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Identification of Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Are Solid Waste (Final Rule) (Revision)

OMB: 2050-0205

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SUPPORTING STATEMENT FOR

EPA INFORMATION COLLECTION REQUEST NUMBER 2382.03


REPORTING AND RECORDKEEPING REQUIREMENTS FOR THE FINAL RULE ON THE Identification of Non-Hazardous SECONDARY Materials That Are Solid Waste







January 2011

(Addendum added June 26, 2012)


















ADDENDUM


FINAL AMENDMENTS

to the March 21, 2011 Final Rule:

Identification of Non-Hazardous SECONDARY Materials

That Are Solid Waste



The EPA is issuing Final Amendments to regulations codified by the March 21, 2011 Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials rule. This final rule established a case-specific non-waste determination petition process for solid waste secondary materials used as fuel in a combustion unit. While the process is voluntary, it requires the petitioner to provide information describing how the secondary materials satisfy the legitimacy criteria, along with consideration of certain market, human and environmental health, and other factors. The per-respondent and aggregate burden and cost estimates for the case-specific petition process are presented in Exhibit 1 of this supporting statement.


During the development of the Final Amendments to the March 21, 2011 final rule, the Agency recognized that selected secondary materials may be more conducive to a categorical non waste determination process, rather than a case-specific determination process. Thus, under the Final Amendments, the Agency is finalizing the process outlined in the proposed amendments rule whereby persons may submit a rulemaking petition to the Administrator where they can identify and request that additional non hazardous secondary materials (NHSMs) be listed in section 241.4. Although the petition process and requirements for this categorical determination are more comprehensive than those of the case-specific process, considerably fewer petitions are likely to be submitted. Thus, the aggregate categorical cost and burden impacts are expected to be considerably less than the aggregate case-specific estimates, if only the case-specific petition process was available.1


TABLE OF CONTENTS



1. IDENTIFICATION OF THE INFORMATION COLLECTION 1

1(a) Title and Number of the Information Collection 1

1(b) Short Characterization 1


2. NEED FOR AND USE OF THE COLLECTION 2

2(a) Need and Authority for the Collection 2

2(b) Practical Utility and Users of the Data 2


3. NONDUPLICATION, CONSULTATIONS, AND OTHER

COLLECTION CRITERIA 2

3(a) Nonduplication 2

3(b) Public Notice 3

3(c) Consultations 3

3(d) Effects of Less Frequent Collection 3

3(e) General Guidelines 3

3(f) Confidentiality 3

3(g) Sensitive Questions 4


4. THE RESPONDENTS AND THE INFORMATION REQUESTED 4

4(a) Respondents and NAICS Codes 4

4(b) Information Requested 5


5. THE INFORMATION COLLECTED -- AGENCY ACTIVITIES, COLLECTION METHODOLOGY, AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT 6

5(a) Agency Activities 6

5(b) Small Entity Flexibility 7


6. ESTIMATING THE HOUR AND COST BURDEN OF THE COLLECTION 7

6(a) Estimating Respondent Burden 7

6(b) Estimating Respondent Costs 7

6(c) Estimating Agency Burden and Costs 8

6(d) Estimating the Respondent Universe and Total Burden and Costs 8

6(e) Bottom Line Burden Hours and Costs 10

6(f) Reason for Change in Burden 11

6(g) Burden Statement 11

EXHIBITS



Exhibit 1: Estimated Respondent Burden and Cost 12


Exhibit 2: Estimated Agency Burden and Cost 13


Exhibit 3: Estimated Average Burden per Respondent 14

1. IDENTIFICATION OF THE INFORMATION COLLECTION


1(a) Title and Number of the Information Collection


This information Collection Request (ICR) is entitled “Identification of Non-Hazardous Secondary Materials That Are Solid Waste (Final Rule) (Revision),” EPA ICR Number 2382.03, OMB Number 2050-0205.


