SUPPORTING STATEMENT
US ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
MEAT AND POULTRY PRODUCTS INDUSTRY DATA COLLECTION
NOVEMBER 2021

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CONTENTS
Page
PART A OF l lll SUPPORTING STATEMENT	1
1.	Circumstances That Make the Collection of Information Necessary and
Legal Requirements That Necessitate the Collection	1
2.	How, by Whom, and for What Purpose the Information is to be Used	3
2(a) What Information Will Be Collected, Reported, or Recorded?	3
2(b) From Whom Will the Information Be Collected?	20
2(c) What Will the Information Be Used For?	20
2(d) How Will the Information Be Collected? Does the Respondent
have Multiple Options for Providing the Information? What Are
They?	21
2(e) How Frequently Will the Information Be Collected?	22
2(f) Will the Information Be Shared With Any Other Organizations
Inside or Outside EPA or the Government?	23
2(g) If This Is an Ongoing Collection, How Have the Collection
Requirements Changed Over Time?	23
3.	To What Extent Does the Collection of Information Involve the Use of
Automated, Electronic, Mechanical, or Other Technology Collection
Techniques or Other Forms of Information Technology	23
4.	Efforts to Identify Duplication and Why Similar Information Already
Available Cannot be Used or Modified for Use for the Purposes Described
in Item 2	23
5.	Collection of Information Impacts to Small Businesses or Other Small
Entities and Methods to Minimize the Burden	26
6.	Consequence to Federal Program or Policy Activities if the Collection is
not Conducted or is Conducted Less Frequently and Any Technical or
Legal Obstacles to Reducing Burden	26
7.	Special Circumstances	28
8.	Publication of the Federal Register Notice and Public Response	28
8(a) Federal Register Notice Publication	28
8(b) Consultations	28
9.	Payment or Gift to Respondents	30
10.	Assurance of Confidentiality Provided to Respondents and the Basis for
the Assurance in Statue, Regulation, or Agency Policy	30
11.	Questions of a Sensitive Nature	31
12.	Estimates of Respondent Burden for the Information Collection	31
12(a) Estimate of Respondent Hour Burden	31
12(b) Estimate of Respondent Labor Costs	34
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CONTENTS (Continued)
Page
13.	Total Annual Cost Burden to Respondents or Recordkeepers Resulting
from the Collection of Information	38
13(a) Estimating Capital/Start-up Operating and Maintenance Costs	38
13(b) Annualizing Capital Costs	40
14.	Annualized Cost to the Federal Government	41
15.	Reason for Any Program Changes or Adjustments in Burden Estimates
From the Previous Approved ICR	44
16.	Collection of Information Whose Results Will be Published	44
16(a) Technical Analyses Supported by the Questionnaire	44
16(b) Collection Schedule	47
16(c) Publication of Results	47
17.	Display of the Expiration Date for OMB Approval of the Information
Collection	48
18.	Certification for Reduction Act Submissions	48
PART B OF l lll SUPPORTING STATEMENT	49
1.	Questionnaire Rationale	49
1(a) Population of Interest	49
1(b) Response rate/Non-response	49
2.	Collection of Information	50
2(a) Stratification/Sample Selection	50
3.	Estimation Procedure	55
4.	Accuracy/Preci si on	55
5.	Specialized Sampling Procedures	56
6.	Data Collection	56
7.	Response Rate/Non-response/Data Utility	56
7(a) Response Rate	56
7(b) Non-response	56
7(c) Burden Reducti on	57
7(d) Data Utility	57
8.	Tests of Procedures	57
9.	Contact Information	58
Appendix A: CENSUS QUESTIONNAIRE
Appendix B: DETAILED QUESTIONNAIRE
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LIST OF TABLES
Page
Table 2-1. MPP Census Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose	4
Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose	8
Table 4-1. Existing Data Sources	24
Table 8-1. Non-Agency Consultations	29
Table 12-1. Estimated Respondent Burden by Activity and Respondent Category for the
Web-Based Census Questionnaire	32
Table 12-2. Estimated Respondent Burden by Activity and Respondent Category for the
Web-Based Detailed Questionnaire	32
Table 12-3. Estimated Burden for 5-Day Sampling per Facility	34
Table 12-4. Estimated Burden for Sampling Program by Activity and Labor Category	34
Table 12-5. 2020 Labor Rate Data	35
Table 12-6. Total Estimated Respondent Labor Burden for the Census and Detailed
Questionnaire per Respondent	35
Table 12-7. Total Estimated Respondents for Questionnaires and Total Estimated Burden	37
Table 12-8. Total Estimated Labor Burden for 5-Day Sampling per Facility	38
Table 12-9. Total Estimated Respondent Labor Burden MPP Data Collection	38
Table 13-1. Total Other Direct Costs for Respondents to the Questionnaires	39
Table 13-2. Total Other Direct Costs for Five-Day Sampling	39
Table 13-3. Total Estimated Respondent Burden and Cost Summary	40
Table 14-5. Total Estimated Agency Burden and Cost Summary	44
Table 16-1. Collection Schedule	47
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November 2021
PART A OF THE SUPPORTING STATEMENT
US Environmental Protection Agency
Meat and Poultry Products Industry Questionnaires
ICR No. 2701.01
OMB Control No. 2040-NEW
Office: EPA Office of Water
Contact: Steve Whitlock
1. CIRCUMSTANCES THAT MAKE THE COLLECTION OF INFORMATION
NECESSARY AND LEGAL REQUIREMENTS THAT NECESSITATE THE
COLLECTION
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), through this Information
Collection Request (ICR) package, requests that the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
review and approve the ICR for the Meat and Poultry Products (MPP) Rulemaking. Through this
collection, EPA will obtain data essential to the review of the MPP effluent limitations
guidelines and standards (ELG) (40 CFR Part 432) and determine whether the ELGs should be
revised.
EPA initially promulgated the MPP ELG in 1974 and amended the regulations in 2004.
The current regulation covers wastewater directly discharged by meat and poultry
slaughterhouses and further processors as well as independent Tenderers. The technology basis
for existing non-small direct dischargers includes biological treatment with partial
denitrification. Additionally, the current MPP ELG does not include pretreatment standards for
any facilities indirectly discharging process wastewater. In the Effluent Guidelines Program Plan
14 (January 2021), EPA announced a detailed study of the MPP category. The MPP category
ranked among the top two industrial categories in EPA's cross-industry review of nutrients in
industrial wastewater. During the study, EPA evaluated publicly available data for direct
discharging facilities, which make up a small portion of the industry, and data from publicly
owned treatment works (POTWs). In addition to having high nutrient discharges, EPA
determined that indirect discharging MPP facilities may be causing problems for POTWs and
that some MPP facilities are already removing nutrients and achieving effluent concentrations
below the current ELG requirements. In the Preliminary Effluent Guidelines Program Plan 15
(September 2021), EPA announced these findings from the detailed study and indicated a
revision to the ELGs may be appropriate, thus initiating a rulemaking to revise the MPP ELGs.
Publicly available data on MPP facilities is limited. EPA has based the population of
MPP facilities on data from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food Safety Inspection
Service (FSIS). The FSIS dataset compiles information on facility name and location, type(s) of
meat and poultry processed, and limited details on size (both employees and amount processed).
USDA FSIS does not report details specific to wastewater generation or wastewater treatment.
EPA has also consulted the Integrated Compliance Information System National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (ICIS-NPDES) dataset for details on MPP wastewater. But these
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data are limited to only those facilities directly discharging wastewater or individual states that
require pretreatment permits to be reported.
A survey of the current MPP industry is an essential portion of the rulemaking process,
necessary for EPA to determine if the current regulations remain appropriate. The data collection
activities described in this ICR will provide a robust dataset that characterizes wastewater
generation, treatment, and discharge from MPP facilities. EPA's Office of Water plans to
administer a Census Questionnaire and a Detailed Questionnaire to facilities engaging in meat
and poultry processing, including those currently regulated under 40 CFRPart 432, and facilities
that discharge wastewater directly to waters of the US, indirectly discharge wastewater, or do not
discharge wastewater. The Census Questionnaire will be administered as a census of the industry
to confirm the industry population, as well as general information on the industry, including:
•	Processing details (including type of meat or poultry and type of processing),
•	Type and size (both production and employees) of the facility, and
•	Wastewater generation and treatment information.
Information collected through the Census Questionnaire will be used to confirm the list of
facilities that fall within the MPP industry; identify which MPP facilities generate, treat, and/or
discharge wastewater; and develop industry weighting factors. A statistically representative
subset of MPP facilities will be asked to complete a more detailed set of questions in place of the
Census Questionnaire. This Detailed Questionnaire collects the same information as the Census
Questionnaire, as well as additional details on processing operations, types and amount of
wastewater generated by operation, wastewater treatment details, and economic data. A small
number of MPP facilities that receive the Detailed Questionnaire will also be asked to collect and
analyze wastewater samples to characterize raw waste streams, wastewater treatment systems,
and treated effluent for pollutants of interest.
EPA plans to conduct both questionnaires via a web-based survey platform. Based on
data primarily from USD A FSIS and ICIS-NPDES, EPA estimates the MPP industry has
between 7,000 and 8,000 facilities. Because no one data source collects information from all
MPP facilities, as discussed in Section 4, the exact number is unclear. EPA continues to refine
the list of facilities by identifying additional or duplicate facilities and working with trade
associations to identify facilities that do not process meat or poultry. For the purposes of this
ICR, EPA estimates the population of MPP facilities at approximately 7,000 facilities, of which
1,633 facilities will receive the Detailed Questionnaire and the remainder will only receive the
Census Questionnaire. The Detailed Questionnaire will include all questions in the Census
Questionnaire. Both questionnaires will be issued at the same time and will collect data for 2021.
Data from 2021 represents the most recent year for which complete technical and economic data
are available as EPA expects the survey will not be administered until 2022. The Detailed
Questionnaire also asks for some data from 2017 and 2019. These historical data will
demonstrate recent trends in industry operation and economics. The data collection will be
administered under the authority of Section 308 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33
USC., Section 1318.
The MPP industry will devote time and resources to respond to this ICR. EPA estimates
that the total burden to the approximately 7,000 MPP facilities for responding to the
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questionnaires and conducting wastewater sampling will be approximately 70,807 hours, or
$3.22 million (including labor and O&M costs). The collection design represents EPA's efforts
to gather sufficient data to perform the analysis required to accurately review and revise the MPP
ELGs, yet at the same time, administer an ICR that limits the burden placed on respondents.
2. HOW, BY WHOM, AND FOR WHAT PURPOSE I II I INFORMATION IS TO
BE USED
2(a) What Information Will Be Collected, Reported, or Recorded?
EPA is planning to collect data from all MPP facilities in the US as described and defined
in Section 1 of this supporting statement. EPA first compiled a list of MPP facilities and their
mailing addresses using data from the following sources:
ICIS-NPDES,
USD A,
•	Food and Drug Administration (FDA),
•	D&B Hoovers,
•	Dun and Bradstreet, and
•	USA Data.
Indirectly discharging MPP facilities are not currently regulated under 40 CFR Part 432.
Therefore, EPA expects the ICIS-NPDES list, which primarily includes direct discharging
facilities who hold NPDES permits, to be incomplete. EPA will supplement the ICIS-NPDES list
of facilities with facilities from USDA's FSIS. The USDA FSIS is responsible for inspecting
meat, poultry, egg, and other products for safe and proper packaging and labeling of food and
also provides information on the type of MPP products for each facility. EPA is also
collaborating with trade associations (US Poultry and Egg Association, National Renderers
Association, National Pork Producers Council, National Chicken Council, National Beef
Council, and North American Meat Institute) to further refine the list of MPP facilities.
The Census Questionnaire is designed to confirm that all facilities do engage in meat or
poultry slaughtering, further processing, or rendering, confirm which facilities fall under the
applicability of 40 CFR Part 432, and collect updated identification information. This updated
identification and characterization data will confirm the MPP population and improve the
accuracy of data extrapolation. The Census Questionnaire is made up of 28 questions (Appendix
A). The data items requested by the Census Questionnaire and the purpose for requesting the
information are listed in Table 2-1.
The Detailed Questionnaire, which EPA is planning to administer to a statistically
representative subset of MPP facilities (see Part B, Section 6), is designed to collect the same
information as the Census Questionnaire, as well as more specific characterization information
on production, wastewater generation, and economics. The Detailed Questionnaire is made up of
86 questions (Appendix B). All questions from the Census Questionnaire are included in the
Detailed Questionnaire in the appropriate section (noted in blue). The data items requested by the
Detailed Questionnaire and the purpose for requesting this information are listed in Table 2-2.
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The Detailed Questionnaire will be administered at the same time as the Census Questionnaire,
but each MPP facility will complete only one questionnaire. Both questionnaires will use the
same web-based platform. EPA plans to identify which facilities should receive the Detailed
Questionnaire prior to sending out questionnaire notifications. When facilities access the web-
based platform, each will be directed to the correct questionnaire for their facility (Census or
Detailed).
Wastewater sampling data will be requested from no more than 20 facilities. These
wastewater characterization data will be critical for characterizing both untreated and treated
wastewaters generated by MPP facilities. EPA will target a mix of facility types, sizes, and
treatment technologies to be able to characterize untreated wastewater from all types of meat and
poultry and all types of processing operations. EPA will use publicly available data from permit
applications, effluent and permit data reported to ICIS-NPDES, pretreatment permits, and
publicly owned treatment works (POTW) annual reports to identify facilities with treatment
technologies of interest. The wastewater sampling data collected will be used to characterize
treatment system capabilities, estimate pollutant loadings, and potentially used to establish new
effluent limitations for the industry.
Table 2-1. MPP Census Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose of Question
1-3
Collect the following information:
-	Facility name, physical address
-	Parent company name, address, contact
information
-	Facility contact information
EPA will use the information collected in these
questions to confirm and correct errors in the
facility list including facility name and address.
EPA will use ownership information for parent
companies to evaluate the financial structure of the
industry. EPA will use contact information for the
parent company and for the facility to conduct
follow up as necessary.
4-5
Confirm facilities engaging in MPP operations
from 2017 through 2021 or if the facility is
permanently closed.
EPA will use these questions to identify facilities
that should complete the questionnaire; facilities
permanently closed or not engaging in MPP
operations are exempted from the remainder of the
questionnaire.
6
Asks for full-time equivalent (FTE) employees
for 2021.
EPA will use employment information to identify
small businesses per the Small Business
Association (SBA) definitions.
7
Asks for 12-digit Facility Registry Service
(FRS) ID.
EPA will use FRS IDs to confirm the facility and
facility information in the facility list and identify
any duplicate facilities.
8
Asks for the United States Department of
Agriculture (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection
Service (FSIS) ID.
EPA will use USD A FSIS IDs to confirm the
facility and facility information in the facility list
and identify any duplicate facilities.
9
Asks for facility and parent company North
American Industry Classification System
(NAICS) code(s).
EPA will use employment information to identify
small businesses per the SBA definitions, confirm
the facility and facility information in the facility
list, and also confirm the NAICS codes impacted
by the MPP ELG.
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Table 2-1. MPP Census Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose of Question
10-11
Asks for existing wastewater permit information
(permit number, type of permit, regulating body,
and issue date). Asks for information on the
basis of limitations in NPDES permits.
EPA will use permit information to identify
duplicate information in the facility list and
identify the regulations applied to individual
facilities and applied by whom. EPA will use
information on the basis of limitations in NPDES
permits to identify where current ELGs may be
implemented incorrectly.
12-13
Asks about planned changes to operation in the
next five years (closure/cease operation, or
increases or decreases in production).
EPA will use this information to determine
whether the facility should be included in future
populations for the rulemaking. EPA will also
evaluate if changes in the industry are trending in
any one direction for particular subsets of the
industry (by production, by processing type, by
amount of wastewater generated, etc.).
14
Asks for MPP operations by type of meat or
poultry in 2021.
EPA will use this information to inform selection
of facilities for site visits or future sampling,
confirm stratification of statistical methodologies,
and confirm types of MPP operations/processes
employed.
15
Asks for facilities to identify which
subcategory(ies) of the current ELG best
describes operations conducted at the facility.
EPA will use this information, on how each
facility will categorize themselves in the existing
ELG, to help identify where current ELGs may be
implemented incorrectly.
16
Asks if the facility slaughtered or further
processed poultry in 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities
that should complete subsequent questions specific
to poultry processing, profile facilities by type(s)
of operation, confirm stratification of statistical
methodologies, and inform selection of facilities
for site visits or future sampling.
17
Asks for production capacity in 2021.
EPA will use this information to confirm
subcategories of the current ELG that apply and
identify which subcategories may need revising.
EPA will also use this information to profile
facilities by type(s) of operation and production
levels, confirm stratification of statistical
methodologies, and inform selection of facilities
for site visits or future sampling.
18
Asks for types of poultry further processing
operations conducted.
EPA will use this information to collect
information on the types of further processing
operations occurring at facilities and to determine
if the type of further processing operation has an
impact on the characteristics of wastewater
generated by the facility. EPA will also use this
information to profile facilities by type of further
processes.
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Table 2-1. MPP Census Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose of Question
19
Asks if the facility slaughtered meat in 2021 and
production capacity.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities
that should complete subsequent questions specific
to meat slaughter, profile facilities by type(s) of
operation, confirm stratification of statistical
methodologies, and inform selection of facilities
for site visits or future sampling.
20
Asks for types of byproducts generated in 2021.
EPA will also use this information to profile
facilities by type of products and determine if by-
products impact wastewater characteristics.
21
Asks if the facility only further processed meat
and amount produced in 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities
that should complete subsequent questions specific
to meat further processing, profile facilities by
type(s) of operation, confirm stratification of
statistical methodologies, and inform selection of
facilities for site visits or future sampling.
22
Asks for types of meat further processing
operations conducted.
EPA will use this information to identify the types
of further processing operations occurring at
facilities and to determine if the type of further
processing operation has an impact on the
characteristics of wastewater generated by the
facility. EPA will also use this information to
profile facilities by type of further processes.
23
Asks if the facility independently rendered meat
in 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities
that should complete subsequent questions specific
to independent rendering, profile facilities by
type(s) of operation, confirm stratification of
statistical methodologies, and inform selection of
facilities for site visits or future sampling.
24
Asks if the facility generated process wastewater
from 2017 through 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities
that generate wastewater, determine which
facilities should complete subsequent questions
specific to wastewater generation and treatment.
25
Asks if the facility operates a wastewater
treatment system.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities
that treat wastewater, determine which facilities
should complete subsequent questions specific to
wastewater treatment.
26
Asks for the number of discharge locations and
types of those destinations.
EPA will use this information to profile the
industry by type of discharge location and confirm
stratification. EPA will also use this information to
characterize the types of surface waters which
receive discharges from MPP facilities and assess
environmental benefits.
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Table 2-1. MPP Census Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose of Question
27
Asks for information for each discharge
destination, the type of wastewater, type of
destination, and flow in 2021.
EPA will use this information to profile the
industry by type of discharge location and flow.
EPA will evaluate the amount of wastewater
discharge relative to production levels and type of
production. EPA will also use this information to
characterize current discharges from the industry,
estimate pollutant loadings, and assess the impacts
of those discharges on the environment.
28
Asks for average concentrations of a short list of
pollutants in untreated process wastewater in
2021.
EPA will use this information to characterize
untreated wastewater and evaluate if untreated
wastewater characteristics are impacted by type of
process or production.
NA
Space for facility to provide additional
comments or elaborate on any questions
throughout the questionnaire.
EPA will use this information, specific to the
question number as indicated, to adjust responses
as needed or take into account any additional
information as part of evaluating national level
estimates based on facility-specific information.
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Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose
1 - Facility
Information
1-3
Collect the following information:
-	Facility name, physical address
-	Parent company name, address, contact information
-	Facility contact information
EPA will use the information collected in these questions
to confirm and correct errors in the facility list including
facility name and address. EPA will use ownership
information for parent companies to evaluate the financial
structure of the industry and pair with financial data
collected later in the questionnaire. EPA will use contact
information for the parent company and for the facility to
conduct follow up as necessary.
2 - Eligibility
Confirmation
4-5
Confirm facilities engaging in MPP operations from 2017
through 2021 or if the facility is permanently closed.
EPA will use these questions to identify facilities that
should complete the questionnaire; facilities permanently
closed or not engaging in MPP operations are exempted
from the remainder of the questionnaire.
3- Facility
Information
6
Asks the year the facility began operating.
EPA will use this information to determine the age of
facilities and whether operations, wastewater flow or
characterization, or production levels vary by age.

