Unified Agenda
40 CFR Ch. I
FRL-7085-7
AGENCY:
Environmental Protection Agency.
ACTION:
Semiannual regulatory agenda.
SUMMARY:
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) publishes the Semiannual Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions to update the public about:
¤ Regulations and major policies currently under development,
¤ Reviews of existing regulations and major policies, and
¤ Regulations and major policies completed or canceled since the last Agenda.
TO BE PLACED ON THE AGENDA MAILING LIST:
If you would like to subscribe, please contact Janice Ndunguru (1806A), Environmental Protection Agency; 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460; by e-mail at ndunguru.janice@epa.gov; or by phone at (202) 564-6572.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
If you have questions or comments about a particular action please get in touch with the agency contact listed for that action. If you have general questions about the Agenda or about EPA's decisionmaking process, please contact: Philip Schwartz (1806A), Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW; Washington, DC 20460; phone: (202) 564-6564; e-mail: schwartz.philip@epa.gov. We welcome your suggestions on how we can make the Agenda more useful to you and easier to use.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
a. What Principles and Objectives Guide EPA in Developing Regulations and Policies?
b. How Does EPA Develop Rules and Policies?
c. What Actions Are Included in the Agenda?
d. How Is the Agenda Organized?
e. What Information Is in Agenda Entries?
f. What Additional Information Is in Regulatory Plan Entries?
g. What Tools Are Available To Help Quickly Identify Actions That Are of Interest to You?
h. How Can You Access Federal Register Documents and Interpretive Guidance via the Internet and via E-mail?
i. What Special Attention Do We Give to the Impacts of Rules on Small Entities?
j. Why Participate and How To Do It Most Effectively?
A. What Principles and Objectives Guide EPA in Developing Regulations and Policies?
The quality of the science, economic, and policy analysis that underlie EPA regulations is vital to the credibility of EPA decisions and ultimately our effectiveness in protecting human health and the environment. Additionally, continued testing and adoption of new environmental protection methods must be a central tenet in environmental problem solving. A well managed regulatory process and a strong commitment to innovative solutions will ensure that the significant environmental improvements that we all want to achieve are cost-effective, fair and fully protective.
Much of the success over the last 31 years and seven administrations in cleaning up the Nation's water, air, and land is attributable to the system of Federal and State regulation that has directed and coordinated private investment in pollution control and prevention. While regulation will remain an important tool to implement environmental policy, it is not the only one. Instead, EPA must increasingly act as an innovator, educator, and leader in administering a broad set of new tools — including new methods to design and administer regulations — that engage all segments of our society in responsive behaviors that protect the environment while promoting appropriate economic growth. For example, we have worked with businesses and community leaders to develop more than 40 voluntary partnership programs that help achieve environmental objectives with the greatest possible efficiency. For more information about these programs visit: www.epa.gov/partners.
EPA's regulatory process must ensure that the Nation's environmental protection system produces the best outcomes at an acceptable cost, where cost considerations are appropriate. Appropriate scientific, economic and policy analyses must be planned at early stages in the regulatory development process so that senior Agency decision makers understand the benefits and costs of policy options from which to choose. Additionally, it is important that we continue to apply new methods to protect the environment—by building flexibility into regulations up front, through non-regulatory approaches where effective, by creating strong partnerships with States, local governments, and businesses, and by vigorously using public outreach and involvement.
Several basic legal requirements we must follow when we issue a regulation are contained in the Administrative Procedure Act, the Regulatory Flexibility Act as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act, the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, the Paperwork Reduction Act, the National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act, and the Congressional Review Act. You can find information on many of these laws at www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/.
We also must meet a number of requirements contained in Executive Orders. Of particular significance for EPA rulemakings are Executive Orders 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review), 13045 (Children's Health Protection), 13175 (Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments), 13132 (Federalism), and 13211 (Energy). You can find information on these and other Executive orders at www.nara.gov/fedreg/eo.html.
B. How Does EPA Develop Rules and Policies?
In order to improve the regulatory process within EPA, we established a task force to examine the Agency's rulemaking process, and to recommend ways to improve the internal process and strengthen the supporting science and analysis. The task force concluded that the regulatory process is essentially sound but improvements should be made in several areas to more effectively carry out our mission including: better science and economic analyses; broader consideration of policy options; greater accountability; and better management of significant nonregulatory decisions. For a detailed discussion of these improvements, please see our Statement of Priorities in The Regulatory Plan, contained in part II of today's Federal Register.
C. What Actions Are Included in the Agenda?
EPA includes regulations and certain major policy documents in the Agenda. We generally do not include minor amendments or the following categories of actions in the Agenda:
¤ Under the Clean Air Act: Revisions to State Implementation Plans; Equivalent Methods for Ambient Air Quality Monitoring; Deletions from the New Source Performance Standards source categories list; Delegations of Authority to States; Area Designations for Air Quality Planning Purposes.
¤ Under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act: Actions regarding pesticide tolerances and food additive regulations; decision documents defining and establishing registration standards; decision documents and termination decisions for the Special Review Registration process; and data call-in requests made under section 3(c)(2)(B).
¤ Under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act: Authorization of State solid waste management plans; hazardous waste delisting petitions.
¤ Under the Clean Water Act: State Water Quality Standards; Deletions from the section 307(a) list of toxic pollutants; Suspensions of toxic testing requirements under the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES); Delegations of NPDES authority to States.
¤ Under the Safe Drinking Water Act: Actions on State underground injection control programs.
There is no legal significance to the omission of an item from the agenda.
D. How Is the Agenda Organized?
We have organized the agenda:
¤ First, by the law that would authorize a particular action;
¤ Second, by the current stage of development (proposal, final, etc.); and
¤ Third, by the section number of the statute which requires or authorizes the action.
The following 14 sections deal with 13 laws that EPA administers and a fourteenth broader section called "General" that includes cross-cutting actions, such as rules authorized by multiple statutes and general acquisition rules:
1. General
2. The Clean Air Act (CAA)
3. The Atomic Energy Act (AEA)
4. The Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)
5. The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA)
6. The Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
7. The Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA)
8. Chemical Safety Information, Site Security and Fuels Regulatory Relief Act
9. The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
10. The Oil Pollution Act (OPA)
11. The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act; Superfund (CERCLA)
12. The Clean Water Act (CWA)
13. The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA)
14. The Shore Protection Act (SPA)
In each of these 14 sections, there are up to 5 headings covering the following stages of rulemaking:
1. Prerulemakings - Prerulemaking actions are intended to determine whether EPA should initiate rulemaking. Prerulemakings may include anything that influences or leads to rulemaking, such as advance notices of proposed rulemaking (ANPRMs), significant studies or analyses of the possible need for regulatory action, announcement of reviews of existing regulations required under section 610 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, requests for public comment on the need for regulatory action, or important preregulatory policy proposals.
