FY20I5
    EPA Budget in  Brief
United States Environmental Protection Agency
           www.epa.gov

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            United States Environmental Protection Agency
             Office of the Chief Financial Officer (27 I OA)
                Publication Number:  EPA-1 90-S-14-00 I
                              March 2014
                             www.epa.gov

                 Printed with vegetable-oil-based inks and is
100-percent postconsumer recycled material, chlorine-free-processed and recyclable.

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                           Budget in Brief

                           Table of Contents

                                                                   PAGE

Overview 	1

Summary Resource Charts

   EPA's FY 2015 Budget by Goal	9
   EPA's FY2015 by Appropriation	10
   EPA's Resource History	11
   EPA's Resources by Major Category	12

Goals

   Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality	13
   Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters	23
   Goal 3: Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development ...35
   Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution	47
   Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws
          and Assuring Compliance	55

Appendices

   EPA's Resources by Appropriation	67
   Highlighted Programs
    E-Enterprise	69
    Environmental Education	70
    Categorical Grants	71
    STAG (State and Tribal  Assistance Grants)	73
    Estimated SRF Obligations by State (FY 2013 - FY 2015)	79
    Infrastructure Financing	83
    Trust Funds (Superfund, Leaking Underground  Storage Tanks)	87

   List of Acronyms	91

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                                           Overview
                                          Mission
               The mission of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is to protect
               human health and the environment.
Budget in Brief Overview

The  mission  of  the Environmental Protection Agency  (EPA) is  to  protect human  health and the
environment. We achieve this by keeping pollution out of the air we breathe, the water we drink and swim
in, and  harmful chemicals out  of the food we eat and the lands where we build our homes and our
communities.  The Agency's FY 2015 budget supports implementation of the EPA's  priorities through
focused  efforts  to  develop and   implement  creative, flexible, cost-effective,  common  sense  and
sustainable actions to fight climate  change, to  protect public  health, and to safeguard  the environment.
Today's environmental problems require critical thinking about the complex interactions of environmental
pollutants and new tools that promote innovation, incentives and partnerships. To this end, the EPA's FY
2015 budget focuses on reinforcing that our work effects people's lives and wellbeing at the  community
level, advancing environmental justice and  ensuring fair and effective enforcement of environmental laws,
improving how the EPA's work is  communicated  to the public, and achieving transparency in agency
decision making.

The FY 2015  budget reflects the EPA's commitment to increase our engagement with local communities
and address what really matters to  people, to make a visible difference with new approaches and tools to
accelerate environmental progress. The EPA works  to enhance the  livability and economic vitality of
neighborhoods; strengthen  our relationship with America's  agricultural  community; support green
infrastructure; reduce air pollution along  roadways, railways and at ports; and take into  consideration the
impacts of our decisions on disproportionately disadvantaged communities through increased analysis,
better science, and  enhanced community engagement.  Central to our  strategy is  modernizing  and
streamlining how we work and  effectively  leveraging technology. We will be able  to provide  all parts of
society—communities, individuals, businesses,  and federal, state, local, and tribal governments—access
to accurate  information so  that  they  may  participate  effectively  in managing human  health  and
environmental  risks. The EPA's work  is  guided  by the best  possible  scientific information  and  a
commitment to transparency and accountability.

The EPA strives to be a good steward of taxpayer resources  and to deliver environmental protection in
the most efficient way. To learn   more about how the  agency accomplishes  its mission, including
information   on    the    organizational   structure    and    regional    offices,   please    visit:
http://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/.


                              FY 2015 Annual Performance Plan

The EPA's FY 2015 Annual Performance  Plan budget of $7.89 billion  is almost $310  million, or nearly
4%, below the FY 2014 Enacted  budget  of $8.2  billion.  Very difficult decisions  impacting  the agency
workforce and water infrastructure funding  were made in developing this budget, but they are necessary
to keep the EPA relevant and sustainable for the future.  An essential aspect of the  FY 2015 budget is our
investment in  maintaining a  high performing environmental protection organization. We are  redesigning
the way we do business and focusing on  achieving the greatest environmental benefits for our efforts.
Making the greatest difference to communities, adapting and embracing opportunities for innovation and
reinvention and ensuring our state  and  tribal partners are well positioned to adapt to the changes are
important principles  as  we move forward. The budget  identifies realignments needed to  take the next
steps and achieve more efficient ways to deliver environmental protection to the nation. Implementing this
strategy will involve all the business lines of the agency, and each individual aspect of the plan is integral
to the success of the whole.