7-8
Asks for full-time equivalent (FTE) employees for 2021 and
operating shifts for 2021.
EPA will use employment information to identify small
businesses per the Small Business Association (SB A)
definitions. Shift-level information will help EPA
determine if staffing and/or operations vary throughout the
year and if staffing and/or operations vary drastically shift
to shift.

9
Asks for 12-digit Facility Registry Service (FRS) ID.
EPA will use FRS IDs to confirm the facility and facility
information in the facility list and identify any duplicate
facilities.

10
Asks for the United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) ID.
EPA will use USD A FSIS IDs to confirm the facility and
facility information in the facility list and identify any
duplicate facilities.

11
Asks for facility and parent company North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS) code(s).
EPA will use employment information to identify small
businesses per the Small Business Association (SB A)
definitions, confirm the facility and facility information in
the facility list, and also confirm the NAICS codes
impacted by the MPP ELG.
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Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose

12-13
Asks for existing wastewater permit information (permit
number, type of permit, regulating body, and issue date).
Asks for information on the basis of limitations in NPDES
permits.
EPA will use permit information to identify duplicate
information in the facility list and identify the regulations
applied to individual facilities and applied by whom. EPA
will use information on the basis of limitations in NPDES
permits to identify where current ELGs may be
implemented incorrectly.

14-15
Asks about planned changes to operation in the next five
years (closure/cease operation, or increases or decreases in
production).
EPA will use this information to determine whether the
facility should be included in future populations for the
rulemaking. EPA will also evaluate if changes in the
industry are trending in any one direction for particular
subsets of the industry (by production, by processing type,
by amount of wastewater generated, etc.).

16
Asks for MPP operations by type of meat or poultry in 2021.
EPA will use this information to inform selection of
facilities for site visits or future sampling, confirm
stratification of statistical methodologies, and confirm
types of MPP operations/processes employed.

17
Asks for facilities to identify which subcategory(ies) of the
current ELG best describes operations conducted at the
facility.
EPA will use this information, on how each facility will
categorize themselves in the existing ELG, to help identify
where current ELGs may be implemented incorrectly.
4 - Production
Information
18
Asks if the facility slaughtered or further processed poultry
in 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities that
should complete subsequent questions specific to poultry
processing, profile facilities by type(s) of operation,
confirm stratification of statistical methodologies, and
inform selection of facilities for site visits or future
sampling.

19
Asks for poultry production capacity in 2021.
EPA will use this information to confirm subcategories of
the current ELG that apply and identify which
subcategories may need revising. EPA will also use this
information to profile facilities by type(s) of operation and
production levels, confirm stratification of statistical
methodologies, and inform selection of facilities for site
visits or future sampling.
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Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose

20
Asks for types of poultry further processing operations
conducted.
EPA will use this information to collect information on the
types of further processing operations occurring at
facilities and to determine if the type of further processing
operation has an impact on the characteristics of
wastewater generated by the facility. EPA will also use
this information to profile facilities by type of further
processes.

21
Asks the days poultry processing operated by month in 2017,
2019, and 2021.
EPA will use this information to evaluate continuous or
intermittent operation and changes due to seasonal
fluctuation in operations. EPA will also evaluate trends in
operation year to year among the industry.

22
Asks for annual poultry production data for 2017 and 2019
and monthly production data for 2021 by type of product,
byproduct, and source.
EPA will use this information to evaluate the volume of
wastewater and mass of pollutant generated per mass of
product. This will be used to determine if certain product
types generate different types of wastewater, and if the
subcategories need revising. In addition, EPA will use this
information to identify the types and levels of production
performed at the facility to inform developing production-
normalized effluent limits, profile facilities by type of
operation and production level, confirm stratification by
production volumes, and evaluate seasonal/annual
operations.

23
Asks if the facility slaughtered meat and production capacity
in 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities that
should complete subsequent questions specific to meat
slaughter, profile facilities by type(s) of operation, confirm
stratification of statistical methodologies, and inform
selection of facilities for site visits or future sampling.

24
Asks for types of meat byproducts generated in 2021.
EPA will also use this information to profile facilities by
type of products and determine if by-products impact
wastewater characteristics.
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Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose

25
Asks the days meat processing operated by month in 2017,
2019, and 2021.
EPA will use this information to evaluate continuous or
intermittent operation and changes due to seasonal
fluctuations in operations. EPA will also evaluate trends in
operation year to year among the industry.

26-27
Asks for annual meat production data for 2017 and 2019 and
monthly production data for 2021 by type of product,
byproduct, and source.
EPA will use this information to evaluate the volume of
wastewater and mass of pollutant generated per mass of
product. This will be used to determine if certain product
types generate different types of wastewater, and if the
subcategories need revising. In addition, EPA will use this
information to identify the types and levels of production
performed at the facility to inform developing production-
normalized effluent limits, profile facilities by type of
operation and production level, confirm stratification by
production volumes, and evaluate seasonal/annual
operations.

28
Asks if the facility further processed meat and amount
produced in 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities that
should complete subsequent questions specific to meat
further processing, profile facilities by type(s) of
operation, confirm stratification of statistical
methodologies, and inform selection of facilities for site
visits or future sampling.

29
Asks for types of meat further processing operations
conducted.
EPA will use this information to collect information on the
types of further processing operations occurring at
facilities and to determine if the type of further processing
operation has an impact on the characteristics of
wastewater generated by the facility. EPA will also use
this information to profile facilities by type of further
processes.

30
Asks the days meat further processing operated by month in
2017, 2019, and 2021.
EPA will use this information to evaluate continuous or
intermittent operation and changes due to seasonal
fluctuation in operations. EPA will also evaluate trends in
operation year to year among the industry.
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November 2021
Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose

31
Asks for annual meat finished product production data for
2017 and 2019 and monthly production data for 2021 by type
of product, byproduct, and source.
EPA will use this information to evaluate the volume of
wastewater and mass of pollutant generated per mass of
product. This will be used to determine if certain product
types generate different types of wastewater, and if the
subcategories need revising. In addition, EPA will use this
information to identify the types and levels of production
performed at the facility to inform developing production-
normalized effluent limits, profile facilities by type of
operation and production level, confirm stratification by
production volumes, and evaluate seasonal/annual
operations.

32
Asks if the facility independently rendered meat in 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities that
should complete subsequent questions specific to
independent rendering, profile facilities by type(s) of
operation, confirm stratification of statistical
methodologies, and inform selection of facilities for site
visits or future sampling.

33
Asks the days rendering operated by month in 2017, 2019,
and 2021.
EPA will use this information to evaluate continuous or
intermittent operation and changes due to seasonal
fluctuations in operations. EPA will also evaluate trends in
operation year to year among the industry.

34
Asks for annual rendering production data for 2017 and 2019
and monthly production data for 2021 by material and
animal type.
EPA will use this information to evaluate the volume of
wastewater and mass of pollutant generated per mass of
product. This will be used to determine if certain product
types generate different types of wastewater, and if the
subcategories need revising. In addition, EPA will use this
information to identify the types and levels of production
performed at the facility to inform developing production-
normalized effluent limits, profile facilities by type of
operation and production level, confirm stratification by
production volumes, and evaluate seasonal/annual
operations.
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November 2021
Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose
5 - Process Flow
Diagram
35
Asks if the facility generated process wastewater from 2017
through 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities that
generate wastewater, determine which facilities should
complete subsequent questions specific to wastewater
generation and treatment.

36
Asks for flow diagrams.
EPA will use this information to identify operations that
generate wastewater, the relative amount of wastewater,
and how the wastewater flows through the facility. With
this information EPA will inform selection of facilities for
site visits or future sampling, assess whether the facility's
system has nutrient control/pollutant removal treatment-in-
place, and identify treatment system configuration and
treatment unit redundancy.

37
Asks for an aerial map of the facility.
EPA will use this information to determine if facilities
have land area available for installation or expansion of
equipment required for compliance with potential
regulatory options and understand the general layout of the
facility.
6 - Wastewater
Generation
Information
38
Asks for annual wastewater flows generated by the facility
for 2017 and 2019 and for monthly wastewater flows
generated by the facility for 2021.
EPA will use this information to relate wastewater
generation to production levels and type of production.
EPA will use this information to inform selection of
facilities for site visits or future sampling, confirm
stratification of statistical methodologies, and assess
seasonality in wastewater generation.

39
Asks if any wastewater generation varies throughout the day,
and if so, asks for types of wastewater and minimum and
maximum flows.
EPA will use this information to determine which
wastewater generation varies through the day or by shift
and to what extent the flow fluctuates. EPA will use this
information to inform selection of facilities for site visits
or future sampling.

