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Ozone Implementation

Approval and Promulgation of
Implementation Plans; Connecticut;
One-Hour Attainment Demonstration;
Connecticut Portion of the New York-
Northern New Jersey-Long Island
Severe Ozone Nonattainment Area

Information provided for informational purposes onlyNote: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.

Federal Register Document

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[Federal Register: December 16, 1999 (Volume 64, Number 241)]

[Proposed Rules]               

[Page 70348-70364]

From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

[DOCID:fr16de99-24]                         



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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY



40 CFR Part 52



[CT057-7216: FRL-6502-1]



 

Approval and Promulgation of Implementation Plans; Connecticut; 

One-Hour Attainment Demonstration; Connecticut Portion of the New York-

Northern New Jersey-Long Island Severe Ozone Nonattainment Area



AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).



ACTION: Proposed rule.



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SUMMARY: The EPA is proposing to conditionally approve the ground-level 

one-hour ozone attainment demonstration State Implementation Plan (SIP) 

for the Connecticut portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long 

Island severe ozone nonattainment area submitted by the Commissioner of 

the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection (CT DEP) on 

September 16, 1998. EPA is also proposing to conditionally approve the 

Connecticut's commitment to submit rate-of-progress (ROP) target 

calculations for ROP after 1999 and the adopted measures to achieve 

post-1999 ROP by December 2000. EPA is also proposing, in the 

alternative, to disapprove this demonstration if Connecticut does not 

submit an adequate motor vehicle emissions budget and additional 

control measures to make up for the projected need for additional 

controls to ensure attainment of the one-hour ozone standard by 

November 2007.



DATES: Comments must be received on or before February 14, 2000.



ADDRESSES: Written comments (in duplicate if possible) should be sent 

to: David B. Conroy at the EPA Region I (New England) Office, One 

Congress Street, Suite 1100-CAQ, Boston, Massachusetts 02114-2023. 

Copies of the State submittal and EPA's technical support document are 

available for public inspection during normal business hours at the 

following address: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 1 (New 

England), One Congress St., 11th Floor, Boston, Massachusetts. 

Telephone (617) 918-1664 an at the Bureau of Air Management, Department 

of Environmental Protection, State Office Building, 79 Elm Street, 

Hartford, CT 06106. Please telephone in advance before visiting.



FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard Burkhart (617) 918-1664.



SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This document provides background 

information on attainment demonstration SIPs for the one-hour ozone 

national ambient air quality standard (NAAQS) and an analysis of the 

one-hour ozone attainment demonstration SIP submitted by the CT DEP for 

the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island severe ozone nonattainment 

area. This document address the following questions:



    What is the Basis for the Attainment Demonstration SIP?

    What are the Components of a Modeled Attainment Demonstration?

    What is the Frame Work for Proposing Action on the Attainment 

Demonstration SIPs?

    What Does EPA Expect to Happen with Respect to the Attainment 

Demonstrations for the Connecticut Portion of the New York-Northern 

New Jersey-Long Island Severe One-hour Ozone Nonattainment Area?

    What are the Relevant Policy and Guidance Documents?

    How Does the Connecticut Submittal Satisfy the Frame Work?



I. Background



A. What Is the Basis for the State's Attainment Demonstration SIP?



1. CAA Requirements

    The Clean Air Act (CAA) requires EPA to establish national ambient 

air quality standards (NAAQS or standards) for certain widespread 

pollutants that cause or contribute to air pollution that is reasonably 

anticipated to endanger public health or welfare. CAA sections 108 and 

109. In 1979, EPA promulgated the one-hour 0.12 parts per million (ppm) 

ground-level ozone standard. 44 FR 8202 (Feb. 8, 1979). Ground-level 

ozone is not emitted directly by sources. Rather, emissions of nitrogen 

oxides (NO<SUB>X</SUB>) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) react in 

the presence of sunlight to form ground-level ozone. NO<SUB>X</SUB> and 

VOC are referred to as precursors of ozone.

    An area exceeds the one-hour ozone standard each time an ambient 

air quality monitor records a one-hour average ozone concentration 

above 0.124 ppm. An area is violating the standard if, over a 

consecutive three-year period, more than three exceedances are expected 

to occur at any one monitor. The CAA, as amended in 1990, required EPA 

to designate as nonattainment any area that was violating the one-hour 

ozone standard, generally based on air quality monitoring data from the 

three-year period from 1987-1989. CAA section 107(d)(4); 56 FR 56694 

(Nov. 6, 1991). The CAA further classified these areas, based on the 

area's design value, as marginal, moderate, serious, severe or extreme. 

CAA section181 (a). Marginal areas were suffering the least significant 

air pollution problems while the areas classified as severe and extreme 

had the most significant air pollution problems.

    The control requirements and dates by which attainment needs to be 

achieved vary with the area's classification. Marginal areas are 

subject to the fewest mandated control requirements and have the 

earliest attainment date. Severe and extreme areas are subject to more 

stringent planning requirements but are provided more time to attain 

the standard. Serious areas are required to attain the one-hour 

standard by November 15, 1999 and severe areas are required to attain 

by November 15, 2005 or November 15, 2007. The New York-Northern New 

Jersey-Long Island nonattainment area is classified as severe and its 

attainment date is November 15, 2007.

    Under section 182(c)(2) and (d) of the CAA, serious and severe 

areas were required to submit by November 15, 1994 demonstrations of 

how they would attain the one-hour standard and how they would achieve 

reductions in VOC emissions of 9 percent for each three-year period 

until the attainment year (rate-of-progress or ROP). (In some cases, 

NO<SUB>X</SUB> emission reductions can be substituted for the required 

VOC emission reductions.) Today, in this proposed rule, EPA is 

proposing action on the attainment demonstration SIP submitted by 

Connecticut for the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island 

nonattainment area. EPA is also proposing action on the Connecticut's 

commitment to submit ROP target calculations for rate-of-progress after 

1999 and the adopted measures to achieve post-1999 ROP by December 

2000. EPA will take action on the Connecticut's 9% ROP plan for 

reductions from 1996-1999 in a separate rulemaking action. (The 9% ROP 

plan was submitted to EPA on December 31, 1997, with minor revisions on 

January 7, 1998.) In addition, elsewhere in this Federal Register, EPA 

is today proposing to take action on nine other serious or severe one-

hour ozone attainment demonstration and, in some



[[Page 70349]]



cases ROP SIPs. The additional nine areas are Greater Connecticut (CT), 

Springfield (Western Massachusetts) (MA), Baltimore (MD), Philadelphia-

Wilmington-Trenton (PA-NJ-DE-MD), Metropolitan Washington, D.C. (DC-MD-

VA), Atlanta (GA), Milwaukee-Racine (WI), Chicago-Gary-Lake County (IL-

IN), and Houston-Galveston-Brazoria (TX).

    In general, an attainment demonstration SIP includes a modeling 

analysis component showing how the area will achieve the standard by 

its attainment date and the control measures necessary to achieve those 

reductions. Another component of the attainment demonstration SIP is a 

motor vehicle emissions budget for transportation conformity purposes. 

Transportation conformity is a process for ensuring that States 

consider the effects of emissions associated with new or improved 

federally-funded roadways on attainment of the standard. As described 

in section 176(c)(2)(A), attainment demonstrations necessarily include 

the estimates of motor vehicle emissions that are consistent with 

attainment, which then act as a budget or ceiling for the purposes of 

determining whether transportation plans and projects conform to the 

attainment SIP.

2. History and Time Frame for the State's Attainment Demonstration SIP

    Notwithstanding significant efforts by the States, in 1995 EPA 

recognized that many States in the eastern half of the United States 

could not meet the November 1994 time frame for submitting an 

attainment demonstration SIP because emissions of NO<SUB>X</SUB> and 

VOCs in upwind States (and the ozone formed by these emissions) 

affected these nonattainment areas and the full impact of this effect 

had not yet been determined. This phenomenon is called ozone transport.

    On March 2, 1995, Mary D. Nichols, EPA's then Assistant 

Administrator for Air and Radiation, issued a memorandum to EPA's 

Regional Administrators acknowledging the efforts made by States but 

noting the remaining difficulties in making attainment demonstration 

SIP submittals.<SUP>1</SUP> Recognizing the problems created by ozone 

transport, the March 2, 1995 memorandum called for a collaborative 

process among the States in the eastern half of the country to evaluate 

and address transport of ozone and its precursors. This memorandum led 

to the formation of the Ozone Transport Assessment Group (OTAG) 

<SUP>2</SUP> and provided for the States to submit the attainment 

demonstration SIPs based on the expected time frames for OTAG to 

complete its evaluation of ozone transport.

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    \1\ Memorandum, ``Ozone Attainment Demonstrations,'' issued 

March 2, 1995. A copy of the memorandum may be found on EPA's web 

site.

    \2\ Letter from Mary A. Gade, Director, State of Illinois 

Environmental Protection Agency to Environmental Council of States 

(ECOS) Members, dated April 13, 1995.

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    In June 1997, OTAG concluded and provided EPA with recommendations 

regarding ozone transport. The OTAG generally concluded that transport 

of ozone and the precursor NO<SUB>X</SUB> is significant and should be 

reduced regionally to enable States in the eastern half of the country 

to attain the ozone NAAQS.

    In recognition of the length of the OTAG process, in a December 29, 

1997 memorandum, Richard Wilson, EPA's then Acting Assistant 

Administrator for Air and Radiation, provided until April 1998 for 

States to submit the following elements of their attainment 

demonstration SIPs for serious and severe nonattainment areas: (1) 

Evidence that the applicable control measures in subpart 2 of part D of 

title I of the CAA were adopted and implemented or were on an 

expeditious course to being adopted and implemented; (2) a list of 

measures needed to meet the remaining ROP emissions reduction 

requirement and to reach attainment; (3) for severe areas only, a 

commitment to adopt and submit target calculations for post-1999 ROP 

and the control measures necessary for attainment and ROP plans through 

the attainment year by the end of 2000 <SUP>3</SUP>; (4) a commitment 

to implement the SIP control programs in a timely manner and to meet 

ROP emissions reductions and attainment; and (5) evidence of a public 

hearing on the State submittal.<SUP>4</SUP> This submission is 

sometimes referred to as the Phase 2 submission. Motor vehicle 

emissions budgets can be established based on a commitment to adopt the 

measures needed for attainment and identification of the measures 

needed. Thus, State submissions due in April 1998 under the Wilson 

policy should have included a motor vehicle emissions budget.

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    \3\ In general, a commitment for severe areas to adopt by 

December 2000 the control measures necessary for attainment and ROP 

plans through the attainment year applies to any additional measures 

necessary for attainment that were not otherwise required to be 

submitted earlier. (For example, this memorandum was not intended to 

allow States to delay submission of measures required under the CAA, 

such as inspection and maintenance (I/M) programs or reasonable 

available control technology (RACT) regulations, required at an 

earlier time.) Thus, this commitment applies to any control measures 

or emission reductions on which the State relied for purposes of the 

modeled attainment demonstration. To the extent that Connecticut has 

relied on a commitment to submit these measures by December 2000, 

EPA is proposing a conditional approval of the area's attainment 

demonstration. Some severe areas submitted the actual adopted 

control measures and are not relying on a commitment.

    \4\ Memorandum, ``Guidance for Implementing the 1-Hour Ozone and 

Pre-Existing PM 10 NAAQS,'' issued December 29, 1997. A copy of this 

memorandum may be found on EPA's web site at https://www.epa.gov/ttn/

oarpg/t1pgm.html.

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    Building upon the OTAG recommendations and technical analyses, in 

November 1997, EPA proposed action addressing the ozone transport 

problem. In its proposal, the EPA found that current SIPs in 22 States 

and the District of Columbia (23 jurisdictions) were insufficient to 

provide for attainment and maintenance of the one-hour standard because 

they did not regulate NO<SUB>X</SUB> emissions that significantly 

contribute to ozone transport. 62 FR 60318 (Nov. 7, 1997). The EPA 

finalized that rule in September 1998, calling on the 23 jurisdictions 

to revise their SIPs to require NO<SUB>X</SUB> emissions reductions 

within the State to a level consistent with a NO<SUB>X</SUB> emissions 

budget identified in the final rule. 63 FR 57356 (Oct. 27, 1998). This 

final rule is commonly referred to as the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call.

3. Time Frame for Taking Action on Attainment Demonstration SIPs for 10 

Serious and Severe Areas

    The States generally submitted the SIPs between April and October 

of 1998; some States are still submitting additional revisions as 

described below. Under the CAA, EPA is required to approve or 

disapprove a State's submission no later than 18 months following 

submission. (The statute provides up to 6 months for a completeness 

determination and an additional 12 months for approval or disapproval.) 

The EPA believes that it is important to keep the process moving 

forward in evaluating these plans and, as appropriate, approving them. 

