FERC-505, (NOPR in RM18-14) Small Hydropower Projects and Conduit Facilities including License/Relicense, Exemption, and Qualifying Conduit Facility Determination
ICR 201805-1902-006
OMB: 1902-0115
Federal Form Document
⚠️ Notice: This information collection may be outdated. More recent filings for OMB 1902-0115 can be found here:
FERC-505, (NOPR in RM18-14)
Small Hydropower Projects and Conduit Facilities including
License/Relicense, Exemption, and Qualifying Conduit Facility
Determination
In accordance
with 5 CFR 1320, OMB is filing comment and withholding approval at
this time. The agency shall examine public comment in response to
the proposed rulemaking and will include in the supporting
statement of the next ICR--to be submitted to OMB at the final rule
stage--a description of how the agency has responded to any public
comments on the ICR, including comments on maximizing the practical
utility of the collection and minimizing the burden.
Inventory as of this Action
Requested
Previously Approved
04/30/2021
36 Months From Approved
04/30/2021
33
0
33
24,321
0
24,321
0
0
0
NOPR in RM18-14. FERC proposes to
eliminate Form 80 and to revise sections 8.1 and 8.2 of its
regulations to modernize public notice practices, clarify
recreational signage requirements, and provide flexibility to
assist licensees’ compliance efforts. FERC-505, in general. FERC
regulates nonfederal hydropower projects on navigable waters &
federal lands pursuant to the Federal Power Act (FPA). RM14-22,
Final Rule. On 8/9/13, Congress enacted the Hydropower Regulatory
Efficiency Act of 2013 (Hydropower Efficiency Act) to encourage the
hydropower industry to utilize non-power dams for electric
generation, noting that roughly 97 percent of the 80,000 dams in
the U.S. do not generate electricity. Congress recognized that it
could encourage hydropower development by reducing costs and
regulatory burden during the project study and licensing stages. To
that end, Congress amended statutory provisions pertaining to
preliminary permits and projects that are exempt from licensing. In
response, FERC issued the Final Rule in Docket No. RM14-22-000,
amending 18CFR Parts 4 & 380 to conform to the Hydropower
Efficiency Act. Although FERC has been complying with the
Hydropower Efficiency Act since its enactment,&made its
compliance procedures available on its website, the Final Rule now
formalizes FERC's compliance procedures in its revised regulations
on preliminary permits and exemptions, & in a new subpart on
qualifying conduit hydro. facilities. FERC-505 Renewal: FERC-505 is
an application for a small hydropower project license or relicense,
exemption, or determination of a qualifying conduit hydropower
facility. FERC-505 has an increase in the number of responses and
the decrease in total hours is related to Congress’ enactment of
the Hydropower Regulatory Efficiency Act in August 2013, which in
part, authorized the Commission to issue qualifying conduit
exemptions. The 28 previous responses that were requested and
approved did not include qualifying conduit exemption applications,
which at the time, did not exist. Qualifying conduit exemption
applications are much less burdensome to prepare than the other
applications reported. Of the 33 responses currently requested, 22
are attributed to the much less burdensome qualifying exemption
applications. Therefore, although the number of responses slightly
increased, the total burden decreased.
US Code:
16
USC 791 Name of Law: Federal Power Act
US Code: 16 USC
46 Name of Law: Public Utilities Regulatory Policies Act of
1978 (PURPA)
In RM18-14, the Commission is
proposing to eliminate Form 80. In addition, the Commission
proposes to further revise its regulations related to recreational
use and development at licensed projects in order to modernize
public notice practices, clarify recreational signage requirements,
and provide flexibility to assist licensees’ compliance efforts.
18CFR Section 8.1 directs licensees to publicize information about
the availability of projects lands and waters for recreational
purposes, and any recreation-related license conditions. Section
8.1 requires licensees, at a minimum, to publish notice in a local
newspaper once each week for four weeks of any recreation-related
license conditions that the Commission may designate in an order
issuing or amending a license. In addition to publishing notice in
the local newspaper, the Commission proposes to require licensees
with project websites to also post notice of recreation-related
license conditions on its website. This requirement would only
apply to a licensee that already has an existing project website,
or decides to develop a project website in the future. This
proposed change will ensure that the public is informed of
recreational opportunities and recreation-related license
conditions regardless of whether members of the public rely on a
newspaper or the internet as their main source of news and
information. The proposed amendments to 18CFR 8.2 clarify project
signage requirements and reflect modern public dissemination
methods, such as website publication. The Commission proposes to
revise section 8.2(a) to streamline the information licensees must
include on recreation signage at each public access point. The
proposed revisions would require signs to, at a minimum, identify:
the project name and number, and a statement that the project is
licensed by the Commission; the licensee name and contact
information for obtaining additional project recreation
information; and permissible times and activities. This proposed
change reduces the information that must be included on recreation
signage, providing licensees greater flexibility to design signs
that effectively communicate the appropriate information needed by
public to use and enjoy the recreational opportunities afforded by
a particular project. In addition, the Commission proposes to
revise section 8.2(b) to require licensees with project websites to
include on their websites copies of any approved recreation plan,
recreation-related reports approved by the Commission, and the
entire license instrument. As with the proposed revision to section
8.1, this requirement would only apply to a licensee that already
has an existing project website, or decides to develop a project
website in the future. This proposed changed would allow the public
to obtain information about a project’s recreation requirements by
accessing the licensee’s website, if applicable, or by visiting the
licensee’s local office in the project vicinity.
$1,405,901
No
No
No
No
No
No
Uncollected
Jon Cofrancesco 202 502-8951
jon.cofrancesco@ferc.gov
No
On behalf of this Federal agency, I certify that
the collection of information encompassed by this request complies
with 5 CFR 1320.9 and the related provisions of 5 CFR
1320.8(b)(3).
The following is a summary of the topics, regarding
the proposed collection of information, that the certification
covers:
(i) Why the information is being collected;
(ii) Use of information;
(iii) Burden estimate;
(iv) Nature of response (voluntary, required for a
benefit, or mandatory);
(v) Nature and extent of confidentiality; and
(vi) Need to display currently valid OMB control
number;
If you are unable to certify compliance with any of
these provisions, identify the item by leaving the box unchecked
and explain the reason in the Supporting Statement.