado's April 9, 1992 submittal for the Canon City
PM10 nonattainment area. We approved this submittal on
December 23, 1993 (58 FR 68036).
    b. Part D Requirements. Before a PM10 nonattainment area
may be redesignated to attainment, the State must have fulfilled the
applicable requirements of part D. Subpart 1 of part D establishes the
general requirements applicable to all nonattainment areas, subpart 4
of part D establishes specific requirements applicable to
PM10 nonattainment areas.
    The requirements of sections 172(c) and 189(a) regarding attainment
of the PM10 NAAQS, and the requirements of section 172(c)
regarding reasonable further progress, imposition of RACM, the adoption
of contingency measures, and the submission of an emission inventory,
have been satisfied through our December 23, 1993 approval of the Canon
City PM10 SIP (58 FR 68036), our December 14, 1994 approval
of PM10 contingency measures for the area (59 FR 64332), and
the demonstration that the area is now attaining the NAAQS.
    Although EPA's regulations (see 40 CFR 51.396) require that states
adopt transportation conformity provisions in their SIPs for areas
designated nonattainment or subject to an EPA-approved maintenance
plan, we have decided that a transportation conformity SIP is not an
applicable requirement for purposes of evaluating a redesignation
request under section 107(d) of the CAA. This decision is reflected in
EPA's 1996 approval of the Boston carbon monoxide redesignation. (See
61 FR 2918, January 30, 1996.)

[[Page 34402]]

    We approved the requirements of the part D new source review permit
program for the Canon City area on August 18, 1994 (59 FR 42506). Once
the Canon City area is redesignated to attainment, the prevention of
significant deterioration (PSD) requirements of part C of the Act will
apply. We must ensure that the State has made any needed modifications
to its PSD regulations so that Colorado's PSD regulations will apply in
the Canon City area after redesignation. Colorado's PSD regulations,
which we approved as meeting all applicable Federal requirements, apply
to any area designated as unclassifiable or attainment and, thus, will
become fully effective in the Canon City area upon redesignation of the
area to attainment.

C. Have the Transportation Conformity Requirements Been Met?

    Under our transportation conformity regulations, States are to
define the mobile vehicle emissions budget to which Federal
transportation plans must demonstrate conformity. The emissions budget
is defined as the level of mobile source emissions relied upon in the
attainment or maintenance demonstration to maintain compliance with the
NAAQS.
    Colorado had previously adopted mobile source emissions budgets for
the years 1994 and 1997 of 4981 lb/day and 5130 lb/day, respectively.
In the Canon City maintenance plan, Colorado indicated that it would
adopt a new mobile source emissions budget of 7439 lb/day for the year
1997 and beyond. This value is equivalent to the year 2015 projected
emissions for mobile sources. EPA believes use of this value as a
budget for years before 2015 is acceptable because the available safety
margin in years before 2015 is adequate to support such a budget. This
is because pre-2015 projected emissions for source categories other
than mobile sources are lower than 2015 projected emissions for these
other source categories. EPA's approval of 7439 lb/day as the budget
means that this value must be used for conformity determinations for
all years after 1997, including 2015 (the end of the maintenance
period) and beyond. After promulgation of approval of this
redesignation request, the State indicated that it would revise its
regulation entitled Ambient Air Standards for the State of Colorado to
include this emissions budget for the years 1997 through 2015.
    On March 2, 1999, the United States Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit issued a decision in Environmental Defense
Fund v. the Environmental Protection Agency, No. 971637, that we must
make an affirmative determination that the submitted motor vehicle
emission budgets contained in SIPs are adequate before they are used to
determine the conformity of Transportation Improvement Programs or Long
Range Transportation Plans. In response to the court decision, we are
making most submitted SIP revisions containing a control strategy plan
available for public comment and responding to these comments before
announcing our adequacy determination. (We do not perform adequacy
determinations for SIP revisions that only create new emission budgets
for years in which an EPA-approved SIP already establishes a budget,
because these new budgets cannot be used for conformity until they are
approved by EPA.) We make SIP revisions available for comment by
posting notification of their availability on our web site (currently,
these notifications are posted at www.epa.gov/oms/transp/conform/
adequacy.htm). The adequacy process is discussed in greater detail in a
May 14, 1999 memorandum from Gay MacGregor entitled Conformity Guidance
on Implementation of March 2, 1999 Conformity Court Decision, also
available on our web site (www.epa.gov/oms/transp/traqconf.htm).
    As noted above, the Canon City maintenance plan was submitted to
EPA on September 22, 1997. After the court decision, EPA conducted an
adequacy review of all SIP submissions that had been received prior to
the decision but not yet acted on. However, EPA did not conduct an
adequacy review of the Canon City maintenance plan, because the
Colorado AQCC voted on April 15, 1999 to request that the Governor
withdraw this plan. The AQCC later rescinded its request that the plan
be withdrawn, and EPA reviewed the emission budget in this plan for
adequacy using the criteria located at 40 CFR 93.118(e).
    This notice also serves as our determination that the emission
budget in the maintenance plan of 7439 pounds per day of
PM10 is adequate for conformity purposes. As a result of
this adequacy finding, the Colorado Department of Transportation and
the Federal Highway Administration are required to use this budget in
future conformity analyses, even if EPA withdraws this direct final
rule. This adequacy determination will be in effect as of the
publication date of this direct final rule, and will remain in effect
unless and until EPA disapproves the maintenance plan. EPA will not be
publishing a separate notice in the Federal Register documenting this
adequacy determination.
    Notice of the availability of this SIP was posted on our adequacy
web site on January 26, 2000, and a 30-day comment period for adequacy
was provided following the procedures described in the May 14, 1999 Gay
MacGregor memorandum referenced above. No comments were received.
Interested parties can still comment on the Canon City mobile source
emissions budget in response to the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that
accompanies this Federal Register document. If EPA receives adverse
comments with respect to the adequacy of the Canon City emissions
budget or any other aspect of our approval of this SIP by the time the
comment period closes on the proposed rule, we will publish a timely
withdrawal of the direct final rule informing the public that the rule
will not take effect. All public comments received will then be
addressed in a subsequent final rule based on the proposed rule. EPA
will not institute a second comment period on this rule. Any parties
interested in commenting on this rule should do so at this time.