40
Asks if facility receives wastewater from offsite.
EPA will use this to identify whether other wastewater
streams are received by the facility and determine if
subsequent questions are relevant to the facility. EPA will
use this information to inform selection of facilities for site
visits or future sampling.
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November 2021
Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose

41-42
Asks for details on the source, flow, and destination of
offsite wastewaters.
EPA will use this information to assess which facilities
receive relatively large amounts of offsite wastewaters and
identify sources of this wastewater and understand how
these streams are handled. EPA will use this information to
evaluate if offsite wastewaters are impacting treatment of
MPP process wastewater across the industry and evaluate
which facilities may be selected for site visits or future
sampling.
7 - Wastewater
Treatment
43
Asks if the facility operates a wastewater treatment system.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities that
treat wastewater, determine which facilities should
complete subsequent questions specific to wastewater
treatment.

44
Asks for types of treatment units and treatment details such
as design parameters, actual flow and residence time, and
purpose of the unit. For recent additions, asks for cost
information.
EPA will use this information to identify current treatment
technologies in place and identify new treatment
technologies and best management practices. This
information combined with production and process
information will be used to identify treatment trends in the
industry. EPA will also use this to inform selection of
facilities for site visits or future sampling. Recent costing
data for treatment unit installation will be used to validate
costing data for similar treatments across the industry and
from other sources (e.g., vendors).

45
Asks about changes to treatment system from 2017 through
2021.
EPA will use this information to identify new treatment
technologies or best practices and trends in the industry.
EPA may also use this information to inform selection of
facilities for site visits.
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November 2021
Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose

46
Asks for details on chemicals added to the wastewater
treatment process in 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify types and
amounts of chemical(s) added in treatment, which may
also be found in the wastewater and assess whether the
system has nutrient/pollutant control treatment-in-place.
EPA will also use this information to inform whether there
are chemicals added in the treatment process and whether
these should not have limits since they are added in the
treatment process.

47
Asks about solids generation from the treatment system and
destination in 2021.
EPA will use this information to understand how facilities
are handling sludge from the treatment system, including
practices/end uses.

48-49
Asks about land area currently owned and occupied by the
facility and availability of underdeveloped land.
EPA will use this information to determine which facilities
have land area available for the expansion of wastewater
treatment systems.

50
Asks for the number of discharge locations and types of
those destinations.
EPA will use this information to profile the industry by
type of discharge location and confirm stratification. EPA
will also use this information to characterize the types of
surface waters which receive discharges from MPP
facilities and assess environmental benefits.

51
Asks for information for each discharge destination, the type
of wastewater, type of destination, and flow in 2021.
EPA will use this information to profile the industry by
type of discharge location and flow. EPA will evaluate the
amount of wastewater discharge relative to production
levels and type of production. EPA will also use this
information to characterize current discharges from the
industry, estimate pollutant loadings, and assess the
impacts of those discharges on the environment.

52
Asks for average concentrations of a short list of pollutants
in untreated process wastewater in 2021.
EPA will use this information to characterize untreated
wastewater and evaluate if untreated wastewater
characteristics are impacted by type of process or
production.
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November 2021
Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose

53-56
Asks for information on any wastewaters discharged to
public or privately owned treatment works. Collects
information on system name, location, permits, regulations,
and fees associated with the treatment system.
EPA will use this information to assess indirect discharge
frequency, types and amount of wastewater discharged,
define relationship with the receiving system, identify
regulations applied to individual facilities and applied by
whom. EPA will also use fee structure information to
evaluate the economic impact of changing regulations on
the MPP facility and the public or private treatment works.

57-60
Asks about biogas collection, volume of biogas, and whether
the biogas is used to offset energy needs.
EPA will use the information to profile the industry and
evaluate the extent to which biogas is collected and
utilized within the MPP industry.
8 - Monitoring
Data Collected
61
Asks if data outside of discharge monitoring reports (DMRs)
were collected from 2017 through 2021.
EPA will use this information to identify facilities that
have wastewater sampling data not already reported in
DMR data and which facilities should continue within the
subsection.

62
Asks for any sampling data for a specific set of pollutants.
EPA will use this information to characterize untreated and
treated wastewater at MPP facilities. EPA will use this
data to evaluate whether characteristics change based on
production levels, types of processes employed, and types
of treatment operations. EPA is interested in gathering data
to characterize treatment system effectiveness, which
include data from the headworks of the treatment system,
at points within the treatment system, and data for
pollutants in the effluent that may be available but not
reported in DMRs because they are not permit
requirements. EPA will assess the performance of
treatment technologies on varying level of pollutants in
influent wastewater and against the current production-
based effluent guidelines.
9 - Environmental
Management and
63
Asks if the facility recycles or reuses process wastewater.
EPA will use this information to profile the industry and
determine which facilities should continue with remaining
questions in the subsection about recycle and reuse.
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November 2021
Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose
Pollution
Prevention
64
Asks the facility about the water that is reused or recycled.
EPA will use this information to profile the industry and
determine the extent to which MPP facilities are
reusing/recycling wastewater, determine what portion of
process wastewater is diverted to reuse to identify the
actual amount of process wastewater generated by the
facility and correlate this amount with reported production
levels. EPA will use the information to evaluate if national
standards or best practices on water reuse could be
established.

65
Asks about other wastewater conservation practices.
EPA will use this information to profile the industry and
determine the extent to which MPP facilities are
conserving water. EPA will use the information to evaluate
if national standards or best practices on water reuse could
be established.

66
Asks about environmental management, monitoring, and
pollution prevention measures.
EPA will use this information to profile the industry and
determine the extent to which MPP facilities implement
pollution prevention measures. EPA will use the
information to evaluate if national standards or best
practices on pollution prevention and environmental
management could be established.

67-69
Asks about ground water monitoring, frequency, and
concentrations.
EPA will use this information to assess non-surface water
environmental impacts and the potential for human health
impacts. EPA will use this information to understand the
potential of MPP wastewater released on land via land
application, deep well injection or unintentional release
pathways to impact potential drinking water sources, such
as shallow aquifers and wells.

70-71
Asks about air permit identifiers and for information on what
pollutants are monitored and concentration and monitoring
frequency.
EPA will use the information to identify whether the
facility has a Title V permit and determine which and how
many facilities have an air pollution permit. EPA will use
information to characterize current GHG emissions and
evaluate changes in GHG emissions with potential ELG
revisions.
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Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose
10 -
Environmental
Assessment
Information
72
Asks about environmental assessments and environmental
effects studies.
EPA will use this information, provided in submitted
studies, to evaluate how MPP discharges are impacting
receiving waters and assess non-surface water
environmental impact(s). This information will allow EPA
to assess environmental impact of MPP discharges from
the facility and identify which and how many facilities
perform environmental assessments.
11 - Financial
Information
73-75
Asks for details on the parent company including corporation
type, public or private status, and company and facility level
FTEs in 2017, 2019, and 2021.
EPA will use this information to determine the impact on
individual sites due to proposed regulations. This data is
also necessary to determine a site's tax status and the
availability of public data for the economic analysis. EPA
collects available data from secondary sources to reduce
burden on recipients. Secondary sources provide data for
multi-site, publicly reporting companies.

76-78
Asks for parent company's discount rate or cost of capital
and the estimated interest rate to finance capital
improvements, as well as their mix of debt and equity used to
finance capital improvements
EPA will use the information to estimate the site's cost for
financing capital improvements. The economic analysis
will use these data to annualize the cost of future
wastewater treatment investments. Data from these
questions will be used to conduct a closure analysis using
information on current assets, the values of land, buildings,
and equipment. Sites that may close due to pollution
control requirements will be identified.

79
Asks about other facilities owned by the same company.
EPA will use this information to aggregate data from the
site level to the company level, and with estimating
impacts at the company level.

80
Asks about revenue, cost, and expenses for the facility and
the company for 2017, 2019, and 2021.
EPA will use this information to predict future income for
sites. Multiple years are requested so that EPA can identify
unusually good or bad years, and so EPA can use
forecasting techniques to predict variations in site cash
flow.
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Table 2-2. MPP Detailed Questionnaire Questions and Their Purpose
Section
Question
Numbcr(s)
Question Description
Purpose

81
Asks if the facility has a parent company.
EPA will use this information to identify whether the
business is owned, controlled, or managed by an ultimate
parent company to determine if subsequent sections of the
questionnaire are relevant to the facility.

82-84
Asks about the facility's relationship with the parent
company and state or international affiliations.
Because financing decisions are commonly made at
company level rather than the site-level, EPA will use this
information to assess economic impacts at the company
level also. If a company is owned by a parent company, it
effects the ability of the company to access capital and
finance capital improvements. It is also necessary for
accurately identifying the number of companies that are
small businesses, which is necessary under the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
(SBREFA).

85
Asks if the parent company is a small business.
EPA will use the information to identify whether the
parent company is a small business to determine if
subsequent questions are relevant to the facility.

86
Asks for parent company total revenue for only small
businesses in 2017, 2019, and 2021.
Because financing decisions are commonly made at the
company level rather than the site-level, EPA intends to
assess economic impacts at the company level also. If a
company is owned by a parent company, it effects the
ability of the company to access capital and finance capital
improvements. It is also necessary for accurately
identifying the number of companies that are small
businesses, which is necessary under the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA).
12 - Comments
NA
Space for facility to provide additional comments or
elaborate on any questions throughout the questionnaire.
EPA will use this information, specific to the section and
question number as indicated, to adjust responses as
needed or take into account any additional information as
part of evaluating national level estimates based on
facility-specific information.
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2(b) From Whom Will the Information Be Collected?
Together, the Census and Detailed Questionnaires will collect information from an
estimated 7,000 MPP facilities located in the US. The respondents affected by this ICR are
classified under the following North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)
identification numbers:
•	311611- Animal (except Poultry) Slaughtering.
•	311612 - Meat Processed from Carcasses.
•	311613 - Rendering and Meat Byproduct Processing.
•	311615 - Poultry Processing.
•	311111- Dog and Cat Food Manufacturing.
•	311119 - Other Animal Food Manufacturing.
•	311999 - All Other Miscellaneous Food Manufacturing.
2(c) What Will the Information Be Used For?
EPA will use the Census Questionnaire data to develop a population and an updated
profile of MPP facilities in the US from which additional data collection, including site calls or
sampling, may be based. EPA will use the results of the Census Questionnaire to confirm the
sample frame of the Detailed Questionnaire and develop industry weights to allow for
extrapolation of Detailed Questionnaire responses.
EPA will use the Detailed Questionnaire data to evaluate the current technology-based
ELG and determine if revised requirements are warranted. EPA will collect and analyze
information pertaining to wastewater characteristics (e.g., pollutants discharged, wastewater
flows), wastewater treatment technologies (e.g., pollution prevention techniques, pretreatment
systems, end-of-pipe treatment systems), and the economic impacts of installing and operating
treatment technologies. Specifically, EPA will use responses to characterize the pollution
discharged from MPP facilities and to determine if pollutant discharges can be controlled beyond
current requirements for any set or subset of MPP facilities.
Of the thousands of MPP facilities, only roughly 500 are direct dischargers that submit
self-monitoring data required by their permits in DMRs. While the requirements for submitting
DMRs vary by state, at a minimum any MPP facility subject to the existing MPP ELGs will be
required to submit DMRs, indicating that the existing ELGs only apply to a small portion of the
industry. Publicly available data on the characterization of discharges from indirect dischargers,
which comprise a large portion of the MPP industry, are not available. EPA will use the Detailed
Questionnaire to collect a consistent dataset across the industry that will be used to characterize
operations and wastewater characteristics for all MPP facilities, including large and small
facilities, all types of meat and poultry processes, facilities that generate but do not discharge
wastewater, and both direct and indirect discharging facilities.
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2(d) How Will the Information Be Collected? Does the Respondent have Multiple
Options for Providing the Information? What Are They?
Each MPP facility will receive a questionnaire notification letter and instructions
providing a URL and facility-specific entry code. Facilities will access the URL and log in using
the code noted in the notification letter. The web-based survey, accessed via the URL, will allow
for electronic review and completion of the questionnaire. The questionnaire notification letter
will also include alternate instructions if the respondent is unable to access the online version.
This package will be sent via Federal Express or similar delivery service to each facility to ensure
that a point of contact (the facility contact person) receives and signs for it. Each facility will be
allowed 60 calendar days from the time of receipt to submit the completed questionnaire.
EPA will include an e-mail address and phone number in the instructions that respondents
can use to request assistance in completing the questionnaire. Using these assistance methods enables
the respondents to receive a timely response to any inquiries that they may have. E-mail and
telephone communication will also reduce any misinterpretations of the questionnaire and thus
decrease the burden of follow-up phone calls and letters to the respondents.
The URL link and facility-specific entry code will direct facilities to the appropriate
questionnaire, Census or Detailed, for their facility. Each questionnaire will include the purpose,
general instructions, and glossary. The Introduction section provides the purpose and use of the
questionnaire, helpline information, and information on how to submit or return the completed
questionnaire. The General Instructions section will give the respondent guidance on completing
the responses. The Glossary provides respondents with all pertinent definitions and acronyms to
understand and complete the questionnaire sections.
Facilities that are unable to access the online version will be directed to contact EPA.
Upon contacting EPA, staff will mail a package via Federal Express, or other trackable delivery
service, containing a hardcopy questionnaire. Hardcopy questionnaires can be filled out by hand
and returned to EPA by mail. EPA and its contractors will enter the hardcopy questionnaire
responses into the web-platform so all responses can be reviewed and analyzed in a consistent
format.
Upon receipt of completed questionnaires, EPA and its contractors will review the
questionnaire responses for completeness and CBI claims. All questionnaires will also be
reviewed for consistency and reasonableness and follow-up calls will be conducted as needed to
clarify inconsistencies found in the responses. Questionnaire data will be automatically
populated into the questionnaire database. The database developed using the questionnaire
responses will be used by EPA to perform data analysis for the purpose of revising the MPP
ELG.
In addition to chemical data provided by facilities in the survey, EPA may need to collect
and analyze wastewater samples to supplement this data for certain treatment technologies. In
this case, each MPP facility selected to conduct sampling and analysis of analytical data will be
contacted by EPA directly with instructions on how to participate in wastewater sampling
activities. EPA will coordinate with each facility to develop detailed site-specific sampling plans.
EPA will be in communication with each facility regarding when sampling should occur.
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The Agency has conducted, is conducting, or will conduct the following activities to
administer the MPP questionnaires:
•	Develop the questions for the Census and Detailed Questionnaires.
•	Estimate the facility population by evaluating data from ICIS-NPDES and USD A
FSIS.
•	Conduct stakeholder meetings with trade associations and industry representatives
to review the population of MPP facilities.
•	Develop the ICR supporting statement.
•	Continue conducting stakeholder meetings with trade associations, industry
representatives, public interest groups, state regulating agencies, EPA workgroup,
OMB, and other stakeholders for input on the facility list and questionnaires.
•	Revise the questionnaires based on comments from trade associations, industry
representatives, public interest groups, state regulating agencies, EPA workgroup
members, OMB, and other stakeholders.
•	Finalize the facility list by making any updates based on comments from trade
associations, industry representatives, and public interest groups.
•	Develop mailing labels.
•	Develop the web-based questionnaire platform.
•	Develop and distribute the cover letters and instructions to notify facilities of the
ICR.
•	Develop a tracking system for the questionnaire cover letter mail-out and non-
online questionnaire return activities.
•	Finalize the web-based Census and Detailed Questionnaires, with registration and
certification requirements.
•	Develop a questionnaire database to house and analyze responses.
•	Develop and maintain helplines (phone and e-mail) for respondents who require
assistance in completing their questionnaires.
•	Receive and review responses.
•	Follow up with facilities on responses as needed.
•	Summarize and analyze responses.
•	Conduct technical analyses.
2(e) How Frequently Will the Information Be Collected?
The information covered by this ICR is a one-time information collection.
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2(f) Will the Information Be Shared With Any Other Organizations Inside or
Outside EPA or the Government?
EPA will share all information not identified as confidential business information
collected through this ICR within EPA and with other Government agencies, the industry, trade
associations, and the public.
2(g) If This Is an Ongoing Collection, How Have the Collection Requirements
Changed Over Time?
This ICR request is not an ongoing collection.
3.	TO WHAT EXTENT DOES THE COLLECTION OF INFORMATION INVOLVE
THE USE OF AUTOMATED, ELECTRONIC, MECHANICAL, OR OTHER
TECHNOLOGY COLLECTION TECHNIQUES OR OTHER FORMS OF
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
EPA plans to develop the Census and Detailed Questionnaires in a web-based tool that
facilities can fill out and submit online. The electronic questionnaires will be developed to meet
the 1998 Government Paperwork Elimination Act (GPEA). EPA anticipates that most
respondents will be familiar and comfortable with electronic submission forms. Additionally, the
electronic questionnaires will include automatic checks to minimize data entry errors and allow
for automatic population of a database with responses—reducing the potential for errors
introduced by key-entry of data. EPA's helpline will also be available during the response period
to assist facilities as needed with submitting responses.
EPA designed the questionnaires to include burden-reducing features. For example, in
addition to the initial facility confirmation/screening function, the questionnaires also contain
"screening" questions that direct respondents that do not qualify as the population of interest for
a particular subset of questions to indicate their status and then bypass this subset of questions to
continue their response. The questionnaire is also designed with drop down choices to simplify
responses, minimizing the number of text responses.
EPA will provide a mechanism for facilities to respond with a hardcopy mailed response
if the contact cannot access the internet. EPA anticipates this situation to affect less than 1
percent of the total population for both questionnaires.
4.	EFFORTS TO IDENTIFY DUPLICATION AND WHY SIMILAR
INFORMATION ALREADY AVAILABLE CANNOT BE USED OR MODIFIED
FOR USE FOR THE PURPOSES DESCRIBED IN ITEM 2
EPA identified several existing data sources that may contain data useful for identifying
the population of MPP facilities, as well as information useful for evaluating facility
characteristics and wastewater characterization. Table 4-1 lists sources of existing data that EPA
has collected and reviewed for the study.
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Table 4-1. Existing Data Sources
Data Sou rcc
Name
Date of Data
Collection
Population Included
Types of Data Available