Thus, in today's Federal Register, EPA is proposing to take action on 

the 10 serious and severe one-hour ozone attainment demonstration SIPs 

(located in 13 States and the District of Columbia) and intends to take 

final action on these submissions over the next 6-12 months. The reader 

is referred to individual dates in this document for specific 

information on actions leading to EPA's final rulemaking on these 

plans.



[[Page 70350]]



4. Options for Action on a State's Attainment Demonstration SIP

    Depending on the circumstances unique to each of the 10 area SIP 

submissions on which EPA is proposing action today, EPA is proposing 

one or more of these types of approval or disapproval in the 

alternative. In addition, these proposals may identify additional 

action that will be necessary from the State.

    The CAA provides for EPA to approve, disapprove, partially approve 

or conditionally approve a State's plan submission. CAA section 110(k). 

The EPA must fully approve the submission if it meets the attainment 

demonstration requirement of the CAA. If the submission is deficient in 

some way, EPA may disapprove the submission. In the alternative, if 

portions of the submission are approvable, EPA may partially approve 

and partially disapprove, or may conditionally approve based on a 

commitment to correct the deficiency by a date certain, which can be no 

later than one year from the date of EPA's final conditional approval.

    The EPA may partially approve a submission if separable parts of 

the submission, standing alone, are consistent with the CAA. For 

example, if a State submits a modeled attainment demonstration, 

including control measures, but the modeling does not demonstrate 

attainment, EPA could approve the control measures and disapprove the 

modeling for failing to demonstrate attainment.

    The EPA may issue a conditional approval based on a State's 

commitment to expeditiously correct a deficiency by a date certain that 

can be no later than one year following EPA's conditional approval. 

Such commitments do not need to be independently enforceable because, 

if the State does not fulfill its commitment, the conditional approval 

is converted to a disapproval. For example, if a State commits to 

submit additional control measures and fails to submit them or EPA 

determines the State's submission of the control measures is 

incomplete, the EPA will notify the State by letter that the 

conditional approval has been converted to a disapproval. If the State 

submits control measures that EPA determines are complete or that are 

deemed complete, EPA will determine through rulemaking whether the 

State's attainment demonstration is fully approvable or whether the 

conditional approval of the attainment demonstration should be 

converted to a disapproval.

    Finally, EPA has recognized that in some limited circumstances, it 

may be appropriate to issue a full approval for a submission that 

consists, in part, of an enforceable commitment. Unlike the commitment 

for conditional approval, such an enforceable commitment can be 

enforced in court by EPA or citizens. In addition, this type of 

commitment may extend beyond one year following EPA's approval action. 

Thus, EPA may accept such an enforceable commitment where it is 

infeasible for the State to accomplish the necessary action in the 

short term.



B. What Are the Components of a Modeled Attainment Demonstration?



    The EPA provides that States may rely on a modeled attainment 

demonstration supplemented with additional evidence to demonstrate 

attainment.<SUP>5</SUP> In order to have a complete modeling 

demonstration submission, States should have submitted the required 

modeling analysis and identified any additional evidence that EPA 

should consider in evaluating whether the area will attain the 

standard.

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    \5\ The EPA issued guidance on the air quality modeling that is 

used to demonstrate attainment with the one-hour ozone NAAQS. See 

U.S. EPA, (1991), Guideline for Regulatory Application of the Urban 

Airshed Model, EPA-450/4-91-013, (July 1991). A copy may be found on 

EPA's web site at https://www.epa.gov/ttn/scram/ (file name: 

``UAMREG''). See also U.S. EPA, (1996), Guidance on Use of Modeled 

Results to Demonstrate Attainment of the Ozone NAAQS, EPA-454/B-95-

007, (June 1996). A copy may be found on EPA's web site at http://

www.epa.gov/ttn/scram/ (file name: ``O3TEST'').

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1. Modeling Requirements

    For purposes of demonstrating attainment, the CAA requires serious 

and severe areas to use photochemical grid modeling or an analytical 

method EPA determines to be as effective. The photochemical grid model 

is set up using meteorological conditions conducive to the formation of 

ozone. Emissions for a base year are used to evaluate the model's 

ability to reproduce actual monitored air quality values and to predict 

air quality changes in the attainment year due to the emission changes 

which include growth up to and controls implemented by the attainment 

year. A modeling domain is chosen that encompasses the nonattainment 

area. Attainment is demonstrated when all predicted concentrations 

inside the modeling domain are at or below the NAAQS or at an 

acceptable upper limit above the NAAQS permitted under certain 

conditions by EPA's guidance. When the predicted concentrations are 

above the NAAQS, an optional weight of evidence determination which 

incorporates, but is not limited to, other analyses such as air quality 

and emissions trends, may be used to address uncertainty inherent in 

the application of photochemical grid models.

    The EPA guidance identifies the features of a modeling analysis 

that are essential to obtain credible results. First, the State must 

develop and implement a modeling protocol. The modeling protocol 

describes the methods and procedures to be used in conducting the 

modeling analyses and provides for policy oversight and technical 

review by individuals responsible for developing or assessing the 

attainment demonstration (State and local agencies, EPA Regional 

offices, the regulated community, and public interest groups). Second, 

for purposes of developing the information to put into the model, the 

State must select air pollution days, i.e., days in the past with bad 

air quality, that are representative of the ozone pollution problem for 

the nonattainment area. Third, the State needs to identify the 

appropriate dimensions of the area to be modeled, i.e., the domain 

size. The domain should be larger than the designated nonattainment 

area to reduce uncertainty in the boundary conditions and should 

include large upwind sources just outside the nonattainment area. In 

general, the domain is considered the local area where control measures 

are most beneficial to bring the area into attainment. Fourth, the 

State needs to determine the grid resolution. The horizontal and 

vertical resolutions in the model affect the dispersion and transport 

of emission plumes. Artificially large grid cells (too few vertical 

layers and horizontal grids) may dilute concentrations and may not 

properly consider impacts of complex terrain, complex meteorology, and 

land/water interfaces. Fifth, the State needs to generate 

meteorological data that describe atmospheric conditions and emissions 

inputs. Finally, the State needs to verify that the model is properly 

simulating the chemistry and atmospheric conditions through diagnostic 

analyses and model performance tests. Once these steps are 

satisfactorily completed, the model is ready to be used to generate air 

quality estimates to support an attainment demonstration.

    The modeled attainment test compares model predicted one-hour daily 

maximum concentrations in all grid cells for the attainment year to the 

level of the NAAQS. A predicted concentration above 0.124 ppm ozone 

indicates that the area is expected to exceed the standard in the 

attainment



[[Page 70351]]



year and a prediction at or below 0.124 ppm indicates that the area is 

expected to attain the standard. This type of test is often referred to 

as an exceedance test. The EPA's guidance recommends that States use 

either of two modeled attainment or exceedance tests for the one-hour 

ozone NAAQS: a deterministic test or a statistical test.

    The deterministic test requires the State to compare predicted one-

hour daily maximum ozone concentrations for each modeled day 

<SUP>6</SUP> to the attainment level of 0.124 ppm. If none of the 

predictions exceed 0.124 ppm, the test is passed.

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    \6\ The initial, ``ramp-up'' days for each episode are excluded 

from this determination.

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    The statistical test takes into account the fact that the form of 

the one-hour ozone standard allows exceedances. If, over a three-year 

period, the area has an average of one or fewer exceedances per year, 

the area is not violating the standard. Thus, if the State models a 

very extreme day, the statistical test provides that a prediction above 

0.124 ppm up to a certain upper limit may be consistent with attainment 

of the standard. (The form of the one-hour standard allows for up to 

three readings above the standard over a three-year period before an 

area is considered to be in violation.)

    The acceptable upper limit above 0.124 ppm is determined by 

examining the size of exceedances at monitoring sites which meet the 

one-hour NAAQS. For example, a monitoring site for which the four 

highest one-hour average concentrations over a three-year period are 

0.136 ppm, 0.130 ppm, 0.128 ppm and 0.122 ppm is attaining the 

standard. To identify an acceptable upper limit, the statistical 

likelihood of observing ozone air quality exceedances of the standard 

of various concentrations is equated to the severity of the modeled 

day. The upper limit generally represents the maximum ozone 

concentration observed at a location on a single day and it would be 

the only reading above the standard that would be expected to occur no 

more than an average of once a year over a three-year period. 

Therefore, if the maximum ozone concentration predicted by the model is 

below the acceptable upper limit, in this case 0.136 ppm, then EPA 

might conclude that the modeled attainment test is passed. Generally, 

exceedances well above 0.124 ppm are very unusual at monitoring sites 

meeting the NAAQS. Thus, these upper limits are rarely substantially 

higher than the attainment level of 0.124 ppm.

2. Additional Analyses Where Modeling Fails To Show Attainment

    When the modeling does not conclusively demonstrate attainment, 

additional analyses may be presented to help determine whether the area 

will attain the standard. As with other predictive tools, there are 

inherent uncertainties associated with modeling and its results. For 

example, there are uncertainties in some of the modeling inputs, such 

as the meteorological and emissions data bases for individual days and 

in the methodology used to assess the severity of an exceedance at 

individual sites. The EPA's guidance recognizes these limitations, and 

provides a means for considering other evidence to help assess whether 

attainment of the NAAQS is likely. The process by which this is done is 

called a weight of evidence (WOE) determination.

    Under a WOE determination, the State can rely on and EPA will 

consider factors such as other modeled attainment tests, e.g., a 

rollback analysis; other modeled outputs, e.g., changes in the 

predicted frequency and pervasiveness of exceedances and predicted 

changes in the design value; actual observed air quality trends; 

estimated emissions trends; analyses of air quality monitored data; the 

responsiveness of the model predictions to further controls; and, 

whether there are additional control measures that are or will be 

approved into the SIP but were not included in the modeling analysis. 

This list is not an exclusive list of factors that may be considered 

and these factors could vary from case to case. The EPA's guidance 

contains no limit on how close a modeled attainment test must be to 

passing to conclude that other evidence besides an attainment test is 

sufficiently compelling to suggest attainment. However, the further a 

modeled attainment test is from being passed, the more compelling the 

WOE needs to be.

    The EPA's 1996 modeling guidance also recognizes a need to perform 

a mid-course review as a means for addressing uncertainty in the 

modeling results. Because of the uncertainty in long term projections, 

EPA believes a viable attainment demonstration that relies on WOE needs 

to contain provisions for periodic review of monitoring, emissions, and 

modeling data to assess the extent to which refinements to emission 

control measures are needed. The mid-course review is discussed in 

Section C.6.



C. What Is the Frame Work for Proposing Action on the Attainment 

Demonstration SIPs?



    In addition to the modeling analysis and WOE support demonstrating 

attainment, the EPA has identified the following key elements which 

must be present in order for EPA to approve or conditionally approve 

the one-hour attainment demonstration SIPs. These elements are listed 

below and then described in detail.



--CAA measures and measures relied on in the modeled attainment 

demonstration SIP. This includes adopted and submitted rules for all 

previously required CAA mandated measures for the specific area 

classification. This also includes measures that may not be required 

for the area classification but that the State relied on in the SIP 

submission for attainment and ROP plans that EPA is proposing to take 

on today.

--NO<SUB>X</SUB> reductions affecting boundary conditions.

--Motor vehicle emissions budget. A motor vehicle emissions budget 

which can be determined by EPA to be adequate for conformity purposes.

--Tier 2/Sulfur program benefits where needed to demonstrate 

attainment. Inclusion of reductions expected from EPA's Tier 2 tailpipe 

and low sulfur-in-fuel standards in the attainment demonstration and 

the motor vehicle emissions budget.

--In certain areas, additional measures to further reduce emissions to 

support the attainment test. Additional measures, may be measures 

adopted regionally such as in the Ozone Transport Region (OTR), or 

locally (intrastate) in individual States.

--Mid-course review. An enforceable commitment to conduct a mid-course 

review and evaluation based on air quality and emission trends. The 

mid-course review would show whether the adopted control measures are 

sufficient to reach attainment by the area's attainment date, or that 

additional control measures are necessary.

1. CAA Measures and Measures Relied On in the Modeled Attainment 

Demonstration SIP

    The States should have adopted the control measures already 

required under the CAA for the area classification. Since these 10 

serious and severe areas need to achieve substantial reductions from 

their 1990 emissions levels in order to attain, EPA anticipates that 

these areas need all of the measures required under the CAA to attain 

the one-hour ozone NAAQS.



[[Page 70352]]



    In addition, a State may have included control measures in its 

attainment strategy that are in addition to measures required in the 

CAA. (For serious areas, these should have already been identified and 

adopted, whereas severe areas have until December 2000 to submit 

measures necessary to achieve ROP through the attainment year and to 

attain.) For purposes of fully approving the State's SIP, the State 

will need to adopt and submit all VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB> controls 

within the local modeling domain that were relied on for purposes of 

the modeled attainment demonstration.

