Monday, November 11, 2024

Rule published on March 4 by Environmental Protection Agency

The US Environmental Protection Agency published a nine page rule on March 4, according to the U.S. Government Publishing Office.

The rule is focused on National Priorities List, Final Rule No. 49.

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 March 4

Title
Approval and Disapproval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Montana; Revisions to the Administrative Rules of Montana-Air Quality, Subchapter 7 and Other Subchapters
National Priorities List, Final Rule No. 49
Determination of Nonattainment and Reclassification of the Atlanta, Georgia, 8-Hour Ozone Nonattainment Area; Correction
National Priorities List, Final Rule-Gowanus Canal
Technical Amendment to the Outer Continental Shelf Air Regulations Consistency Update; Correction
National Priorities List, Proposed Rule No. 52
Public Water System Supervision Program Revision for the State of Oklahoma
Science Advisory Board Staff Office; Notification of a Public Meeting of the Science Advisory Board; Committee on Science Integration for Decision Making
Maneb; Notice of Receipt of a Request to Voluntarily Cancel a Certain Pesticide Registration
Office of Research and Development; Ambient Air Monitoring Reference and Equivalent Methods: Designation of One New Equivalent Method
Adequacy Determination for the Denver Metro Area and North Front Range 8-Hour Ozone Attainment Plan's Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets for Transportation Conformity Purposes; State of Colorado
Farm, Ranch, and Rural Communities Advisory Committee (FRRCC)