Any facilities under 40
Facility Name
Address
NPDES Permit ID
FRS number
Latitude/Longitude
SIC code


CFR 432.1 with individual
ICIS-NPDES
2019
permits.
(20 records not already
included in 2018 dataset)


All facilities associated
Facility Name


with Standard Industrial
Address
ICIS-NPDES
2018
Classification (SIC) codes
listed under 40 CFR Part
432.1.
(1,476 records)
NPDES Permit ID
FRS number
Latitude/Longitude
SIC code
National
Renderer's List
2018
List of member facilities.
(150 records)
Facility Name
Address
Contact person
of Members

List of products
Other notes



The level of information collected from these
POTW Annual
Reports
2018
Publicly available POTW
pretreatment reports from
seven states (CA, TN, TX,
WA, IN, MI, and NH).
reports varied by state and report.
Facility Name
Address
Receiving POTW
General information on operations
Toxic Release
Inventory (TRI)
2017
Data for facilities listing
NAICS codes associated
with 40 CFR Part 432.1.
(437 records)
Facility Name
City and State
TRI Facility ID
FRS number
Direct, indirect, or both discharger



Facility Name
Address


List of MPP facilities from
FDA district
US Food and

US Food and Drug
Operation state
Drug
2020
Administration's Center
Firm type
Administration

for Veterinary Medicine.
(252 records)
Program risk
Last inspection date
Indication if facility handles feed for
ruminant animals


All MPP facilities subject
Unique establishment number
USD A FSIS
2020
to USDA's FSIS
Establishment name
requirements.
(6,532 records)
Address
Coordinate data (latitude/longitude)