1(b) Short Characterization


Section 112(d) of the Clean Air Act (CAA) requires the promulgation of regulations to control emissions of specific hazardous air pollutants from “major sources” within defined source categories.2,3 One such regulation, promulgated in September 2004, is the National Emissions Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Industrial, Commercial, and Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters (the “Boilers Rule”), which established Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) standards for this source category. Section 129 of the CAA directed EPA to promulgate regulations to control emissions of nine specified pollutants from “solid waste incineration units.” EPA did so in December 2000 with the publication of the final Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines for Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration Units (the “CISWI Rule”). Units regulated under Section 129 cannot be subject to any rule promulgated under Section 112.

In September 2005, in response to a subsequent petition for reconsideration, EPA amended the CISWI Rule when it promulgated revised definitions for “solid waste,” “commercial or industrial waste,” and “commercial and industrial solid waste incineration unit” (the “CISWI Definitions Rule”). As part of the CISWI Definitions Rule, EPA made a distinction between solid waste incinerators and boilers, characterizing the former as units that are designed and operated to discard materials through high temperature combustion. However, EPA excluded from the definition of a solid waste incinerator those units designed to recover energy for “useful purposes such as steam generation or process heating.”

In July 2007, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit vacated and remanded to EPA both the CISWI Definitions Rule and the Boilers Rule. In vacating the definitions rule, the Court noted that, despite the potential reasonableness of the functional distinction between boilers and incinerators, the CAA is unambiguous in its requirement that EPA regulate any commercial or industrial incinerator that combusts any solid waste material, as a solid waste incineration unit regardless of whether the waste is burned as a “fuel.” The Court also concluded that EPA erred in excluding from the CISWI Definitions Rule units that combust solid waste for the purposes of energy recovery and including these units in the Boilers Rule. In short, revision to the Definitions Rule necessitates a revision to the Boilers Rule as well, since the former will result in a different set of units that will be subject to the latter.

EPA’s response to the Court’s decision requires a clear determination of which non-hazardous, “secondary materials”4 constitute RCRA Subtitle D “solid waste” in order to clarify when the combustion of these materials would be regulated pursuant to CAA Section 129 (as opposed to potential regulation under Section 112 if a combustion unit burns materials that are not solid waste when combusted). Thus, EPA has developed the Final Rule for the identification of non-hazardous secondary materials that are solid waste.


This ICR is a description of the information collection requirements for combustion units that use non-hazardous secondary materials that are solid wastes.


1(c) Revision


The purpose of this revision is to make classification changes in the Final Rule. There are no changes to the burden or other components of the ICR. See “Addendum” section for further information.


2. NEED FOR AND USE OF THE COLLECTION


2(a) Need and Authority for the Collection


The requirements covered in this ICR are necessary for EPA to identify non-hazardous secondary materials that are solid waste when combusted and to enforce Sections 112 and 129 of the Clean Air Act. EPA is proposing the establishment of these information collection requirements under the authority of Subtitle D of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA).


2(b) Practical Utility and Users of the Data


EPA will use the collected information to ensure that non-hazardous secondary materials that are solid wastes are managed as such and that combustion units that use these materials are regulated under Section 129 of the Clean Air Act. In particular, EPA will use information collected pursuant to the Final Rule’s petition process requirements to assess whether the materials included in each petition are solid wastes.


3. NONDUPLICATION, CONSULTATIONS, AND OTHER COLLECTION CRITERIA


3(a) Nonduplication


None of the information required by the Final Rule would duplicate information required by existing RCRA regulations.


3(b) Public Notice


In compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, EPA opened a 60-day public comment period at the time that the Proposed Rule was published in the Federal Register.5 To assist the public in commenting on the proposal, EPA raised a number of issues in the preamble to the Proposed Rule and asked for the public to comment on them. EPA has published responses to the comments on the rulemaking docket (Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0329) and addresses several of these comments in the preamble to the Final Rule.