    The information in Table 1 is a summary of the CAA requirements 

that need to be met for each severe nonattainment area for the one-hour 

ozone NAAQS. These requirements are specified in section 182 of the 

CAA. Information on more measures that States may have adopted or 

relied on in their current SIP submissions is not shown in the table. 

EPA will need to take final action approving all measures relied on for 

attainment, including the required ROP control measures and target 

calculations, before EPA can issue a final full approval of the 

attainment demonstration as meeting CAA section 182(d).



               Table 1.--CAA Requirements for Severe Areas





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--NSR for VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB>,\1\ including an offset ratio of 1.3:1 and a major

 VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB> source cutoff of 25 tons per year (tpy).

--Reasonable Available Control Technology (RACT) for VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB>1.\1\

--Enhanced Inspection and Maintenance (I/M) program.

--15% volatile organic compound (VOC) plans.

--Emissions inventory.

--Emission statements.

--Periodic inventories.

--Clean fuels program or substitute.

--Enhanced monitoring Photochemical Assessment Monitoring Stations

 (PAMS).

--Stage II vapor recovery.

--Reformulated gasoline.

--Requirement for fees for major sources for failure to attain.

--9 percent ROP plan through attainment year.

--Attainment demonstration.

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

\1\ Unless the area has in effect a NO<SUB>X</SUB> waiver under section 182(f). The

  Connecticut portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island

  area is not such a area.



2. NO<SUB>X</SUB> Reductions Consistent With the Modeling Demonstration

    The EPA completed final rulemaking on the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call 

on October 27, 1998, which required States to address transport of 

NO<SUB>X</SUB> and ozone to other States. To address transport, the 

NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call established emissions budgets for 

NO<SUB>X</SUB> that 23 jurisdictions were required to show they would 

meet through enforceable SIP measures adopted and submitted by 

September 30, 1999. The NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call is intended to reduce 

emissions in upwind States that significantly contribute to 

nonattainment problems. The EPA did not identify specific sources that 

the States must regulate nor did EPA limit the States' choices 

regarding where to achieve the emission reductions. Subsequently, a 

three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia 

Circuit issued an order staying the portion of the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP 

call rule requiring States to submit rules by September 30, 1999.

    The NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call rule establishes budgets for the States 

in which 9 of the nonattainment areas for which EPA is proposing action 

today are located. The 9 areas are: Greater Connecticut, Springfield 

MA, New York-North New Jersey-Long Island (NY-NJ-CT), Baltimore MD, 

Philadelphia-Wilmington-Trenton (PA-NJ-DE-MD), Metropolitan Washington, 

D.C. (DC-MD-VA), Atlanta GA, Milwaukee-Racine WI, and Chicago-Gary-Lake 

County (IL-IN).

    Emission reductions that will be achieved through EPA's 

NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call will reduce the levels of ozone and ozone 

precursors entering nonattainment areas at their boundaries. For 

purposes of developing attainment demonstrations, States define local 

modeling domains that include both the nonattainment area and nearby 

surrounding areas. The ozone levels at the boundary of the local 

modeling domain are reflected in modeled attainment demonstrations and 

are referred to as boundary conditions. With the exception of Houston, 

the one-hour attainment demonstrations on which EPA is proposing action 

have relied, in part, on the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call reductions for 

purposes of determining the boundary conditions of the modeling domain. 

Emission reductions assumed in the attainment demonstrations are 

modeled to occur both within the State and in upwind States; thus, 

intrastate reductions as well as reductions in other States impact the 

boundary conditions. Although the court has indefinitely stayed the SIP 

submission deadline, the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call rule remains in 

effect. Therefore, EPA believes it is appropriate to allow States to 

continue to assume the reductions from the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call in 

areas outside the local one-hour modeling domains. If States assume 

control levels and emission reductions other than those of the 

NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call within their State but outside of the modeling 

domain, States must also adopt control measures to achieve those 

reductions in order to have an approvable plan.

    Accordingly, States in which the nonattainment areas are located 

will not be required to adopt measures outside the modeling domain to 

achieve the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call budgets prior to the time that all 

States are required to comply with the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call. If the 

reductions from the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call do not occur as planned, 

States will need to revise their SIPs to add additional local measures 

or obtain interstate reductions, or both, in order to provide 

sufficient reductions needed for attainment.

    As provided in section 1 above, any controls assumed by the State 

inside the local modeling domain <SUP>7</SUP> for purposes of the 

modeled attainment demonstration must be adopted and submitted as part 

of the State's one-hour attainment demonstration SIP. It is only for 

reductions occurring outside the local modeling domain that States may 

assume implementation of NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call measures and the 

resulting boundary conditions.

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    \7\ For the purposes of this document, ``local modeling domain'' 

is typically an urban scale domain with horizontal dimensions less 

than about 300 km on a side, horizontal grid resolution less than or 

equal to 5 x 5 km or finer. The domain is large enough to ensure 

that emissions occurring at 8 am in the domain's center are still 

within the domain at 8 pm the same day. If recirculation of the 

nonattainment area's previous day's emissions is believed to 

contribute to an observed problem, the domain is large enough to 

characterize this.

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3. Motor Vehicle Emissions Budget

    The EPA believes that attainment demonstration SIPs must 

necessarily estimate the motor vehicle emissions that will be produced 

in the attainment year and demonstrate that this emissions level, when 

considered with emissions from all other sources, is consistent with 

attainment. The estimate of motor vehicle emissions is used to 

determine the conformity of transportation plans and programs to the 

SIP, as described by CAA section 176(c)(2)(A). For transportation 

conformity purposes, the estimate of motor vehicle emissions is known 

as the motor vehicle emissions budget. The EPA believes that 

appropriately identified motor vehicle emissions budgets are a 

necessary part of an attainment demonstration SIP. A SIP cannot 

effectively demonstrate attainment unless it identifies the level of 

motor vehicle emissions that can be produced while still demonstrating 

attainment.

    The EPA has determined that except for the Western MA (Springfield)



[[Page 70353]]



attainment demonstration SIP, the motor vehicle emission budgets for 

all areas in today's proposals are inadequate or missing from the 

attainment demonstration. Therefore, EPA is proposing to disapprove the 

attainment demonstration SIPs for those nine areas if the States do not 

submit motor vehicle emissions budgets that EPA can find adequate by 

May 31, 2000.<SUP>8</SUP> In order for EPA to complete the adequacy 

process by the end of May, States should submit a budget no later than 

December 31, 1999.<SUP>9</SUP> If an area does not have a motor vehicle 

emissions budget that EPA can determine adequate for conformity 

purposes by May 31, 2000, EPA plans to take final action at that time 

disapproving in full or in part the area's attainment demonstration. 

The emissions budget should reflect all the motor vehicle control 

measures contained in the attainment demonstration, i.e., measures 

already adopted for the nonattainment area as well as those yet to be 

adopted.

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    \8\ For severe areas, EPA will determine the adequacy of the 

emissions budgets associated with the post-1999 ROP plans once the 

States submit the target calculations, which are due no later than 

December 2000.

    \9\ A final budget is preferred; but, if the State public 

hearing process is not yet complete, then the draft budget for 

public hearing may be submitted. The adequacy process generally 

takes at least 90 days. Therefore, in order for EPA to complete the 

adequacy process no later than the end of May, EPA must have by 

February 15, 2000, the final budget or a draft that is substantially 

similar to what the final budget will be. The State must submit the 

final budget by April 15, 2000.

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4. Tier 2/Sulfur Program Benefits

    On May 13, 1999, EPA published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 

(NPRM) proposing a major, comprehensive program designed to 

significantly reduce emissions from passenger cars and light trucks 

(including sport-utility vehicles, minivans, and pickup trucks) and to 

reduce sulfur in gasoline. Under the proposed program, automakers would 

produce vehicles designed to have very low emissions when operated on 

low-sulfur gasoline, and oil refiners would provide that cleaner 

gasoline nationwide. The EPA subsequently issued two supplemental 

notices. 64 FR 35112 (June 30, 1999); 64 FR 57827 (October 27, 1999).

    These notices provide one-hour ozone modeling and monitoring 

information that support EPA's belief that the Tier 2/Sulfur program is 

necessary to help areas attain the one-hour NAAQS. Under the proposed 

rule, NO<SUB>X</SUB> and VOC emission reductions (as well as other 

reductions not directly relevant for attainment of the one-hour ozone 

standard) would occur beginning in the 2004 ozone season although 

incentives for early compliance by vehicle manufacturers and refiners 

will likely result in some reductions prior to 2004. Nationwide, the 

Tier 2/Sulfur program is projected to result in reductions of 

approximately 800,000 tons of NO<SUB>X</SUB> per year by 2007 and 

1,200,000 tons by 2010.

    In the October 27, 1999 supplemental notice, EPA reported in Table 

1 that EPA's regional ozone modeling indicated that 17 metropolitan 

areas for which the one-hour standard applies need the Tier 2/Sulfur 

program reductions to help attain the one-hour ozone standard. The New 

York-North New Jersey-Long Island area, whose attainment demonstration 

EPA is proposing to approve today, is included on that list.

    The EPA issued a memorandum that provides estimates of the 

emissions reductions associated with the Tier 

2/Sulfur program proposal.<SUP>10</SUP> The memorandum provides the 

tonnage benefits for the Tier 2/Sulfur program in 2007 on a county-by-

county basis for all counties within the 10 serious and severe 

nonattainment areas for which EPA is proposing to take action today and 

the 2005 tonnage benefits for the Tier 2/Sulfur program for each county 

for three areas.

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



    \10\ Memorandum, ``1-Hour Ozone Attainment Demonstrations and 

Tier 2/Sulfur Rulemaking'' from Lydia Wegman, Office of Air Quality 

Planning and Standards and Merrylin Zaw-Mon, Office of Mobile 

Sources to the Air Division Directors, Regions I-VI, issued November 

8, 1999. A copy of this memorandum may be found on EPA's web site at 

https://www.epa.gov/oms/transp/traqconf.html.

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



    The EPA also issued a memorandum which explains the connection 

between the Tier 2/Sulfur program, motor vehicle emissions budgets for 

conformity determinations, and timing for SIP revisions to account for 

the Tier 2/Sulfur program benefit.<SUP>11</SUP> This memorandum 

explains that conformity analyses in serious and severe ozone 

nonattainment areas can begin including Tier 2/Sulfur program benefits 

once EPA's Tier 2 rule is promulgated, provided that the attainment 

demonstration SIPs and associated motor vehicle emissions budgets 

include the Tier 2 benefits. For areas that require all or some portion 

of the Tier 2 benefits to demonstrate attainment but have not yet 

included the benefits in the motor vehicle emissions budgets, EPA's 

adequacy finding will include a condition that conformity 

determinations may not take credit for Tier 2 until the SIP budgets are 

revised to reflect Tier 2 benefits. See EPA's memorandum for more 

information.

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



    \11\ Memorandum, ``Guidance on Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets 

in One-Hour Ozone Attainment Demonstrations'', from Merrylin Zaw-

Mon, Office of Mobile Sources, to Air Division Directors, Regions I-

VI, issued November 3, 1999. A copy of this memorandum may be found 

on EPA's web site at https://www.epa.gov/oms/transp/traqconf.html.

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



    For the New York-North New Jersey-Long Island, Philadelphia-

Wilmington-Trenton, Baltimore, Atlanta, and Houston-Galveston-Brazoria 

nonattainment areas, the EPA is proposing to determine that additional 

emission reduction beyond those provided by the SIP submission are 

necessary for attainment. With the exception of Atlanta nonattainment 

area, a portion of that reduction will be achieved by EPA's Tier 2/

Sulfur program, which EPA expects to finalize shortly. States that need 

to rely in whole or in part on the Tier 2 benefits to help demonstrate 

attainment will need to adjust the demonstration for their SIP 

submission, emission inventories and motor vehicle emissions budgets to 

include the Tier 2/Sulfur program reductions in order for EPA to 

approve the SIP submittal. The submittal requirement including the 

analysis to make that submission is described in the two memoranda 

cited. States may use the tonnage benefits and guidance in these 

memoranda to make these adjustments to the SIP submission and motor 

vehicle emission budgets. The EPA encourages States to submit these SIP 

revisions by December 31, 1999 to allow EPA to include them in the 

motor vehicle emissions budget adequacy determinations which need to be 

completed by May 31, 2000. Alternatively, these revisions should be 

submitted by July 2000 for serious nonattainment areas, as EPA 

anticipates completing rulemaking on these SIPs in the fall of 2000. 

For severe nonattainment areas, these revisions should be submitted by 

December 31, 2000.