Unique establishment number



Establishment name


All MPP facilities subject
Address
USD A FSIS
2018 and
to USDA's FSIS
Phone number
2019
requirements.
(6,385 records)
General list of activities.
Production size
Species slaughtered
Aggregate categorical production
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EPA identified the USDA FSIS dataset as the most comprehensive listing of MPP
facilities currently available. The USDA dataset, however, is quite limited for EPA's purpose in
that it lacks wastewater generation and characterization data, details on wastewater treatment
technologies, or wastewater discharge information. In addition, the USDA FSIS dataset includes
only limited information on the MPP facility type, size, and economics.
The ICIS-NPDES database includes more specific wastewater characterization
information, including flow data, pollutant effluent concentrations, and discharge permit
information. However, the data included in the ICIS-NPDES database only includes MPP
facilities required to submit DMRs, which comprises a small portion (<10 percent) of the MPP
industry. As stated in Section 2, the current ELGs for the MPP industrial category do not include
effluent requirements for indirect discharging facilities.
To capture more information on indirect dischargers, EPA collected pretreatment permits
for MPP facilities and pretreatment reports for receiving POTWs from select states. 1 EPA
reviewed these pretreatment reports, which are specific to the MPP facility, for details on
operations, any pretreatment, and the POTW receiving the MPP wastewater. POTW annual
pretreatment reports were reviewed to identify any MPP facilities that may be discharging to a
POTW and identified as significant or categorical users.
EPA also consulted trade associations, including the American Meat Institute, the
National Renderers Association, and the US Poultry & Egg Association, for lists of members and
other facility-specific details.
EPA has used the existing data sources listed in Table 4-1 to construct a list of MPP
facilities and evaluate wastewater treatment and wastewater characterization. As discussed in
Section 1, because EPA has had to construct the list of MPP facilities by combining data from
multiple sources, it has been difficult to identify overlap between datasets and where multiple
datasets may be identifying the same facility. Facility names and addresses are often inconsistent
and may change over time as ownership changes or addresses of record change. Based on the
data evaluated to date, EPA estimates the population of MPP facilities to be between 7,000 and
8,000 facilities. EPA's facility list currently includes just over 8,000 records. While EPA has
attempted to identify duplicate records based on similar facility name, city/state address, and
other unique identifiers, some duplicate records may still exist. EPA continues to coordinate with
industry trade associations on identifying additional duplicate records and facilities included on
the facility list that may not process meat or poultry or may no longer be operating.
Although the consulted sources have provided valuable industry information, and EPA
has and will continue to use this information to understand current industry practices, these
sources do not provide the Agency with complete and up-to-date site-specific technical and
economic data that covers the entire MPP industry and are crucial to the review of the MPP
ELG.
1 Pretreatment permits and pretreatment reports from CA, TN, TX, WA, IN, MI, and NH were available through
state websites and/or state databases. EPA also coordinated with EPA Region contacts for additional pretreatment
permits and/or reports.
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5.	COLLECTION OF INFORMATION IMPACTS TO SMALL BUSINESSES OR
OTHER SMALL ENTITIES AND METHODS TO MINIMIZE THE BURDEN
In accordance with requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), EPA must
assess whether actions would have "a significant impact on a substantial number of small
entities" (SISNOSE). Small entities include small businesses, small organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions.
EPA has taken steps to ensure that the respondent burden is minimized for small entities,
while collecting sufficient data to evaluate regulatory flexibility for small entities. EPA will
identify the size of the business entity according to Small Business Administration definitions
from questionnaire information through sales revenues and company employment. The financial
and economic information collected in the questionnaire is necessary to perform the economic
analysis of any proposed revision to the MPP ELG in order to meet the requirements of the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA).
To minimize the burden of responding to the questionnaires, EPA has developed a
shortened list of questions, the Census Questionnaire, that will be sent to the majority of the
facilities identified as most likely to be small entities and has limited the number of Detailed
Questionnaires it is sending to these facilities. Finally, the questions are phrased with commonly
used terminology and the tables are organized in formats familiar to financial officers in the
respondent industry.
6.	CONSEQUENCE TO FEDERAL PROGRAM OR POLICY ACTIVITIES IF THE
COLLECTION IS NOT CONDUCTED OR IS CONDUCTED LESS
FREQUENTLY AND ANY TECHNICAL OR LEGAL OBSTACLES TO
REDUCING BURDEN
The Census and Detailed Questionnaires are to be administered one time only. If the data
collection is not conducted, EPA will not be able to fulfill its statutory requirement to consider
revising the MPP ELG. The currently available data do not include wastewater quantity and
quality characteristics information, except for those facilities currently with permit limits.
Information on treatment technologies is available in select permits and/or permit applications,
but this information requires manual review of permit and permit application documents and not
all permit applications are publicly available. In addition, if the national population of all MPP
facilities is not identified, it will not be possible to confirm whether population estimates are
accurate and whether the sample frame is statistically valid. Without the data sought in these
questionnaires, EPA will be required to rely on the publicly available data obtained through
ICIS-NPDES and USD A FSIS and any additional data trade associations may provide from self-
operated surveys. In general, these datasets are inconsistent and difficult to combine. Typically,
the only overlapping data element between datasets is the facility name. In EPA's experience,
matching data on only facility name or city/state details is time consuming and often inaccurate
as facility names change over time. In addition, particularly for this industry, city/state and street
address information can also be confusing as some facilities may share the same building/space
but are not the same entity. The publicly available data are not sufficient to assess the current
industry population, evaluate subcategories in the current ELG or future ELGs, determine
characteristics of wastewater and wastewater treatment currently occurring at MPP facilities, or
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evaluate new treatment technologies that are being used, especially for indirect discharging
facilities which comprise the vast majority of the sector. Also, data collected by any trade
association's voluntary efforts will likely be incomplete as trade associations do not represent all
MPP facilities, particularly many of the small facilities in this industry.
The Census Questionnaire will collect data from all MPP facilities on production, waste
streams generated, and general wastewater treatment. Production data from all facilities will help
EPA create an accurate sample frame based on production type and size, type of wastewater
discharge, and other aspects of facility operation. Data on wastewater generation and treatment
will allow EPA to establish an accurate current profile of the MPP industry to estimate the
loadings discharged from the entire MPP industry. If this questionnaire is not conducted, EPA
would need to estimate or interpolate data for those facilities where these data are not available.
Publicly available data on production from USD A FSIS are general at best, indicating type of
animal and volume as one of five general categories. Data on wastewater generation and
wastewater treatment are only available through discharge permits which are held by only a
small portion of the industry and are limited in level of detail.
The Detailed Questionnaire will collect more specific information on production,
wastewater generation, wastewater treatment, and economics from a subset of facilities. This
detailed information will allow EPA to determine if facility operations and/or wastewater
generation varies by different aspects (e.g., shifts, type of production, year-to-year, seasonality).
Wastewater treatment details will provide insight into the type and design of current treatment
technologies employed and treatment system capabilities. Economics data will be evaluated to
determine the economic health of the industry. Detailed information on production and
wastewater generation and treatment is not available publicly. Limited economic data are
available through public sources; however, those data are aggregated and not useful for
determining affordability within industry subcategories or sizes. If the Detailed Questionnaire is
not conducted, EPA will not be able to evaluate current treatment capabilities, identify the extent
to which pollutant discharges could be reduced or eliminated within the industry, or evaluate the
potential economic impact that new or revised ELGs would impose on MPP facilities nor would
developing new or revising existing ELGs be possible.
Wastewater sampling data collected through this ICR are critical for characterizing the
wastewater generated by MPP facilities and the treated effluent discharged by MPP facilities, as
well as evaluating the effectiveness of technologies used to treat MPP wastewater. These
characterization data will be used to estimate current pollutant loadings for the industry and to
potentially establish new ELG requirements. The only current publicly available concentration
data are self-monitoring permit data collected through DMRs. DMR data do not include a
complete set of concentration data for the entire MPP industry. These data typically only include
final effluent from direct discharging facilities, represent predominantly larger MPP facilities
(those with current ELG requirements), and only include a small subset of pollutants (only those
specified in permits). Little data on the wastewater generated or discharged from indirect
facilities are available through DMRs reported by POTWs. Older data on untreated wastewater
characterization data are available from information collected by EPA in 2001 in support of the
2004 MPP ELG, but more recent data will help EPA evaluate if wastewater characteristics have
changed in the past 20 years or if new subcategories should be established based on differing
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wastewater characteristics. EPA will not be able to calculate pollutant removal efficiencies for
treatment technologies without wastewater sampling data.
7.	SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES
There are no special circumstances. The collection of information is conducted in a
manner consistent with the guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.6.
8.	PUBLICATION OF THE FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICE AND PUBLIC
RESPONSE
8(a) Federal Register Notice Publication
EPA plans to publish a notice in the Federal Register announcing the Agency's intent to
submit a request for a new ICR and to collect comments on draft initial questionnaires and the
draft list of MPP facilities in the US. The notice will include a description of the entities to be
affected by the proposed questionnaires, a brief explanation of the need for the questionnaires,
identification of the authority under which the questionnaire will be issued, and an estimate of
burden to be incurred by questionnaire respondents. By means of this notice, the Agency will
request comments and suggestions regarding the questionnaire and draft facility list and the
reduction of data collection burden. The notice will ask that the public submit all comments and
suggestions within 60 days of the Federal Register notice publication.
Pursuant to section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), EPA will
specifically solicit comments and information to enable it to:
•	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.
•	Evaluate the accuracy of the Agency's estimate of burden of the proposed
collection of information, including the validity of the methodology and
assumptions used.
•	Enhance the quality, unity, and clarity of the information to be collected.
•	Minimize the burden of the collection of information on those who are to respond.
The public comment period will be announced at the time of the publication of this
request in the Federal Register.
8(b) Consultations
The Engineering and Analysis Division (EAD) of EPA's Office of Water has
conducted consultations with individuals in EPA Offices, Regions and States, clean water
organizations, and other federal agencies including the USD A FSIS, USD A Economic Research
Service (ERS), and the FDA. EAD has also engaged industry trade associations (US Poultry and
Egg Association, National Cattlemen's Beef Association, North American Meat Institute and
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November 2021
National Pork Producers Council) and consultants. EAD has also met with community and
environmental groups in March, July, September, and October 2021.
Consultations with the USD A FSIS, USD A ERS, and the FDA have yielded a directory
of facilities with some information about meat type and processes, facility size, and
production. However, the size data are limited in accuracy as they were self-reported, and the
production data are reported as lumped categories and do not provide the detail needed to
complete the ELG review. Also, these data do not provide information about wastewater
generation, treatment, or discharge.
EPA first met with MPP trade associations in February 2020. Since then, the MPP trade
associations have reviewed the directory of facilities and provided videos of facility operations
and waste treatment for two facilities awarded US Poultry and Egg Association's Clean Water
Award. However, the membership of these trade associations is primarily larger facilities. In
addition, EPA does not expect trade associations will be able to collect the financial data needed
to determine whether treatment technology options are economically achievable.
EPA has also reached out to the clean water organizations which represent the POTWs,
such as the National Rural Water Association (NRWA) and the National Association of Clean
Water Agencies (NACWA), to get a better understanding of whether and how POTWs are
impacted by MPP facilities. These organizations have provided a POTW contact that receives
wastewater from MPP industrial users. EPA has also collected POTW annual reports from EPA
Regions and States to identify MPP indirect discharging facilities. While the information
collected through these consultations has been helpful, it does not represent the overall
industry in each subcategory and size category, and additional information is needed to represent
the industry.
EPA distributed draft copies of the Census and Detailed Questionnaires along with
specific points of discussion to trade association and clean water organizations on September 23,
2021. EPA then met with some of these organizations on October 15, 2021 to discuss the
timeline for the ICR, the mechanism of questionnaire delivery, and the types of information
solicited in the questionnaires.
Table 8-1 includes a list of all non-Agency organizations that EPA has consulted with as
part of the MPP ICR development.
Table 8-1. Non-Agency Consultations
	Association	
Association of Clean Water Administrators (ACWA)
Bayard Ridge Group	
Hampton Roads Sanitation District (HRSD)	
Iowa Department of Natural Resources	
JBS	
National American Meat Institute	
National Association of Clean Water Agencies (NACWA)
National Cattlemen's Beef Association
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Table 8-1. Non-Agency Consultations
	Association	
National Chicken Council	
National Pork Producers Council	
National Rural Water Association (NRWA)	
North American Meat Institute	
Pilgrims	
The Policy Group	
Tyson Foods	
United Egg Producers	
US Poultry & Egg Association	
USD A	
Water Environment Federation (WEF)	
9.	PAYMENT OR GIFT TO RESPONDENTS
No payments or gifts are provided to respondents.
10.	ASSURANCE OF CONFIDENTIALITY PROVIDED TO RESPONDENTS AND
THE BASIS FOR THE ASSURANCE IN STATUE, REGULATION, OR AGENCY
POLICY
In accordance with 40 CFR, Part 2, Subpart B, Section 2.203, the MPP questionnaires
inform respondents of their right to claim information as confidential. Each questionnaire
provides instructions for claiming confidentiality and informs respondents of the terms and rules
governing the protection of Confidential Business Information (CBI) under the Clean Water Act
and 40 CFR 2.203(B). Each question which requests potentially confidential information will be
accompanied by a CBI box. Respondents will be requested to check all CBI boxes which
accompany responses they claim as confidential.
EPA and its contractors will follow EAD's existing procedures to protect data labeled as
CBI. These procedures include the following:
•	Ensure secure handling of completed questionnaires to preclude access by
unauthorized personnel.
•	Store completed questionnaires and databases in secured areas of offices and
restrict access to authorized EPA and contractor personnel only.
•	Restrict any publication or dissemination of confidential results or findings to
aggregate statistics and coded listings. Individual respondents will not be
identified in summary reports.
EPA will ensure that the web-based platform used to administer the questionnaire meets
EAD's policies to protect CBI data. This web-based tool will require authentication and
verification of the respondents to allow access to the questionnaire, allow users to mark
information as CBI, provide secure storage and limit access to EPA and EAD's
contractors, and require users to certify and sign completed questionnaires.
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Each EPA contractor that collects, processes, or stores CBI is responsible for the proper
handling of that data. Each contractor shall safeguard information as described in Section 2.211
(d) of Subpart B and is obligated to use or disclose information only as permitted by the contract
under which the information is furnished.
11.	QUESTIONS OF A SENSITIVE NATURE
No sensitive questions pertaining to private or personal information, such as sexual
behavior or religious beliefs, will be asked in the Census or Detailed Questionnaires or as part of
the wastewater sampling.
12.	ESTIMATES OF RESPONDENT BURDEN FOR THE INFORMATION
COLLECTION
12(a) Estimate of Respondent Hour Burden
The MPP data collection (Census Questionnaire, Detailed Questionnaire, and wastewater
sampling) will require recipient facilities to devote time and resources to produce acceptable
responses to the EPA data requests. EPA expects that engineers, supervisors, and technical staff
at the sites will devote time toward gathering and preparing the final responses to the
questionnaires, coordinating and planning sampling with EPA staff, and collecting wastewater
samples. The costs to the respondents' facilities associated with these time commitments can be
estimated by multiplying the time spent in each labor category by an appropriately loaded hourly
rate.
To develop the burden estimates, EPA estimated the number of hours that will be
required to complete all of the questions in the Census and Detailed Questionnaires (including
reviewing instructions, researching data sources, gathering data, entering the information
requested, reviewing responses, and submitting the questionnaire). Table 12-1 and Table 12-2
break down the burden (in hours) per anticipated respondent activity and per labor category
presumed necessary to complete the Census and Detailed Questionnaires, respectively. EPA
expects that wastewater treatment plant operators, engineers, financial manager, and facility
managers will all be involved in responding to the data request. In both Table 12-1 and Table 12-
2, EPA has differentiated the hours that will be spent by two different types of responses for
either questionnaire, facilities that complete the full questionnaire and facilities for which
portions of the questionnaire are non-applicable. For both the Census and Detailed
Questionnaires, EPA expects that a fraction of the respondent population does not generate
wastewater or does not fall under the applicability of the MPP ELG. These facilities will not be
required to complete the full questionnaire. They will be directed to the end of the questionnaire
via specific questions placed strategically within both the Census and Detailed Questionnaires.
As a result, these facilities will not be required to complete large portions of questions resulting
in less burden. Throughout the remainder of this supporting statement these will be referred to as
"non-applicable" questionnaire facilities.
EPA expects that questionnaire response will be led by the wastewater plant operator as
most questions are specific to wastewater generation and treatment. EPA has included hours for
engineering staff to support collecting data and entering details related to production as well as
financial staff to support details related to financial information requested in the Detailed
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November 2021
Questionnaire. EPA has also included hours for the facility manager to review the questionnaire
response.
Table 12-1. Estimated Respondent Burden by Activity and Respondent Category for the
Web-Based Census Questionnaire
Activity
Respondent Category and Burden (Hours)
Wastewater
Plant Operator
Engineer
Finance
Manager
Facility
Manager
Total Burden per
Activity
Census Questionnaire - Non-applicable Facilities
Review Instructions
0.75
0.75
0
0.75
2.25
Registration and Basic Facility
Information
0.25
0
0
0
0.25
Gather data
0
0
0
0
0
Complete the Questionnaire
0
0
0
0
0
Review and Submission
0
0
0
0.5
0.5
Contact Helpline
0.5
0
0
0
0.5
Total
1.5
0.75
0
1.25
3.50
Census Questionnaire - Full Response Facilities
Review Instructions
0.75
0.75
0
0.75
2.25
Registration and Basic Facility
Information
0.25
0
0
0
0.25
Gather data
1
1
0
0
2
Complete the Questionnaire
1
1
0
0
2
Review and Submission
0
0
0
0.5
0.5
Contact Helpline
0.5
0
0
0
0.5
Total
3.5
2.75
0
1.25
7.5
Table 12-2. Estimated Respondent Burden by Activity and Respondent Category for the
Web-Based Detailed Questionnaire
Activity
Respondent Category and Burden (Hours)
Wastewater
Plant Operator
Engineer
Finance
Manager
Facility
Manager
Total Burden per
Activity
Detailed Questionnaire - Non-applicable Facilities
Review Instructions
0.75
0.75
0.75
0.75
3
Registration and Basic Facility
Information
0.25
0
0
0
0.25
Gather data
0
0
0
0
0
Complete the Questionnaire
0
0
0
0
0
Review and Submission
0
0
0
3
3
Contact Helpline
0.5
0
0
0
0.5
Total
1.5
0.75
0.75
3.75
6.75
Detailed Questionnaire - Full Response Facilities
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Table 12-2. Estimated Respondent Burden by Activity and Respondent Category for the
Web-Based Detailed Questionnaire
Activity
Respondent Category and Burden (Hours)
Wastewater
Plant Operator
Engineer
Finance
Manager
Facility
Manager
Total Burden per
Activity
Review Instructions
0.75
0.75
0.75
0.75
3
Registration and Basic Facility
Information
0.25
0
0
0
0.25
Gather data
5
5
2
0
12
Complete the Questionnaire
5
5
2
0
12
Review and Submission
0
0
0
3
3
Contact Helpline
0.5
0
0
0
0.5
Total
11.5
10.75
4.75
3.75
30.75
In addition to the questionnaires, EPA intends to seek new sampling data from a select
group of 20 MPP facilities. These facilities will perform 5-day long sampling episodes to collect
data on MPP wastewater characteristics. Each MPP facility selected for sampling will be asked
to engage with EPA to develop site-specific plans to standardize sampling across all facilities.
EPA will provide each facility with a sampling kit, with all sampling supplies included. Facilities
will be responsible for executing the sampling plan by collecting samples, preserving samples,
and shipping wastewater samples to specific laboratories identified by EPA. EPA will contract
with accredited analytical laboratories for each method included in the sampling plan; facilities
will ship wastewater samples according to instructions provided by EPA. By EPA contracting
directly with laboratories, this ensures that all wastewater samples will be analyzed to the same
precision and using the same method for each analyte.
EPA estimates that each facility will collect 24-hour composite samples for five
consecutive days from up to three locations, such as the influent to the wastewater treatment
system, a midpoint in the wastewater treatment system, and the treated effluent. The exact
sample location may vary by facility based on the treatment system configuration and/or type of
operations. For the purposes of the ICR estimate, EPA estimates that all facilities will collect
samples from three locations for each day of the sampling episode for a total of 15 wastewater
samples per facility. In addition, EPA expects the facility will also collect one quality assurance
sample each day of the sampling episode. These quality assurance samples could include
laboratory required quality assurance volumes or field quality assurance samples. Table 12-3
presents the estimated burden per facility to collect wastewater samples for the five-day
sampling episode. Table 12-4 presents estimated burden to support the wastewater sampling
program on a per facility basis by labor category. EPA expects that wastewater treatment plant
operators and facility managers will be involved in planning and implementing the wastewater
treatment protocols.
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Table 12-3. Estimated Burden for 5-Day Sampling per Facility
Activitv
Hours
Units
People
Total Burden per
Activitv
Prep work - Planning, purchasing supplies,
labeling bottles, organizing, and packing
materials.
4
per sampling
day
2
8
Sampling Collection - Collect two grab
samples every four hours for a 24-hr period.
7.5
per sampling
day
2
15
Sample Preservation/Shipment - Label and
preserve samples. Package samples in
coolers and prepare for shipment. Transport
to shipping vendor.
6
per sampling
day
3
18
Total Hours per Facility per Day
41
Total Hours per Facility for 5-day Period
205
Table 12-4. Estimated Burden for Sampling Program by Activity and Labor
Category
Activity
Respondent Category and Burden (Hours)
Wastewater Plant
Operator
Facility
Manager
Total Burden per
Activity
Planning Work - Coordinating with EPA
to plan and develop sampling plan
40
40
80
Sampling Activities
205
0
205
Sampling Oversight
0
20
20
Total
245
60
305
12(b) Estimate of Respondent Labor Costs
EPA obtained mean labor rates from the May 2020, US Department of Labor, Bureau of
Labor Statistics website. Table 12-5 presents the labor data for 2020 (the latest year for which
data are available) for the labor categories representing a wastewater treatment plant operator,
engineer, finance specialist, and an operations manager. EPA used these labor rates for the
burden estimates.
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Table 12-5. 2020 Labor Rate Data
Job Category
WWT Plant
Operator1
Engineer2
Finance Specialist3
Operations
Manager4
Mean Hourly
Earnings ($/hour)
27.66
54.35
45.16
64.45
1	Wastewater treatment plant operator unloaded mean hourly wage of $22.55/hour times 1.3 loading = $29.32/hour.
EPA assumed a 30 percent increase for overhead and benefits.
2	Engineer unloaded labor rate of $45.40/hour times 1.3 loading = $59.02/hour. EPA assumed a 30 percent increase
for overhead and benefits.
3	Finance specialist unloaded labor rates of $34.74/hour times 1.3 loading = $45.16/hour. EPA assumed a 30 percent
increase for overhead and benefits.
4	Operations manager unloaded labor rate of $49.58/hour times 1.3 loading = $64.45/hour. EPA assumed a 30
percent increase for overhead and benefits.
Source: 2020 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for water and wastewater treatment plant and
systems operators - occupation code 51-8031, engineer - occupation code 17-2000, finance specialist - occupation
code 13-2000, and general and operations managers - occupation code 11-1021.
https ://www.bls. gov/oes/current/oes_nat. htm
The direct labor cost to respondents to complete the Census or Detailed Questionnaire
equals the time required to read through and understand all of the instructions, gather data,
transfer it to the questionnaire, and review/check the responses as described in item 12a. EPA
calculated the estimated respondent burden for completion of both questionnaires using the
estimated total response time per activity shown in Table 12-1 and Table 12-2 as well as the
labor rates shown in Table 12-5 to calculate a total labor cost shown in Table 12-6. EPA expects
that some portion of facilities will have questions about how to complete either the Census or the
Detailed Questionnaire. Table 12-6 includes estimates for both types of respondents: non-
applicable facilities and full questionnaire responses.
Table 12-6. Total Estimated Respondent Labor Burden for the Census and Detailed
Questionnaire per Respondent
Respondent
Category
Wastewater Plant
Operator Total
Labor Costs
Engineer
Total Labor
Costs
Finanee Manager
Total Labor Costs
Facility Manager
Total Labor
Costs
Total Labor
Burden (S)
Census Questionnaire
Non-Applicable
$41
$41
$0
$81
$163
Full Responses
$97
$149
$0
$81
$327
Detailed Questionnaire
Non-Applicable
$41
$41
$34
$242
$358
Full Responses
$318
$584
$215
$242
$1,359
The total burden for the Census Questionnaire and Detailed Questionnaire equals the
estimated burden per facility for all facilities EPA expects will respond to the questionnaires. As
noted previously in this supporting statement, for the purposes of estimating burden to the
industry, EPA estimates the population of MPP facilities at approximately 7,000. EPA expects
that some number of facilities will not respond to the questionnaires. Although this ICR will be
mandatory, the typical non-response rate for effluent guidelines questionnaires is 10 percent,
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November 2021
which is consistent with the non-response rate from for the ICR Supporting EPA's 2004 MPP
ELG. As described in Part B, Section 7, EPA expects that 67 percent of questionnaire population
will be full responses. Factoring in the expected number of non-responses and the assumed full
responses, this results in 23 percent of facilities as non-applicable facilities that will not be
required to complete the entire questionnaire. Table 12-7 includes the number of respondents in
each category (non-applicable, non-responses, and full responses), total burden, and total cost for
the industry to respond to both the Census and the Detailed Questionnaires. The values presented
in Table 12-7 also include hours for a portion of the respondents to consult with EPA's helpline.
EPA estimates that 10 percent of Census Questionnaire respondents and 20 percent of the
Detailed Questionnaire respondents, both non-applicable responses and full responses, will spend
0.5 hour coordinating with the helpline.
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November 2021
Table 12-7. Total Estimated Respondents for Questionnaires and Total Estimated Burden
Respondent
Category
Number of
Responses
Number of
Respondents
Contacting
Helpline
Total WW
Plant
Operator
Labor
(Hours)
Total
Engineer
Labor
(Hours)
Total
Finance
Manager
Labor
(Hours)
Total
Facility
Manager
Labor
(Hours)
Total
Labor
(Hours)
Total WW
Plant
Operator
Labor Cost
($)
Total
Engineer
Labor
Cost ($)
Total
Finance
Manager
Labor
Cost ($)
Total
Facility
Manager
Labor
Cost ($)
Total
Labor
Cost ($)
Census Questionnaire
Non-applicable
1,234
123
1,296
926
0
1,543
3,765
$35,856
$50,320
$-
$99,453
$185,630
Non-respondents
537
0
0
0
0
0
0
$-
$-
$-
$-
$-
Full Responses
3,596
360
10,967
9,889
0
4,495
25,351
$303,404
$537,480
$-
$289,712
$1,130,596
Total
5,367
483
12,264
10,815
0
6,038
29,116
$339,260
$587,801
$ -
$389,165
SI,316,226

