-                                  EPA  816-2-01-005


Federal Register/Vol. 66, No.  106/Friday, June  1, 2001 /Notices  	29793
                                                  ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
                                                  AGENCY

                                                  [FRL-6989-8]

                                                  Agency Information Collection
                                                  Activities: Proposed Collection;
                                                  Comment Request; Final National
                                                  Primary Drinking Water Regulations;
                                                  Stage 1 Disinfectants/Disinfection
                                                  Byproducts Rule and Interim
                                                  Enhanced Surface Water Treatment
                                                  Rule

                                                  AGENCY: Environmental Protection
                                                  Agency.
                                                  ACTION: Notice.

-------
                                                                                 EPA 816-2-01-005
 29794
Federal  Register/Vol. 66, No. 106/Friday, June  1, 2001/Notices
SUMMARY: In compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
3501 ef seq.), this document announces
that Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) is planning to submit the
following two continuing Information
Collection Requests (ICRs) to the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB).
Before submitting the ICRs to OMB for
review and approval, EPA is soliciting
comments on specific aspects of the
information collection as described at
the beginning of SUPPLEMENTARY •
INFORMATION.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before July 31, 2001.
ADDRESSES: Office of Ground Water and
Drinking Water (MC 4606), 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20460. A hard copy of an ICR may
be obtained without charge by calling
the identified information contact
individual for each ICR in Section C of
the Supplementary Information.,
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
specific information on the individual
ICR see Section C of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. For All ICRs
  An Agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number. The OMB control
numbers  for EPA's regulations are
displayed in 40 CFR part 9.
  The EPA would like to solicit
comments to:
  (i) Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the Agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
  (ii) Evaluate the accuracy of the
Agency's estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information;
  (iii) Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to  be
collected; and
  (iv) Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology, e.g., permitting electronic
submission of responses.
  Burden means the total time, effort, or
financial resources expended by persons
to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose
or provide information to or for a
Federal agency. This includes  the time
needed to review instructions; develop,
acquire, install, and utilize technology
and systems for the purposes of
collecting, validating, and verifying
               information, processing and
               maintaining information, and disclosing
               and providing information; adjust the
               existing ways to comply with any
               previously applicable instructions and
               requirements; train personnel to be able
               to respond to a collection of
               information; search data sources;
               complete and review the collection of
               information; and transmit or otherwise
               disclose the information.

               B. List of ICRs Planned To Be
               Submitted
                In compliance with the Paperwork
               Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.  3501 et seq.},
               this notice announces that EPA is
               planning to submit the following two
               continuing Information Collection
               Requests (ICRs) to the Office of
               Management and Budget (OMB):
                (1) Information Collection Request for
               Final National Primary Drinking Water
               Regulations; Stage 1 Disinfectants/
               Disinfection Byproducts Rule, ICR
               Number: 1896.01, OMB Control
               Number: 2040-0204, expiring November
               30, 2001.
                (2) Information Collection Request for
               Final National Primary Drinking Water
               Regulations; Interim Enhanced Surface
               Water Treatment Rule, ICR Number:
               1895.01, OMB Control Number: 2040-
               0205, expiring November 30, 2001.

               C. Contact Individuals for ICRs
                (1) Information Collection Request for
               Final National Primary Drinking Water
               Regulations; Stage 1 Disinfectants/
               Disinfection Byproducts Rule, Nicole
               Foley, phone: 202-260-0875, facsimile:
               202-401-2345, foley.nicole@epa.gov.
               (ICR Number: 1896.01, OMB Control
               Number: 2040-0204, expiring November
               30, 2001);
                (2) Information Collection Request for
               Final National Primary Drinking Water
               Regulations; Interim Enhanced Surface
               Water Treatment Rule, Nicole Foley,
               phone: 202-260-0875, facsimile: 202-
               401-2345, foley.nicole@epa.gov. (ICR
               Number: 1895.01, OMB Control
               Number: 2040-0205, expiring November
               30, 2001).