3(c) Consultations


EPA consulted and collected information from interested parties over the course of several months to support the Final Rule. EPA solicited and received comments on the Proposed Rule and addresses these comments in the preamble to the Final Rule.6 EPA also met and communicated with industry associations, generators and users of the materials potentially affected by the rule, as well as other interested parties. The summaries of the meetings and telephone conversations with interested parties are available in the docket for the Final Rule.


3(d) Effects of Less Frequent Collection


EPA has carefully considered the burden imposed upon the regulated community by the Final Rule. EPA is confident that those activities required of respondents are necessary, and to the extent possible, the Agency has attempted to minimize the burden imposed. EPA believes strongly that, if the minimum information collection requirements of the Final Rule are not met, neither industry nor EPA will be able to ensure that non-hazardous secondary materials that are solid wastes are managed in a manner that is protective of human health and the environment.


3(e) General Guidelines


This ICR adheres to the guidelines stated in the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, OMB’s implementing regulations, EPA’s ICR Handbook, and other applicable OMB guidance.


3(f) Confidentiality


Section 3007(b) of RCRA and 40 CFR Part 2, Subpart B, which defines EPA’s general policy on public disclosure of information, contain provisions for confidentiality. However, the Agency does not anticipate that businesses will assert a claim of confidentiality covering all or part of the Final Rule. If such a claim is asserted, EPA must and will treat the information in accordance with the regulations cited above. EPA also will assure that this information collection complies with the Privacy Act of 1974 and OMB Circular 108.


3(g) Sensitive Questions


No questions of a sensitive nature are included in the information collection requirements associated with the Final Rule.

4. THE RESPONDENTS AND THE INFORMATION REQUESTED


4(a) Respondents and NAICS Codes


The following is a list of North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) codes associated with the facilities most likely to be affected by the information collection requirements covered in this ICR.


NAICS

NAICS Category

111

Crop Production

113

Forestry and Logging

114

Fishing, Hunting, and Trapping

115

Support Activities for Agriculture and Forestry

211

Oil and Gas Extraction

212

Mining (Except Oil and Gas)

221

Utilities

237

Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction

311

Food Manufacturing

312

Beverage and Tobacco Product Manufacturing

313

Textile Mills

314

Textile Product Mills

316

Leather and Allied Product Manufacturing

321

Wood Product Manufacturing

322

Paper Manufacturing

323

Printing and Related Support Activities

324

Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing

325

Chemical Manufacturing

326

Plastics and Rubber Products Manufacturing

327

Nonmetallic Mineral Product Manufacturing

331

Primary Metal Manufacturing

332

Fabricated Metal Product Manufacturing

333

Machinery Manufacturing

334

Computer and Electronic Product Manufacturing

335

Electrical Equipment, Appliance and Component Manufacturing

336

Transportation Equipment Manufacturing

337

Furniture and Related Product Manufacturing

339

Miscellaneous Manufacturing

423

Merchant Wholesalers, Durable Goods

424

Nondurable Goods Merchant Wholesalers

441

Motor Vehicle and Parts Dealers

446

Health and Personal Care Stores

451

Sporting Good, Hobby, Book and Music Stores

481

Air Transportation

482

Rail Transportation

486

Pipeline Transportation

488

Support Activities for Transportation

493

Warehousing and Storage

522

Credit Intermediation and Related Activities

541

Professional, Scientific and Technical Services

561

Administrative and Support Services

562

Waste Management and Remediation Services

611

Educational Services

622

Hospitals

721

Accommodation

811

Repair and Maintenance

921

Public Administration

928

Public Administration


This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a guide for readers regarding entities likely to be impacted by this action.


4(b) Information Requested


This section describes information collection requirements applicable to entities that would be affected by the Final Rule.

Petition Process

(i) Data items:

The Final Rule establishes a non-waste determination petition process that provides persons with an administrative process for receiving a formal determination from the EPA Regional Administrator that non-hazardous secondary materials that are burned as a fuel and have not been managed within the control of the generator, have not been discarded, and are indistinguishable in all relevant aspects from a fuel product are not a solid waste when used as a legitimate fuel in a combustion unit. To receive consideration, a petitioner must request a case-specific non-waste determination. While the process is voluntary, it requires the petitioner to provide information describing how the secondary materials satisfy the legitimacy criteria, along with analysis of certain market, human and environmental health, and other factors.