    A number of areas for which the EPA is not proposing to determine 

that additional emission reduction beyond those provided by the SIP 

submission are necessary for attainment will be taking a partial credit 

for Tier 2 when they use credit from national low emissions vehicles 

(NLEV) in their attainment demonstration. These nonattainment areas are 

the Milwaukee-Racine, Chicago-Gary-Lake County and Metropolitan 

Washington, D.C. areas. By regulation, the NLEV standards do not extend 

beyond the 2003 model year unless EPA promulgates Tier 2 vehicle 

standards at least as stringent as the NLEV standards. See 40 CFR 

86.1701-99(c). Thus, the emission reductions relied upon from 2004 and 

later model year NLEV vehicles will actually be due to the promulgation 

of the Tier 2



[[Page 70354]]



standards, either through the extension of the NLEV program or a 

portion of the reduction from vehicles meeting the Tier 2 standards.

    Like all the other SIPs that rely on Tier 2 reductions in order to 

demonstrate attainment, the attainment demonstrations for the 

Milwaukee-Racine, Chicago-Gary-Lake County and Metropolitan Washington, 

D.C. areas must be revised to estimate the effects of Tier 2 according 

to our policy before EPA can take final action approving such 

attainment demonstrations. Until the SIPs are revised to include full 

Tier 2 credit, EPA can determine by May 31, 2000 that a motor vehicle 

emissions budget is adequate if the budget would be otherwise adequate. 

No conditions need be placed on such adequacy determinations since the 

budgets in such SIPs already include reductions equivalent to the 

amount of emission reductions the areas will be relying on from Tier 2 

by virtue of the NLEV reductions included in the budgets.

    a. Revisions to the Motor Vehicle Emissions Budget and the 

Attainment Demonstration When EPA Issues the MOBILE6 Model. Within one 

year of when EPA issues the MOBILE6 model for estimating mobile source 

emissions which takes into account the emissions benefit of EPA's Tier 

2/Sulfur program, States will need to revise their motor vehicle 

emissions budgets in their attainment demonstration SIPs if the Tier 2/

Sulfur program is necessary for attainment. In addition, the budgets 

will need to be revised using MOBILE6 in those areas that do not need 

the Tier 2/Sulfur program for attainment but decide to include its 

benefits in the motor vehicle emissions budget anyway. The EPA will 

work with States on a case-by-case basis if the new emission estimates 

raise issues about the sufficiency of the attainment demonstration.

    States described in the paragraph above will need to submit an 

enforceable commitment in the near term to revise their motor vehicle 

emissions budget within one year after EPA's release of MOBILE6. This 

commitment should be submitted to EPA along with the other commitments 

discussed elsewhere in this notice, or alternatively, as part of the 

SIP revision that modifies the motor vehicle emission inventories and 

budgets to include the Tier 2/Sulfur program benefits needed in order 

for EPA to approve the SIP submittal.<SUP>12</SUP>

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    \12\ For purposes of conformity, the State needs a commitment 

that has been subject to public hearing. If the State has submitted 

a commitment that has been subject to public hearing and that 

provides for the adoption of all measures necessary for attainment, 

the State should submit a letter prior to December 31, 1999, 

amending the commitment to include the revision of the budget after 

the release of MOBILE6.

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5. Additional Measures to Further Reduce Emissions

    The EPA is proposing to find that the attainment demonstrations for 

New York-North New Jersey-Long Island; Baltimore; Philadelphia-

Wilmington-Trenton; Houston-Galveston-Brazoria and Atlanta, even 

considering the Tier 2/Sulfur program reductions and the WOE, will not 

achieve attainment without the application of additional emission 

control measures to achieve additional emission reductions. Thus, for 

each of these areas, EPA has identified specific tons per day emissions 

of NO<SUB>X</SUB> and/or VOC that must be reduced through additional 

control measures in order to demonstrate attainment and to enable EPA 

to approve the demonstration. The need for additional emission 

reductions is generally based on a lack of sufficient compelling 

evidence that the demonstration shows attainment at the current level 

of adopted or planned emission controls. This is discussed in detail 

below for the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island area. The method 

used by EPA to calculate the amount of additional reductions is 

described in a technical support document located in the record for 

this proposed rule. Briefly, the method makes use of the relationship 

between ozone and its precursors (VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB>) to identify 

additional reductions that, at a minimum, would bring the model 

predicted future ozone concentration to a level at or below the 

standard. The relationship is derived by comparing changes in either 

(1) the model predicted ozone to changes in modeled emissions or (2) in 

observed air quality to changes in actual emissions.

    The EPA is not requesting that States perform new photochemical 

grid modeling to assess the full air quality impact of the additional 

measures that would be adopted. Rather, as described above, one of the 

factors that EPA can consider as part of the WOE analysis of the 

attainment demonstration is whether there will be additional emission 

reductions anticipated that were not modeled. Therefore, EPA will 

consider the reductions from these additional measures as part of the 

WOE analysis if the State adopts the measures or, as appropriate, 

submits an enforceable commitment to adopt the measures.

    As an initial matter, for areas that need additional measures, the 

State must submit a commitment to adopt additional control measures to 

meet, the level of reductions that EPA has identified as necessary for 

attainment. For purposes of conformity, if the State submitted a 

commitment, which has been subject to public hearing, to adopt the 

control measures necessary for attainment and ROP through the area's 

attainment date in conformance with the December 1997 Wilson policy, 

the State will not need an additional commitment at this time. However, 

the state will need to amend its commitment by letter to provide two 

things concerning the additional measures.

    First, the State will need to identify a list of potential control 

measures (from which a list of measures could be selected) that, when 

implemented, would be expected to provide sufficient additional 

emission reductions to meet the level of reduction that EPA has 

identified as necessary for attainment. States need not commit to adopt 

any specific measures on their list at this time, but if they do not do 

so, they must identify sufficient additional emission reductions to 

attain the standard with the submitted motor vehicle emissions budget. 

These measures may not involve additional limits on highway 

construction beyond those that could be imposed under the submitted 

motor vehicle emissions budget. (See memorandum, ``Guidance on Motor 

Vehicle Emissions Budgets in One-Hour Ozone Attainment 

Demonstrations'', from Merrylin Zaw-Mon, Office of Mobile Sources, to 

Air Division Directors, Regions I-VI <SUP>13</SUP>). States may, of 

course, select control measures that do impose limits on highway 

construction, but if they do so, they must revise the budget to reflect 

the effects of specific, identified measures that were either committed 

to in the SIP or were actually adopted. Otherwise, EPA could not 

conclude that the submitted motor vehicle emissions budget would be 

providing for attainment, and EPA could not find it adequate for 

conformity purposes.

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



    \13\ Memorandum, ``Guidance on Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets 

in One-Hour Ozone Attainment Demonstrations'', from Merrylin Zaw-

Mon, Office of Mobile Sources, to Air Division Directors, Regions I-

VI, issued November 3, 1999. A copy of this memorandum may be found 

on EPA's web site at https://www.epa.gov/oms/transp/traqconf.htm.

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



    Second, the letter should provide that the State will recalculate 

and submit a revised motor vehicle emissions budget that includes the 

effects, if any, of the measure or measures that are ultimately adopted 

when those measures are submitted as SIP revisions should any of the 

measures pertain to motor vehicles.



[[Page 70355]]



    For purposes of approving the SIP, the State will need an 

enforceable commitment that identifies the date by which the additional 

measures will be submitted, identifies the percentage reductions needed 

of VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB>, and provides that the State will recalculate 

and submit a revised motor vehicle emissions budget that includes the 

effects, if any, of the measure or measures that are ultimately adopted 

when these measures are submitted as SIP revisions should any of the 

measures pertain to motor vehicles. To the extent the State's current 

commitment does not include one of the above items or to the extent 

that a State plans to revise one of the above items in an existing 

commitment, the State will need a new public hearing.

    For areas within the OTR, EPA believes it is appropriate to provide 

a State that is relying on a regional solution to a Congressionally-

recognized regional air pollution problem with more time to adopt and 

submit measures for additional reductions to EPA than for a State that 

will rely on intrastate measures to achieve the reductions. Therefore, 

the EPA believes that States in the OTR must be allowed sufficient time 

for the OTR to analyze the appropriate measures as well as time for the 

State to adopt the measures. For these States, EPA believes it is 

appropriate for them to commit to work through the OTR to develop a 

regional strategy regarding the measures necessary to meet the 

additional reductions identified by EPA for these areas. However, as a 

backstop, the State will need to commit to adopt intrastate measures 

sufficient to achieve the additional reductions if the regional 

measures are not identified by the OTR and adopted by the relevant 

States.

    For purposes of conformity, if the State submitted a commitment 

consistent with the December 1997 Wilson policy and which has been 

subject to public hearing, the State may amend its current commitment 

by letter to provide these assurances. However, before EPA can take 

final rulemaking action to approve the attainment demonstration, the 

State will need to meet the public hearing requirements for the 

commitment and submit it to EPA as a SIP revision. The EPA will have to 

propose and take final action on this SIP revision before EPA can fully 

approve the State's attainment demonstration. The State will have to 

submit the necessary measures themselves (and a revised motor vehicle 

emissions budget that includes the effects, if any, of the measure or 

measures that are ultimately adopted should any of the measures pertain 

to motor vehicles) as a SIP revision no later than October 31, 2001.

    a. Guidance on Additional Control Measures. Much progress has been 

made over the past 25 years to reduce VOC emissions and over the past 9 

years to reduce NO<SUB>X</SUB> emissions. Many large sources have been 

controlled to some extent through RACT rules or other emission 

standards or limitations, such as maximum achievable control technology 

(MACT), new source performance standards (NSPS) and the emission 

control requirements for NSR--lowest achievable emissions rate (LAER) 

and best achievable control technology (BACT). However, there may be 

controls available for sources that have not yet been regulated as well 

as additional means for achieving reductions from sources that have 

already been regulated. The EPA has prepared a report to assist States 

in identifying additional measures. This report is called ``Serious and 

Severe Ozone Nonattainment Areas: Information on Emissions, Control 

Measures Adopted or Planned and Other Available Control Measures''. The 

purpose of this report is to provide information to State and local 

agencies to assist them in identifying additional control measures that 

can be adopted into their SIPs to support the attainment demonstrations 

for the serious and severe nonattainment areas under consideration. 

This report has been added to the record for this proposal.

    In summary, the report provides information in four areas. First, 

the report contains detailed information on emissions for ozone 

precursor emissions of NO<SUB>X</SUB> and VOCs. This inventory data 

gives an indication of where the major emissions are coming from in a 

particular geographic area and may indicate where it will be profitable 

to look for further reductions. Second, the report contains information 

on control measures for emission sources of NO<SUB>X</SUB> and VOC 

(including stationary, area and mobile source measures) for which 

controls may not have been adopted by many jurisdictions. This would 

include many measures listed among the control measures EPA considered 

when developing the Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) for promulgation 

of the 8-hour ozone NAAQS. Third, the report includes information on 

standards EPA has issued for the NSPS and MACT programs as well as 

information on alternative control techniques (ACT) documents. This may 

be useful to States who may already specify emission limits on existing 

source categories to which NSPS and MACT for new sources apply, but the 

current RACT level of control for these existing sources may not match 

the level specified in the NSPS or MACT standards for new sources or 

sources which emit hazardous air pollutants. Finally, the report 

includes information on the control measures not already covered 

elsewhere that States have adopted, or have proposed to adopt at the 

date of the report, into their SIPs. Comparison of information on 

measures already adopted into others' SIPs may help inform States about 

reductions that may be available from their sources whose emissions are 

currently not regulated.

    Another source of information is the BACT and LAER determinations 

that States have made for individual new sources. Information on BACT/

LAER determinations is available through EPA's RACT/BACT/LAER 

Clearinghouse (RBLC) which may be accessed on EPA's web site on the 

internet at the following address: www.epa.gov/ttn/catc/.

    The ACT documents for VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB> are valuable because 

EPA has not issued control technique guidelines (CTGs) that specify the 

level of RACT for several categories of sources. For some of these 

source categories, EPA has prepared ACT documents which describe 

various control technologies and associated costs for reducing 

emissions. While States were required to adopt RACT for major sources 

within these source categories, the ACT documents may identify an 

additional level of control for regulated sources or may provide 

control options for non-major sources within these source categories. 

States are free to evaluate the various options given and use the 

results to assist in formulating their own regulations.

    The EPA report lists the various sources EPA used to develop the 

lists of additional measures. These sources include an EPA draft 

control measure data base, State and Territorial Air Pollution 

Administrators and the Association of Local Air Pollution Control 

Official's (STAPPA/ALAPCO's) books ``Controlling Nitrogen Oxides under 

the Clean Air Act: A Menu of Options'', and ``Meeting the 15-Percent 

Rate-of-Progress Requirement Under the Clean Air Act: A Menu of 

Options,'' California's ozone SIP for the South Coast and various ACT 

documents.

    There is one control approach which bears special mention because 

it is broader in application than any one specific control measure. 