2. Proposed Rules - This section includes EPA rulemaking actions that are within a year of proposal (publication of Notices of Proposed Rulemakings (NPRMs)).
3. Final Rules - This section includes rules that are within a year of final promulgation.
4. Long-Term Actions - This section includes rulemakings for which the next scheduled regulatory action is after September 2002.
5. Completed Actions - This section contains actions that have been promulgated and published in the Federal Register since publication of the April 2001 Agenda. It also includes actions that we are no longer considering or actions that have been merged into other actions. If an action appears in the completed section, it will not appear in future Agendas unless we decide to initiate action again, in which case it will appear as a new entry. EPA also announces the results of our Regulatory Flexibility Act section 610 reviews in this section of the Agenda.
E. What Information Is in Agenda Entries?
Agenda entries include the following information, where applicable:
Sequence Number: This indicates where the entry appears in the Agenda.
Title: Titles for new entries (those that haven't appeared in previous Agendas) are preceded by a bullet (¤). The notation "Section 610 Review" follows the title if we are reviewing the rule as part of our periodic review of existing rules under section 610 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 610).
Priority: Entries are placed into one of five categories described below.
Economically Significant: As defined in Executive Order 12866, a rulemaking action that will have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or will adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or communities. OMB reviews all economically significant rules under Executive Order 12866.
EPA is developing 25 rules that are expected to have annualized economic impacts of more than $100 million.
| Number | Rules that are expected to have annualized economic impacts over $100 million | RIN |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Radon | 2040-AA94 |
| 2 | National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Groundwater Rule | 2040-AA97 |
| 3 | National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Arsenic and Clarifications to Compliance and New Source Contaminant Monitoring | 2040-AB75 |
| 4 | Effluent Guidelines and Standards for the Metal Products and Machinery Category, Phases 1 and 2 | 2040-AB79 |
| 5 | NPDES Permit Requirements for Municipal Sanitary Sewer Collection Systems, Municipal Satellite Collection Systems, and Sanitary Sewer Overflows | 2040-AD02 |
| 6 | NPDES Permit Regulation and Effluent Limitations Guidelines and Standards for Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) | 2040-AD19 |
| 7 | National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule | 2040-AD37 |
| 8 | National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Stage 2 Disinfectants/Disinfection Byproducts Rule | 2040-AD38 |
| 9 | Effluent Guidelines and Standards for the Construction and Development Industry | 2040-AD42 |
| 10 | Minimizing Adverse Environmental Impact from Cooling Water Intake Structures at Existing Facilities Under Section 316(b) of the Clean Water Act, Phase 2 | 2040-AD62 |
| 11 | Corrective Action for Solid Waste Management Units (SWMUs) at Hazardous Waste Management Facilities | 2050-AB80 |
| 12 | Standards for the Management of Coal Combustion Wastes Generated by Commercial Electric Power Producers | 2050-AE81 |
| 13 | Standards for the Management of Coal Combustion Wastes — Non-Power Producers and Minefilling | 2050-AE83 |
| 14 | NESHAP: Plywood and Composite Wood Products | 2060-AG52 |
| 15 | NESHAP: Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engine | 2060-AG63 |
| 16 | NESHAP: Combustion Turbine | 2060-AG67 |
| 17 | NESHAP: Industrial, Commercial and Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters | 2060-AG69 |
| 18 | NESHAP: Automobile and Light-Duty Truck Manufacturing (Surface Coating) | 2060-AG99 |
| 19 | Phase I Federal Implementation Plans (FIPs) To Reduce the Regional Transport of Ozone in the Eastern United States | 2060-AH87 |
| 20 | Control of Emissions from Nonroad Large Spark Ignition Engines, Recreational Engines (Marine and Land-based), and Highway Motorcycles | 2060-AI11 |
| 21 | Review of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Particulate Matter | 2060-AI44 |
| 22 | Rulemakings for the Purpose of Reducing Interstate Ozone Transport | 2060-AJ20 |
| 23 | Electric Utility Steam Generating Unit MACT Regulation | 2060-AJ65 |
| 24 | Groundwater and Pesticide Management Plan Rule | 2060-AC46 |
| 25 | Endocrine Disruptor Screening Program | 2070-AD26 |
Other Significant: A rulemaking that is not economically significant but is considered significant by the agency. This category includes rules that are an EPA priority and rules that EPA anticipates will be reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Order 12866 because they are likely to:
¤ Create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an action taken or planned by another agency;
¤ Materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights or obligations of recipients; or
¤ Raise novel legal or policy issues.
Substantive, Nonsignificant: A rulemaking that has substantive impacts but is neither Significant, nor Routine and Frequent, nor Informational/Administrative/Other.
Routine and Frequent: A rulemaking that is a specific case of a recurring application of a regulatory program in the Code of Federal Regulations and that does not alter the body of the regulation.
Informational/Administrative/Other: A rulemaking that is primarily informational or pertains to agency matters not central to accomplishing the agency's regulatory mandate but that the agency places in the Agenda to inform the public of the activity.
Also, if we believe that a rule may be "major" as defined in the congressional review provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) (5 U.S.C. 801; Public Law 104-121) because it is likely to result in an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or meets other criteria specified in this law, we indicate this under the "Priority" heading with the statement "Major under 5 U.S.C. 801."
Legal Authority: The sections of the United States Code (U.S.C.), Public Law (P.L.), Executive Order (E.O.), or common name of the law that authorizes the regulatory action.
CFR Citation: The sections of the Code of Federal Regulations that will be affected by the action.
Legal Deadline: An indication of whether the rule is subject to a statutory or judicial deadline, the date of that deadline, and whether the deadline pertains to a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, a Final Action, or some other action.
Abstract: A brief description of the problem the regulation will address; the need for a Federal solution; to the extent available, the alternatives that the agency is considering to address the problem; and the potential advantages and disadvantages of the action.
Timetable: The dates (and citations) that documents for this action were published in the Federal Register and, where possible, a projected date for the next step. Projected publication dates frequently change during the course of a rule development. The projections in the Agenda are our best estimates as of the date we submit the Agenda for publication. For some entries, the timetable indicates that the date of the next action is "to be determined."
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis Required: Indicates whether EPA has prepared or anticipates that it will be preparing a regulatory flexibility analysis under section 603 or 604 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. Generally, such an analysis is required for proposed or final rules that EPA believes may have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Small Entities Affected: Indicates whether we expect the rule to have any effect on small entities.
Government Levels Affected: Indicates whether we expect the rule to have any effect on levels of government and, if so, whether the governments are State, local, tribal, or Federal.
Federalism Implications: Indicates whether the action is expected to 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.
Unfunded Mandates: Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act requires an assessment of anticipated costs and benefits if a rule includes a mandate that may result in expenditures of more than $100 million in any one year by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector. If we expect to exceed this $100 million threshold, we note it in this section.