As we redefine how we do our work, the  agency requests 15,000 appropriated FTE in FY 2015 to support

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our highest priorities  and our critical mission. This budget highlights actions to reduce costs through
implementing  approaches such as strategic sourcing, redesigning long-standing processes to capture
technological  advances, and accelerating  the  pace  of  employee  facilities  reduction. Successfully
implementing these changes to our facilities and  our business processes requires a commitment in time
and resources.

The EPA strives to connect the results we have achieved to our planning and budgeting decisions and to
support our overall strategic direction  and priorities. The  FY 2015  President's  Budget is presented
following the  anticipated structure of the FY 2014  -  FY 2018  Strategic  Plan. The  EPA's FY 2013
performance information is highlighted throughout the budget.


                             FY 2014 - 2015 Agency Priority Goals

This budget highlights EPA's six FY 2014-2015 Agency Priority Goals that  advance the Administrator's
Priorities and the agency's Strategic Plan. Additional information on the EPA's Agency Priority Goals can
be found at www.performance.gov and in subsequent chapters in this document.

Reduce greenhouse  gas emissions from cars and trucks
Through September 30, 2015, the EPA, in coordination with the U.S. Department of Transportation's fuel
economy standards program, will be implementing vehicle and truck greenhouse gas standards that are
projected to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 6 billion metric tons and reduce oil consumption
by about 12 billion barrels over the lifetime of those vehicles and trucks.

Clean up contaminated sites to enhance the livability and economic vitality of communities
By 2015, an additional 18,970 sites will be made  ready for anticipated use, protecting Americans and the
environment one community at a time.

Assess and reduce risks posed by chemicals and promote the use of safer chemicals in
commerce
By September 30, 2015, EPA will have completed more than 250 assessments  of pesticides and other
commercially available chemicals to evaluate risks they may pose to human  health  and the environment,
including the potential for some of these chemicals to disrupt endocrine systems. These assessments are
essential in determining whether products containing these chemicals can be used safely for commercial,
agricultural and/or industrial uses.

Improve environmental outcomes and enhance service to the regulated  community and the public
By September 30, 2015 reduce EPA reporting requirements by one million hours through streamlined
regulations, providing real-time environmental data to at least two communities,  and  establish a new
portal to service  the regulated community and public.

Improve, restore, and maintain water quality by enhancing nonpoint source program leveraging,
accountability,  and on-the-ground effectiveness to address the nation's  largest sources of
pollution
By September 30, 2015, 100 percent  of the  states will have updated nonpoint  source management
programs that comport with the new Clean Water  Act Section 319 grant guidelines that will result in better
targeting of resources through prioritization and increased  coordination  with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture.

Improve public  health protection for persons served by small drinking water systems, which
account for more than 97% of public water systems in the U.S., by strengthening the technical,
managerial, and financial capacity of those systems
By September 30, 2015,  EPA will engage with an additional ten states (for a total of 30 states) and three
tribes to  improve small drinking water system capability to provide safe drinking  water, an invaluable
resource.

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                                           Overview

                                   FY 2015 Funding Priorities

Support for Core Mission and Priorities

The  FY 2015  Annual Performance Plan  and Budget of $7.89  billion  invests  in  maintaining and
strengthening a high performing environmental protection organization to better serve Americans. Our FY
2015  budget will  advance our work  to make a visible difference in communities  across the country;
address climate change and improve air quality; take action on toxics and chemical safety;  protect the
nation's  waters;  advance  efforts to  maintain  and  strengthen  a  high  performing  environmental
organization; and  work toward a sustainable future. Additional details and supporting information can be
found in the  program descriptions.

