TITLE
2. AGRICULTURE
BOARD OF AGRICULTURE AND CONSUMER
SERVICES
Agency Decision
Title of Regulation:
2VAC5-319. Best Management Practices for the Operation of Apiaries in Order to
Limit Operator Liability.
Statutory Authority: § 3.2-4411.1 of the Code of
Virginia.
Name of Petitioner: C.B. Ecker
Nature of Petitioner's Request: Petitioner requests
amendments to 2VAC5-319, Best Management Practices for the Operation of
Apiaries in Order to Limit Operator Liability, to (i) provide a mechanism to
offer public comment regarding the regulation via a regional apiary inspector;
(ii) establish provisions for short-term waivers, long-term waivers, and
permanent exemptions from the best management practices included in the
regulation; and (iii) authorize the Virginia State Beekeepers Association's
website as an official communication outlet for the Virginia Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Services (VDACS) and direct VDACS to establish or
reinitiate official communication with certain entities to communicate honey
beekeeping policy to best inform apiarists without broadband service.
Agency Decision: Request denied.
Statement of Reason for Decision: The Board of
Agriculture and Consumer Services (board) voted to take no action on the
petitioner's request for rulemaking for the following reasons: The petitioner
requests amendments to 2VAC5-319, Best Management Practices for the Operation
of Apiaries in Order to Limit Operator Liability, to (i) provide a mechanism to
offer public comment regarding the regulation via a regional apiary inspector;
(ii) establish provisions for short-term waivers, long-term waivers, and
permanent exemptions from the best management practices included in the
regulation; and (iii) authorize the Virginia State Beekeepers Association's
website as an official communication outlet for the Virginia Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Services (VDACS) and direct VDACS to establish or
reinitiate official communication with certain entities to communicate honey
beekeeping policy to best inform apiarists without broadband service. Best Management
Practices for the Operation of Apiaries in Order to Limit Operator Liability,
2VAC5-319, was established pursuant to § 3.2-4411.1 of Virginia's
Beekeeping Law. This section provides that an individual operating an apiary in
a responsible manner, in compliance with local zoning restrictions, and in
conformance with the agency's best management practices regulation shall not be
liable for any personal injury or property damage that occurs in connection
with his keeping of bees. Section 3.2-4411.1 further provides that the initial
regulations shall be exempt from the requirements of Article 2 of the Virginia
Administrative Process Act provided such regulations are adopted no later than
November 1, 2016; however, the board shall publish proposed regulations in the
Virginia Register of Regulations and allow at least 30 days for public comment.
Virginia's Beekeeping Law does not provide authority to the board to establish
methods for a person to request amendments to the regulation. In addition,
§ 2.2-4007 of the Virginia Administrative Process Act establishes a formal
process by which a person can request changes to a regulation. Virginia's
Beekeeping Law does not provide authority to the board to amend the regulation
to allow for waivers or exemptions to provisions established in Best Management
Practices for the Operation of Apiaries in Order to Limit Operator Liability,
2VAC5-319. The best management practices in the regulation are those that
reduce risks associated with keeping honey bees. Amending the regulation to
allow for waivers or exemptions to a voluntary best management practice could
provide liability protection for those operations that should not be afforded
the limited liability. Section 3.2-109 of the Code of Virginia establishes the
board. However, neither § 3.2-4411.1 nor 3.2-109 of the Code of Virginia
gives the board authority to establish methods for the communication of
information related to beekeeping from VDACS to beekeepers.
Agency Contact: Debra Martin, Program Manager, Office of
Plant Industry Services, Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, P.O.
Box 1163, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804) 786-3515, or email
debra.martin@vdacs.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-20; Filed December 8, 2017, 2:38 p.m.
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TITLE
9. ENVIRONMENT
STATE WATER CONTROL BOARD
Agency Decision
Title of Regulation:
9VAC25-260. Water Quality Standards.
Statutory Authority: § 62.1-44.15 of the Code of
Virginia.
Name of Petitioner: Virginia Coal and Energy Alliance.