Energy Impacts: Indicates whether the action is a significant energy action under Executive Order 13211.
Agency Contact: The name, address, phone number, and e-mail address, if available, of a person who is knowledgeable about the regulation.
SAN Number: A code number that EPA uses to identify and track rulemakings.
RIN: The Regulatory Identifier Number is used by OMB to identify and track rulemakings. The first four digits of the RIN stand for the EPA office with lead responsibility for developing the action.
F. What Additional Information Is in Regulatory Plan Entries?
Regulatory Plan entries contain all of the categories of information that are in Agenda entries and also include the following six types of information:
Statement of Need
Statement of the Legal Basis
Alternatives
Anticipated Costs and Benefits
Risks
G. What Tools Are Available To Help Quickly Identify Actions That Are of Interest to You?
The Regulatory Information Service Center (RISC), the Government Printing Office (GPO), and the EPA have created a number of aids to help you find actions that are of interest to you.
For Rules That Directly Affect a Particular Industry: See Appendix F "Environmental Protection Agency Subject Index to the Unified Agenda." If you have access to the Internet, you can use the EPA Regulatory Agenda search engine which is located in the Small Business Regulatory Library section of the EPA Web site at www.epa.gov/regagenda. Click on "Search Regulatory Action Database" and then "Access the Database". This tool can be used to search all Agenda entries by keyword and we invite everyone to use it. The GPO also has a search engine which is located at .
For Rules With Impacts on Small Businesses, Small Governments, and Small Organizations:
Go to Appendix B following this Agenda for the lists of the rules that we expect may have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities. These lists are also available on the Internet. The small businesses list is at ciir.cs.umass.edu/ua/ October2001/entities/sm_index-2.html. The small governments list is at ciir.cs.umass.edu/ua/ October2001/entities/sm_index-3.html. And the small organizations list is at ciir.cs.umass.edu/ua/ October2001/entities/sm_index-4.html.
For Rules That We Expect Will Have Some Impact on Some Small Entities but Less Than a Significant Impact on a Substantial Number of Them:
See Appendix C following this Agenda, "Index to Entries That May Affect Small Entities When a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis Is Not Required." This list is available on the Internet at ciir.cs.umass.edu/ua/ October2001/entities/smgov-5.html.
For Rules With Impacts on State, Local, Tribal, or Federal Government, or Other Federal Agencies:
See Appendix D following this Agenda, "Index to Entries That May Affect Government Levels." This list is available on the Internet at ciir.cs.umass.edu/ua/ October2001/entities/smgov-8.html.
H. How Can You Access Federal Register Documents and Interpretive Guidance via the Internet and via E-mail?
Like many organizations in the public and private sector, EPA is harnessing the power of the Internet to meet the needs of those we serve. The EPA Web site offers more than 100,000 files online. If you want to get automatic e-mails about areas of particular interest as they appear in the Federal Register (FR), we maintain 12 collections including: air; water; wastes and emergency response; pesticides; toxic substances; right-to-know and toxic release inventory; environmental impacts; endangered species; meetings; the Science Advisory Board; daily full-text notices with page numbers; and general information. For more information and to subscribe via our FR Web site, visit: www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/ subscribe.htm. If you have e-mail without full Internet access, please send an e-mail to envsubset@epa.gov to request instructions for subscribing to the EPA Federal Register listservers.
Several Web sites allow access to the full text of Federal Register documents.
¤ The Government Printing Office site has a number of databases online including the Unified Agenda and the Federal Register going back to 1994. This site is the official source for the electronic Federal Register. It provides public access via telnet, Internet, and dial-up connection and is located at www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/ aces/aces140.html.
¤ EPA's site www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/ has environmental rules issued by EPA and other Federal agencies dating back to October 1994 and lets you search by date, page citation or keyword. It includes links to the Regulatory Information Service Center and Government Printing Office sites. We also have a Regulatory Agenda search engine at: www.epa/regagenda. To use, first select "Search Regulatory Action Database" and then select "Access the Database".
¤ The Regulatory Information Service Center of the General Services Administration maintains a site to help users who want to find information about Federal, State, and local regulations at www.reginfo.gov/. This site includes links to all agencies' regulatory agendas and regulatory plans going back to October 1995.
In the "Additional Information" section of many of the entries in this Agenda we include the Internet address for documents that we have already published as part of the rulemaking.
We have recently opened an Internet site through which you can access a collection of non-binding guidance materials issued by EPA Headquarters offices since January 1, 1999. The collection includes non-binding guidance documents which explain what must be done to meet environmental requirements or explain how EPA will exercise its discretion in implementing statutory or regulatory requirements. The collection is located at: www.epa.gov/guidance/
I. What Special Attention Do We Give to the Impacts of Rules on Small Entities?
For each of our rulemakings we consider whether there will be any adverse impact on any small entity. We attempt to fit the regulatory requirements, to the extent feasible and appropriate, to the scale of the businesses, organizations, and governmental jurisdictions subject to the regulation. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), for rules on which we expect there will be a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities, we convene a Small Business Advocacy Review Panel to consider the rulemaking. We also prepare regulatory flexibility analyses on these rules. See Appendix B at the end of the Agenda, "Index to Environmental Protection Agency Entries for which a Regulatory Flexiblity Analysis is Required" for a list of these rules. See Appendix C for a list of the rules that may affect small entities, but which will not have a significant impact on a substantial number of them.
As required by section 610 of the RFA, we review within 10 years of issuance all rules that were projected to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. This year we have no rules scheduled for section 610 review.
J. Why Participate and How To Do It Most Effectively?
You may participate by contacting the expert responsible for developing a particular action. You may also participate by commenting on proposed rules that we publish in the Federal Register. Once we have proposed a rule, we will consider your comments and address them before issuing a final rule. To be most effective, comments should contain information and data that support your position, and you also should explain why we should incorporate your suggestion in the final rule. You can be particularly helpful and persuasive if you provide examples to illustrate your concerns and offer specific alternatives.
We believe that the best approach to making our rules more cost-effective and fairer includes having those of you who are stakeholders in a problem work with us in deciding on the solution. We urge you to participate with us in this process.
Dated:
October 15, 2001.
