*»EPA

Office of Land
and

Emergency Management

May 17, 2018
www.epa.gov/rmp

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

RMP Reconsideration Proposed Rule Fact Sheet

Overview

EPA is proposing changes to a final rule, the Risk Management Program (RMP) Amendments (82 FR
4594, January 13, 2017) to better address potential security risks and reasonable consideration of
costs. The proposed changes are intended to promote better emergency planning and public
information about accidents and maintain the trend of fewer significant accidents involving
chemicals regulated under the RMP rule. The proposal reflects issues raised in three petitions for
reconsideration of the RMP Amendments as well as other revisions the EPA identified in its review
of that rule. The proposed rule was signed on May 17, 2018. A public hearing is scheduled for June
14, 2018, and the proposed rule has a 60-day comment period.

Why is EPA reconsidering the RMP Amendments final rule?

EPA is reconsidering the final RMP Amendments Rule based on objections highlighted in three
petitions submitted to the Agency under Clean Air Act section 307(d)(7)(B) and based on its own
review of that rule. The proposal addresses:

•	potential security risks associated with new information disclosure requirements introduced
in the final rule,

•	BATF's finding that a key incident affecting US chemical safety policy, a fire and explosion in
West, Texas, was caused by a criminal act (arson) rather than being the result of an accident

•	concerns with EPA's economic analysis, and

•	concerns that EPA did not coordinate its rulemaking with the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA).

EPA is proposing changes to the Amendments final rule to:

•	Maintain consistency of RMP accident prevention requirements with the OSHA Process
Safety Management (PSM) standard.

•	Address security concerns.

•	Reduce unnecessary regulations and regulatory costs.

•	Revise compliance dates to provide necessary time for program changes.

What are the proposed changes included in the RMP Reconsideration Rule?

The RMP Reconsideration Rule proposes the following changes to the RMP Amendments final rule:

•	Rescinding all accident prevention program provisions of the RMP Amendments rule (i.e.,
third party audits, safer technology and alternatives analyses, incident investigation root
cause analysis, and most other minor changes to the prevention program) so that EPA can
better coordinate revisions to the RMP rule with OSHA and its PSM standard and reduce

Office of Emergency Management


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RMP Reconsideration Proposed Rule

May 17, 2018

regulatory costs. (An alternative proposal would retain certain minor changes to the
prevention program provisions.)

•	Rescinding most of the public information availability provisions of the RMP Amendments
rule that would have provided redundant, less secure means of access to information that is
available through better controlled means, while retaining the provision requiring a public
meeting after an accident but with minor language modifications.

•	Modifying the emergency coordination and exercise provisions of the Amendments rule to
address security concerns raised by petitioners and give more flexibility to regulated facilities
in complying with these provisions.

•	Establishing compliance dates that are:

o one year after the effective date of a final rule for the emergency coordination
provisions,

o two years after the effective date for the public meeting provision,
o four years after the effective date for the emergency exercise provisions, and
o five years after the effective date for incorporating new Subpart G data elements into
a facility's risk management plan.

What are the estimated cost savings for the proposed RMP Reconsideration Rule?

The proposed rule is deregulatory, and would result in total annual cost savings (averted costs) of
approximately $88 million a year.

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