Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2002/09/10/02-22983/ambient-air-quality-surveillance-and-designation-of-areas-for-air-quality-planning-purposes
Timestamp: 2017-09-22 15:49:00
Document Index: 336032880

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 58', 'art 81', 'art 50', 'art 58', 'art 58', '§\u200981', '§\u200981', '§\u200981']

Federal Register :: Ambient Air Quality Surveillance and Designation of Areas for Air Quality Planning Purposes; Louisiana; Modification of Ozone Monitoring Season and Revisions to Geographical Boundaries of Air Quality Control Regions
This rule is effective on November 12, 2002 without further notice, unless we receive adverse comment by October 10, 2002. If we receive such comment, we will publish a timely withdrawal in the Federal Register informing the public that this rule will not take effect.
57332-57337 (6 pages)
LA-31-1-7189a
FRL-7374-1
II. What Are the AQCRs and Ozone Seasons in Louisiana?
III. How Is EPA Changing the AQCR Boundaries and Ozone Monitoring Seasons in Louisiana?
IV. What Is EPA's Authority To Revise AQCRs and Ozone Monitoring Seasons?
V. How Do These Revisions Affect Other States' AQCRs and Ozone Seasons?
VI. Is Coordination With the Other States Required?
VII. How Do Air Quality Data Support a Revision to the Ozone Season in Two Louisiana AQCRs?
VIII. Why Is This a “Final Action?”
IX. What Administrative Requirements Apply for This Action?
Appendix D to Part 58—Network Design for State and Local Air Monitoring Stations (SLAMS) and National Air Monitoring Stations (NAMS) and Photochemical Assessment Monitoring Stations (PAMS)
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/02-22983 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/02-22983
The EPA is taking direct final action to revise the geographical boundaries of the three Air Quality Control Regions (AQCRs) in the State of Louisiana, which are the Southern Louisiana-Southeast Texas AQCR, the Shreveport-Texarkana-Tyler AQCR, and the Monroe-El Dorado AQCR. The EPA is also taking direct final action to shorten the ozone season for the Monroe-El Dorado and Shreveport-Texarkana-Tyler AQCRs, from year-round, to March 1 through October 31. EPA is taking this action in response to a June 12, 1995, letter from the Governor of Louisiana requesting that EPA revise the AQCR boundaries and ozone seasons in order to provide for more effective and efficient air quality management in the State of Louisiana.
Written comments on this action should be addressed to Mr. Thomas H. Diggs, Chief, Air Planning Section (6PD-L), at the EPA Region 6 Office listed below. Copies of documents relevant to this action are available for public inspection during normal business hours at the following locations. Anyone wanting to examine these documents should make an appointment with the appropriate office at least 24 hours in advance.
Joe Kordzi of the EPA Region 6 Air Planning Section at (214) 665-7186 and at the address above.
In this rulemaking, we are approving a June 12, 1995, request from the Governor of Louisiana to:
1. Revise the geographical boundaries of the three AQCRs in the State, and;
2. Shorten the ozone season, for the Louisiana parishes located in two of these AQCRs, from year-round to March 1 through October 31.
The Governor requested these revisions to the AQCR boundaries and ozone ambient air monitoring seasons in order to maximize the staff resources dedicated to providing air quality control services to the citizens of the State.
The three AQCRs in Louisiana are as follows:
AQCR 019—Monroe (Louisiana)-El Dorado (Arkansas) Interstate (Codified at 40 CFR 81.92)
AQCR 022—Shreveport-Texarkana-Tyler Interstate (Arkansas-Louisiana-Oklahoma-Texas) (Codified at 40 CFR 81.94)
AQCR 106—Southern Louisiana-Southeast Texas Interstate (Codified at 40 CFR 81.53).
The ozone monitoring season is currently year-round for all three AQCRs.
In this rulemaking, we are taking direct final action to:
1. Transfer Avoyelles, Rapides and Vernon Parishes from the Southern Louisiana-Southeast Texas AQCR to the Shreveport-Texarkana-Tyler AQCR;
2. Transfer Grant Parish from the Southern Louisiana-Southeast Texas AQCR to the Monroe-El Dorado AQCR; and
3. Shorten the ozone season, for the Monroe-El Dorado and Shreveport-Texarkana-Tyler AQCRs, from year-long (January 1 through December 31) to March 1 through October 31.
The EPA designates boundaries of AQCRs under section 107 of the Federal Clean Air Act (Act), and codifies them at 40 CFR part 81, subpart B (Designation of Air Quality Control Regions). A Governor may request, under section 107(e) of the Act, a realignment of the AQCRs in the State if the realignment will provide for more efficient and effective air quality management.
40 CFR 58.13(a)(3) allows EPA Regional Administrators to exempt particular periods or seasons from the requirements to collect ambient air quality data at State and Local Ambient Start Printed Page 57333Monitoring Stations (SLAMS). Appendix H of 40 CFR part 50 also mentions such waivers for continuous ozone monitoring requirements where it can be demonstrated that exceedences of the ozone national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) are extremely unlikely. Such exemptions or waivers take the form of a formal change to 40 CFR part 58, Appendix D, section 2.5, published as a final rule in the Federal Register by the Regional Administrator. Regional Offices must coordinate with EPA Headquarters on exemptions or waivers affecting National Ambient Monitoring Stations (NAMS). Either a State, EPA Regional Office, or EPA Headquarters may initiate the revision to a State's ozone season.
Moving four parishes from the Southern Louisiana-Southeast Texas AQCR to the northern Louisiana AQCRs will change the overall boundaries for all three interstate AQCRs (019, 022, and 106). However, these changes do not affect to which AQCRs the counties in Texas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas are assigned. Revising the ozone monitoring season for those Louisiana parishes assigned to AQCRs 019 and 022 does not alter the official monitoring seasons for the States of Texas, Arkansas, and Oklahoma.