Thomas J. Gibson, Associate Administrator, Office of Policy, Economics, and Innovation.
| GENERAL—Proposed Rule Stage | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3334 | SAN No. 4056 Utilization of Small, Minority and Women's Business Enterprises in Procurement Under Assistance Agreements | 2020-AA39 |
| 3335 | SAN No. 4191 Revision to EPAAR 1552.211-73, Level of Effort | 2030-AA64 |
| 3336 | SAN No. 4319 Revisions to Acquisition Regulation Concerning Conflict of Interest | 2030-AA67 |
| 3337 | SAN No. 3580 Incorporation of Class Deviations Into EPAAR | 2030-AA37 |
| 3338 | SAN No. 3876 Incrementally Funding Fixed Price Contracts | 2030-AA50 |
| 3339 | SAN No. 3817 Implementation of Changes to Governmentwide Debarment and Suspension Common Rule | 2030-AA48 |
| 3340 | SAN No. 3933 Environmental Impact Assessment of Nongovernmental Activities in Antarctica | 2020-AA34 |
| 3341 | SAN No. 4292 Proposed Revision to EPA's Implementing NEPA Regulations | 2020-AA42 |
| 3342 | SAN No. 4618 Revision of Procedural Rules for Hearings on Cancellations, Suspensions, Changes in Classifications, and Denials of Pesticide Registrations | 2020-AA44 |
| 3343 | SAN No. 3240 Public Information and Confidentiality Regulations | 2025-AA02 |
| 3344 | SAN No. 4463 Persistent, Bioaccumulative, and Toxic (PBT) Pollutants Strategy | 2070-AD45 |
| 3345 | SAN No. 4473 Regulatory Incentives for the National Environmental Achievement Track Program (Reg Plan Seq No. 117) | 2090-AA13 |
| 3346 | SAN No. 4536 Project XL Site Specific Rulemaking for NASA White Sands Test Facility Electronic Reporting in Las Cruces, New Mexico | 2090-AA27 |
| 3347 | SAN No. 4533 New Jersey Gold Track Project XL Rule | 2090-AA28 |
| GENERAL—Final Rule Stage | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3348 | SAN No. 4187 EPAAR Coverage on Local Hiring and Training | 2030-AA62 |
| 3349 | SAN No. 4021 Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Race, Color, National Origin, Handicap, and Age in Programs and Activities Receiving Federal Financial Assistance | 2020-AA36 |
| 3350 | SAN No. 4180 Rewriting of EPA Regulations Implementing the Freedom of Information Act | 2025-AA04 |
| 3351 | SAN No. 4270 Cross-Media Electronic Reporting (ER) and Recordkeeping Rule (Reg Plan Seq No. 148) | 2025-AA07 |
| 3352 | SAN No. 4185 Electronic Funds Transfer | 2030-AA57 |
| 3353 | SAN No. 4351 Notice to Proceed | 2030-AA68 |
| 3354 | SAN No. 4400 Administrative Corrections to EPAAR 1515, Contracting by Negotiation | 2030-AA73 |
| GENERAL—Long-Term Actions | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3355 | SAN No. 3807 Consolidation of Good Laboratory Practice Standards (GLPS) Regulations Currently Under TSCA and FIFRA Into One Rule | 2020-AA26 |
| 3356 | SAN No. 4572 Fellowship Grant Regulation Revision | 2030-AA77 |
| 3357 | SAN No. 4589 Empowerment Through Delegations of Authority and Miscellaneous Amendments | 2030-AA78 |
| 3358 | SAN No. 3671 Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment | 2080-AA06 |
| 3359 | SAN No. 4530 EPA Draft Agencywide Public Involvement Policy | 2090-AA23 |
| GENERAL—Completed Actions | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3360 | SAN No. 4226 Incorporating Informal Clauses (EP) Into the EPAAR | 2030-AA66 |
| 3361 | SAN No. 4533 New Jersey Gold Track Project XL Rule | 2002-AA00 |
| CLEAN AIR ACT (CAA)—Proposed Rule Stage | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3362 | SAN No. 3263 Performance Warranty and Inspection/Maintenance Test Procedures | 2060-AE20 |
| 3363 | SAN No. 3262 Inspection/Maintenance Recall Requirements | 2060-AE22 |
| 3364 | SAN No. 3553 Implementation of Ozone and Particulate Matter (PM) National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) and Regional Haze Regulations (Reg Plan Seq No. 119) | 2060-AF34 |
| 3365 | SAN No. 3412 Operating Permits: Revisions (Part 70) (Reg Plan Seq No. 120) | 2060-AF70 |
| 3366 | SAN No. 3649 Amendments to Method 24 (Water-Based Coatings) | 2060-AF72 |
| 3367 | SAN No. 3820 NESHAP: Plywood and Composite Wood Products (Reg Plan Seq No. 121) | 2060-AG52 |
| 3368 | SAN No. 3969 NESHAP: Municipal Solid Waste Landfills | 2060-AH13 |
| 3369 | SAN No. 3917 Transportation Conformity Rule Amendment: Clarification of Trading Provisions | 2060-AH31 |
| 3370 | SAN No. 3910 Streamlined Evaporative Test Procedures | 2060-AH34 |
| 3371 | SAN No. 4045 Rulemaking To Modify the List of Source Categories From Which Fugitive Emissions Are Considered in Major Source Determinations | 2060-AH58 |
| 3372 | SAN No. 4111 NESHAP: Fumed Silica Production | 2060-AH72 |
| 3373 | SAN No. 4104 NESHAP: Hydrochloric Acid Production Industry | 2060-AH75 |
| 3374 | SAN No. 4107 NESHAP: Asphalt/Coal Tar Application on Metal Pipes | 2060-AH78 |
| 3375 | SAN No. 4113 NESHAP: Clay Minerals Processing | 2060-AH79 |
| 3376 | SAN No. 4098 NESHAP: Uranium Hexafluoride Production | 2060-AH83 |
| 3377 | SAN No. 4119 Performance Specification 16 - Specifications and Test Procedures for Predictive Emission Monitoring Systems in Stationary Sources | 2060-AH84 |
| 3378 | SAN No. 4003 Technical Change to Dose Methodology for 40 CFR 191, Subpart A | 2060-AH90 |
| 3379 | SAN No. 4464 Rulemaking on Section 126 Petitions from New York and Connecticut Regarding Sources in Michigan | 2060-AJ36 |
| 3380 | SAN No. 4580 Withdrawal of Amendments for Testing and Monitoring Provisions to Parts 60, 61, and 63 | 2060-AJ85 |
| 3381 | SAN No. 1002 NAAQS: Sulfur Dioxide (Response to Remand) (Reg Plan Seq No. 118) | 2060-AA61 |
| 3382 | SAN No. 3656 NESHAP: Reciprocating Internal Combustion Engine (Reg Plan Seq No. 122) | 2060-AG63 |
| 3383 | SAN No. 3657 NESHAP: Combustion Turbine (Reg Plan Seq No. 123) | 2060-AG67 |