Non-applicable
376
75
413
282
282
1,408
2,385
$11,429
$15,311
$12,722
$90,781
$130,243
Non-respondents
163
0
0
0
0
0
0
$-
$-
$-
$-
$-
Full Responses
1,094
219
12,145
11,762
5,197
4,103
33,206
$335,969
$639,283
$234,708
$264,449
$1,474,409
Total
1,633
294
12,558
12,043
5,479
5,511
35,591
$347,398
$654,594
$247,430
$355,230
S 1,604,652
Industry Total Hours
64,707
Industry Total Cost
S2,920,878
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November 2021
For labor costs associated with sampling, EPA assumed that all sampling activities
described in Section 12(a) will be completed by a combination of wastewater plant operation
staff and the facility manager as shown in Table 12-4. To estimate the labor cost, EPA combined
the hours presented in Table 12-4 with the labor rates shown in Table 12-5. The total labor cost
for sampling per facility is shown in Table 12-8.
Table 12-8. Total Estimated Labor Burden for 5-Day Sampling per Facility
Wastewater Plant Operator Total
Labor Cost (S)
Facility Manager
Total Labor Cost (S)
Total Labor Burden (S)
$6,778
$3,867
$10,645
Using the total industry labor cost for the questionnaires shown in Table 12-7 and the
total labor cost for sampling per facility shown in Table 12-8 combined with the number of
facilities participating in sampling, EPA estimates the total labor cost associated with activities
described in this ICR. The total labor associated with the MPP Census Questionnaire, Detailed
Questionnaire, and wastewater sampling is $3.13 million, as shown in Table 12-9.
Table 12-9. Total Estimated Respondent Labor Burden MPP Data Collection
Activity
Number of Facilities Participating
Total Labor Burden (Dollars)
Census Questionnaire
5,367
$1,316,226
Detailed Questionnaire
1,633
$1,604,652
Wastewater Sampling
20
$212,898
Total
$3,133,776
13. TOTAL ANNUAL COST BURDEN TO RESPONDENTS OR RECORDKEEPERS
RESULTING FROM THE COLLECTION OF INFORMATION
13(a) Estimating Capital/Start-up Operating and Maintenance Costs
EPA estimates there will be minimal other direct costs associated with responding to the
Census Questionnaire and Detailed Questionnaire. All information requested in either
questionnaire should be available from existing facility records and/or monitoring. Facilities are
not required to collect and analyze additional samples to respond to the questionnaires.
Other costs for completing the questionnaires include printing/duplication of working
copies and, for a select few facilities, shipping for those respondents that are unable to respond to
the online platform. EPA has assumed that one percent of Census Questionnaire and one percent
of Detailed Questionnaire respondents will respond with mailed hardcopies as opposed to online
submittals. Most respondents will submit electronic questionnaires, which will reduce burden
and ensure efficient transfer of data. EPA assumes all respondents will incur a printing rate of
$0.10 per page for a paper copy for use as a working copy or a hardcopy file. EPA also assumes
that any facility submitting a paper response will return the completed questionnaire via Federal
Express or a comparable delivery carrier that requires a signature to acknowledge receipt. EPA
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also included cost for long distance phone charges. Although, most facilities likely have access
to cell phones or other internet-based phone mechanisms that do not charge for long distance
calls, EPA has included these costs at $0.05 per minute for calls into the helpline to cover
facilities in rural areas.
Table 13-1 presents the estimated Other Direct Costs for respondents related to the
Census and Detailed Questionnaires.
Table 13-1. Total Other Direct Costs for Respondents to the Questionnaires
Activitv
Number of
Respondents
Total
Printer/Photocopying
Cost1
Total
Shipping
Cost2
Total
Phone/Calling
Costs3
Total
Census
Questionnaire
5,367
$4,830
$430
$726
$5,986
Detailed
Questionnaire
1,633
$7,349
$131
$443
$7,922
Total
$12,179
$561
$1,169
$13,908
1	Assumes printing of 10 pages for the Census Questionnaire and 50 pages for the Detailed Questionnaire;
$0.10/page print cost. Assumes all facilities will print the questionnaire once as a working copy.
2	Assumes one percent of Census Questionnaire respondents and one percent of Detailed Questionnaire respondents
will send in a paper questionnaire via Federal Express (or another shipper with tracking). Assumes $8.90 shipping
fee/package.
3	Assumes 10 percent of Census Questionnaire respondents and 20 percent of Detailed Questionnaire respondents
will contact the helpline for 30 minutes at a rate of $0.05/minute. EPA expects this to be an overestimate of the long-
distance costs associated with the Questionnaire.
As described in Section 12, wastewater sampling of MPP facilities will be conducted by
MPP facility staff. This burden estimate assumes that EPA will contract directly with
laboratories and provide each facility with a set of sampling supplies. The only sampling
supplies not provided by EPA would be ice required to cool wastewater samples immediately
after collection and/or during preservation. Sampled facilities will be responsible for any long-
distance phone charges associated with planning, supplies not provided by EPA, and shipping
samples to the laboratories within the holding times specified in the sampling plan. In addition to
ice needed during sample collection, EPA estimates that each sampled facility will need to
provide ice for filling coolers and keeping samples at the proper temperature during shipping and
postage to ship all wastewater samples in coolers provided by EPA. EPA estimates these other
direct costs associated with wastewater sampling include those elements shown in Table 13-2.
Table 13-2. Total Other Direct Costs for Five-Day Sampling
Activitv
Units Cost
Units
Number
Direct Cost (S)
Planning Calls (phone charges)
$3
$ per hour
6 hours
$18
Shipping Costs (ice and postage)
$110
$ per
cooler
5 coolers per sample day
$550
Sample Supplies Not Provided by
EPA (ice)
$10
$ per
wastewater
sample
15 wastewater samples
$150
Total Cost per Facility
$3,590
Total Cost for Sampling at All Facilities
$71,800
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13(b) Annualizing Capital Costs
EPA estimates that there will be no recuring capital costs associated with responding to
the Census Questionnaire, responding to the Detailed Questionnaire, or wastewater sampling.
The one-time burden to respondents includes labor costs described in Section 12 and
O&M costs described in Section 13(a). Table 13-3 presents the total burden to the industry for
the MPP questionnaires and wastewater sampling.
Table 13-3. Total Estimated Respondent Burden and Cost Summary
Information Collection
Activity
Number of
Participating
Facilities
Total Burden
(Hours)
Total Labor
Cost ($)
Total O&M
Cost ($)
Total Cost
($)
Census and Detailed
Questionnaire
7,00c)1
64,707
$2,920,878
$13,908
$2,934,786
Wastewater Sampling
20
6,100
$212,898
$71,800
$284,698
Total
70,807
$3,133,776
$85,708
S3,219,484
1 - All 7,000 MPP facility will complete one questionnaire, either the Census or the Detailed.
EPA estimates that the total burden to the industry for responding to the Census
Questionnaire, Detailed Questionnaire, and wastewater sampling will be approximately 70,807
hours, or $3.22 million (including labor and O&M costs).
Burden means the total time, effort, and financial resources expended by persons to
generate, maintain, retain, and 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 to collect, validate, and verify information; adjust the existing ways to comply with
any previously applicable instructions and requirements; train personnel to respond to a
collection of information; search data sources; complete and review the collection of
information; and transmit or otherwise disclose information. An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays
a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control number for EPA's regulations are
listed in 40 CFR part 9 and 48 CFR chapter 15.
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 No. EPA-HQ-OW-2021-0736, which is available for public viewing at the Water
Docket in the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave.,
NW, Washington, DC. An electronic version of the public docket is available through the
Federal Data Management System (FDMS) at http://www.regulations.gov. Use FDMS to view
and submit 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. Once in the system,
select "Advanced Search" then key in the Docket ID number identified above. Also, you can
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send comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, 725 17th Street, NW, Washington, DC. 20503, Attention: Desk Officer for EPA. Please
include the EPA Docket ID No. (EPA-HQ-OW-2021-0736) in any correspondence.
14. ANNUALIZED COST TO Till FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
Table 14-1 presents an estimate of the burden and labor costs that EPA will incur to
administer the Census and Detailed Questionnaires. The table identifies the collection
administration tasks to be performed by EPA employees and contractors, with the associated
hours required for each grouping of related tasks. EPA determined Agency labor costs by
multiplying Agency burden figures by an average hourly Agency labor rate ($45.51/hour) for
technical and managerial support using the Salary Table 2021-GS from the US Office of
Personal Management. This table can be found at the Web site https://www.opm.gov/policy-
data-oversight/pay-leave/salaries-wages/salary-tables/pdf/2021/GS_h.pdf. The government
employee labor rates are $38.08 per hour for technical (GS-13, Stepl) and $52.93 per hour for
managerial (GS-15, Step 1). EPA determined contractor labor costs by multiplying contractor
burden figures by an average contract labor rate of $100 per hour. This rate is consistent with
current Agency contracts.
For EPA and contractor O&M costs, EPA assumed mailing a cover letter announcing the
questionnaire effort to all MPP facilities and mailing hardcopy questionnaires to one percent of
all respondents as described in Section 13(a). Table 14-2 presents the other direct costs
associated with administering the questionnaires that will be incurred by EPA.
Table 14-3 presents a list of the tasks EPA and its contractors will perform associated
with the MPP wastewater sampling. These tasks include the following:
•	Selecting facilities for wastewater sampling.
•	Developing site-specific sampling plans.
•	Planning and conducting audits of each sampling episode.
•	Ordering sampling supplies and preparing sampling kits for each sampled facility.
•	Reviewing and analyzing sampling results and documenting results of each
sampling episode.
Table 14-3 includes an estimate of the burden and labor costs for each task and the total labor
cost. O&M costs associated with wastewater sampling include travel costs (for EPA's contractor
staff to audit each wastewater sampling facility), costs for sample collection supplies, shipping
costs to get sampling kits to facilities, and sample analysis costs. Table 14-4 shows the other
direct costs incurred by EPA per sampled facility and the total cost for all 20 sampled facilities.
Table 14-5 and Table 14-6 summarize the total costs that the industry and the Agency
will incur as a result of the ICR.
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November 2021
Table 14-1. Estimated Agency Burden and Labor Costs for Census and Detailed Questionnaires
Activities
Burden (hours)
Labor Cost
Agency
Contractor
Total Hours
Agency
(S45.51/hr)
Contractor
(SlOO/hr)
Total Cost
Develop Census Questionnaire instrument
150
1,800
1,950
$6,827
$180,000
$186,827
Develop Detailed Questionnaire instrument
Meet with trade association representatives
150
200
350
$6,827
$20,000
$26,827
Publish notice of anticipated ICR in Federal Register
Respond to all comments received
Revise questionnaire instruments based on reviewers' comments
Design sampling approach
400
1,800
2,200
$18,204
$180,000
$198,204
Develop a mailing list database
Develop a system to track mailing and receipt activities to
improve mailing list
Develop notification letters
Mail questionnaire notification letters
Develop and maintain e-mail and phone helplines
75
588
663
$3,413
$58,849
$62,262
Maintain helpline database and develop documentation
Track survey responses
250
4,132
4,382
$11,378
$413,246
$424,623
Review responses and assess potential for bias due to missing data
Engineering follow-up to address non-response (hardcopies) and
to clarify responses
Develop questionnaire database
40
500
540
$1,820
$50,000
$51,820
Upload and verify data
Enter hardcopy survey responses
50
308
358
$2,276
$30,798
$33,074
Idlill
I.I 15
9,229
10.344
S50,744
S922.S92
S9"73.(i3(i
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November 2021
Table 14-2. Estimated Other Direct Costs for the Agency to Administer the Questionnaires
Activity
Unit Costs1
Number of Units2 Total Cost (S)
Questionnaire Notification Mailout
$0.58
per letter
7,000
letters
$4,060
Hardcopy Census Questionnaires
$8.90
per package
54
packages
$145
Hardcopy Detailed Questionnaires
$8.90
per package
16
packages
$478
Total
$4,683
1	Questionnaire notifications will be sent out via USPS with a letter. Hardcopy questionnaires will be sent via
Federal Express (or another shipper with tracking) at $8.90 shipping fee/package.
2	Assumes one percent of Census Questionnaire respondents and one percent of Detailed Questionnaire respondents
will not have access to the internet and request hardcopy questionnaires.
Table 14-3. Estimated Agency Burden and Labor Costs for Wastewater Sampling
Activities
Burden (hours)
Labor Cost
Agency
Contractor
Total Hours
Agency
(S45.51/hr)
Contractor
(SlOO/hr)
Total Cost
Select MPP facilities
50
100
150
$2,276
$10,000
$12,276
Develop site-specific sampling plans - Calls with facilities and
write/review plans
200
720
920
$9,102
$72,000
$81,102
Plan and conduct sampling audits
80
510
590
$3,641
$51,050
$54,691
Prepare sample collection kits
0
80
80
$0
$8,000
$8,000
Review sampling data results, enter data into database, analyze
data
1,200
3,080
4,280
$54,612
$308,000
$362,612
Total
1,530
4,490
6,020
$69,630
$449,000
$518,630
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November 2021
Table 14-4. Estimated Other Direct Costs for the Agency to Conduct Wastewater Sampling
Activity
U nit Costs
Number of Units
Total Cost
($)
Sampling Audit Travel (airfare, hotel, per
diem, car rental, long-distance charges
and other miscellaneous ODCs)
$900
$ per trip
1
trip per facility
$900
Sample Collection Supplies (bottles,
labels, preservation supplies, sampling
equipment)
$1,150
$ per set of supplies
1
set of supplies per
facility
$1,150
Sample Analysis
$3,030
$ per wastewater
sample
20
wastewater and
QA samples per
facility
$60,600
Shipping Sample Kits to Facilities
$80
$ per box
6
boxes of supplies
per facility
480
Total Cost per Facility
$63,148
Total Cost for All Facilities
S 1,262,%0
Table 14-5. Total Estimated Agency Burden and Cost Summary
Total Burden (Hours)
Total Labor Cost (S)
Total O&M Cost ($)
Total Cost (S)
16,364
$1,492,266
$1,267,643
$2,759,909
EPA estimates that the total burden to the Agency for the MPP Census Questionnaire,
Detailed Questionnaire, and wastewater sampling will be approximately 16,364 hours, or $2.76
million (including labor and O&M costs). EPA estimates that there will be no start-up or capital
costs associated with completing the Census or Detailed Questionnaires.
15.	REASON FOR ANY PROGRAM CHANGES OR ADJUSTMENTS IN BURDEN
ESTIMATES FROM THE PREVIOUS APPROVED ICR
Since this is a one-time information collection, there are no changes to the information
collection since the last OMB approval.
16.	COLLECTION OF INFORMATION WHOSE RESULTS WILL BE PUBLISHED
16(a) Technical Analyses Supported by the Questionnaire
EPA will use the data collected through this ICR to determine if a revision to the MPP
ELG is warranted. If EPA determines a revision is warranted, EPA anticipates also using data in
support of future rulemaking efforts. EPA will use the data collected through the Census and
Detailed Questionnaires and wastewater sampling to support the following analyses:
• Subcategorization - The Agency will survey facilities from the MPP industry to fully
capture the range of processes, wastewater types, and in-place treatment technologies for
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the entire sector. Data from the respondents will help the Agency determine whether the
existing subcategorization of the industry is appropriate or additional/revised
subcategorization is necessary for effluent limitations. Under such a regime, the Agency
will develop estimates of pollutant loadings, and estimates of compliance costs associated
with any proposed regulatory options for each subcategory. It is important that EPA fully
understand these differences to construct subcategories that are meaningful and effluent
limitations guidelines and standards that incorporate differences within the industry.
•	Evaluation of MPP Industry Processes and Wastewaters - EPA will use data collected
through the questionnaires to analyze meat and poultry products industry manufacturing
processes, pollution prevention practices, and wastewater treatment systems. Specifically,
EPA will analyze each manufacturing process, including the water use, production, and
wastewater discharge rates; pollution prevention techniques associated with each process;
and the characteristics of wastewater generated from each process. EPA will also analyze
facility-wide pollution prevention practices and wastewater treatment systems to
determine the wastewaters that require treatment, the treatment technologies that are
applicable to those wastewaters, the effectiveness of these systems, and the final
discharge characteristics from meat and poultry products facilities.
•	Technical Feasibility Analysis - EPA will evaluate technically feasible technology
options, including control technologies and pollution prevention and recycle practices, for
all subcategories. The Agency will assess the technical feasibility of each technology
option by determining its availability within the industry as well as the degree to which it
effectively eliminates the generation of pollutants and/or removes or destroys specific
pollutants.
•	Assessment of Technology Costs - EPA will use data collected through the
questionnaires to estimate the direct costs of the wastewater treatment and control
technologies and pollution prevention/management practices evaluated as potential
technology basis options for MPP effluent guidelines. These data include wastewater
flow rates, production rates, data related to treatment technologies already in place, and
pollutant concentrations. EPA will use data collected through the questionnaires to assess
the following direct costs: treatment equipment capital costs; annual operating expenses
(e.g., power costs, chemical costs); and waste disposal costs.
•	Estimation of Effluent Limitations - EPA may develop preliminary and final effluent
limitations guidelines and standards. The Agency will base these preliminary limitations
upon a detailed statistical analysis of treated effluent data from sites that implement the
potential control technologies and pollution prevention/management practices and that
have well-operated treatment systems. EPA may develop preliminary effluent limitations
for maximum daily and average monthly discharge levels. In addition, EPA may evaluate
the volume of wastewater, as well as the mass of pollutant generated per ton of product
(e.g., gallons of wastewater per pounds of meat slaughtered, pounds of ammonia
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generated per pound of raw material processed). This evaluation may be used to
determine if certain product types generate different types of wastewater, and if
subcategorization is appropriate. EPA may develop production-normalized flows and/or
pollutant loadings on which to base the limitations calculations for possible
subcategories.
•	Environmental Assessment - EPA will perform an environmental assessment to
determine the potential impacts of MPP discharges on aquatic life and human health, as
well as on the proper operation of POTWs and other treatment works. This assessment
will characterize the potential risk posed by the discharges and will assist the Agency in
projecting the environmental and economic benefits of the regulation.
•	Estimation of Impacts on Sites - EPA will evaluate the economic impact of possible
technology options on individual sites. The analysis will combine site-specific costs of
compliance with site financial data suitably weighted for questionnaire respondents.
These results will be statistically weighted to estimate the total costs and impacts of the
possible regulation. A goal of the analysis will be to identify sites that might close due to
pollution control requirements. A standard financial decision model would predict
closure if the net present value of future income is negative. The forecasted income for
the site is a major determinant of the net present value of continued operations. The
income projections are calculated using the revenue information collected in the
questionnaire, including the tax status of the site or its business entity. An estimated
percentage of costs that the market will allow to pass through to the consumer will be
incorporated into the projected revenue estimates. To complete the closure analysis, the
questionnaire also provides data relevant to calculating the salvage value of the site, such
as current assets, and the book value of land, buildings, and equipment, if deemed
appropriate. Direct losses in output, revenue, and employment are calculated directly
from the closure analysis results and questionnaire responses.
•	Estimation of Impacts on Companies - The costs for all MPP sites that a given company
owns will be estimated and aggregated. The combined cost to the company will be
analyzed in the context of the company's financial status to evaluate the overall impact.
The company-level impact analysis allows EPA to assess the effect of an effluent
guideline at a different level of business organization. Companies that own multiple sites
may not be able to afford the total cost of upgrading all facilities, even if it makes
economic sense for each individual site. Because such financing decisions are commonly
made at company-level rather than the site-level, EPA needs to assess economic impacts
at the company-level in addition to the site-level. In the case of single-establishment
firms, this component of the analysis is unnecessary because site-level and company-
level impacts will coincide. Whenever possible, EPA will collect data needed to assess
company-level impacts from secondary sources. This reduces the burden on
questionnaire recipients. Secondary sources provide data for multi-site, publicly reporting
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companies but are inadequate for single-site companies or multi-site, non-publicly
reporting companies.
• Estimation of Secondary Impacts - EPA will assess the secondary impacts of projected
site closures on other segments of the economy. For example, employment losses and
reductions in derived demand for input goods/services could potentially erode the
economic condition of households and firms in communities around closing MPP sites.
Estimation of these community impacts depends upon employment and labor income
data from the questionnaire effort, macroeconomic multipliers, general economic data,
and economic data from secondary sources. EPA also plans to consider the secondary
impacts felt by small businesses and foreign trade. EPA will utilize secondary sources
whenever possible during these analyses to minimize the burden placed upon
questionnaire recipients. Data from secondary sources will include detailed industry trade
statistics, labor cost and commodity price indices, labor and commodity input
requirement coefficients, regional income multipliers, regional employment, small
business statistics, and other relevant secondary source information.
16(b) Collection Schedule
The specific dates for distribution, response receipt, and data collection activities for the
questionnaire have not yet been established but will include the activities in Table 16-1.
Table 16-1. Collection Schedule
Activity
Estimate of Schedule
EPA notification to questionnaire recipients
15 days after OMB Approval
Facilities submit responses
2 months following receipt
EPA reviews responses and evaluates need for follow-up
3 months
EPA conducts follow-up to collect all missing or
incomplete information
2 months
EPA completes questionnaire database
3 weeks
EPA selects and notifies sites for wastewater data request
1 month after OMB Approval
Wastewater data collection occurs
5 months
Wastewater data reviewed and analytical database
populated
10 months
16(c) Publication of Results
All responses containing or consisting of CBI will be so identified in the questionnaire
database. Regulations governing confidentiality of business information appear at 40 CFR Part 2
Subpart B, and these are adhered to strictly by EPA and its contractors. Safeguards and
procedures for CBI are described in written plans maintained by EPA and its contractors.
Information not classified as CBI could potentially be shared with any interested parties.
47