That is the approach of ``cap and trade.'' In this approach, a cap is 

placed on emissions, and existing sources are given emission 

allotments. Under a declining cap, emissions would be decreased each 

year. Sources may over-control and sell



[[Page 70356]]



part of their allotments to other sources which under-control. Overall, 

the percentage decrease in emissions is maintained, but the reductions 

are made where they are most economical. A cap and trade program has 

been in operation in the South Coast Air Quality Management District in 

California since about 1992.

    The State of Illinois has adopted a declining cap and trade 

program. The Illinois program will set a cap on future emissions of 

major sources in the Chicago area that in most cases is 12 percent 

lower than baseline emissions. Illinois will issue a number of emission 

allotments corresponding to the cap level and will require each source 

to have VOC emissions at or below the level for which it holds emission 

allotments. Trading of emission allotments will be allowed, so that 

sources that reduce VOC emissions more than 12 percent may sell 

emission allotments, and sources that reduce VOC emission less than 12 

percent must buy emission allotments. The proposed reductions are 

planned to begin in the next ozone season, May 2000.

    In addition, EPA's draft economic incentives program guidance (EIP) 

was proposed in September 1999. This encourages cost-effective and 

innovative approaches to achieving air pollution goals through 

emissions trading. Such an approach has been demonstrated to be 

successful and cost-effective in reducing air pollution in EPA's acid 

rain emissions trading program. These and other similar programs should 

allow cost-effective implementation of additional control measures.

    Finally, a reduction in VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB> emissions can be 

achieved through a wide range of control measures. These measures range 

from technology based actions such as retrofitting diesel trucks and 

buses, and controlling ground service equipment at airports to activity 

based controls such as increased use of transit by utilizing existing 

Federal tax incentives, market and pricing based programs, and ozone 

action days. States can also achieve emission reductions by 

implementing programs involving cleaner burning fuels. The State of 

Texas is also considering a rule to change the times during the day in 

which construction can occur to reduce ozone precursor emissions during 

periods when ozone formation is occurring. There are a wide range of 

new and innovative programs beyond the few examples listed here. These 

measures, if taken together, can provide significant emission 

reductions for attainment purposes. In addition, a variety of mobile 

source measures could be considered as part of the commitment to meet 

the need for additional emission reduction measures.

6. Mid-Course Review

    A mid-course review (MCR) is a reassessment of modeling analyses 

and more recent monitored data to determine if a prescribed control 

strategy is resulting in emission reductions and air quality 

improvements needed to attain the ambient air quality standard for 

ozone as expeditiously as practicable but no later than the statutory 

dates.

    The EPA believes that a commitment to perform a MCR is a critical 

element of the WOE analysis for the attainment demonstration on which 

EPA is proposing to take action today. In order to approve the 

attainment demonstration SIP for the Connecticut portion of the New 

York city area (NYC area), EPA believes that the State must have an 

enforceable commitment to perform a MCR as described here.<SUP>14</SUP> 

The Connecticut DEP submitted an enforceable commitment with its 

attainment demonstration on September 16, 1998. The commitment made was 

to submit a MCR in the 2001/2002 time frame and an additional MCR in 

2005. EPA is suggesting that Connecticut revise its commitment to 

provide for the MCR immediately following the 2003 ozone season. 

Connecticut should also revise its commitment to agree to work with EPA 

in a public consultative process to develop a methodology for 

performing the MCR and developing the criteria by which adequate 

progress would be judged.

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    \14\ For purposes of conformity, the State needs a commitment 

that has been subject to public hearing. If the State has submitted 

a commitment that has been subject to public hearing and that 

provides for the adoption of all measures necessary for attainment, 

the State should submit a letter prior to December 31, 1999, 

amending the commitment to include the MCR.

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



    For severe areas, the States must have an enforceable commitment to 

perform the MCR preferably following the 2003 ozone season, and to 

submit the results to EPA by the end of the review year (e.g., by 

December 31, 2003). EPA believes that an analysis in 2003 would be most 

robust since some or all of the regional NO<SUB>X</SUB> emission 

reductions should be achieved by that date. EPA would then review the 

results and determine whether any States need to adopt and submit 

additional control measures for purposes of attainment. The EPA is not 

requesting that States commit now to adopt new control measures as a 

result of this process. It would be impracticable for the States to 

make a commitment that is specific enough to be considered enforceable. 

Moreover, the MCR could indicate that upwind States may need to adopt 

some or all of the additional controls needed to ensure an area attains 

the standard. Therefore, if EPA determines additional control measures 

are needed for attainment, EPA would determine whether additional 

emission reductions as necessary from States in which the nonattainment 

area is located or upwind States, or both. The EPA would require the 

affected State or States to adopt and submit the new measures within a 

period specified at the time. The EPA anticipates that these findings 

would be made as calls for SIP revisions under section 110(k)(5) and, 

therefore, the period for submission of the measures would be no longer 

than 18 months after the EPA finding. A draft guidance document 

regarding the MCR process is located in the docket for this proposal 

and may also be found on EPA's web site at https://www.epa.gov/ttn/

scram.



D. What Does EPA Expect to Happen With Respect to the Attainment 

Demonstration for the Connecticut Portion of the New York-Northern New 

Jersey-Long Island Severe One-Hour Ozone Nonattainment Area?



    Table 2 shows a summary of information on what EPA expects from the 

states in which the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island area is 

located to allow EPA to approve the one-hour ozone attainment 

demonstration SIPs.



[[Page 70357]]







  Table 2.--Summary Schedule of Future State Actions Related to Attainment Demonstration for the Portion of the

                New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island Severe Nonattainment Area in Connecticut

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

                       Req'd no later than                                             Action

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

12/31/99.........................................................  State submits the following to EPA:

                                                                   --motor vehicle emissions budget.\1\

                                                                   --Commitments \2\ to do the following:

                                                                     --Submit by 10/31/01, measures for

                                                                    additional emission reductions as required

                                                                    in the attainment demonstration test

                                                                    developed through the regional process. (The

                                                                    State must also submit a backstop commitment

                                                                    to adopt and submit by 10/31/01 intrastate

                                                                    measures for the emission reductions in the

                                                                    event the OTR process does not recommend

                                                                    measures that produce emission reductions.)

                                                                     --Submit revised SIP and motor vehicle

                                                                    emissions budget by 10/31/01, if additional

                                                                    measures (due 10/31/01) affect the motor

                                                                    vehicle emissions inventory.

                                                                     --Revise SIP and motor vehicle emissions

                                                                    budget 1 year after MOBILE6 issued.\3\

                                                                     --Perform a mid-course review.--A list of

                                                                    potential control measures identified that

                                                                    could provide additional emission reductions

                                                                    needed to attain the standard.\4\

4/15/00..........................................................  State submits in final any submissions made

                                                                    in draft by 12/31/99.

Before EPA final rulemaking......................................  State submits enforceable commitments for any

                                                                    above-mentioned commitments that may not yet

                                                                    have been subjected to public hearing.

12/31/00.........................................................  --State submits adopted modeled measures

                                                                    relied on in attainment demonstration and

                                                                    relied on for ROP through the attainment

                                                                    year.

                                                                   --State revises and submits SIP and motor

                                                                    vehicle emissions budget to account for Tier

                                                                    2 reductions as needed.\5\

10/31/01.........................................................  --OTR States submit additional measures

                                                                    developed through the regional process.

                                                                   --State revises SIP and motor vehicle

                                                                    emissions budget, if the additional measures

                                                                    are for motor vehicle category.

Within 1 yr after release of MOBILE6 model.......................  State submits revised SIP & motor vehicle

                                                                    emissions budget based on MOBILE6.

12/31/03.........................................................  State submits to EPA results of mid-course

                                                                    review.

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

\1\ Final budget preferable; however, if public process is not yet complete, then a ``draft'' budget (the one

  undergoing public process) may be submitted at this time with a final budget by 4/15/00. However, if a final

  budget is significantly different from the draft submitted earlier, the final budget must be submitted by 2/15/

  00 to accommodate the 90 day processing period prior to the 5/31/00 date by which EPA must find the motor

  vehicle emissions budget adequate. Note that the budget can reflect estimated Tier 2 emission reductions--see

  memorandum from Lydia Wegman and Merrylin Zaw-Mon, ``1-Hour Ozone Attainment Demonstrations and Tier 2/Sulfur

  Rulemaking.''

\2\ As provided in the preamble text, the State may clarify by letter an existing commitment, which has been

  subject to public hearing, to submit the control measures needed for attainment. If the State has not yet

  submitted such a commitment, the State should adopt a commitment after public hearing. If the public hearing

  process is not yet complete, then draft commitments may be submitted at this time. The final commitment should

  be submitted no later than 4/15/00.

\3\ The revision for MOBILE6 is only required for SIPs that include the effects of Tier 2. The commitment to

  revise the SIP after MOBILE6 may be submitted at the same time that the state submits the budget that includes

  the effects of Tier 2 (no later than 7/1/00).

\4\ The State is not required to commit to adopt any specific measures. However, if the State does not do so,

  the list cannot include any measures that place limits on highway construction.

\5\ If the state submits such a revision, it must be accompanied by a commitment to revise the SIP and motor

  vehicle emissions budget 1 year after MOBILE6 is issued (if the commitment has not already been submitted).



E. What Are the Relevant Policy and Guidance Documents?



    This proposal has cited several policy and guidance memoranda. The 

EPA has also developed several technical documents related to the 

rulemaking action in this proposal. Some of the documents have been 

referenced above. The documents and their location on EPA's web site 

are listed below; these documents will also be placed in the docket for 

this proposal action.

Recent Documents

    1. ``Guidance for Improving Weight of Evidence Through 

Identification of Additional Emission Reductions, Not Modeled.'' U.S. 

Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Air Quality Planning and 

Standards, Emissions, Monitoring, and Analysis Division, Air Quality 

Modeling Group, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711. November 1999. Web 

site: https://www.epa.gov/ttn/scram (file name: ``ADDWOE1H'').

    2. ``Serious and Severe Ozone Nonattainment Areas: Information on 

Emissions, Control Measures Adopted or Planned and Other Available 

Control Measures.'' Draft Report. November 3, 1999. Ozone Policy and 

Strategies Group. U.S. EPA, RTP, NC.

    3. Memorandum from Merrylin Zaw-Mon to the Air Division Directors, 

Regions I-VI, ``Guidance on Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets in One-Hour 

Attainment Demonstrations.'' November 3, 1999. Web site: http://

www.epa.gov/oms/transp/traqconf.htm.

    4. Memorandum from Lydia Wegman and Merrylin Zaw-Mon to the Air 

Division Directors, Regions I-VI, ``1-Hour Ozone Attainment 

Demonstrations and Tier 2/Sulfur Rulemaking,'' November 8, 1999. Web 

site: https://www.epa.gov/oms/transp/traqconf.htm.

    5. Draft Memorandum, ``Analyses To Support Mid-course Review Of 

SIP's To Meet The 1-hr NAAQS For Ozone.'' From John Seitz, Director, 

Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards. Web site: http://

www.epa.gov/ttn/scram (file name: ``DR6MCR'').

    6. Memorandum, ``Guidance on the Reasonably Available Control 

Measures (RACM) Requirement and Attainment Demonstration Submissions 

for Ozone Nonattainment Areas.'' John S. Seitz, Director, Office of Air 

Quality Planning and Standards. November 30, 1999. 

Previous Documents

    1. U.S. EPA, (1991), Guideline for Regulatory Application of the 

Urban Airshed Model, EPA-450/4-91-013, (July 1991). Web site: http://

www.epa.gov/ttn/scram/ (file name: ``UAMREG'').

    2. U.S. EPA, (1996), Guidance on Use of Modeled Results to 

Demonstrate Attainment of the Ozone NAAQS, EPA-454/B-95-007, (June 

1996). Web site: https://www.epa.gov/ttn/scram/ (file name: ``O3TEST'').

    3. Memorandum, ``Ozone Attainment Demonstrations,'' from Mary D. 

Nichols,



[[Page 70358]]



issued March 2, 1995. 

    4. Memorandum, ``Extension of Attainment Dates for Downwind 

Transport Areas,'' issued July 16, 1998. 

    5. December 29, 1997 Memorandum from Richard Wilson, Acting 

Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation ``Guidance for 

Implementing the 1-Hour Ozone and Pre-Existing PM<SUB>10</SUB> NAAQS.'' 





II. How Does the Connecticut Submittal Satisfy the Frame Work?



    This section provides a review of Connecticut's submittal and an 

analysis of how this submittal satisfies the frame work discussed in 

section I of this notice.