| 3384 | SAN No. 3343 NESHAP: Iron Foundries and Steel Foundries | 2060-AE43 |
| 3385 | SAN No. 3452 National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants: Miscellaneous Organic Chemical Manufacturing and Miscellaneous Coating Manufacturing | 2060-AE82 |
| 3386 | SAN No. 3449 NESHAP: Chlorine Production | 2060-AE85 |
| 3387 | SAN No. 3825 NESHAP: Miscellaneous Metal Parts and Products (Surface Coating) | 2060-AG56 |
| 3388 | SAN No. 3655 NESHAP: Asphalt Processing and Asphalt Roofing Manufacturing | 2060-AG66 |
| 3389 | SAN No. 3652 NESHAP: Refractory Products Manufacturing | 2060-AG68 |
| 3390 | SAN No. 3837 NESHAP: Industrial, Commercial and Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters (Reg Plan Seq No. 124) | 2060-AG69 |
| 3391 | SAN No. 3651 NESHAP: Lime Manufacturing | 2060-AG72 |
| 3392 | SAN No. 3902 NESHAP: Semiconductor Production | 2060-AG93 |
| 3393 | SAN No. 3906 NESHAP: Metal Can (Surface Coating) Industry | 2060-AG96 |
| 3394 | SAN No. 3909 NESHAP: Fabric Printing, Coating and Dyeing | 2060-AG98 |
| 3395 | SAN No. 3907 NESHAP: Surface Coating of Automobiles and Light-Duty Trucks (Reg Plan Seq No. 125) | 2060-AG99 |
| 3396 | SAN No. 3924 NESHAP: Primary Magnesium Refining | 2060-AH03 |
| 3397 | SAN No. 2841 NESHAP: Chromium Electroplating Amendment | 2060-AH08 |
| 3398 | SAN No. 3968 NESHAP: Site Remediation | 2060-AH12 |
| 3399 | SAN No. 3972 NESHAP: Rocket Engine Test Firing | 2060-AH35 |
| 3400 | SAN No. 3971 NESHAP: Organic Liquids Distribution (Non-Gasoline) | 2060-AH41 |
| 3401 | SAN No. 3939 NESHAP: Group I Polymers and Resins and Group IV Polymers and Resins-Amendments | 2060-AH47 |
| 3402 | SAN No. 3479 Amendments to Parts 51, 52, 63, 70 and 71 Regarding the Provisions for Determining Potential To Emit | 2060-AI01 |
| 3403 | SAN No. 4546 NESHAP: Publicly Owned Treatment Works (POTW)-Amendments II | 2060-AJ66 |
| 3404 | SAN No. 3824 Metal Furniture (Surface Coating) NESHAP | 2060-AG55 |
| 3405 | SAN No. 3826 Plastic Parts and Products (Surface Coating) NESHAP | 2060-AG57 |
| 3406 | SAN No. 3904 NESHAP: Wood Building Products (Surface Coating) | 2060-AH02 |
| 3407 | SAN No. 3139 Location of Selective Enforcement Audits of Foreign Manufactured Vehicles and Engines; Amendment | 2060-AD90 |
| 3408 | SAN No. 3979 Review of Federal Test Procedures for Emissions From Motor Vehicles; Test Procedure Adjustments to Fuel Economy and Emission Test Results | 2060-AH38 |
| 3409 | SAN No. 3673 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Reconsideration of Section 608 Sales Restriction | 2060-AG20 |
| 3410 | SAN No. 4542 Federal Implementation Plan (FIP) for the Billings/Laurel, Montana Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) Area | 2008-AA00 |
| 3411 | SAN No. 4487 Federal Implementation Plans for Indian Reservations in Idaho, Oregon and Washington | 2012-AA01 |
| 3412 | SAN No. 4511 Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act, Section 112(r)(7); Third Party Audit Provisions | 2050-AE85 |
| 3413 | SAN No. 4115 NESHAP: Chromium Electroplating Amendment | 2060-AH69 |
| 3414 | SAN No. 4154 Control of Emissions from Nonroad Large Spark Ignition Engines, Recreational Engines (Marine and Land-based), and Highway Motorcycles | 2060-AI11 |
| 3415 | SAN No. 4255 Review of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Particulate Matter (Reg Plan Seq No. 126) | 2060-AI44 |
| 3416 | SAN No. 4340 Transportation Conformity Amendments: Response to March 2, 1999, Court Decision (Reg Plan Seq No. 127) | 2060-AI56 |
| 3417 | SAN No. 4309 National VOC Emission Standards for Consumer Products; Proposed Amendments | 2060-AI62 |
| 3418 | SAN No. 4310 NESHAP for the Printing and Publishing Industry; Amendments | 2060-AI66 |
| 3419 | SAN No. 4325 NESHAP: Brick and Structural Clay Products Manufacturing | 2060-AI67 |
| 3420 | SAN No. 4343 NESHAP: Clay Ceramics Manufacturing | 2060-AI68 |
| 3421 | SAN No. 4144 NESHAP: Engine Test Cells/Stands | 2060-AI74 |
| 3422 | SAN No. 4306 Development of Reference Method for the Determination of Source Emissions of Filterable Fine Particulate Matter as PM2.5 | 2060-AI96 |
| 3423 | SAN No. 4348 Inspection Maintenance Program Requirements for Federal Facilities; Amendment to the Final Rule | 2060-AI97 |
| 3424 | SAN No. 4393 Control of Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether (MTBE) | 2060-AJ00 |
| 3425 | SAN No. 4380 NESHAP: Taconite Iron Ore Processing Industry | 2060-AJ02 |
| 3426 | SAN No. 4390 Utility Sector New Source Review (NSR) Alternative Compliance Program | 2060-AJ14 |
| 3427 | SAN No. 4433 Interstate Ozone Transport: Response to Court Decisions on the NOx SIP Call, NOx SIP Call Technical Amendments, and Section 126 Rules | 2060-AJ16 |
| 3428 | SAN No. 4460 NESHAP for Friction Products Manufacturing | 2060-AJ18 |
| 3429 | SAN No. 4466 Rulemakings for the Purpose of Reducing Interstate Ozone Transport (Reg Plan Seq No. 128) | 2060-AJ20 |
| 3430 | SAN No. 4415 Petitions to Delist Source Categories from the Source Category List, Developed Pursuant to Section 112(c) of the Clean Air Act | 2060-AJ23 |
| 3431 | SAN No. 4421 Revising Regulations on Ambient Air Quality Monitoring | 2060-AJ25 |
| 3432 | SAN No. 4426 Clarification to Existing Part 63 NESHAP Delegations' Provisions-Work Practices | 2060-AJ26 |
| 3433 | SAN No. 4441 Federal Plan Requirements for Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration Units Constructed on or Before November 30, 1999 | 2060-AJ28 |
| 3434 | SAN No. 4448 Revisions to Part 97 Federal NOx Budget Trading Program Allowance Allocation Method and Part 75 Output and Emissions Monitoring Provisions | 2060-AJ30 |