(ii) Respondent activities:


In order for EPA to grant the non-waste determination, a petitioner must show that the material in question was not initially abandoned or thrown away by the generator. After demonstrating that the non-hazardous secondary material has not been discarded in the first instance, the petitioner must then demonstrate that the material is indistinguishable in all relevant aspects from a fuel product by showing that it satisfies all of the following five criteria: (1) whether market participants handle the non-hazardous secondary material as a fuel rather than a waste; (2) whether the chemical and physical identity of the non-hazardous secondary material is comparable to a commercial fuel; (3) whether the capacity of the market would use the non-hazardous secondary material in a reasonable time frame; (4) whether the constituents in the non-hazardous secondary material are released to the air, water or land from the point of generation to the point just prior to combustion of the non-hazardous secondary material at levels comparable to what would otherwise be released from traditional fuels; and (5) other relevant factors.

Notification

The Final Rule does not contain any notification requirements.

Rule Familiarization (Reading the Regulations)

(i) Data items:

None.

(ii) Respondent activities:


It is expected that entities potentially affected by the Final Rule will read it to assess how it may affect their operations.


Title V Permitting

In addition, under the Final Rule, some combustion units that are currently regulated under Section 112 of the Clean Air Act will be regulated under Section 129. For a limited number of units, this change in regulatory status could potentially trigger the permitting requirements of Title V of the Clean Air Act.

Title V permitting requirements apply to all major emissions sources, cement kilns, and electric arc furnace steelmaking facilities/units.7 Therefore, many of the units potentially affected by the rule are already required to obtain a Title V permit. The data available to the Agency do not indicate that any units will be newly subject to the Title V permitting requirement as a result of the Final Rule. Therefore, this ICR does not examine any activities associated with Title V permitting.


5. THE INFORMATION COLLECTED—AGENCY ACTIVITIES, COLLECTION METHODOLOGY, AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT

5(a) Agency Activities

As discussed above, EPA is proposing a self-implementing approach that requires facilities to determine whether a given material meets EPA’s non-waste criteria. The Agency is also establishing a petition process under which facilities may seek clarity on whether the materials that they burn are considered solid wastes. Therefore, under this Final Rule, EPA will process and review the petitions of facilities seeking non-waste determinations and decide whether the information provided in each petition warrants a non-waste determination.

Because the Final Rule contains no notification requirements, the Agency will not engage in notification review under the rule.


5(b) Small Entity Flexibility

The self-implementing approach for non-waste determinations finalized by EPA would provide small entities with flexibility to minimize their information collection burdens under the Final Rule. Under this approach, small entities would not be required to submit any paperwork to EPA or state agencies and would have the flexibility to develop their own individualized approaches for determining whether the materials that they burn meet the non-waste criteria included in the Final Rule.


6. ESTIMATING THE HOUR AND COST BURDEN OF THE COLLECTION

6(a) Estimating Respondent Burden


In Exhibit 1, EPA estimates the respondent burden associated with the new paperwork requirements in the Final Rule. As shown in the Exhibit, EPA estimates that the total one-time respondent burden for the new requirements in the rule varies between 1 hour (per respondent) and approximately 149 hours (per respondent), depending on whether the facility incurs solely rule familiarization costs, or whether it also incurs petition process costs.


6(b) Estimating Respondent Costs


Exhibit 1 summarizes the total costs of the information collection activities associated with the Final Rule. As indicated in the exhibit, these range from $74 per respondent for rule familiarization to $10,088 for the petition process for non-waste determinations. Where applicable, these cost estimates reflect the cost of labor as well as operations and maintenance (O&M) costs.