A. What Was Submitted by Connecticut?



    As mentioned previously the CAA requires nonattainment areas 

classified as moderate or worse for the one-hour ozone standard to 

prepare air quality modeling, using a photochemical grid model. This 

modeling is required to show that collective control strategies will 

reduce ozone to concentrations below the air quality standard by the 

area's attainment date. Connecticut submitted its modeling in several 

submittals. A January 4, 1995 submittal gave EPA the then up-to-date 

status of the state's modeling effort, including the completed elements 

of the one-hour modeling. The Phase I submittal, required for those 

states participating in the OTAG effort, was submitted on November 21, 

1997. The Phase II submittal, which along with the previous submittals 

constitutes the attainment demonstration, was submitted on September 

16, 1998.

    The New York-New Jersey-Long Island severe ozone nonattainment 

area, which includes the southwest corner of Connecticut and is 

classified as severe-17, must attain the one-hour ozone standard by 

November 15, 2007. The Connecticut portion includes all of Fairfield 

County, CT except Shelton City, plus the towns of Bridgewater and New 

Milford, which are both in Litchfield County (40 CFR 81.307). The rest 

of Connecticut, including Shelton City is officially titled the Greater 

Connecticut serious area. The Greater Connecticut serious area's 

attainment demonstration is a separate SIP action, and is discussed 

elsewhere in this Federal Register. The New York-New Jersey-Long Island 

severe ozone nonattainment area contains the states of Connecticut, New 

Jersey and New York. All three states are required to submit an 

attainment demonstration State Implementation Plan (SIP). Since New 

York and New Jersey are part of EPA Region II, EPA Region II is 

responsible for their SIP submittal, and those submission are addressed 

elsewhere in this Federal Register.

    The Connecticut portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long 

Island severe nonattainment area was modeled by the New York Department 

of Environmental Conservation, with input from environmental agency 

staff of both the States of Connecticut and New Jersey and by staff 

from EPA Regions I and II. This arrangement was agreed to in 1990 by 

all the participating parties, with concurrence from EPA Regions I and 

II. The modeling also includes the modeling for the Greater Connecticut 

nonattainment area.



B. How Was the Model Selected?



    EPA recommended that states use the Urban Airshed Model (UAM) 

version IV as the ozone model of choice for the grid-point modeling 

required by the Clean Air Act (CAA) for the one-hour attainment 

demonstrations. Other models are allowed if the states show that they 

are scientifically valid and they preform (i.e., are just as reliable) 

as well as, or better than, UAM IV. The NYC domain chose to use UAM IV. 

Details on the model and its selection can be found in the submittal 

from the State of Connecticut. Many different sensitivity runs and 

model performance runs were performed using the UAM IV model, also 

different boundary conditions were tried. These runs are available in 

the submittal from Connecticut.



C. What Did the Photochemical Grid Modeling Show?



    The UAM IV modeling analysis is contained in the State 

Implementation Plan (SIP) submitted by the CT DEP. A mostly similar 

analysis was also submitted by New Jersey (NJDEP) and New York State 

(NYSDEC) since, as explained above, their SIPs include portions of the 

modeling domain. The domain covers both the New York Northern New 

Jersey-Long Island severe area, and the Greater Connecticut area. 

Information on how the UAM modeling meets EPA guidance is summarized 

here and detailed in the State's submittals.

    EPA's Guideline on the use of photochemical grid models recommends 

that areas model three or more episodes including the types of weather 

conditions most conducive to ozone formation. The final photochemical 

grid modeling submitted by Connecticut focused on the UAM-IV modeling 

for several episodes from 1988 and 1991. All episodes represent 

significant ozone exceedances, under various meteorological conditions. 

The episodes have some of the worst case meteorology (i.e., the highest 

potential for ozone formation) of the episodes in the past forty years. 

It follows that if an extreme episode, like the ones chosen, pass the 

modeled attainment test, then less extreme days would pass as well.

    The UAM IV was run using the CALMET meteorological processor, with 

State actual emission inventories for the base years (1988 or 1991 as 

appropriate) and with projected emissions representing grown and 

controlled emissions for the attainment year. The projected emissions 

used were the Case-E scenario developed for EPA-OTC modeling 

simulations and included the effects of projected growth, the CAA 

required measures, low emission vehicle (LEV) assumptions for the motor 

vehicle section, and NO<SUB>X</SUB> reductions equivalent to the 

regional NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call adopted by EPA.

    The UAM IV model shows that domain wide there is a 91% decrease in 

the number of grid cells that exceed the one-hour standard from the 

base year to 2007. A 100% decrease would be necessary to pass the 

deterministic model test. The predicted peaks for 2007 remain above the 

one-hour standard with peak concentrations of 171 ppb in 2007. This 

does not pass the deterministic test. Since the UAM-IV model, as run 

for this analysis, does not show attainment in 2007 additional weight 

of evidence analyses were performed. These additional analyses are 

discussed below.



D. How Well Did the Model Perform?



    The UAM-IV model predicts ozone within the quality limits set by 

EPA guidance on most days. Qualitatively, the model predicts the peak 

ozone in the observed locations downwind of New York City. The model 

shows a slight bias toward over predicting ozone.

    As prescribed by EPA Guidance, the UAM-IV modeling predicts ozone 

concentrations for the year 2007 using the meteorology of the episodes 

from 1988 and 1991 combined with the emissions that are projected to 

occur by 2007. The 2007 emissions include emission increases due to 

population and economic growth and decreases due to the control 

strategies that will be in place by then (including an estimate for the 

EPA NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call).



E. What Other Type of Analyses Were Performed By Connecticut?



    In the past, EPA guidance for use of the UAM model required that 

all



[[Page 70359]]



modeling days show attainment of the ozone standard at all grid cells. 

This is called the deterministic method. The attainment demonstration 

guidance allows the user to adjust for days that have an extremely high 

ability to form ozone because of its meteorology. Adjustments are 

allowed since the one-hour ozone standard allows each location to have 

one day per year, on average, over the one-hour ozone standard.

    The attainment demonstration guidance allows use of additional 

corroborative analyses to support the attainment demonstration when the 

modeled attainment test is not passed. These other analyses can be used 

as part of the weight of evidence to attainment. The weight of evidence 

used to supplement the modeled attainment test in the Connecticut 

portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island area attainment 

demonstration, and how they can help predict that the area will attain 

the standard, are described here. In addition, one of the factors that 

EPA can consider as part of the weight-of-evidence analysis is whether 

there will be additional emission reductions anticipated that are not 

modeled.

    This notice discusses several analyses. Those analyses are the 

local Photochemical Grid Modeling (discussed above), Air Quality Trends 

Analyses, the Design Value Rollback analysis, and an additional 

analysis done pursuant to EPA memorandum entitled ``Guidance for 

Improving Weight of Evidence Through Identification of Additional 

Emission Reductions, Not Modeled.''



F. What Do Air Quality Trends Show?



    Linear extrapolation of present air quality trends predicts that 

the peak ozone values will be less than 125 ppb and the number of 

exceedances of the air quality standard will be less than one per year 

about the year 2005. Since a number of emission control programs, such 

as the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call, and Tier 2 car standards are still to 

be implemented and others, like the OTC NO<SUB>X</SUB> agreement and 

vehicle inspection and maintenance programs, are still being 

implemented (i.e. not achieving full emissions reduction benefit), 

emissions of ozone precursors will continue to decrease from now 

through 2007. Connecticut's attainment demonstration states that 

attainment of the one-hour ozone standard is possible based on an 

extrapolation of the air quality data.

    The attainment demonstration also includes research showing that 

ozone decreases occur at all of the monitors in the New York City 

airshed. Even when the trends are adjusted for year-to-year changes in 

how conducive the weather is for ozone formation (i.e. meteorologically 

adjusted trends), every air quality monitor except one shows decreased 

ozone. This supports the conclusion that the improvements in air 

quality during recent years are due to reductions in emissions rather 

than meteorology.



G. What Does the Regional Design Value Rollback Analysis Show?



    One of the analyses in the weight of evidence is the design value 

rollback analysis. Design value rollback uses the design value from 

recent air quality data as its starting point. The amount of ozone 

reduction predicted by the model from the starting point to the 

attainment year is calculated and the design value from recent air 

quality data is reduced by that amount.

    For the Connecticut analysis, EPA supplied calculations of the 

percentage reduction in ozone at the grid cells near the monitoring 

sites. The calculations were from the UAM-V modeling that EPA has been 

doing for the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call. EPA ran the UAM-V for the entire 

eastern United States for various episodes in 1991, 1993 and 1995 with 

both 1995 and 2007 OTAG emission inventories. The 2007 run included 

emissions adjusted for growth and reductions from the CAA-required 

controls plus the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call, and the National LEV (NLEV) 

program.

    The percentage difference between the base and the future case was 

calculated for the days when the modeling predicted the highest 

concentrations near each monitoring site. The ozone reductions on those 

days were averaged for each monitoring site. This percent difference 

was divided by 100 to produce a ``rollback factor.'' The observed ozone 

design value was multiplied by the rollback factor to obtain the 

concentration of ozone predicted for the monitoring site for the year 

2007. The ozone design value was the fourth highest concentration at 

each site over the three-year period from 1996 to 1998. The highest 

predicted design value for 2007 from all the monitoring sites is 122 

ppb, less than the 125 ppb one-hour ozone standard. This is how the 

design value rollback method predicts that the area may attain the 

ozone standard by 2007. The three years of data used by Connecticut in 

its submittal to calculate the observed design value were the latest 

available data at the time: 1996 to 1998. When EPA used the method in 

the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call, it used the design value from 1994 to 

1996, centered on 1995 when the model begins its reductions in 

emissions and ozone. The period used by in the analysis submitted by CT 

DEP does not overlap 1995. It should also be noted that preliminary 

ozone data from the summer of 1999 for this area shows that ozone 

levels have risen, most likely due to weather conditions, and that the 

three year design value has also risen. So the regional design value 

rollback method, when applied to the most recent air quality data does 

not show attainment in 2007. Further analyses are thus necessary, such 

as those discussed below.

    The design value rollback technique is a way of using existing air 

quality and the model in a relative sense to predict how the air 

quality will improve. Existing air quality is a readily measured 

quantity. Models may be more accurate at calculating the amount of 

improvement in air quality as opposed to predicting an absolute 

concentration. Therefore, this method counteracts some of UAM-IV's 

biases toward underestimating the extent of ozone reduction. The design 

value rollback method provides another gauge of whether an area will 

attain the air quality standard, using a method which does not rely 

solely on the absolute predictions made by the models.

    In summary, the design value rollback method was applied to the New 

York City airshed, where it used the most recent data to predict that 

all of the air quality stations will have better air quality than the 

one-hour air quality standard when the present ozone concentrations are 

reduced by the percentage ozone reduction that the UAM-V model predicts 

from the baseline to the attainment year. More recent air quality data 

call this analysis into question.



H. Does the Connecticut Portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-

Long Island Severe Nonattainment Area Need Additional Local Measures?



    EPA does not believe the attainment analysis for New York-Northern 

New Jersey-Long Island area proves attainment by the year 2007. EPA 

conducted a further analysis to further determine how much additional 

reduction is needed in order for EPA to approve or conditionally 

approve a revised and re-submitted attainment demonstration for this 

area. The EPA suggests that Connecticut include these calculations as 

part of the WOE analysis accompanying the adjusted attainment 

demonstration and revised motor vehicle emissions budget for this area.

    EPA calculated the emission reductions needed to make up the 

difference between the future year modeled ozone values and the ozone 

standard. The details of this calculation



[[Page 70360]]



are contained in the TSD for this notice. The analysis shows an ozone 

shortfall of 5 ppb for the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island 

severe nonattainment. From this 5 ppb shortfall value, additional local 

emission reduction targets can be developed. When the appropriate 

method is applied to this area, it is predicted that an additional 3.8% 

VOC and 0.3% NO<SUB>X</SUB> reduction from base year 1990 inventories 

is necessary to approve or conditionally approve a revised and re-

submitted attainment demonstration for this area. These additional 

reductions are over and above the Clean Air Act measures required for 

this area and the measures already relied on in the demonstration of 

attainment. Since Tier 2/Sulfur is included in the EPA analysis the 

percent reduction figures are also over and above Tier 2/Sulfur 

reductions as well. The three states within the nonattainment area will 

have to work together to achieve these reductions. A notice of public 

hearing was signed by Arthur Rocque, Jr, Commissioner, Connecticut DEP 

on November 24, 1999 requesting public comment on proposed changes to 

the attainment demonstration for the Connecticut portion of the New 

York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island severe nonattainment area.. To 

achieve the additional reductions necessary for attainment, Connecticut 

has proposed to: (1) Revise the transportation conformity budget to 

include the effects of EPA's recently proposed Tier 2 motor vehicle 

emissions control program and associated fuel sulfur control program, 

(2) commit to adopt additional NO<SUB>X</SUB> emission limits 

applicable to municipal waste combustors, and (3) commit to work with 

other jurisdictions of the Ozone Transport Region (OTR) and to submit, 

by October 31, 2001, additional necessary regional control measures in 

conjunction with other jurisdictions of the OTR to offset the emissions 

reduction shortfall in order attain the 1-hour ozone NAAQS by 2007.