| 3435 | SAN No. 4457 NESHAP: Pesticides Active Ingredients—Amendments | 2060-AJ34 |
| 3436 | SAN No. 4479 NESHAP: Gasoline Distribution Facilities — Amendment | 2060-AJ42 |
| 3437 | SAN No. 4484 NESHAP: Amino/Phenolic Resins: Amendment | 2060-AJ45 |
| 3438 | SAN No. 4494 Indoor Air Toxics Strategy | 2060-AJ49 |
| 3439 | SAN No. 4495 Revisions to Regional Haze Rule to Incorporate Sulfur Dioxide Milestones and Backstop Emissions Trading Program for Nine Western States | 2060-AJ50 |
| 3440 | SAN No. 4524 NESHAP: Portland Cement Manufacturing Industry, Amendments to Rule to Implement Settlement Agreement | 2060-AJ57 |
| 3441 | SAN No. 4531 Evaluation of Updated Test Procedures for the Certification of Gasoline Deposit Control Additives | 2060-AJ61 |
| 3442 | SAN No. 4532 Motor Vehicle and Engine Compliance Program Fees for: Light-Duty Vehicles and Trucks; Heavy-Duty Vehicles and Engines; Nonroad Engines; and Motorcycles | 2060-AJ62 |
| 3443 | SAN No. 4571 Electric Utility Steam Generating Unit MACT Regulation (Reg Plan Seq No. 129) | 2060-AJ65 |
| 3444 | SAN No. 4555 Electric Arc Furnace NSPS Amendment | 2060-AJ68 |
| 3445 | SAN No. 4558 Transportation Conformity Rule Amendments: Minor Revision and Addition of Grace Period for Newly Designated Nonattainment Areas | 2060-AJ70 |
| 3446 | SAN No. 4570 Control of Air Pollution From Motor Vehicles and Engines: Alternative Low-Sulfur Highway Diesel Fuel Transition Program for Alaska | 2060-AJ72 |
| 3447 | SAN No. 4573 Non-Conformance Penalties for 2004 and Later Model Year Heavy-Duty Diesel Engines and Heavy-Duty Diesel Vehicles | 2060-AJ73 |
| 3448 | SAN No. 4574 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Assorted Amendments to the Phaseout of Class I Controlled Substances - Changes Under the Montreal Protocol | 2060-AJ74 |
| 3449 | SAN No. 4583 Modification of Federal On-board Diagnostic Regulations for 2004 Model Year Vehicles Below 14,000 Pounds | 2060-AJ77 |
| 3450 | SAN No. 4592 Regulation to Establish New Date for Receipt of Summer Grade RFG at Terminals | 2060-AJ79 |
| 3451 | SAN No. 4593 Relaxation of Summer Gasoline Volatility Standard for Denver/Boulder Area | 2060-AJ80 |
| 3452 | SAN No. 4594 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Allocation of Year 2002 Essential Use Allowances | 2060-AJ81 |
| 3453 | SAN No. 4547 Modification of Authority to Grant Alternative Method Approvals | 2060-AJ83 |
| 3454 | SAN No. 4584 Performance Specifications for Continuous Parameter Monitoring Systems | 2060-AJ86 |
| 3455 | SAN No. 4591 Benzene Waste Operations NESHAP; Amendments | 2060-AJ87 |
| 3456 | SAN No. 4605 Propsed Amendments to Performance Standards and Monitoring Requirements for Particulate Matter at Stationary Sources | 2060-AJ88 |
| 3457 | SAN No. 4626 Control of Emissions from Spark Ignition Marine Vessels and Highway Motorcycles | 2060-AJ90 |
| CLEAN AIR ACT (CAA)—Final Rule Stage | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3458 | SAN No. 3569 Source-Specific Federal Implementation Plan for Navajo Generating Station; Four Corners Power Plant | 2009-AA01 |
| 3459 | SAN No. 3259 New Source Review (NSR) Improvement (Reg Plan Seq No. 139) | 2060-AE11 |
| 3460 | SAN No. 3380 NSPS: Synthetic Organic Chemicals Manufacturing Industry - Wastewater (Final) & Amend. to Appendix C of Part 63 & Appendix J of Part 60 | 2060-AE94 |
| 3461 | SAN No. 3549 NESHAP: Petroleum Refineries; Catalytic Cracking Units, Catalytic Reforming Units and Sulfur Recovery Units | 2060-AF28 |
| 3462 | SAN No. 2915 Methods for Measurement of Visible Emissions—Addition of Methods 203A, 203B, and 203C to Appendix M of Part 51 | 2060-AF83 |
| 3463 | SAN No. 3741 Service Information Regulation for Light-Duty Vehicles and Trucks. | 2060-AG13 |
| 3464 | SAN No. 3900 Addition of Method 207 to Appendix M of 40 CFR Part 51 Method for Measuring Isocyanates in Stationary Source Emissions | 2060-AG88 |
| 3465 | SAN No. 3970 NESHAP: Cellulose Production Manufacturing | 2060-AH11 |
| 3466 | SAN No. 3986 Consolidated Emissions Reporting Rule | 2060-AH25 |
| 3467 | SAN No. 4030 Expanded Definitions for Alternative-Fueled Vehicles and Engines Meeting Low-Emission Vehicle Exhaust Emission Standards | 2060-AH52 |
| 3468 | SAN No. 4022 NESHAP: Coke Ovens: Pushing, Quenching, and Battery Stacks | 2060-AH55 |
| 3469 | SAN No. 4120 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Allowance System for Controlling HCFC Production, Import & Export | 2060-AH67 |
| 3470 | SAN No. 4114 NESHAP: Polyvinyl Chloride and Copolymers Production | 2060-AH82 |
| 3471 | SAN No. 4096 Phase I Federal Implementation Plans (FIPs) To Reduce the Regional Transport of Ozone in the Eastern United States | 2060-AH87 |
| 3472 | SAN No. 4082 NESHAP: Wet-Formed Fiberglass Mat Production | 2060-AH89 |
| 3473 | SAN No. 4077 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Reconsideration on the 610 Nonessential Products Ban | 2060-AH99 |
| 3474 | SAN No. 4254 Revision to the Definition of Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) to Exclude Tertiary Butyl Acetate | 2060-AI45 |
| 3475 | SAN No. 3470 Requirements for Preparation, Adoption, and Submittal of State Implementation Plans (Guideline on Air Quality Models) | 2060-AF01 |
| 3476 | SAN No. 3340 NESHAP: Primary Copper Smelting | 2060-AE46 |
| 3477 | SAN No. 3346 NESHAP: Integrated Iron and Steel | 2060-AE48 |
| 3478 | SAN No. 3326 NESHAP: Reinforced Plastic Composites Production | 2060-AE79 |
| 3479 | SAN No. 3551 Amendments to General Provisions Subparts A and B for 40 CFR 63 | 2060-AF31 |
| 3480 | SAN No. 3746 NESHAP: Paint Stripping Operations | 2060-AG26 |
| 3481 | SAN No. 3749 NESHAP: Tire Manufacturing | 2060-AG29 |