Labor Costs


For purposes of this analysis, EPA estimates an average hourly respondent labor cost of $92 for legal staff, $76 for managerial staff, $66 for technical staff, and $29 for clerical staff. These hourly labor costs were obtained from the following sources:

  • Hourly Wage: Bureau of Labor Statistics, occupational earnings data for 2009.8

  • Benefits Percentage: U.S. Department of Labor data on benefits as a percentage of total compensation.9

  • Overhead: Expressed as a percent of wages, as summarized in the regulatory impact analysis for the 2008 Definition of Solid Waste Final Rule.10



Capital and Operation & Maintenance Costs

Capital costs usually include any produced physical good necessary to provide the required information, such as machinery, computers, and other equipment. EPA does not anticipate that respondents will incur capital costs in carrying out the information collection requirements of the Final Rule.


O&M costs are those costs associated with materials and services procured for the information collection requirements included in the ICR. For this ICR, O&M costs may include material testing for the petition process, as well as the costs of supplies used in the preparation of each petition (e.g., photocopies). We estimate that facilities will incur O&M costs of $293 per material for testing.11 Based on data compiled in support of EPA’s Boiler MACT and CISWI rulemakings, we estimate that each facility will, on average, petition for non-waste determinations for 1.38 materials.12 Applying this to the testing cost of $293 per material, we estimate per facility O&M costs of $403 for testing.


6(c) Estimating Agency Burden and Costs


Exhibit 2 below presents the estimated Agency burden and costs associated with the requirements covered in this ICR. We estimate that EPA would incur a one-time cost of approximately $10,058 per respondent for the petition process.


6(d) Estimating the Respondent Universe and Total Burden and Costs


Respondent Universe


The number of affected entities varies by information collection activity, as summarized below:


Rule Familiarization: EPA estimates that 1,461 facilities will incur rule familiarization costs under the Final Rule. This estimate is based upon information compiled by EPA on the non-hazardous secondary materials burned by individual combustion units potentially affected by either of the following rulemakings: (1) the Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources and Emission Guidelines for Existing Sources: Commercial and Industrial Solid Waste Incineration (CISWI) Units (the CISWI Rule); and (2) the National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Industrial/Commercial/Institutional Boilers and Process Heaters (the major source Boilers Rule).13,14


Petition Process: EPA assumes that those facilities that currently burn secondary materials considered to be waste under the Final Rule will undergo the petition process for non-waste determination if the material is not burned within the control of the generator. Based on the unit-level information compiled by EPA for the CISWI Rule and the Major Source Boilers Rule, the Agency estimates that a total of 168 facilities will submit petitions to the Agency.15



Respondent Burden and Cost


Based on the universe data presented above, EPA estimates the respondent burden associated with all of the new information collection requirements covered in this ICR in Exhibit 1. A discussion of the assumptions used in developing these burden estimates follows.


Rule Familiarization


As shown in Exhibit 1, EPA estimates that 1,461 potentially affected facilities will read the rule. Based on the ICR for another recent RCRA rulemaking, we estimate that the per-facility burden for rule familiarization is one hour and that the cost per facility for rule familiarization is $74.16


Petition Process


As shown in Exhibit 1, EPA estimates that 168 potentially affected facilities will file petitions for non-waste determinations. Specifically, EPA assumes that all facilities that burn non-hazardous secondary materials considered to be solid waste when combusted under the Final Rule will file petitions for non-waste determinations. Similar to reading the regulations, it is assumed that this represents a one-time cost per facility.


We estimate the burden and cost of the petition process based partially on the estimated burden and cost for the petition process included in the 2008 Definition of Solid Waste (DSW) Rule and the estimated additional cost of testing NHSMs to ensure that they meet the legitimacy criteria. The petition process in the 2008 DSW rule is similar to that established in the Final NHSM Rule in that petitioner must demonstrate that the material in question is not discarded and meets specific non-waste criteria. In addition, testing costs are assumed to require two hours of field technical labor per material petitioned plus an additional $293 in O&M costs per material petitioned. The estimated per facility burden of this petition process is approximately 149 hours (for the facility itself), and the estimated cost per facility is $10,100.