D. Did Colorado Follow the Proper Procedures for Adopting This Action?

    The Act requires States to observe certain procedural requirements
in developing implementation plans and plan revisions for submission.
Section 110(a)(2) of the Act provides that each implementation plan
submitted by a State must be adopted after reasonable notice and public
hearing. Section 110(l) of the Act similarly provides that each
revision to an implementation plan submitted by a State under the Act
must be adopted by such State after reasonable notice and public
hearing.
    We also must determine whether a submittal is complete and
therefore warrants further review and action (see section 110(k)(1) and
57 FR 13565, April 16, 1992). Our completeness criteria for SIP
submittals are set out at 40 CFR part 51, appendix V. We attempt to
make completeness determinations within 60 days of receiving a
submission. However, a submittal is deemed complete by operation of law
under section 110(k)(1)(B) if a completeness determination is not made
within six months after receipt of the submission.
    Copies of the proposed changes were made available to the public
and the AQCC held a public hearing on October 17, 1996 to entertain
public comment on the redesignation request and maintenance plan for
the Canon City PM10 nonattainment area, after providing for
more than 30 days of

[[Page 34403]]

public notice. Colorado did not receive any adverse comments and
therefore, the redesignation request and maintenance plan were
subsequently adopted by the AQCC on October 17, 1996. The request was
formally submitted to us for approval on September 22, 1997. We did not
issue a completeness or an incompleteness finding for the September 22,
1997 submittal. Thus, pursuant to section 110(k)(1)(B), the submittal
was deemed administratively and technically complete by operation of
law on March 22, 1997 (six months after the date of receipt). We have
evaluated the Governor's submittal and have determined that the State
met the requirements for reasonable notice and public hearing under
section 110(a)(2) of the CAA.

III. Background

    To implement our 1987 revisions to the particulate matter NAAQS, on
August 7, 1987 (52 FR 29383), we categorized areas of the nation into
three groups based on the likelihood that protection of the
PM10 NAAQS would require revisions of the existing SIP. We
identified Canon City as a PM10 Group I area of concern,
i.e., an area with a strong likelihood of violating the PM10
NAAQS and requiring a substantial SIP revision. The Canon City area was
among several Group I PM10 areas, all of which were
designated and classified as moderate PM10 nonattainment
areas by operation of law upon enactment of the Clean Air Act
Amendments of 1990 (November 15, 1990). See 56 FR 56694 at 5670556706
(November 6, 1991).
    By November 15, 1991, States containing initial moderate
PM10 nonattainment areas were required to submit most
elements of their PM10 SIPs. (See sections 172(c), 188, and
189 of the Act.) Some provisions, such as PM10 contingency
measures required by section 172(c)(9) of the Act and nonattainment new
source review (NSR) provisions, were due at later dates. In order for a
nonattainment area to be redesignated to attainment, the above
mentioned conditions in section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act must be met. We
approved Colorado's SIP for the Canon City PM10
nonattainment area on December 23, 1993 (58 FR 68036) and
PM10 contingency measures for the area on December 14, 1994
(59 FR 64332).
    On September 22, 1997, the Governor of Colorado submitted a request
to redesignate the Canon City moderate PM10 nonattainment
area to attainment for the 1987 PM10 NAAQS along with a
maintenance plan for the area. Colorado's submittal was not approved at
that time because we promulgated new standards for PM10 on
September 18, 1997 and at the time of this redesignation request, we
were transitioning from the 1987 PM10 standard to the new
PM10 standard. Areas were to be designated under the new
PM10 standard by July 2000 and for that reason we were
encouraging areas to withdraw any redesignation requests for the pre-
existing standard. The AQCC had voted to withdraw the Canon City
redesignation request and maintenance plan due to the fact that Canon
City would have been designated attainment by July 2000 under the 1997
PM10 standard. (Colorado's request for withdrawal had not
yet been officially sent to us by the Governor and so we are able to
process the original redesignation request and maintenance plan now.)
On May 18, 1999, the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C.
Circuit in American Trucking Associations, Inc. et al., v. United
States Environmental Protection Agency vacated the 1997 PM10
standard. Because of the Court ruling, we are continuing to implement
the pre-existing PM10 standard, and are therefore approving
redesignations to qualified PM10 nonattainment areas.