Making a Visible Difference in Communities across the Country
Community,  as an organizing principle for our work, is well established, but resources to strengthen this
integrated approach are essential. Within our budget proposal, we are realigning  $7.5 million and 64
FTEs toward efforts that will make a difference in people's everyday lives and make a visible difference in
their communities. Resources  will build  on current work  by providing green  infrastructure technical
assistance to up to 100 communities  to help them more easily implement cost-effective and sustainable
approaches  to water management. This includes modeling and design assistance to demonstrate how
green infrastructure can help to cost-effectively make progress on multiple water and combined sewer
overflows goals. The resources also will allow the agency to obtain and disseminate information  about
successful approaches for adopting green programs. Research under this focus area will contribute  to the
development and  application of new  and enhanced technologies  for large-scale  green infrastructure in
pilot  communities. Finally, the agency will focus efforts  on considering the impacts of our decisions on
environmental  justice  communities  through  increased  analysis, better  science, and   increased
transparency of data and information to enhance community engagement.

Through realignments and  existing core work, the EPA will continue to lead efforts to preserve, restore,
and protect  our land for both current  and future generations. Hazardous and non-hazardous wastes on
land  can migrate to air, groundwater  and surface water, contaminating drinking water supplies, causing
acute illnesses and   chronic diseases, and  threatening  healthy  ecosystems.  Local land use and
infrastructure investments  also can  generate unanticipated  environmental  consequences,  such as
increased stormwater runoff, loss of open space, and  increased greenhouse gas emissions. We will
continue our work to prevent and reduce exposure to contaminants, accelerate the pace of cleanups, and
reduce the environmental impacts associated with land  use across the country. We also will partner with
other federal,  state and local  governments to  better coordinate  and leverage resources  to  support
community efforts.


Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
One  of  the  most  significant challenges  of this and  future generations  is the threat from a changing
climate. Building on existing efforts, the agency is  realigning $10  million and 24  FTE within  our budget
proposal to  support implementation of the President's  Climate Action Plan, to enhance education and
outreach, and to foster state engagement and partnership. The Climate Action Plan tasks the EPA with
setting carbon dioxide (CO2) standards for power plants and applying its authorities and other tools to
address hydrofluorocarbons (MFCs) and  methane. Realigned resources will support the development of
GHG  standards,  regulations, or guidelines,  as  appropriate,  for modified, reconstructed, and  existing
power plants. This will require extensive engagement with the states as they develop and implement their
plans. This  realignment will also support developing  and  implementing  the  President's interagency
methane strategy, which requires  the assessment and collection of emissions and control  technology
data  to  inform our reduction programs and measures. In addition,  Heavy  Duty Vehicle GHG Phase 2
standards will require the development of new testing cycles and  methods, and upgrades to the testing
equipment and software at the National Vehicle and Fuel Emission Laboratory (NVFEL). The EPA also is
implementing a range of activities in support of the President's call to cut energy waste in homes,
businesses,  and factories, including ENERGY STAR'S efforts to increase energy efficiency in multifamily
housing. Finally, resources are realigned to provide technical  assistance and support tools  to address
adaptation planning. This includes technical assistance for water utilities at greatest risk from storm  surge
with emphasis on  using the Climate Resilience Evaluation Awareness Tool (GREAT), which helps utilities

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scope  potential climate  impacts  and risks.  Research and development efforts will focus on decision
support tools for at-risk communities/tribes in preparing for the effects of climate change.

Taking Action on Toxics and Chemical Safety
Realignment of $23 million and 24  FTE will  support activities  under the President's Executive Order on
Chemical  Safety1,  as well as agency efforts  on chemical prioritization, air toxics, radon, and volatile
organic compounds (VOCs)  in drinking water. Chemicals and  toxic substances are ubiquitous in  our
everyday lives and products. They are used in the production  of everything from our homes and cars to
the cell phones we carry and the food we eat. Keeping communities safe and  healthy requires action to
reduce risks associated with exposure to chemicals in commerce, our indoor and outdoor environments,
and  products  and  food. Continuing to oversee  the  introduction  and use  of pesticides, improve  our
Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) program, screen chemicals already  in commerce for potential
risk, reduce radon risks,  identify and address children's health risks in schools and homes, and improve
chemical  management  practices will  remain  of  central  relevance to  the  EPA's  mission,  including
maintaining incentive-based  efforts and research to promote  green chemistry. Chemicals often  are
released into the environment as a result of their manufacture, processing, use,  and disposal.