6(e) Bottom Line Burden Hours and Costs


Respondent Burden and Costs


In Exhibit 1, EPA presents the total respondent burden and cost for each of the two paperwork requirements associated with the Final Rule (i.e., rule familiarization and the petition process for non-waste determinations). As described above, these paperwork requirements apply to units and facilities that burn non-hazardous secondary materials. The total respondent burden and costs for these requirements are as follows:


Rule Familiarization

All potentially affected facilities will incur the one-time cost of reading the rule. EPA estimates that the hours burden of rule familiarization is 1,461 hours and that the associated cost is $108,771.


Petition Process

Facilities that burn non-hazardous secondary materials that are considered solid waste under the Final Rule are expected to incur the one-time cost of petitioning for non-waste determination. The estimated (one-time) hours burden for respondents is 25,000 hours and the estimated (one-time) cost of the petition process for respondents is approximately $1.7 million.



Agency Burden and Costs


Exhibit 2 summarizes the total Agency burden and cost associated with the paperwork requirements for the Final Rule. As indicated in the exhibit, the Agency’s burden and costs relate to the petition process for non-waste determinations included in the Final Rule. The one-time burden realized by the Agency for the petition process included in the Final Rule is approximately 26,200 hours. EPA estimates that the cost incurred by the Agency under the petition process is approximately $1.7 million.


6(f) Reasons for Change in Burden


For this revision ICR there are no changes in burden.


As described in previously approved ICR 2382.02, EPA expects that the Final Rule will result in an increase in burden to users of non-hazardous secondary materials and the Agency itself. This increase in burden reflects specific paperwork requirements established by the Final Rule (e.g., the petition process for non-waste determinations). EPA has determined that these paperwork requirements are necessary for informed assessments of the waste status of certain secondary materials, and to ensure that non-hazardous secondary materials are managed in a manner that is consistent with their status as a waste or non-waste under the Final Rule.


6(g) Burden Statement


Exhibit 3 summarizes the average burden associated with each of the paperwork requirements associated with the Final Rule, presented separately for regulated entities and EPA. The paperwork requirements reflected in the exhibit include one-time activities for (1) the petition process for non-waste determinations included in the Final Rule and (2) rule familiarization.


As indicated in Exhibit 3, we estimate the total burden associated with one-time activities as a range for regulated entities and EPA. This is because the burden per respondent depends on whether the respondent files a petition for non-waste determination.


To comment on the Agency's need for this information, the accuracy of the provided burden estimates, and any suggested methods for minimizing respondent burden, including the use of automated collection techniques, EPA has established a public docket for this ICR under Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0329, which is available for online viewing at www.regulations.gov, or in person viewing at the RCRA Docket in the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. The EPA Docket Center Public Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The telephone number for the Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the telephone number for the RCRA Docket is (202) 566-0270. An electronic version of the public docket is available at www.regulations.gov. This site can be used to submit or view public comments, access the index listing of the contents of the public docket, and to access those documents in the public docket that are available electronically. When in the system, select “search,” then key in the Docket ID Number identified above. Also, you can send comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20503, Attention: Desk Officer for EPA. Please include the EPA Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-RCRA-2008-0329 and OMB Control Number 2050-0205 in any correspondence.


Exhibit 1 - Estimated Respondent Burden and Cost


Hours and Costs per Respondent Total Hours and Costs


INFORMATION COLLECTION ACTIVITY


Leg.

$92/Hr


Mgr.

$76/Hr


Tech.

$66/Hr


Cler.