               D. Individual ICRs
                (1) Information Collection Request for
               Final National Primary Drinking Water
               Regulations; Stage 1 Disinfectants/
               Disinfection Byproducts Rule, ICR
               Number: 1896.01, OMB Control
               Number: 2040-0204, expiring November
               30, 2001.
                Affected Entities: Entities potentially
               affected by this action are State, local,
               Tribal or Federal governments, and
               public water systems (PWSs). This rule
               applies to community water systems
               and nontransient noncommunity water
 systems that add a chemical disinfectant
 to the water in any part of the drinking
 water treatment process and transient
 noncommunity water systems that use
 chlorine dioxide. "Small" systems serve
 less than 10,000 people. "Large"
 systems serve 10,000 or more people.
 "Subpart H" systems include all PWSs
 using surface water or ground water
 under the direct influence of surface
 water as a source (40 CFR 141.2).
  Abstract: The Stage 1 Disinfectants/
 Disinfection Byproducts Rule (Stage 1
 DBPR) requires information collection
 for disinfectants and disinfection
 byproducts (DBFs). The contaminants
 included in this rule also include DBF
 precursors, characterized as total
 organic carbon (TOG). Under the Stage
 1 DBPR, contaminants and disinfectants
 regulated include total trihalomethanes
 (TTHMs), five haloacetic acids (HAAS),
 bromate, chlorite, chlorine,
 chloramines, chlorine dioxide, and TOG
 (through a treatment technique). The
 regulation is intended to protect public
 health and welfare from these
 chemicals.
  All of the data collected from PWSs
 and States are mandatory (40 CFR part
 141 subpart L and 40 CFR part 142).
 Data from laboratories for laboratory
 certification or approval are not
 mandatory, but laboratories must
 provide it in order to obtain or retain a
 benefit. Under this rule, State and local
 respondents will collect and report
 information on the levels of various
 contaminants in drinking water supplies
 at specified intervals. The
 Environmental Protection Agency (the
 Agency), through the Safe Drinking
 Water Information System (SDWIS), will
 use the information to ensure
 compliance with this rule and to protect
 public health. The date that systems
 begin to monitor contaminants for the
 Stage 1 DBPR depends on the size and
 type of the system (40 CFR 141.130).
  Monitoring, reporting, and record
 keeping are required at both system and
 State levels under the National Primary
Drinking Water Regulations (NPDWRs)
 (40 CFR 141.131, 141.132, 141.134,
 141.135, 142.14, 142.16). All public
water systems (PWSs) shall maintain
and report to the State information
 documenting compliance with the
treatment and monitoring requirements
 under the NPDWRs. States shall
maintain records essential for program
 implementation and  oversight. These
records, retained in the SDWIS or at
State offices, will allow EPA to track
PWS compliance with the NPDWRs.
  Data collected under the Safe
Drinking Water Act (SDWA) are used by
the Agency's Office of Ground Water
and Drinking Water and other U.S. EPA

