Wednesday, November 13, 2024

What did Environmental Protection Agency publish on July 22?

The US Environmental Protection Agency published a six page rule on July 22, according to the U.S. Government Publishing Office.

The rule is focused on Underground Injection Control Program Revision; Aquifer Exemption Determination for Portions of the Lance Formation Aquifer in Wyoming.

More than half of the Agency's employees are engineers, scientists and protection specialists. The Climate Reality Project, a global climate activist organization, accused Agency leadership in the last five years of undermining its main mission.

Notices are required documents detailing rules and regulations being proposed by each federal department. This allows the public to see what issues legislators and federal departments are focusing on.

Any person or organization can comment on the proposed rules. Departments and agencies must then address “significant issues raised in comments and discuss any changes made,” the Federal Register says.

Notices published by the Environmental Protection Agency on July 22

Title
Revisions to the California State Implementation Plan, San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District
Valley Chemical Superfund Site/Greenville, MS; Notice of Proposed Settlement
Agency Information Collection Activities; OMB Responses
Announcement of Public Comment Period for Draft Contaminated Sediments Science Plan
Organophosphate Pesticides; Availability of the Revised Organophosphate Cumulative Risk Assessment; Extension of Comment Period
Agency Information Collection Activities: Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request, NESHAP: Natural Gas Transmission and Storage Facilities
Agency Information Collection Activities: Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request; 2003 Report to Congress on Impacts and Control of Combined Sewer Overflows and Sanitary Sewer Overflows
Underground Injection Control Program Revision; Aquifer Exemption Determination for Portions of the Lance Formation Aquifer in Wyoming
Revisions to the California State Implementation Plan, San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District
Protection of Stratospheric Ozone; Listing of Substitutes in the Foam Sector
National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Brick and Structural Clay Products Manufacturing; and National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants for Clay Ceramics Manufacturing