$29/Hr


Respon. Hours


Labor Cost1


Capital/

Startup Cost


O & M

Cost


Cost per Respondent

Number of Respondents


Total Hours


Total Cost


RULE FAMILIARIZATION – Read the rule (one-time burden and cost)

Affected Facilities

0.2

0.3

0.5

0.0

1.02

$64.0

$0.0

$0.0

$74

1,461

1,461

$108,771


PETITION PROCESS (one-time)

Affected Facilities

4

4

1335

8

149

$9,6853

$0.0

$4033

$10,0885

168

24,990

$1.7 million


1 Hourly Wages: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational earnings tables: United States, December 2008 – January 2010 (average reference date July 2009), Table 3 Full-time civilian workers: Mean and median hourly, weekly, and annual earnings and mean weekly and annual hours, accessed at http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ocs/sp/nctb1346.pdf, December 8, 2010.

Benefits Percentage: U.S. Department of Labor, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation—September 2010" USDL-10-1687, December 8, 2010. Derived from percent of total compensation breakout for "civilian workers" as presented in Table 2.

Overhead Percentage: U.S. EPA, Regulatory Impact Analysis USEPA’s 2008 Final Rule Amendments To The Industrial Recycling Exclusions Of the RCRA Definition Of Solid Waste, September 25, 2008. Exhibit B-1.

2 Hours for Rule Familiarization: U.S. EPA, Supporting Statement for EPA Information Collection Request Number 2324.01 Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements for the Final Rule in Adding Pharmaceuticals to the Universal Waste Rule (Final Rule), September 2008, Exhibit 1.

3 Petition Process Costs: Derived from U.S. EPA, Supporting Statement for EPA Information Collection Request Number 2310.01: Revisions to the RCRA Definition of Solid Waste (Final Rule), October 28, 2008. Hours estimate for technical labor also reflects an assumed 2 hours of testing per material petitioned. In addition, the estimated O&M cost reflects a testing cost of $293 per material tested, based on data from the RACER 2005 cost estimating software. Based on the combustion unit databases developed by EPA for the Major Source Boiler MACT and the CISWI rule, we estimate that, on average, 1.38 materials will be tested per petitioner.

4 Uncertainty Regarding Number of Respondents for the Petition Process: As described in previous sections of this document, EPA assumes that facilities potentially affected by the CISWI rule and the major source Boilers Rule will submit petitions to EPA for a non-waste determination if they burn materials considered to be a solid waste under the Final Rule and if the material is burned outside the control of the generator. Based on these conditions, the Agency estimates that 168 facilities will submit petitions. In reality, the number of petitions that will be submitted is uncertain and dependent on several factors that EPA is unable to assess (e.g., the operational characteristics of individual facilities).



Exhibit 2 - Estimated Agency Burden and Cost


Hours and Costs per Respondent Total Hours and Costs


INFORMATION COLLECTION ACTIVITY


Leg.

$92/Hr


Mgr.

$76/Hr


Tech.

$66/Hr


Cler.

$29/Hr


Respon. Hours


Labor Cost1


Capital/

Startup Cost


O & M

Cost


Total Cost per Respondent

Number of Respondents


Total Hours


Total Cost


PETITION PROCESS (one-time burden and cost)

Affected Facilities

8

8

125

16

157

$10,0582

$0.0

$0.0

$10,058

168

26,219

$1.7 million



1 Hourly Wages: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational earnings tables: United States, December 2008 – January 2010 (average reference date July 2009), Table 3 Full-time civilian workers: Mean and median hourly, weekly, and annual earnings and mean weekly and annual hours, accessed at http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ocs/sp/nctb1346.pdf, December 8, 2010.

Benefits Percentage: U.S. Department of Labor, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation—September 2010," USDL-10-1687, December 8, 2010. Derived from percent of total compensation breakout for "civilian workers" as presented in Table 2.

Overhead Percentage: U.S. EPA, Regulatory Impact Analysis USEPA’s 2008 Final Rule Amendments To The Industrial Recycling Exclusions Of the RCRA Definition Of Solid Waste, September 25, 2008. Exhibit B-1.

2 Petition Process Costs: Derived from U.S. EPA, Supporting Statement for EPA Information Collection Request Number 2310.01: Revisions to the RCRA Definition of Solid Waste (Final Rule), October 28, 2008.

