Willingness to Pay Survey to Evaluate Recreational Benefits of Nutrient Reductions in Coastal New England Waters (Revision)

ICR 201807-2080-001

OMB: 2080-0084

Federal Form Document

Forms and Documents
Document
Name
Status
Supplementary Document
2018-07-13
Supplementary Document
2018-07-13
Supplementary Document
2018-07-13
Supplementary Document
2018-07-13
Supplementary Document
2018-07-13
Supplementary Document
2018-07-13
Supplementary Document
2018-07-13
Supplementary Document
2018-07-24
Supporting Statement A
2018-07-24
IC Document Collections
IC ID
Document
Title
Status
225542 Modified
ICR Details
2080-0084 201807-2080-001
Historical Active 201702-2080-001
EPA/ORD 2558.02
Willingness to Pay Survey to Evaluate Recreational Benefits of Nutrient Reductions in Coastal New England Waters (Revision)
Revision of a currently approved collection   No
Regular
Approved with change 07/25/2018
Retrieve Notice of Action (NOA) 07/13/2018
This ICR is approved in accordance with 5 CFR 1320. OMB concurs with EPA that this collection is to inform the agency about the user valuation of water quality. This study is not intended to inform or evaluate any particular policy. OMB notes that the study must fulfill other quality criteria including generalizability if the study results are to be transferred outside the study sample. In addition, OMB reminds the EPA to discontinue this collection after it has completed the study.
  Inventory as of this Action Requested Previously Approved
07/31/2021 36 Months From Approved 04/30/2021
2,253 0 2,455
188 0 205
0 0 0

New England’s coastal social-ecological systems are subject to chronic environmental problems, including water quality degradation that results in important social and ecological impacts. Researchers at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency are piloting an effort to better understand how reduced water quality due to nutrient enrichment affects the economic prosperity, social capacity, and ecological integrity of coastal New England communities. EPA is conducting a survey that will allow us to estimate changes in recreation demand and values due to changes in nutrients in northeastern U.S. coastal waters. The initial geographic focus for these efforts will be Cape Cod, Massachusetts (“the Cape”; Barnstable County), and New England residents within 100 miles of the Cape. One of the key water quality concerns on Cape Cod, and throughout New England, is nonpoint sources of nitrogen, which lead to ecological impairments in estuaries with resultant socio-economic impacts. The towns on the Cape are currently in the process of creating plans to address their total maximum daily load (TMDL) thresholds for nitrogen-impaired coastal embayments. There are over 40 coastal embayments and subembayments on the Cape. To date, the EPA has approved 12 TMDLs for embayments on Cape Cod with others pending review. Because Cape Cod’s wastewater is primarily handled by onsite septic systems (85% of total Cape wastewater flows), the main sources are spread across the Cape and are affected by individual household-level decisions as well as community-level decisions. Coordinated through the Cape Cod Commission and based on the Cape’s Clean Water Act Section 208 Plan, communities across the Cape have been tasked with developing a watershed-based approach for addressing water quality to improve valued socio-economic and ecological conditions. The decisions needed to meet water quality standards are highly complex and involve significant cross-disciplinary challenges in identifying, implementing, and monitoring social and ecological management ecosystem services on the Cape (including beachgoing, swimming, fishing, shellfishing, and boating). As part of these efforts, EPA will conduct a revealed preference survey to collect data on people’s saltwater recreational activities; how recreational values are related to water quality; how perceptions of water quality relate to objective measures; the connections between perceptions of water quality, recreational choices and values, and sense of place; and demographic information. The survey will be administered using a mixed-mode approach that includes a mailed invitation to a web survey with an optional paper survey for people who are unable or unwilling to answer the web survey. EPA will use the survey responses to estimate willingness to pay for changes related to reductions in nutrient and pathogen loadings to coastal New England waters.

None
None

Not associated with rulemaking

  81 FR 78809 11/09/2016
82 FR 52297 11/13/2017
No

1
IC Title Form No. Form Name
ORD/AED Recreational Valuation Survey

  Total Approved Previously Approved Change Due to New Statute Change Due to Agency Discretion Change Due to Adjustment in Estimate Change Due to Potential Violation of the PRA
Annual Number of Responses 2,253 2,455 0 -202 0 0
Annual Time Burden (Hours) 188 205 0 -17 0 0
Annual Cost Burden (Dollars) 0 0 0 0 0 0
No
Yes
Miscellaneous Actions
Per OMB's Terms of Clearance on the previous ICR, now that the pre-test is complete, EPA is submitting the results of the pre-test, demonstrating that the study objectives can be achieved, in order to begin the remainder of the survey.

$366,173
No
    No
    No
No
No
No
Uncollected
Marisa Mazzotta 401 782-3026 mazzotta.marisa@epa.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.
07/13/2018


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