Nature of Petitioner's Request: The Virginia Coal and
Energy Alliance (VCEA) has petitioned the State Water Control Board to take
action on EPA's Freshwater Aquatic Life Ambient Water Quality criteria for
selenium (EPA selenium criteria). The EPA selenium criteria were finalized and
published in the Federal Register on July 13, 2016, and include four elements -
two that are fish tissue-based and two that are water column-based. The updated
EPA selenium criteria reflect the latest scientific knowledge at the national level
and provide a more up-to-date evaluation of impacts from selenium than
Virginia's current surface water quality criteria at 9VAC25-260-140. Virginia's
acute and chronic selenium criteria are over 25 years old, do not reflect the
latest scientific information, and are unnecessarily stringent to protect
aquatic life. As long as the outdated and obsolete criteria remain on the
books, we are concerned that our members will be placed in peril of
unreasonable compliance obligations, misguided enforcement actions and baseless
lawsuits. At DEQ's July 20, 2016, Regulatory Advisory Panel meeting to address
"carry-over" issues from the last Triennial Review of Water Quality
Standards, VCEA representatives alerted DEQ to the availability of the new EPA
selenium criteria and asked that selenium be addressed along with the other
carry-over issues. VCEA now formally requests, pursuant to § 2.2-4007 of
the Code of Virginia, that the existing surface water quality criteria for
selenium be amended to incorporate the EPA selenium criteria, subject to
appropriate tailoring for Virginia's waters and fish species. The board is
empowered to adopt water quality standards in the Commonwealth. Section
62.1-44.15 of the Code of Virginia is required to review applicable water quality
standards and as appropriate, modify and adopt federal standards 33 USC
§ 1313(c)(1) and 40 CFR 131.20(a). EPA has recently published technical
support materials to assist states in adopting the new selenium criteria,
including guidance on monitoring fish tissue, water quality assessment and
listings under § 303(d) of the Clean Water Act, and implementation of the
criteria in NPDES permits. These technical support materials should provide a
sufficient basis to guide adoption of the EPA selenium criteria in Virginia,
subject to modifications that reflect the unique characteristics of Virginia's
waterbodies and fish species. We note that EPA's criteria include a hierarchy
with a stated preference for the use of fish tissue data, where available, in
evaluating compliance with the criteria. The criteria provide that where fish
tissue data are available, the fish tissue criteria supersede the water column
criteria. This same hierarchy should be adopted and the fish tissue criteria
should be allowed to prevail over any water column criteria where fish tissue
data are available. Importantly, the board will need to consider state- or
regionally-specific tailoring of the fish tissue values set by EPA. EPA's data
set for fish tissue covers 10 fish genera for chronic toxicity for fish
reproductive effects and seven fish genera for nonproductive effects. Some of
these species do not occur in some or all of Virginia's waters. As a result, we
believe that the fish tissue criteria will need to be adjusted so that they are
reflective of, and protective of, the fish species that are actually present.
In particular, we ask that regional criteria specific to the coalfields region
of the Commonwealth, given its unique geography, geology and hydrology, be
considered. Further, a translation procedure, consistent with Appendix K in the
EPA selenium criteria document, needs to be adopted to provide a process for
use by dischargers seeking site-specific criteria. Whether to deviate from
EPA's guidance in the technical support document "FAQs: Implementing the
2016 Selenium Criterion in CWA § 303(d) and 305(b) Assessment, Listing,
and TMDL Programs," as it relates to fishless waters will also need to be
evaluated. EPA's guidance counsels that where no fish tissue data are available
because waters have insufficient in-stream habitat and/or flow to support a
population of any fish species on a continuous basis, or waters that once
supported populations of one or more fish species but no longer support fish,
the water column values are the applicable criteria and the water column data
are sufficient to determine whether the criteria have been met. We urge
rejection of EPA's approach to fishless waters. Where a waterbody does not have
an actual, existing aquatic life use, the use simply does not apply. In that
case, the criteria adopted to protect such a use also do not apply. We submit
that this is consistent with the longstanding approach to uses and criteria in
Virginia. By way of simple example, the "Public Water Supply" use only
applies where a public water supply is shown to be present. In the absence of a
documented public water supply, neither the use nor the corresponding
"PWS" criteria apply. Finally, given the time it is likely to take to
implement any change in the selenium criteria, and the need for permittees to
appropriately adjust their operations to comply with any new limits,
authorizing longer term compliance schedules for permittees will need to be
considered, since compliance with criteria-based limits may in some cases take more
than five years.
Agency Decision: Request denied.