I. Does Connecticut Portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long 

Island Severe Nonattainment Area Need a Mid-Course Review Correction?



    EPA guidance requires a mid-course review correction for the 

Connecticut portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island 

severe nonattainment area to access assess whether the assumptions used 

in the attainment demonstration are still true in the future. This mid-

course review should take place after the 2003 ozone season. The 

Connecticut DEP submitted an enforceable commitment with its attainment 

demonstration on September 16, 1998, to submit a MCR in the 2001/2002 

time frame, and an additional MCR in 2005. In order for EPA to accept 

that commitment of an MCR, Connecticut will have to agree to perform 

the MCR immediately following the 2003 ozone season and to submit the 

results to EPA by December 31, 2003. Connecticut should agree to work 

with EPA in a public consultative process to develop a methodology for 

performing the MCR and developing the criteria by which adequate 

progress would be judged. Once Connecticut modifies their commitment on 

the MCR to include these issues, then EPA can move forward to approve 

the attainment demonstration.



J. What Are EPA's Recommendations With Regard to the Modeling Portion 

of the Attainment Demonstration?



    The modeling for the Connecticut portion of the New York-Northern 

New Jersey-Long Island severe nonattainment area uses analyses that 

follow the EPA guidelines for predicting future air quality. These 

analyses, on balance, do not show that air quality will meet the one-

hour ozone air quality standard by the requested attainment date of 

2007. Additional analyses performed by EPA using the most up-to-date 

EPA guidance allows for attainment if the state commits to incorporate 

the Tier 2/Sulfur program into its attainment demonstration and commits 

to adopt measures which achieve an additional 3.8% VOC and a 0.3% 

NO<SUB>X</SUB> emission reduction. As stated previously, Connecticut 

has recently proposed revisions to its attainment demonstration to 

address these requirements.



K. What Measures Did Connecticut Rely on in Their Attainment 

Demonstration?



    Table 3 shows the measures Connecticut relied on in the attainment 

demonstration for the Connecticut portion of the New York Northern New 

Jersey-Long Island nonattainment area. The measures along with their 

approval status is shown.



Table 3.--Control Measures in the One-Hour Ozone Attainment Plans for the Connecticut Severe Ozone Nonattainment

                                                      Area

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

                                                                Included in local

      Name of control measure            Type of measure            modeling               Approval status

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

On-board Refueling Vapor Recovery..  Federal rule..........  Yes...................  Promulgated at 40 CFR 86.

Federal Motor Vehicle Control        Federal rule..........  Yes...................  Promulgated at 40 CFR 86.

 program.

Federal Non-road Gasoline Engines..  Federal rule..........  Yes...................  Promulgated at 40 CFR 90.

Federal Non-road Heavy Duty diesel   Federal rule..........  Yes...................  Promulgated at 40 CFR 89.

 engines.

AIM Surface Coatings...............  Federal rule..........  Yes...................  Promulgated at 40 CFR 59

                                                                                      subpart D.

Consumer & commercial products.....  Federal rule..........  Yes...................  Promulgated at 40 CFR 59

                                                                                      subpart C.

Enhanced Inspection & Maintenance..  CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes...................  Conditionally SIP approved

                                                                                      (64 FR 12005; 3/10/99).\1\

NO<SUB>X</SUB> RACT...........................  CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes...................  SIP approved (62 FR 52016;

                                                                                      10/6/97).

VOC RACT pursuant to sections        CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes...................  SIP approved (56 FR 52205;

 182(a)(2)(A) and 182(b)(2)(B) of                                                     10/18/91 and 64 FR 12019;

 Clean Air Act.                                                                       3/10/99).

VOC RACT pursuant to sections        CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes...................  Conditionally SIP approved

 182(b)(2)(A) and (C) of Clean Air                                                    (64 FR 12019; 3/10/99)--

 Act.                                                                                 SIP approval pending for

                                                                                      SIP submitted in response

                                                                                      to condition.\2\

Stage II Vapor Recovery............  CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes...................  SIP approved (58 FR 65930;

                                                                                      12/17/93).

Stage I Vapor Recovery.............  CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes...................  SIP approved (56 FR 52205;

                                                                                      10/18/91).



[[Page 70361]]





Reformulated Gasoline..............  CAA required program    Yes...................  Promulgated statewide under

                                      in NYC and Hartford                             40 CFR section 80.70. Also

                                      areas. Opt-in to                                approved for opt-in

                                      federal program for                             portion of state as part

                                      remainder of state.                             of 15% plan (64 FR 12015;

                                                                                      3/10/99).

National Low Emission Vehicle        State opt-in..........  Yes...................  Federal program promulgated

 (NLEV).                                                                              at 40 CFR 86 subpart R.

                                                                                      State opt-in SIP approval

                                                                                      proposed 8/16/99, 64 FR

                                                                                      44450.\3\

Clean Fuel Fleets..................  CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes...................  RFG and I/M reductions

                                                                                      substituted--SIP approval

                                                                                      pending.\4\

New Source Review..................  CAA SIP Requirement...  No....................  SIP approval pending.\5\

Base Year Emissions Inventory......  CAA SIP Requirement...  N/A \6\...............  SIP approved (62 FR 55336;

                                                                                      10/24/97).

15% VOC Reduction Plan.............  CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes \7\...............  SIP approved (64 FR 12015;

                                                                                      3/10/99).

Enhanced Rule Effectiveness........  State measure.........  Yes \7\...............  SIP approved (64 FR 12015;

                                                                                      3/10/99).

9% rate of progress plans..........  CAA SIP Requirement...  Yes for the strategies  SIP approval pending for

                                                              relied on for the       the first phase from 1996-

                                                              first phase from 1996-  1999.\8\ For the ROP plans

                                                              1999 \7\.               post 1999, CT provided an

                                                                                      enforceable commitment to

                                                                                      submit the plans and adopt

                                                                                      all necessary rules

                                                                                      demonstrating ROP through

                                                                                      2007 by December 2000.\9\

Emissions Statements...............  CAA SIP Requirement...  N/A \6\...............  SIP approved (60 FR 2524; 1/

                                                                                      10/95).

Enhanced Monitoring (PAMS).........  CAA Requirement.......  N/A \6\...............  SIP approved (62 FR 55336;

                                                                                      10/24/97).

OTC NO<SUB>X</SUB> MOU Phase II...............  State initiative......  Yes...................  SIP approved (64 FR 52233;

                                                                                      9/28/99).

EPA NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call...................  EPA requirement.......  Yes...................  SIP approval pending.\10\

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

\1\ The fact that CT's enhanced I/M rule is conditionally approved does not affect the emission reductions that

  Connecticut can rely on for attainment purposes since the achievement of those emission reductions in no way

  depends upon the fulfillment of the conditions outlined in that final rule. Rather, the conditions relate to

  certain procedural requirements only.

\2\ With respect to the various VOC and Non-CTG rules, Connecticut submitted a revised non-CTG RACT rule on

  September 2, 1999. In order to meet the requirements of sections 182(b)(2)(A) and (C), CT revised the section

  22a-174-32 to remove the exemption for the remaining Appendix E categories, as well as expanding the

  applicability to sources in industrial categories in CT for which EPA has published final CTGs since the date

  of enactment (e.g., aerospace, shipbuilding, and wood furniture coating). EPA deemed the SIP submittal

  complete on September 10, 1999. EPA will take final action on the revised section 22a-174-32 prior to

  finalizing action on the one-hour ozone attainment plan.

\3\ EPA intends to publish final rules for the NLEV opt-in SIP before or at the same time as we publish final

  rules on the attainment demonstration.

\4\ Since RFG and I/M emission reductions already approved into the SIP, the Clean Fuel Fleet program will not

  have to be finally approved in order to approve the attainment demonstration.

\5\ CT submitted its New Source Review (NSR) for VOC and NO<SUB>X</SUB> as a SIP revision on May 23, 1994. The state is not

  relying on emission reductions from this NSR SIP, and therefore it will not have to be finally approved in

  order to approve the attainment demonstration.

\6\ Does not produce emission reductions.

\7\ The measures used to demonstrate rate of progress were modeled.

\8\ The nine percent plan rate-of-progress (ROP) plan SIP for reductions from 1996 through 1999 was submitted to

  EPA on December 31, 1997, with minor revisions on January 7, 1998. This plan is currently under review by EPA.

  A notice of proposed rulemaking will be published soon. EPA intends to publish final rules for the nine

  percent ROP before or at the same time as it publishes final rules on the attainment demonstration.

\9\ In today's notice, EPA is proposing to conditionally approve Connecticut's attainment demonstration for the

  New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island severe ozone nonattainment area, including the enforceable commitment

  for the Post-99 ROP submission.

\10\ On September 30, 1999, CT DEP submitted a SIP revision in response to the EPA's regulation entitled,

  ``Finding of Significant Contribution and Rulemaking for Certain States in the Ozone Transport Assessment

  Group Region for Purposes of Reducing Regional Transport of Ozone,'' otherwise known as the ``NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP Call.''

  The SIP submittal included a NO<SUB>X</SUB> budget and allowance trading regulation, section 22a-174-22b. Although not a

  CAA required measure, section 22a-174-22b requires significant NO<SUB>X</SUB> reductions from 2003 onward which will

  strengthen the SIP. EPA will take final action on section 22a-174-22b prior to finalizing action on the one-

  hour ozone attainment plan. This also fulfills Connecticut's commitment under the OTC MOU Phase III program.



L. Motor Vehicle Emission Budget



    The CT DEP submitted 2007 conformity budgets for the Connecticut 

portion of the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island severe ozone 

nonattainment area on February 10, 1999. These budgets were developed 

from the mobile source inventories developed by EPA for the 

NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call. In its February 10, 1999 letter, CT DEP 

concluded that it is reasonable to extract 2007 transportation 

conformity budgets from the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call since Connecticut's 

ozone attainment demonstrations rely on EPA modeling results developed 

using emission inventories equivalent to those used by EPA to develop 

the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call. In a November 19, 1999 letter from Susan 

Studlien, EPA Region I to Carmine DiBattista, CT DEP, EPA found that 

the 2007 motor vehicle emissions budgets submitted for the Connecticut 

area are inadequate for conformity purposes. The budgets were 

determined to be inadequate because in some instances they do not 

accurately reflect the mobile source control strategies Connecticut is 

implementing and, when compared to more recent mobile source emission 

estimates prepared by the state for conformity, appear to be 

substantial higher in the attainment year than the



[[Page 70362]]



most current projections. The letter, which is available in the docket 

for this action, further outlines the rationale behind this 

determination.

    In November 24, 1999 notice of public hearing discussed previously, 

Connecticut DEP has included proposed 2007 conformity budgets for the 

Connecticut portion of the New York Northern New Jersey-Long Island 

nonattainment area. These budgets incorporate the benefits of the Tier 

2/Sulfur program for the Connecticut portion of the New York Northern 

New Jersey-Long Island nonattainment area. The EPA is proposing to 

conditionally approve the attainment demonstration SIP should 

Connecticut corrects the deficiencies that cause the motor vehicle 

emissions budget to be inadequate and, alternatively, to disapprove it 

if Connecticut does not correct the deficiencies.

    Because Connecticut may shortly be submitting revised 

demonstrations with revised motor vehicle emission budgets, EPA is 

providing a 60 day comment period on this proposed rule. If Connecticut 

submits a revised attainment demonstration, EPA will place the 

revisions in the docket for this rulemaking and will post a notice on 

EPA's website at www.epa.gov/oms/traq. By posting notice on the 

website, EPA will also initiate the adequacy process.



M. Tier 2/Sulphur Program Benefits



    As result of EPA's review of the State's SIP submittal, EPA 

believes that the ozone modeling submitted by the State for the New 

York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island severe nonattainment area on which 

EPA is proposing to conditionally approve and disapprove-in-the-

alternative today will need the emission reductions from EPA's Tier 2/

Sulfur to attain the one-hour ozone NAAQS. Further, EPA believes that 

the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island severe nonattainment area 

will require additional emission reductions identified by EPA, beyond 

those from EPA's Tier 2/Sulfur program, to attain the one-hour ozone 

NAAQS.

    For the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island severe 

nonattainment area, EPA is proposing to determine that the submitted 

control strategy does not provide for attainment by the attainment 

deadline. The emission reductions of EPA's Tier 2/Sulfur program, which 

are not reflected in the submitted SIP, will assist in attainment and 

the effects of these standards must be included in the motor vehicle 

emissions budget.

    To assist the State in the preparation of a new submission which 

could be approved or conditionally approved, EPA has prepared an 

estimate of the air quality benefits of EPA's Tier 2/Sulfur program. In 

our calculation, EPA assumed that all of the Tier 2/Sulfur emissions 

reductions will contribute to the ability of the New York-Northern New 

Jersey-Long Island severe nonattainment area to demonstrate attainment. 