| 3482 | SAN No. 3823 NESHAP: Large Appliance (Surface Coating) | 2060-AG54 |
| 3483 | SAN No. 3905 NESHAP: Metal Coil (Surface Coating) Industry | 2060-AG97 |
| 3484 | SAN No. 3964 NESHAP: Leather Finishing Operations | 2060-AH17 |
| 3485 | SAN No. 2665 Importation of Nonconforming Vehicles; Amendments to Regulations | 2060-AI03 |
| 3486 | SAN No. 3556 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Supplemental Rule Regarding a Recycling Standard Under Section 608 | 2060-AF36 |
| 3487 | SAN No. 3560 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Refrigerant Recycling Rule Amendment To Include Substitute Refrigerants | 2060-AF37 |
| 3488 | SAN No. 3827 Paper and Other Web Coating NESHAP | 2060-AG58 |
| 3489 | SAN No. 4315 Source-Specific Federal Implementation Plan for Navajo Generating Station; Navajo Nation | 2009-AA00 |
| 3490 | SAN No. 4105 NESHAP: Generic MACT for Carbon Black, Ethylene, Cynaide and Spandex | 2060-AH68 |
| 3491 | SAN No. 4316 NESHAP for Ethylene Oxide Commercial Sterilization Operations-Monitoring Amendments | 2060-AI64 |
| 3492 | SAN No. 4313 Petitions to Delist Hazardous Air Pollutants (e.g., MEK, EGBE, Methanol, and MIBK) from Section 112(b)(1) of the CAA | 2060-AI72 |
| 3493 | SAN No. 4273 Amend Subpart H and I, 40 CFR Part 61, for Emissions of Radionuclides Other Than Radon From DOE Facilities | 2060-AI90 |
| 3494 | SAN No. 4299 Revision to Method 24 for Electrical Insulating Varnishes | 2060-AI94 |
| 3495 | SAN No. 4449 NESHAP for Flexible Polyurethane Foam Fabrication Operations | 2060-AJ19 |
| 3496 | SAN No. 4428 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Phaseout of Chlorobromomethane (Halon 1011) Production and Consumption | 2060-AJ27 |
| 3497 | SAN No. 4442 NESHAP for Source Categories: Phosphoric Acid Manufacturing and Phosphate Fertilizers Production — Amendments | 2060-AJ29 |
| 3498 | SAN No. 4450 Guidelines for Best Available Retrofit Technology (BART) | 2060-AJ31 |
| 3499 | SAN No. 4478 Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources: Municipal Solid Waste Landfills: Amendment | 2060-AJ41 |
| 3500 | SAN No. 4538 Revisions to the Part 97 Federal NOx Budget Trading Program, the Part 75 Emissions Monitoring Provisions, the Part 72 Permits Regulation Provisions, and the Part 78 Appeal Procedures | 2060-AJ43 |
| 3501 | SAN No. 4454 Federal Plan for Small Municipal Waste Combustion Units | 2060-AJ46 |
| 3502 | SAN No. 4491 Section 126 Rule Revision Correcting NOx Allowance Allocations for Certain Units in the Federal NOx Budget Trading Program | 2060-AJ47 |
| 3503 | SAN No. 4507 Standards of Performance for New Sources and Emission Guidelines for Existing Sources: Large Municipal Waste Combustors Amendment of Startup, Shutdown, and Malfunction Provisions | 2060-AJ52 |
| 3504 | SAN No. 4508 Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources: Volatile Organic Liquid Storage Vessels; Amendments | 2060-AJ53 |
| 3505 | SAN No. 4528 Modification of the Anti-Dumping Baseline Date Cut-Off Limit for Data Used in Development of an Individual Baseline | 2060-AJ59 |
| 3506 | SAN No. 4529 Change in the Definition of Major Source for Operating Permits | 2060-AJ60 |
| 3507 | SAN No. 4554 Control of Hazardous Air Pollutants From Mobile Sources; Correction | 2060-AJ67 |
| 3508 | SAN No. 4569 Control of Air Pollution from New Motor Vehicles; Second Amendment to the Tier 2/Gasoline Sulfur Regulations | 2060-AJ71 |
| 3509 | SAN No. 4604 Modification of the Anti-Dumping Baseline Date Cut-Off Limit for Data Used in Development of an Individual Baseline | 2060-AJ82 |
| 3510 | SAN No. 4548 Compilation of Source-Specific Alternative Methods Being Approved for Source-Category Wide Application | 2060-AJ84 |
| 3511 | SAN No. 4600 State and Federal Operating Permits Program: Removal of Amendments to Part 70 and Part 71 Compliance Certification Requirements | 2060-AJ89 |
| 3512 | SAN No. 4278 Project XL Site-Specific Rulemaking for Andersen Corporation's Facility in Bayport, Minnesota | 2090-AA21 |
| CLEAN AIR ACT (CAA)—Long-Term Actions | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3513 | SAN No. 3922 Revised Permit Revision Procedures for the Federal Operating Permits Program | 2060-AG92 |
| 3514 | SAN No. 3958 Addition of Opacity Method to Appendix M of 40 CFR Part 51 (Method 203) | 2060-AH23 |
| 3515 | SAN No. 3975 Review of Minor New Sources and Modifications in Indian Country | 2060-AH37 |
| 3516 | SAN No. 4046 Federal Major New Source Review (NSR) Program for Nonattainment Areas | 2060-AH53 |
| 3517 | SAN No. 4070 General Conformity Regulations; Revisions | 2060-AH93 |
| 3518 | SAN No. 4247 Revisions to Air Pollution Emergency Episode Requirements (Subpart H, 40 CFR Part 51) | 2060-AI47 |
| 3519 | SAN No. 3638 Revision of EPA's Radiological Emergency Response Plan | 2060-AI49 |
| 3520 | SAN No. 4162 NESHAP: Oil and Natural Gas Production | 2060-AI13 |
| 3521 | SAN No. 2937 Field Citation Program | 2020-AA32 |
| 3522 | SAN No. 3751 NSPS and Emission Guidelines for Other Solid Waste Incinerators | 2060-AG31 |
| 3523 | SAN No. 3919 Prevention of Significant Deterioration of Air Quality: Permit Application Review Procedures for Non-Federal Class I Areas | 2060-AH01 |
| 3524 | SAN No. 3525 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Update of the Substitutes List Under the Significant New Alternatives Policy (SNAP) Program | 2060-AG12 |
| 3525 | SAN No. 4607 Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act, Section 112(r)(7); Availability of Information to the Public; Technical Amendment | 2050-AE95 |
| 3526 | SAN No. 4619 Accidental Release Prevention Requirements: Risk Management Programs Under the Clean Air Act, Section 112(r)(3); Revisions to the List of Substances | 2050-AE96 |