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Such information is subject to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. Results of EPA's
analyses become publicly available most often in three ways: (1) within materials placed in the
public docket supporting the rulemaking, (2) within development and supporting documents
otherwise published in support of the rulemaking, and (3) within any proposed and final rules
published in the Federal Register if the data is to be used in any rulemaking effort. These
documents are available through EPA's website and on regulations.gov.
17.	DISPLAY OF THE EXPIRATION DATE FOR OMB APPROVAL OF THE
INFORMATION COLLECTION
The Agency plans to display the expiration date for OMB approval of the information
collection on all instruments.
18.	CERTIFICATION FOR REDUCTION ACT SUBMISSIONS
The Agency is able to comply with all provisions of the Certification for Paperwork
Reduction Act Submissions.
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PART B OF THE SUPPORTING STATEMENT
1. QUESTIONNAIRE RATIONALE
The MPP questionnaires will provide information essential to establishing a need for and
developing, as necessary, revised regulations under Section 304(m) of the Clean Water Act.
These data are essential for characterizing the nationwide and industry-specific status of MPP
facilities' locations, the types of operations, wastewater characteristics, wastewater management
technology, and for assessing the financial status of the industry potentially affected by proposed
regulations.
1(a) Population of Interest
EPA intends to use responses from these questionnaires to inform further and more
detailed analyses in the future. To obtain valuable information on the MPP industry's wastewater
management practice, EPA has targeted MPP facilities with slaughtering, by-product processing,
rendering, and further processing operations. The basic 5 domains of interest are: 1) Poultry
slaughterers, 2) Meat slaughterers, 3) Poultry further processors, 4) Meat further processors, and
5) Renderers.
For the Census Questionnaire, EPA estimates the target population to consist of all MPP
facilities in the US, approximately 7,000 facilities. This includes facilities of all sizes that
perform operations across all five domains of interest.
For the Detailed Questionnaire, EPA estimates the target population to consist of 1,633
MPP facilities in the US, distributed across the industry based on size and type of operation.
Large facilities are defined as those with operating production values based on data available
from USD A. Details on how this target population was defined is addresses in Part B Section
2(a) Stratification/Sample Selection.
1(b) Response rate/Non-response
Non-response is relatively low for questionnaires sent under the authority of Section 308
of the Clean Water Act. The typical non-response rate for effluent guidelines questionnaires is 10
percent. EPA will employ several measures to reduce non-responses. The cover letter and
instructions will explain the legal authority, responsibility to respond, reasons for the
questionnaires, and penalty for nonresponse. Delivery or non-delivery of cover letters will be
tracked using Federal Express or other traceable delivery option; thus, signatures of the
recipients will be required to confirm receipt. E-mail and telephone helplines will be operated
while the questionnaires are in the field so that technical, financial, and administrative questions
can be addressed. Recipients not responding to the Census Questionnaire or Detailed
Questionnaire by the deadline date may be telephoned or notified again by mail to encourage
response, to answer questions, and to determine the reason(s) for the nonresponse.
To minimize non-response, EPA solicited comments on a draft list of questions and
worked closely with industry experts to refine questions so that they are easy to understand with
clearly defined and familiar terms, are formatted in a logical sequence, and request data that are
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readily available within the industry. In this manner, EPA expects to minimize inaccurate or
incomplete responses to questions that can occur due to misunderstanding and misinterpretation
as well as the unintentional skipping of questions by respondents who respond via hardcopy (the
electronic version of the questionnaires will prevent incomplete submissions).
The design and implementation of the questionnaires will employ several quality
assurance techniques to reduce the frequency of such errors. These techniques include the
following:
•	Review of question language for ambiguity and clarity.
•	Use of an easily followed sequence of questions and stopping points.
•	Avoidance of questions requiring an open-ended response.
•	Provision of a limited number of carefully considered responses to each question.
•	Provision of clear definitions of units of measurement and of technical terms.
•	Provision of clear instructions with references to the definitions.
•	Provision of helplines via e-mail or a toll-free number to assist respondents.
•	Review of questions by engineers, scientists, and economists who will telephone
respondents to obtain missing information and resolve problems and inconsistencies.
•	Use of a web-based questionnaire platform to require completion of all required
questions.
•	Provision of the web-based questionnaire to require specific response formats (e.g.,
numeric values where a number is requested) and pre-screening for out-of-range
values.
•	Conduct computerized analyses to screen for out-of-range and inconsistent numerical
values.
•	Use of double-entry keypunch verification on any hardcopy submittals.
•	Conduct computerized analyses to detect missing numerical data and missing units on
any hardcopy submittals.
2. COLLECTION OF INFORMATION
2(a) Stratification/Sample Selection
As the Census Questionnaire is to be distributed as a census, intended for response by all
MPP facilities, no stratification or sampling scheme has been designed. The main data sources
that contributed to the industry population are described in Part A Section 2(a) What Information
Will Be Collected, Reported, or Recorded?
A stratification/sampling scheme has been designed for distribution of the Detailed
Questionnaire. EPA will survey approximately 1,633 facilities with the Detailed Questionnaire.
Stratification increases precision (reducing one source of uncertainty) for estimates of costs,
benefits, and other quantities. The strata will be based on the stage of operation (slaughterer,
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processor, renderer), the meat type (meat, poultry), and the production volume based on
production categories available from USDA FSIS. EPA has defined strata of 32 groups;
however, five of these 32 groups have zero facilities, and therefore, will not be included in the
Detailed Questionnaire population. This leaves a remaining 27 strata. Using the data available
from USDA FSIS, EPA identified the following production volume categories:
•	Volume 1 (very small facilities) - Less than 10,000 pounds per month processed and
less than 1,000 head slaughters per year,
•	Volume 2 (small facilities) - Between 10,000 and 100,000 pounds per month
processed and between 1,000 and 10,000 head slaughtered per year,
•	Volume 3 (medium facilities) - Between 100,000 and 1,000,000 pounds per month
processed and between 10,000 and 100,000 head slaughtered per year,
•	Volume 4 (large facilities) - Between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 pounds per month
processed and between 100,000 and 10,000,000 head slaughtered per year,
•	Volume 5 (very large facilities) - Greater than 10,000,000 pounds per month
processed and greater than 100,000,000 head slaughtered per year.
A size measure based on water discharged would be preferable, but this information does
not exist in any available data source. It is assumed that the largest water dischargers will have
larger production volumes, so using production as a stratification variable is a logical alternative.
Table 2-1 presents the stratification scheme developed for the MPP industry. Table 2-2 shows
the count of facilities in each stratum. These strata are based on the information in EPA's facility
list and include production volume, meat type, and type of processing. These counts include 316
Tenderers and 493 animal feeds facilities of unknown production. EPA also included separate
strata for facilities that directly discharge wastewater. EPA identified these facilities based on
those with individual NPDES permits.
The sample for the Detailed Questionnaire will be a probability sample from a sample
size of approximately 7,000 facilities. Because facilities can fall into multiple strata with
stratification as described above. The sampling unit will be the facility. Approximately 50
facilities will be selected with certainty to obtain information determined to be necessary for
evaluating facility operations and best technology options. Also, it is anticipated that many very
small facilities will not be eligible for the Detailed Questionnaire (e.g., out of business, not
discharging water), not all sections and questions will be applicable. In drawing a sample, EPA
used systematic sampling (with a random starting point in the frame) within each stratum, and
sampling the same proportion across strata. Table 2-3 presents the sample size by stratum for the
Detailed Questionnaire.
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Table 2-1. Detailed Questionnaire Stratification Levels
Simiii I.om'I 1
Slmlii l.eu'1 2
S(r;i(;i l.eu'l 3'1
Further Processing- Identified by SIC code 2047 and
2048 (dog and cat food, animal feed)