-------
                                                                                    EPA  816-2-01-005
                        Federal Register/Vol. 66, No. 106/Friday, June 1,  2001/Notices
                                                                    29795
 programs, such as Superfund and
 RCRA. The data are also used by the
 Farmers Home Administration, the
 Department of the Interior, the
 Department of Housing and Urban
 Development, the U.S. Army Corps of
 Engineers, White House Task forces, the
 Federal Emergency Management
 Agency, the Food and Drug
 Administration, public interest groups,
 and many private companies and
 individuals. The information collected
 is not confidential.
   Burden Statement: The estimated
 annual burden hours for this renewed
 information collection are 724,307
 hours. The estimated average burden
 hours per response is 0.7 hours. The
 estimated average number of responses
 per respondent is 24. The estimated
 number of likely respondents annually
 is 47,074. The estimated annual cost is
 $43.1 million which represents O&M
 costs in the form of fee for service.
   Change in Burden: The burden will be
 changed from 314,471 annual burden
 hours to 724,307 annual burden hours
 for this renewal ICR. The estimated
 burden of 409,836 annual burden hours
 is occurring because all monitoring,
 reporting, and record keeping
 requirements associated with
 compliance under the Stage I DBPR will
 take effect during the next ICR approval
 period. The O&M costs also occur as a
 result of die monitoring requirements.
   (2) Information Collection Request for
 Final National Primary Drinking Water
 Regulations; Interim Enhanced Surface
 Water Treatment Rule,  ICR Number:
 1895.01, OMB Control Number: 2040-
 0205, expiring November 30, 2001.
   Affected Entities: Entities potentially
 affected by this action are State, local,
 Tribal or Federal governments, and
 public water systems serving 10,000 or
 more people using surface water or
 ground water under the direct influence
 of surface water. "Subpart H" systems
 include all PWSs using surface water or
' ground water under the direct influence
  of surface water as a source (40 CFR
 '§141.2).
    .Abstract: The Interim Enhanced
  Surface Water Treatment Rule (IESWTR)
  requires information collection of
  turbidity measurements and water
  quality characteristics  for Subpart H
  public water systems (PWSs) serving
  10,000 or more peopled Subpart H
  systems include all PWSs using surface ,
  water or ground water under the direct
  influence (GWUDI) of surface water as
  a source (40 CFR 141.2). Under this rule,
  standards for combined filter effluent
  are strengthened to improve control of
  microbial contaminants, the protozoan
Cryptosporidium in particular. The rule
also establishes individual filter
monitoring and reporting requirements.
Additionally, the provisions of this rule
are intended to prevent an increase in
microbial risk while PWSs comply with
new standards for disinfection
byproducts. The regulatory initiative
discussed in this document is intended
to protect public health and welfare
from microbial contaminants. All of the
data collected from PWSs and States are
mandatory (40 CFR part  141 subpart L
and 40 CFR part 142). Data from
laboratories for laboratory certification
or approval are not mandatory, but
laboratories must provide the data in
order to obtain or retain  a benefit. In
addition, under this drinking water
protection initiative, EPA would assure
appropriate laboratory approval through
a volunteer program for the
measurement of microbial contaminants
(e.g., Cryptosporidium) for the
protection of public health. Through
this program, EPA would evaluate the
performance of laboratories analyzing
PWS source water microbial samples.
Given the high level of skill and
experience required for the appropriate
analytical methods, and the
impracticality for States to adopt their
own laboratory approval program for a
small number of laboratories, an EPA
 laboratory approval program is critical
to ensure high quality data. Also, the
microbial contaminant data analyzed by
 the laboratories may be  used to meet
 possible future compliance
 requirements for PWSs.
   Several distinct types of data are
 being collected under the IESWTR. The
 most extensive data collection effort
 involves monitoring the turbidity of
 drinking water at individual filters for
 all PWSs covered by this rule. This
 monitoring requirement supplements
 current combined filter effluent
 turbidity monitoring already required
 under the Surface. Water Treatment Rule
  (SWTR). Under the current SWTR,
 PWSs must monitor their combined
  filter effluent every 4 hours  to determine
  compliance. This requirement will
  continue under the IESWTR, but the
  turbidity compliance levels will change.
  The IESWTR will initiate new
  requirements for individual filter
  monitoring using a continuous
  monitoring turbidimeter and
  electronically recording data on a
  continuous basis. The turbidity data for
  individual filters are used to determine
  if follow-up filter or plant assessments
  are needed.
    Monitoring, reporting, and record
  keeping are required at both system and
State levels under the National Primary
Drinking Water Regulations (NPDWRs)
(40 CFR 141.172, 141.174, 142.175,
142.14,142.15). All affected PWSs shall
maintain and report to the State
information documenting compliance
with the treatment and monitoring
requirements under the NPDWRs. States
shall maintain records essential for
program implementation and oversight.
These records, retained in the Safe
Drinking Water Information System
(SDWIS), will allow EPA to track PWS
compliance with the NPDWRs.
  Data collected under the Safe
Drinking Water Act (SDWA) are used by
the Agency's Office of Ground Water
and Drinking Water, and other U.S. EPA
programs such as Superfund and RCRA.
The data are also used by the Farmers
Home Administration, the Department
of the Interior, the Department of
Housing and Urban Development, the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, White
. House task forces, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency, the
Food and Drug Administration, public
interest groups, and many private
companies and individuals. The
information collected is not
confidential.
   Burden Statement: The estimated
annual burden hours for this renewed
information collection are 4,682,067
hours. The estimated average burden
hours per response is one hour. The
 estimated average number of responses
 per respondent is 3,229. The estimated
 number of likely respondents annually
 is 1,497. The estimated annual capital
 cost is $30.9 million. The estimated
 annual O&M cost is $10.3  million.
   Change  in Burden: The burden will be
 changed from 150,557 annual hours to
 4,687,452  annual hours for this renewal
 ICR. The burden of 4,682,067 annual
 hours is occurring because turbidity
 monitoring for individual filters and
 sanitary surveys are beginning in the
 third year following promulgation of the
 rule. In addition, a laboratory approval
 program for measurement of microbial
 contaminants will add an estimated
 marginal burden of 5,385 annual hours,
 an estimated annual capital cost of
 $17,000,.and an estimated annual O&M
 cost of $71,000.
   Dated: May 24, 2001.
 PhilOshida,
 Acting Director, Office of Ground Water and
 Drinking Water.
 [FRDoc. 01-13923 Filed 5-31-01; 8:45 ami
 BILLING CODE 6560-50-P

-------

-------