The EPA has further calculated how much additional emission reduction 

is needed for the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island severe 

nonattainment area in order for EPA to approve or conditionally approve 

a revised and re-submitted attainment demonstration for this area. The 

EPA suggests that the State include these calculations as part of the 

WOE analysis accompanying the adjusted attainment demonstration and 

revised motor vehicle emissions budget for this area. Today EPA is 

proposing to conditionally approve a new attainment demonstration if it 

meets this description.

    However, Connecticut can use some of EPA's Tier 2/Sulfur program 

credit for other purposes. Thus, the State could take credit for all or 

some of EPA's Tier 2/Sulfur program credit for its attainment 

demonstration.

    If the amount of Tier 2/Sulfur program credit that Connecticut is 

assuming in its adjusted attainment plan is less than the amount that 

EPA assumed would be available for attainment, i.e., the State is 

applying some or all of the Tier 2/Sulfur program credit for other 

purposes, the State will have to calculate the remaining amount of 

additional emission reductions needed and commit to adopt measures to 

achieve them. If the State assumes all the Tier 2/Sulfur program credit 

will go toward attainment, then the State will be able to rely on EPA's 

estimate of the additional emission reductions needed.



N. What Are the Consequences of State Failure?



    This section explains the CAA consequences of State failure to meet 

the time frames and terms described generally in this notice. The CAA 

provides for the imposition of sanctions and the promulgation of a 

federal implementation plan if States fail to submit a required plan, 

submit a plan that is determined to be incomplete or if EPA disapproves 

a plan. (We using the phrase ``failure to submit'' to cover both the 

situation where a State makes no submission and the situation where the 

State makes a submission that we find is incomplete in accordance with 

section 110(k)(1)(B) and 40 CFR part 51, Appendix V.) For purposes of 

sanctions, there are no sanctions clocks in place based on a failure to 

submit. Thus, the description of the timing of sanctions, below, is 

linked to a potential disapproval of the State's submission.

1. What Are the CAA's Provisions for Sanctions?

    If EPA disapproves a required SIP, such as the attainment 

demonstration SIPs, section 179(a) provides for the imposition of two 

sanctions. The first sanction would apply 18 months after EPA 

disapproves the SIP if the State fails to make the required submittal 

which EPA proposes to fully or conditionally approve within that time. 

Under EPA's sanctions regulations, 40 CFR 52.31, the first sanction 

would be 2:1 offsets for sources subject to the new source review 

requirements under section 173 of the CAA. If the State has still 

failed to submit a SIP for which EPA proposes full or conditional 

approval 6 months after the first sanction is imposed, the second 

sanction will apply. The second sanction is a limitation on the receipt 

of Federal highway funds. EPA also has authority under section 110(m) 

to a broader area, but is not proposing to take such action today.

2. What Are the CAA's FIP Provisions if a State Fails To Submit a Plan?

    In addition to sanctions, if EPA finds that a State failed to 

submit the required SIP revision or disapproves the required SIP 

revision EPA must promulgate a FIP no later than 2 years from the date 

of the finding if the deficiency has not been corrected. The attainment 

demonstration SIPs on which EPA is taking action today were originally 

due in November 1994. However, through a series of policy memoranda, 

EPA recognized that States had not submitted attainment demonstrations 

and were constrained to do so until ozone transport had been further 

analyzed. As provided in the Background, above, EPA provided for States 

to submit the attainment demonstration SIPs in two phases. In June 

1996, EPA made findings that ten States and the District of Columbia 

had failed to submit the phase I SIPs for nine nonattainment areas. 61 

FR 36292 (July 10, 1996). In addition on May 19, 1997, EPA made a 

similar finding for Pennsylvania for the Philadelphia area. 62 FR 

27201.

    In July 1998, several environmental groups filed a notice of 

citizen suit, alleging that EPA had outstanding sanctions and FIP 

obligations for the serious and severe nonattainment areas on which EPA 

is proposing action today. These groups filed a lawsuit in the Federal 

District Court for the District of Columbia on November 8, 1999.



[[Page 70363]]



III. Proposed Action



    EPA is proposing to conditionally approve the ground-level one-hour 

ozone attainment demonstration State implementation plan (SIP or 

demonstration) for the Connecticut portion of the New York-Northern New 

Jersey-Long Island severe nonattainment Area submitted by Connecticut 

on September 16, 1998. EPA is also proposing to conditionally approve 

the Connecticut's commitment to submit ROP target calculations for ROP 

after 1999 and the adopted measures to achieve post-1999 ROP by 

December 2000. EPA is also proposing, in the alternative, to approve in 

part and disapprove in part this demonstration if the State does not 

submit an adequate motor vehicle emissions budget consistent with 

attainment, and a commitment to the additional measures required for 

attainment of the standard. Lastly, EPA intends to publish final rules 

for Nine Percent ROP, NLEV and the NO<SUB>X</SUB> SIP call for 

Connecticut either before or at the same time as publication of final 

approval of the attainment demonstration.

    EPA is soliciting public comments on the issues discussed in this 

proposal or on other relevant matters. These issues will be considered 

before EPA takes final action. Interested parties may participate in 

the Federal rulemaking procedure by submitting written comments to the 

EPA Regional office listed in the ADDRESSES section of this action.

    A more detailed description of the state submittal and EPA's 

evaluation are included in a Technical Support Document (TSD) prepared 

in support of this rulemaking action. A copy of the TSD is available 

upon request from the EPA Regional Office listed in the ADDRESSES 

section of this action.

    Nothing in this action should be construed as permitting or 

allowing or establishing a precedent for any future request for 

revision to any State implementation plan. Each request for revision to 

the State implementation plan shall be considered separately in light 

of specific technical, economic, and environmental factors and in 

relation to relevant statutory and regulatory requirements.



IV. Administrative Requirements



A. Executive Order 12866



    The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has exempted this 

regulatory action from review under Executive Order 12866, entitled 

``Regulatory Planning and Review.''



B. Executive Order 13045



    Executive Order 13045, entitled ``Protection of Children from 

Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks'' (62 FR 19885, April 23, 

1997), applies to any rule that the EPA determines (1) is 

``economically significant,'' as defined under Executive Order 12866, 

and (2) the environmental health or safety risk addressed by the rule 

has a disproportionate effect on children. If the regulatory action 

meets both criteria, the Agency must evaluate the environmental health 

or safety effects of the planned rule on children and explain why the 

planned regulation is preferable to other potentially effective and 

reasonably feasible alternatives considered by the Agency.

    This final rule is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it 

does not involve decisions intended to mitigate environmental health 

and safety risks.



C. Executive Order 13084



    Under Executive Order 13084, EPA may not issue a regulation that is 

not required by statute, that significantly affects or uniquely affects 

the communities of Indian tribal governments, and that imposes 

substantial direct compliance costs on those communities, unless the 

Federal government provides the funds necessary to pay the direct 

compliance costs incurred by the tribal governments. If the mandate is 

unfunded, EPA must provide to the Office of Management and Budget, in a 

separately identified section of the preamble to the rule, a 

description of the extent of EPA's prior consultation with 

representatives of affected tribal governments, a summary of the nature 

of their concerns, and a statement supporting the need to issue the 

regulation. In addition, Executive Order 13084 requires EPA to develop 

an effective process permitting elected and other representatives of 

Indian tribal governments ``to provide meaningful and timely input in 

the development of regulatory policies on matters that significantly or 

uniquely affect their communities.'' Today's rule does not 

significantly or uniquely affect the communities of Indian tribal 

governments. This action does not involve or impose any requirements 

that affect Indian Tribes. Accordingly, the requirements of section 

3(b) of Executive Order 13084 do not apply to this rule.



D. Executive Order 13132



    Executive Order 13132 Federalism (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999), 

revokes and replaces Executive Orders 12612 (Federalism) and 12875 

(Enhancing the Intergovernmental Partnership). Executive Order 13132 

requires EPA to develop an accountable process to ensure ``meaningful 

and timely input by State and local officials in the development of 

regulatory policies that have federalism implications.'' ``Policies 

that have federalism implications'' is defined in the Executive Order 

to include regulations that 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.'' Under Executive Order 13132, EPA may 

not issue a regulation that has federalism implications, that imposes 

substantial direct compliance costs, and that is not required by 

statute, unless the Federal government provides the funds necessary to 

pay the direct compliance costs incurred by State and local 

governments, or EPA consults with State and local officials early in 

the process of developing the proposed regulation. EPA also may not 

issue a regulation that has federalism implications and that preempts 

State law unless the Agency consults with State and local officials 

early in the process of developing the proposed regulation.

    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. Thus, the requirements of section 6 of the Executive Order do 

not apply to this rule.



E. Regulatory Flexibility Act



    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires an agency 

to conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule subject to 

notice and comment rulemaking requirements unless the agency certifies 

that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a 

substantial number of small entities. Small entities include small 

businesses, small not-for-profit enterprises, and small governmental 

jurisdictions. This proposed rule will not have a significant impact on 

a substantial number of small entities because SIP approvals under 

section 110 and subchapter I, part D of



[[Page 70364]]



the Clean Air Act do not create any new requirements but simply approve 

requirements that the State is already imposing. Therefore, because the 

Federal SIP approval does not create any new requirements, I certify 

that this action will not have a significant economic impact on a 

substantial number of small entities. Moreover, due to the nature of 

the Federal-State relationship under the Clean Air Act, preparation of 

a flexibility analysis would constitute Federal inquiry into the 

economic reasonableness of state action. The Clean Air Act forbids EPA 

to base its actions concerning SIPs on such grounds. Union Electric Co. 

v. U.S. EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 255-66 (1976); 42 U.S.C. 7410(a)(2).

    If the approval is converted to a disapproval under section 110(k), 

based on the State's failure to meet the commitment, it will not affect 

any existing State requirements applicable to small entities. Federal 

disapproval of the State submittal does not affect State-

enforceability. Moreover, EPA's disapproval of the submittal does not 

impose any new requirements. Therefore, I certify that such a 

disapproval action will not have a significant economic impact on a 

substantial number of small entities because it would not remove 

existing requirements nor would it substitute a new Federal 

requirement.

    The EPA's alternative proposed disapproval of the State request 

under section 110 and subchapter I, part D of the Act would not affect 

any existing requirements applicable to small entities. Any pre-

existing Federal requirements would remain in place after this 

disapproval. Federal disapproval of the State submittal would not 

affect State-enforceability. Moreover EPA's disapproval of the 

submittal does not impose any new Federal requirements. Therefore, I 

certify that the proposed disapproval would not have a significant 

impact on a substantial number of small entities.



F. Unfunded Mandates



    Under section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 

(``Unfunded Mandates Act''), signed into law on March 22, 1995, EPA 

must prepare a budgetary impact statement to accompany any proposed or 

final rule that includes a Federal mandate that may result in estimated 

annual costs to State, local, or tribal governments in the aggregate; 

or to private sector, of $100 million or more. Under section 205, EPA 

must select the most cost-effective and least burdensome alternative 

that achieves the objectives of the rule and is consistent with 

statutory requirements. Section 203 requires EPA to establish a plan 

for informing and advising any small governments that may be 

significantly or uniquely impacted by the rule.

    EPA has determined that the proposed approval action does not 

include a Federal mandate that may result in estimated annual costs of 

$100 million or more to either State, local, or tribal governments in 

the aggregate, or to the private sector. This Federal action approves 

pre-existing requirements under State or local law, and imposes no new 

requirements. Accordingly, no additional costs to State, local, or 

tribal governments, or to the private sector, result from this action.

    Sections 202 and 205 do not apply to the proposed disapproval 

because the proposed disapproval of the SIP submittal would not, in and 

of itself, constitute a Federal mandate because it would not impose an 

enforceable duty on any entity. In addition, the Act does not permit 

EPA to consider types of analyses described in section 202 in 

determining whether a SIP submittal meets the CAA. Finally, section 203 

does not apply to the proposed disapproval because it would affect only 

the State of Connecticut, which is not a small government.



G. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act



    Section 12 of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act 

(NTTAA) of 1995 requires Federal agencies to evaluate existing 

technical standards when developing new regulations. To comply with 

NTTAA, the EPA must consider and use ``voluntary consensus standards'' 

(VCS) if available and applicable when developing programs and policies 

unless doing so would be inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise 

impractical.

    EPA believes that VCS are inapplicable to this action. Today's 

action does not require the public to perform activities conducive to 

the use of VCS.



List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52



    Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Hydrocarbons, 

Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone.



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



    Dated: November 30, 1999.

Mindy S. Lubber,

Deputy Regional Administrator, Region I.

[FR Doc. 99-31711 Filed 12-15-99; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 6560-50-P







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