Renderers


Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 1

Poultry Slaughter
Production Volume 1

Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 1

Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 1
Direct discharge
Poultry Slaughter- Direct
Production Volume 1
Direct discharge
Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 1
Direct discharge
Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 2

Poultry Slaughter
Production Volume 2

Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 2

Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 2
Direct discharge
Poultry Slaughter- Direct
Production Volume 2
Direct discharge
Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 2
Direct discharge
Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 3

Poultry Slaughter
Production Volume 3

Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 3

Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 3
Direct discharge
Poultry Slaughter- Direct
Production Volume 3
Direct discharge
Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 3
Direct discharge
Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 4

Poultry Slaughter
Production Volume 4

Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 4

Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 4
Direct discharge
Poultry Slaughter- Direct
Production Volume 4
Direct discharge
Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 4
Direct discharge
Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 5

Poultry Slaughter
Production Volume 5

Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 5

Meat Slaughter
Production Volume 5
Direct discharge
Poultry Slaughter- Direct
Production Volume 5
Direct discharge
Further Processing (All Types)
Production Volume 5
Direct discharge
a - Strata level 3, those that have a direct discharge were identified based on which facilities have an individual NPDES permit.
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Table 2-2. Detailed Questionnaire Stratification
Strata
Production
Volume 1"
Production
Volume 2b
Production
Volume 3'
Production
Volume 4d
Production
Volume 5'
Unknown
Production
Volume
All
Production
Volumes
Meat Slaughter
268
276
134
100
3
0
781
Poultry Slaughter
4
19
32
78
119
0
252
Further Processing - All
1,057
1,790
1,108
713
345
2
5,015
Further Processing - Dog and cat
food, animal feed

493
493
Renderers

316
316
Meat Slaughter - Direct discharge
0
2
5
23
0
0
30
Poultry Slaughter - Direct
discharge
0
0
0
6
48
0
54
Further Processing All - Direct
discharge
1
6
13
25
75
0
120
Total
1,330
2,093
1.292
945
590
811
7,061
a - Less than 10,000 pounds per month processed and less than 1,000 head slaughters per year,
b - Between 10,000 and 100,000 pounds per month processed and between 1,000 and 10,000 head slaughtered per year,
c - Between 100,000 and 1,000,000 pounds per month processed and between 10,000 and 100,000 head slaughtered per year,
d - Between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 pounds per month processed and between 100,000 and 10,000,000 head slaughtered per year,
e - Greater than 10,000,000 pounds per month processed and greater than 100,000,000 head slaughtered per year.
Table 2-3. Detailed Questionnaire Sample Size
Strata
Production
Volume 1"
Production
Volume 2b
Production
Volume 3'
Production
Volume 4d
Production
Volume 5'
Unknown
Production
Volume
All
Production
Volumes
Meat Slaughter
106
107
84
73
3
0
373
Poultry Slaughter
4
19
32
65
80
0
200
Further Processing - All
132
136
132
126
112
0
638
Further Processing - Dog and cat
food, animal feed





120
120
Renderers





110
110
Meat Slaughter - Direct discharge
0
2
5
23
0
0
30
Poultry Slaughter - Direct
discharge
0
0
0
6
48
0
54
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November 2021
Table 2-3. Detailed Questionnaire Sample Size
Strata
Production
Volume 1"
Production
Volume 2b
Production
Volume 3'
Production
Volume 4d
Production
Volume 5'
Unknown
Production
Volume
All
Production
Volumes
Further Processing All - Direct
discharge
1
6
13
25
63
0
108
Totals
242
270
266
318
306
230
1,633'
a - Less than 10,000 pounds per month processed and less than 1,000 head slaughters per year,
b - Between 10,000 and 100,000 pounds per month processed and between 1,000 and 10,000 head slaughtered per year,
c - Between 100,000 and 1,000,000 pounds per month processed and between 10,000 and 100,000 head slaughtered per year,
d - Between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 pounds per month processed and between 100,000 and 10,000,000 head slaughtered per year,
e - Greater than 10,000,000 pounds per month processed and greater than 100,000,000 head slaughtered per year,
f - Approximately 50 facilities across all strata will be selected with certainty.
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November 2021
3.	ESTIMATION PROCEDURE
As the Census Questionnaire is designed as a census, no sample size estimation is
needed. However, there will be some nonresponse, thus we will not have perfect information and
will analyze this after we receive the results.
The sample size identified in Table 2-3 is based on anticipated response rates. EPA
estimated the response rate when calculating the sample size based on historic data and
information from the ICR conducted in support of the previous MPP ELG. As noted previously
in this supporting statement, the typical non-response rate for effluent guidelines questionnaires
is 10 percent. The ICR conducted as part of the 2004 MPP ELG was consistent with this
standard, with response rates from 91 to 93 percent (a non-response rate of 7 to 9 percent). EPA
expects the non-response rate to the Detailed Questionnaire to be similar, roughly 10 percent.
The rate of full responses, facilities that found all or almost all sections of the previous MPP ICR
applicable, was roughly 67 percent. To estimate the required sample size for this Detailed
Questionnaire, EPA assumed a similar rate of full responses. EPA estimates that 10 percent of
facilities will not respond, 23 percent of facilities will be non-applicable for all parts of the
questionnaire, and the remaining 67 percent will provide full responses.
4.	ACCURACY/PRECISION
The Census Questionnaire is being distributed as a census; therefore, no estimation of
sample size is needed. While 5,367 facilities will complete only the Census Questionnaire, the
same questions will be completed by those facilities selected to complete the Detailed
Questionnaire. As a result, EPA's resulting dataset will include responses to the Census
questions for all MPP facilities.
EPA is developing a national rule and is concerned with the precision of the overall facility-
level estimates which inform the industry profile, and the estimates made within strata which inform
the industry subcategories and economics at various production scales. Because a sample of facilities
will be given the Detailed Questionnaire rather than all facilities within the target population, it
follows that some degree of uncertainty will be associated with estimates made from the data
collected. The precision of these estimates depends on both the sample design and the sample size -
that is, the number of facilities selected. One measure of precision is the width of the confidence
interval for the estimate. Confidence intervals provide a range of values for a particular estimate that
would be likely if the study were repeated an infinite number of times. EPA estimated the number
of questionnaire responses needed for each stratum based on a 95 percent confidence level and
10 percent acceptable sampling error within each stratum (with a conservative assumption about
percentage responding to a binary yes/no question). A survey plan must balance the desired level
of detail, acceptable error, and sample size. More detail, such as sampling each production
volume category, meat type and process type requires more strata, which requires a larger sample
size. A low acceptable error also requires a larger sample size. For example, an error of +/- 5
percent would require 3,715 facilities receive the questionnaire. Aggregating strata and/or
increasing the acceptable error are ways to decrease the sample size but results in lower detail
and higher error. For example, an error of 20 percent would reduce the sample size to 590
facilities. The numbers and analysis discussed above are all based on reporting unweighted
statistics at the level of the strata.
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November 2021
EPA expects to include certainty select facilities as part of the Detailed Questionnaire
sample frame. These certainty selects will be primarily larger facilities.
5.	SPECIALIZED SAMPLING PROCEDURES
No special sampling procedures are planned for this questionnaire.
6.	DATA COLLECTION
This will be a single incident data collection; no periodic data collection is planned at this
stage. Under this ICR, EPA intends to conduct a Census Questionnaire and Detailed
Questionnaire of the MPP industry. The collection methods for each of these efforts have been
described previously in this supporting statement.
7.	RESPONSE RATE/NON-RESPONSE/DATA UTILITY
7(a) Response Rate
EPA expects that the response rate will be relatively high for this mandatory
questionnaire effort, which will be conducted under the authority of Section 308 of the Clean
Water Act. The sample size for the Census and Detailed Questionnaire is 7,000 facilities. The
typical non-response rate for effluent guidelines questionnaires is 10 percent. EPA has adjusted
the sample size for the Detailed Questionnaire to help ensure that the effective sample sizes (i.e.,
respondents) would be sufficient for precision requirements based on the non-response rate and
estimated full responses described in Part B, Section 3. In addition to increasing the initial
sample size, EPA would strive to improve the response rate by reminder letters and/or telephone
calls. Furthermore, after receiving the responses, EPA intends to adjust the questionnaire weights
based on the actual non-response rate and to review publicly available information in order to
determine if non-respondents appear to have different characteristics than respondents. EPA
would examine these characteristics both for the entire industry and for subgroups in the
analyses. For any differences, EPA intends to determine the major causes, and to incorporate
appropriate adjustments for bias.2
7(b) Non- response
EPA recognizes that some non-response is unavoidable, and in past questionnaire efforts,
EPA has waived the duty to respond in extreme and rare cases (e.g., natural disasters) which also
might occur for this survey effort. As noted throughout this supporting statement, EPA will
implement efforts to reduce non-response, including use of an easy-to-use format, operating
helplines, and following up with potential non-respondents.
2 Bias is the difference between the expected value of an estimate and the true value of a parameter or quantity being
estimated. If the data collection process generates estimates that are consistently (or on average) above or
consistently below the true value, the data collection process is biased
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November 2021
7(c) Burden Reduction
EPA designed the Census and Detailed Questionnaires to include burden-reducing
features. The Census Questionnaire contains initial screening questions that direct respondents
that do not qualify as MPP facilities to indicate their status and then submit their initial responses
without the need to respond to the remaining questions. The sections within the Detailed
Questionnaire also contain screening questions which direct respondents to skip questions or
whole sections that reference activities or operations that are not conducted at the MPP facility.
The Census and Detailed Questionnaires also group similar topic questions together and will
offer drop-down menu and checkbox selections to simplify responses, thus minimizing the
number of text responses requiring input.
The Census Questionnaire consists of 28 questions and should not require a burden of
more than 6 hours (on average) for each facilities' respondents to complete, verify, and submit.
The Detailed Questionnaire consists of 86 questions and should not require a burden of more
than 24 hours (on average) for each facility's respondents to complete, verify, and submit. EPA
will implement the questionnaires online which will facilitate access and completion.
For those respondents without internet access, the cover letter and instruction packet will
inform the respondent on how to request a paper questionnaire that can then be completed and
mailed to EPA's contractor for input into the electronic system. EPA therefore concludes that
completing the questionnaires does not represent an overly burdensome task.
7(d) Data Utility
The data collected through this ICR will serve to update current information, fill in
missing data, and profile the universe of MPP facilities with sufficient information to support
ELG revisions. Subsequently, if EPA pursues a rulemaking, data will be used to conduct further
analyses of the MPP industry and support proposed and/or final rulemaking analyses.
8. TESTS OF PROCEDURES
EPA does not intend to pre-test the questionnaires. For more than 30 years, EPA's
Engineering and Analysis Division (EAD) has conducted surveys of numerous industrial sectors
to collect information to support regulation development activities in the effluent guidelines
program. While EPA develops different questionnaires for each industry, there are common
elements for all industries. The questionnaires collect the same basic data such as information
about processes, treatment, and financial status. Thus, when EPA develops a questionnaire for a
particular industry, it generally tailors the questions for specific terms and processes used by that
industry. In past years, EPA has relied predominantly on active participation by trade groups and
their members in reviewing the questionnaires. In EPA's experience, such collaboration
generally tends to better reflect the industry at large than pre-tests. As discussed in Part A of this
supporting statement, EPA has already engaged several trade associations and industry experts
regarding this data collection. EPA expects to continue to discuss and refine this questionnaire
with industry experts prior to implementation. For this reason, EPA considers additional review
through the pre-test process to be unnecessary for this industry.
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9. CONTACT INFORMATION
EPA: Steve Whitlock Whitlock.steve@epa.gov
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