3 Uncertainty Regarding Number of Respondents for the Petition Process: As described in previous sections of this document, EPA assumes that facilities potentially affected by the CISWI rule and the Major Source Boilers Rule will submit petitions to EPA for a non-waste determination if they burn materials considered to be a solid waste under the Final Rule and if the material is burned outside the control of the generator. Based on these conditions, the Agency estimates that 168 facilities will submit petitions. In reality, the number of petitions that will be submitted is uncertain and dependent on several factors that EPA is unable to assess (e.g., the operational characteristics of individual facilities).




Exhibit 3


Estimated Average Burden per Respondent (hours)


Regulated Entities

EPA

Burden for one-time activities1

1 to 150

0 to 157

Petition Process (one-time burden)

149

157

Rule Familiarization (one-time burden)

1

0

Notes:

Burden for one-time activities presented as a range for regulated entities and EPA because the burden will depend on whether a regulated entity files a petition for non-waste determination.


1 It is feasible that as few as 18 categorical petitions may be submitted (22 broad categories identified in Materials Characterization papers less the four categorical non waste materials identified in section 241.4), down from the estimated 168 total case-specific submissions (Exhibit 1).

2 A “major source” is any stationary source that emits or has the potential to emit considering controls, in the aggregate, at least 10 tons per year of any hazardous air pollutant or at least 25 tons per year of any combination of hazardous air pollutants.

3 The Clean Air Act also requires EPA to identify and list the area source categories (sources that are not major sources) that represent 90 percent of the emissions of the 30 urban air toxics associated with area sources and subject them to standards under the Section 112(d) of the Act. EPA’s Urban Air Toxics Strategy is summarized in Federal Register, Vol 64, No. 137, 38706, July 19, 1999.

4 A “secondary material” is any material that is not the primary product of a manufacturing or commercial process, and can include post-consumer material, off-specification commercial chemical products or manufacturing chemical intermediates, post-industrial material, and scrap.

5 Federal Register, Vol. 75, No. 107, 31844, June 4, 2010.

6 Ibid.

7 40 CFR Part 270 includes detailed information on the requirements of the Title V permitting program.

8Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational earnings tables: United States, December 2008 – January 2010 (average reference date July 2009), Table 3 Full-time civilian workers: Mean and median hourly, weekly, and annual earnings and mean weekly and annual hours. Acessed at http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ocs/sp/nctb1346.pdf, December 8, 2010. We assume these estimates are in year 2009$..

9 U.S. Department of Labor, "EMPLOYER COSTS FOR EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION—SEPTEMBER 2010," USDL-10-1687, December 8, 2010. Derived from percent of total compensation breakout for "civilian workers" as presented in Table 2.

10 U.S. EPA, Regulatory Impact Analysis USEPA’s 2008 Final Rule Amendments To The Industrial Recycling Exclusions Of the RCRA Definition Of Solid Waste, September 25, 2008. Exhibit B-1.

11 Estimate derived from RACER 2005 Cost Estimating Software.

12 U.S. EPA, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Draft combustor database in support of the proposed CISWI Rule, April 14, 2009 and U.S. EPA, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Draft combustor database in support of the proposed major source Boilers Rule, March 20, 2009.

13 U.S. EPA, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Draft combustor database in support of the proposed CISWI Rule, April 14, 2009 and U.S. EPA, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Draft combustor database in support of the proposed major source Boilers Rule, March 20, 2009.

14 EPA is also issuing National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Area Sources: Industrial, Commercial, and Institutional Boilers (the area source Boilers Rule). The vast majority of such units, however, are not designed to burn secondary materials and will therefore not be affected by the Final NHSM Rule.

15 U.S. EPA, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, op cit..

16 U.S. EPA, Supporting Statement for EPA Information Collection Request Number 2324.01 Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements for the Proposed Rule in Adding Pharmaceuticals to the Universal Waste Rule (Proposed Rule), September 2008, Exhibit 1.


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