A State must obtain permission from the Governor of a neighboring State to revise an AQCR if EPA determines that the realignment will significantly affect the air pollution concentrations in the neighboring State. (See section 107(e) of the Act.) We have determined that the Louisiana AQCR realignments will not significantly impact air quality in the neighboring States because:
1. The four Louisiana parishes being moved are currently in compliance with the one-hour ozone NAAQS, and;
2. The affected parishes' inventories of anthropogenic, or man-made, precursor emissions (i.e., nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds) are quite small.
Thus, we believe that coordination with the neighboring States is not required in order to approve this revision to the Louisiana AQCR boundaries.
As stated above in part IV of this rulemaking, either a State, EPA Regional Office, or EPA Headquarters may request a revision to a State's ozone season. Coordination among States is not required in order for Regional Administrators to grant such requests for exemption or waiver from the requirements to collect ambient ozone air quality data. We have determined that the revision to the ozone monitoring season for the northern Louisiana parishes (in AQCRs 019, 022) is appropriate because historical one- and 8-hour ozone data indicate that ozone exceedences are extremely unlikely to occur outside the months of March through October.
The State's request to shorten the ozone season, for AQCRs 019 and 022, included an analysis of historical (1987-1993) one-hour ozone data collected at both SLAMS and NAMS monitoring sites in Louisiana. As recommended by EPA's “Guideline on Modification to Monitoring Seasons for Ozone (March 1990),” we reviewed the monitoring data submitted to determine the potential for one-hour ozone exceedences throughout the year, and concluded that modification to the ozone season, from year-round to March 1 through October 31, was appropriate. We also reviewed more recent (1994-2001) one-hour ozone data to ensure that the monitors in northern Louisiana had not exceeded the 1-hour NAAQS outside the months of March through October since the State had submitted its request.
On July 18, 1997, EPA promulgated the 8-hour ozone standard (62 FR 38856)[1] . In July 1998, EPA subsequently released a new guidance document concerning ozone monitoring season selection and modification.[2] In the guidance, EPA provided a methodology for calculating new 8-hour ozone monitoring seasons. We have reviewed historical (1987-2001) 8-hour ozone data for AQCRs 019 and 022,[3] consistent with the July 1998 guidance. We determined that no exceedences occurred outside the months of March through October during this period. Thus, shortening the ozone monitoring season for Louisiana AQCRs 019 and 022, from year-round to March 1 through October 31, will not result in the potential to miss days in which the 8-hour ozone standard is exceeded.
Therefore, we are agreeing with Louisiana's conclusions that shortening the ambient ozone monitoring season for AQCRs 019 and 022, from year-round to March 1 through October 31, will provide significant cost savings for the State without reducing the effectiveness of the ozone monitoring program. Since this action affects two NAMS sites located in these AQCRs, we have coordinated our approval of the revised ozone season with EPA Headquarters.
As recommended in the new ozone season guidance, we will periodically review the historical 8-hour ozone data following this change to the ozone season to determine whether the March 1 through October 31 monitoring season is still appropriate.
We are publishing this rule without prior proposal because we view this as a noncontroversial amendment and anticipate no adverse comment. 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 revisions to the AQCR boundaries and ozone monitoring season if adverse comments are received. This rule will be effective on November 12, 2002, without further notice unless we receive adverse comment by October 10, 2002. If EPA receives adverse comment, we will publish a timely withdrawal in the Federal Register informing the public that the rule will not take effect. We will address all public comments in a subsequent final rule based on the proposed rule. We will not institute a second comment period on this action. Any parties interested in commenting must do so at this time.
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 Start Printed Page 57334Office of Management and Budget. For this reason, this action is also not subject to Executive Order 13211, “Actions Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use” (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001). 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 (Pub. L. 104-4).
and 81, chapter I, title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations are amended as follows:
2. Part 58, Appendix D, section 2.5: the table entitled “Ozone Monitoring Season By State” is amended by revising the entry for Louisiana to read as follows:
Louisiana AQCRs 019, 022 March October.
2. Section 81.53 is amended by revising the entry for Louisiana to read as follows:
Southern Louisiana-Southeast Texas Interstate Air Quality Control Region.
3. Section 81.92 is amended by revising the entry for Louisiana to read as follows:
§ 81.92
Monroe (Louisiana)-El Dorado (Arkansas) Interstate Air Quality Control Region.
4. Section 81.94 is amended by revising the entry for Louisiana to read as follows:
§ 81.94
Shreveport-Texarkana-Tyler Interstate Air Quality Control Region.
4. In § 81.319, the carbon monoxide table and the ozone table are amended by revising the list of parishes in AQCRs 019, 022, and 106 to read as follows:
1. On May 14, 1999, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that the 8-hour ozone standard could not be enforced by EPA. Although the Court of Appeals determined that the 8-hour standard could not be enforced, it did not vacate the standard. Hence, the 8-hour standard remained in effect. While appealing this decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, EPA reinstated the one-hour standard in areas where it had been revoked. (65 FR 45182, July 20, 2000). On February 27, 2001, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the 8-hour standard and instructed EPA to develop an implementation plan for the 8-hour standard that is consistent with the Supreme Court's opinion. Whitman v. American Trucking Assoc., Inc., 531 U.S. 457, 121 S. Ct. 903 (2001).
2. “Guideline for Selecting and Modifying the Ozone Monitoring Season Based on an 8-Hour Ozone Standard (EPA-454/R-98-001),” EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, dated July 9, 1998.
3. For this review, EPA Region 6 used all available data as entered into EPA's Aerometric Information Retrieval System (AIRS).
[FR Doc. 02-22983 Filed 9-9-02; 8:45 am]