Statement of Reason for Decision: The State Water
Control Board, at its meeting on December 6, 2017, through December 7, 2017,
based on a report from the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ), voted not
to initiate a rulemaking to amend the selenium criteria found in the Water
Quality Standards and to await issuance of the final technical support guidance
documents from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). DEQ advised the
board that EPA's technical support documents and implementation guidance are as
important as the criteria themselves, and it could be premature to initiate a
rulemaking without the documents and guidance. The "How" to protect
aquatic life from a toxicant is as vital as the "What" to allow as
acceptable levels of the contaminant. DEQ reported that EPA developed four
technical support documents that cover Water Quality Standards adoption, NPDES
permitting, waterbody assessment and § 303(d) (Impaired Waters)
listing, and fish tissue monitoring to assist in implementation and held a
public comment period from October 13, 2016, to February 2, 2017. However, they
have not been finalized by EPA for use by the states, and it is unknown when
that final action will occur. In addition, staff advised the board that
Virginia's stakeholders want and should receive as much certainty as possible
on implementation methods along with revised standards; recent examples are
proposals for amended bacteria criteria (data period to generate a geometric-mean)
and ammonia criteria (justification for extended compliance schedules, beyond
permit term).
Agency Contact: David Whitehurst, Department of
Environmental Quality, 629 East Main Street, P.O. Box 1105, Richmond, VA 23218,
telephone (804) 698-4121, or email david.whitehurst@deq.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R17-18; Filed December 14, 2017, 10:03 a.m.
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TITLE
16. LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT
SAFETY AND HEALTH CODES BOARD
Initial Agency Notice
Title of Regulation: 16VAC25-60.
Administrative Regulation for the Virginia Occupational Safety and Health
Program.
Statutory Authority: §§ 40.1-6 and 40.1-22 of the
Code of Virginia.
Name of Petitioner: Robert R. Payne, University of
Alabama at Birmingham.
Nature of Petitioner's Request: 16VAC25-60-120 currently
provides as follows: "The employer shall comply with the manufacturer's
specifications and limitations applicable to the operation, training, use,
installation, inspection, testing, repair and maintenance of all machinery, vehicles,
tools, materials and equipment, unless specifically superseded by a more
stringent corresponding requirement in 29 CFR Part 1910. The use of any
machinery, vehicle, tool, material or equipment that is not in compliance with
any applicable requirement of the manufacturer is prohibited, and shall either
be identified by the employer as unsafe by tagging or locking the controls to
render them inoperable or be physically removed from its place of use or
operation." The petition requests the following language be added to the
end of the current regulation: "Any employer who is using machinery,
vehicles, tools, materials or equipment as part of a Process Safety Management
(PSM) covered process, as defined in 29 CFR 1910.119, may adjust the
operation, training, use, installation, inspection, testing, repair or
maintenance after completion of the following:
• Documenting the adjustment from the Manufacturer's
Specifications and Limitations (MS&L) in the Process Safety Information
(PSI),
• Completing the Management of Change (MOC) requirement
described in 29 CFR 1910.119(l) and
• Certification from a company executive that they have
examined this adjustment and that to the best of their knowledge the
information is true, accurate and complete."
Agency Plan for Disposition of Request: In accordance
with § 2.2-4007 B of the Code of Virginia the petition has been filed with
the Registrar of Regulations and will be published on January 8, 2018. Comment
on the petition may be sent by email or regular mail or posted on the Virginia
Regulatory Town Hall at www.townhall.virginia.gov. Comment will be requested
until January 28, 2018. Following receipt of all comments on the petition to
amend the regulation, the Safety and Health Codes Board will decide whether to
make any changes to the regulatory language. This matter will be on the board's
agenda for its next regularly scheduled meeting following the end of the
comment period. The board does not currently have a meeting scheduled. The
board will issue a written decision on the petition within 90 days of the close
of the comment period, or within 14 days of its next meeting should the board
not meet within the initial 90-day period.
Public Comment Deadline: January 28, 2018.
Agency Contact: Jay Withrow, Director, Division of Legal
Support, VPP, ORA, OPP, Department of Labor and Industry, Main Street Centre,
600 East Main Street, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 786-9873, or email
jay.withrow@doli.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R18-14; Filed December 18, 2017, 9:36 a.m.