IV. Administrative Requirements

    Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), this
action is not a significant regulatory action and therefore is not
subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget. This action
merely approves state law as meeting federal requirements and imposes
no additional requirements beyond those imposed by state law.
Accordingly, the Administrator certifies that this rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). Because
this rule approves pre-existing requirements under state law and does
not impose any additional enforceable duty beyond that required by
state law, it does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public Law 1044). For the same reason,
this rule also does not significantly or uniquely affect the
communities of tribal governments, as specified by Executive Order
13084 (63 FR 27655, May 10, 1998). This rule 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, as specified
in Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999), because it
merely approves a state rule implementing a federal standard, and does
not alter the relationship or the distribution of power and
responsibilities established in the Clean Air Act. This rule also is
not subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997),
because it is not economically significant.
    In reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act. In
this context, in the absence of a prior existing requirement for the
State to use voluntary consensus standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for EPA, when it reviews a SIP
submission, to use VCS in place of a SIP submission that otherwise
satisfies the provisions of the Clean Air Act. Thus, the requirements
of section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) do not apply. As required by section 3
of Executive Order 12988 (61 FR 4729, February 7, 1996), in issuing
this rule, EPA has taken the necessary steps to eliminate drafting
errors and ambiguity, minimize potential litigation, and provide a
clear legal standard for affected conduct. EPA has complied with
Executive Order 12630 (53 FR 8859, March 15, 1988) by examining the
takings implications of the rule in accordance with the Attorney
General's Supplemental Guidelines for the Evaluation of Risk and
Avoidance of Unanticipated Takings issued under the executive order.
This rule does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.).
    The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, generally
provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency promulgating
the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy of the rule,
to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the
United States. EPA will submit a report containing this rule and other
required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the United States prior
to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. A major rule cannot
take effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal
Register. This action is not a major rule as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2). This rule will be effective July 31, 2000 unless EPA receives
adverse written comments by June 29, 2000.

[[Page 34404]]

    Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean Air Act, petitions for
judicial review of this action must be filed in the United States Court
of Appeals for the appropriate circuit by July 31, 2000. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule
does not affect the finality of this rule for the purposes of judicial
review nor does it extend the time within which a petition for judicial
review may be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness of such
rule or action. This action may not be challenged later in proceedings
to enforce its requirements. (See section 307(b)(2).)

List of Subjects

40 CFR Part 52

    Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Particulate Matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.

40 CFR Part 81

    Air pollution control.

    Dated: May 18, 2000.
Jack W. McGraw,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region VIII.

    40 CFR part 52, subpart TT of chapter I, title 40 is amended as
follows:

PART 52[AMENDED]

    1. The authority citation for Part 52 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.

Subpart TT

    2. Section 52.332 is amended by adding paragraph (i) to read as
follows:

52.332  Moderate PM10 nonattainment area plans.

* * * * *
    (i) On September 22, 1997, the State of Colorado submitted a
maintenance plan for the Canon City PM10 nonattainment area and
requested that the area be redesignated to attainment for the PM10
National Ambient Air Quality Standards. An April 24, 2000 letter from
Margie Perkins, Director, Colorado Air Pollution Control Division, to
Richard Long, Director, EPA Region VIII Air and Radiation Program, was
sent to clarify the requirements of the contingency plan section of the
Canon City maintenance plan. The redesignation request and maintenance
plan satisfy all applicable requirements of the Clean Air Act.

PART 81[AMENDED]

    1. The authority citation for part 81 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.

    2. In 81.306, the table entitled ColoradoPM10 is amended by
revising the entry under Fremont County for Canon City Area to read as
follows:

81.306  Colorado.

* * * * *

                                                                      ColoradoPM10
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                           Designation                                               Classification
         Designated area          ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  Date                          Type                          Date                         Type
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                         *******
Fremont County
  Canon City Area................  July 31, 2000....................  Attainment.............
    Township 18SRange 70W: All of
     sections 21, 22, 27, 28, 33,
     and 34; the E\1/2\, NENW,
     NESW, SENW, SESW quarters of
     sections 20, 29, 32; and the
     W\1/2\ of sections 23, 26,
     and 35; Township 19SRange
     70W: All of sections 3, 4,
     9, 10; E\1/2\, NENW, NESW,
     SENW, SESW quarters of
     sections 5 and 8; W\1/2\ of
     sections 2 and 11.

                                                                         *******
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

* * * * *
[FR Doc. 0013332 Filed 52600; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 656050U



 
 


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