| 3527 | SAN No. 4253 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Process for Exempting Quarantine and Preshipment Methyl Bromide and Trade Ban With Non-Parties to the Montreal Protocol | 2060-AI42 |
| 3528 | SAN No. 4266 Review National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Carbon Monoxide | 2060-AI43 |
| 3529 | SAN No. 4276 Revision to NOx SIP Call Emission Budgets for Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island | 2060-AI80 |
| 3530 | SAN No. 4383 Interstate Ozone Transport: Rulemaking on Section 126 Petitions from the District of Columbia, Delaware, Maryland, and New Jersey | 2060-AI99 |
| 3531 | SAN No. 4391 Rescinding Finding that Pre-existing PM10 Standards No Longer Applicable in Northern Ada County/Boise, Idaho | 2060-AJ05 |
| 3532 | SAN No. 4535 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone: Process for Exempting Critical and Emergency Uses of Methyl Bromide | 2060-AJ63 |
| 3533 | SAN No. 4585 Portland Cement Manufacturing Industry NESHAP: Amendment to Implement Court Remand | 2060-AJ78 |
| 3534 | SAN No. 4471 Project XL Site-Specific Rulemaking for Georgia-Pacific Corporation's Facility in Big Island, Virginia | 2090-AA26 |
| CLEAN AIR ACT (CAA)—Completed Actions | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3535 | SAN No. 3568 Environmental Radiation Protection Standards for Yucca Mountain, Nevada | 2060-AG14 |
| 3536 | SAN No. 4123 NESHAP: Pulp and Paper Production; Amendments to the Promulgated Rule | 2060-AH74 |
| 3537 | SAN No. 3550 NESHAP: Manufacturing of Nutritional Yeast | 2060-AF30 |
| 3538 | SAN No. 3747 NESHAP: Boat Manufacturing | 2060-AG27 |
| 3539 | SAN No. 3903 NESHAP: Solvent Extraction for Vegetable Oil Production | 2060-AH22 |
| 3540 | SAN No. 4245 Consumer and Commercial Products: Flexible Package Printing Materials: Determination on Control Techniques Guidelines in Lieu of Regulation | 2060-AI31 |
| 3541 | SAN No. 4274 Identification of Additional Ozone Areas Attaining the 1-Hour Standard and to Which the 1-Hour Standard Is No Longer Applicable (7 Areas) | 2060-AI57 |
| 3542 | SAN No. 4346 NESHAP: Lightweight Aggregate Manufacturing | 2060-AI75 |
| 3543 | SAN No. 4358 Regulation of Fuels and Fuel Additives: Reformulated Gasoline Adjustment | 2060-AI98 |
| 3544 | SAN No. 4413 NESHAP: Aluminum Die Casting and Aluminum Foundries | 2060-AJ09 |
| 3545 | SAN No. 4417 Removal of Aluminum Die Casting and Aluminum Foundries From the Secondary Aluminum NESHAP and Applicability Stay for These Industries | 2060-AJ11 |
| 3546 | SAN No. 4410 Protection of Stratospheric Ozone Allocation of Essential-Use Allowances for Calendar Year 2001: Laboratory Essential Use Exemptions | 2060-AJ15 |
| 3547 | SAN No. 4458 NESHAP for Pharmaceuticals Production: Direct Final Amendments | 2060-AJ17 |
| 3548 | SAN No. 4492 Revision to Interim Approval Requirements | 2060-AJ48 |
| 3549 | SAN No. 4506 Standards of Performance for New Sources and Emission Guidelines for Existing Sources: Large Municipal Waste Combustors Amendment of Mass Burn Rotary Waterwall Definition | 2060-AJ51 |
| 3550 | SAN No. 4510 Control of Air Pollution from New Motor Vehicles Amendments to the Tier 2/Gasoline Sulfur Regulations | 2060-AJ54 |
| 3551 | SAN No. 4520 Petition by Colorado To Relax the Reid Vapor Pressure Standard for Gasoline for 2001 | 2060-AJ55 |
| 3552 | SAN No. 4522 NESHAP: Amendments to Ferroalloys Production | 2060-AJ56 |
| 3553 | SAN No. 4544 NESHAP: Ferroalloy Production: Ferromanganese and Silicomanganese | 2060-AJ64 |
| 3554 | SAN No. 4557 Revision to the Requirements on Variability in the Composition of Additives Certified Under the Gasoline Deposit Control Program; Direct Final and Proposed Rules | 2060-AJ69 |
| 3555 | SAN No. 4564 Prohibitions on Gasoline Containing Lead or Lead Additives for Highway Use: Fuel Inlet Restrictor Exclusion for Motorcycles | 2060-AJ76 |
| 3556 | SAN No. 4517 Project XL Site-Specific Rulemaking for Weyerhaeuser Company Flint River Operations | 2090-AA20 |
| ATOMIC ENERGY ACT (AEA)—Proposed Rule Stage | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3557 | SAN No. 3602 Protective Action Guidance for Drinking Water | 2060-AF39 |
| 3558 | SAN No. 4054 Environmental Radiation Protection Standards for the Disposal of Low-Activity Mixed Radioactive Waste | 2060-AH63 |
| 3559 | SAN No. 4403 Revision of the 40 CFR Part 194 Waste Isolation Pilot Plant Compliance Criteria | 2060-AJ07 |
| 3560 | SAN No. 4582 Modification of 40 CFR Part 194, Appedix A, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant Certification | 2060-AJ75 |
| FEDERAL INSECTICIDE, FUNGICIDE, AND RODENTICIDE ACT (FIFRA)—Prerule Stage | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3561 | SAN No. 4610 Acceptability of Research Using Human Subjects (Reg Plan Seq No. 115) | 2070-AD57 |
| FEDERAL INSECTICIDE, FUNGICIDE, AND RODENTICIDE ACT (FIFRA)—Proposed Rule Stage | Sequence Number | Title | Regulation Identification Number |
|---|---|---|
| 3562 | SAN No. 4143 Endocrine Disruptor Screening Program (Reg Plan Seq No. 131) | 2070-AD26 |
| 3563 | SAN No. 4170 Procedures for the Pesticide Registration Review Program | 2070-AD29 |
| 3564 | SAN No. 4173 Data Requirements for Antimicrobial Pesticide Registration | 2070-AD30 |
| 3565 | SAN No. 4216 Pesticide Emergency Exemption Regulations (Reg Plan Seq No. 132) | 2070-AD36 |
| 3566 | SAN No. 4496 Data Requirement for Pesticide Registration; Environmental Fate and Ecological Effects | 2070-AD47 |
| 3567 | SAN No. 4596 Data Requirements; Biochemical and Microbial Pesticides | 2070-AD51 |
| 3568 | SAN No. 4609 Exemption of Medical Devices Treated with Antimicrobial Pesticides | |