The Executive  Order  on Chemical Safety seeks to  expand tools, information and  materials for State
Emergency Response Commissions and Local Emergency Planning Committees.  Realigned resources
will be used to fund technical support, EPA/interagency data system enhancements, and outreach in the
State and Local Prevention and  Preparedness program. Computer Aided Management of Emergency
Operations (CAMEO)  enhancements will build more mobile  device accessibility for easy use by first
responders and provide hands-on technical assistance in the riskiest areas including towns and cities at
risk due to local infrastructure and presence of high risk facilities.

Realigned  resources  for air toxics work will  enhance  the analytical capabilities  required  to develop
effective regulations, to continue the progress in developing the National Air Toxics Assessment (NATA),
to update methods for  estimating  area and  mobile  source  emissions, and  to update air dispersion
modeling  based on   recent advances  in  the  science.  In  the  agency's  chemical  safety program,
realignments will be used to develop and release 19 draft chemical risk assessments and complete 10
final chemical risk assessments. These actions are critical in achieving the agency's  long-term chemical
safety goals.

Also included in this realignment are resources in support of the  Federal Radon Action Plan and work on
the drinking water VOC rule. Regulating groups of drinking water contaminants, including volatile organic
compounds (VOCs), more effectively addresses potential risks and demonstrates a predictable strategy
for regulating similar  contaminants and/or groups in the future. This group  regulation  requires more
scientific input,  complex analyses, and supporting documentation  than  a  regulation  for  a  single
contaminant.

Protecting Water: A Precious, Limited Resource
The EPA and its federal partners along with states, tribes, municipalities, and private parties, will continue
efforts to restore the integrity of the imperiled waters of the United States as part of the Agency's mission.
We are reminded almost daily of the importance of clean water through natural disasters, industrial spills
and outbreaks of illnesses. The nation's water resources are the  lifeblood of our communities, supporting
our economy and way of life. Our FY 2015 budget  reflects this recognition of the expected long-term
benefits of healthy aquatic systems  as economic  cornerstones  vital  to  property  values, tourism,
recreational and commercial fishing, and hunting. We will need to  build resiliency to deal with impacts
from climate change and build new approaches for water quality management.

The agency is  realigning $8 million and 10 FTE to  advance Clean Water. As we  look to  protect the
nation's water, new approaches  are needed to make progress. A centerpiece  of this strategy is a water
quality  framework  to improve  return  on investment,  accountability  and  environmental  results.
Improvements in permitting in the stormwater energy sectors are  also elements  of the strategy.

Resources also are being realigned for the Municipal Separate Storm Sewer Systems (MS4) program for
technical  support  to  select communities with newly  regulated  MS4s  that must  develop  effective
stormwater permits for the first time. Resources will strengthen green infrastructure activities and make a
1 Executive Order on Improving Chemical Facility and Security #13650

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                                           Overview

visible difference at the local level with an emphasis on sustainability. Realignments of resources also will
help the  agency to  continue  providing  technical expertise for states  and tribes as they manage their
response to new requirements for hydraulic fracturing activities. Funding will also be used to conduct
inspections of permitted wells to ensure ongoing compliance. Implementation support will ensure that
authorized  agencies  are effectively managing and  overseeing the rapidly growing energy sector while
preventing endangerment of underground sources of drinking water.

Launching a New Era of State, Tribal and Local Partners
Supporting  our state and tribal  partners, the primary implementers of environmental programs on the
ground, is a long-held priority  of the EPA. Funding to states and tribes  in the State and Tribal Assistance
Grants (STAG) account continues to be the largest in the EPA's budget request, and prioritizes funding
to state categorical grants.

The Clean  Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Funds are provided $1.775 billion in FY 2015, a
nearly $581  million reduction from the FY 2014 enacted budget. As part of the Administration's long-term
strategy, the EPA is implementing a Sustainable  Water Infrastructure Policy that focuses on working with
states and  communities to enhance technical, managerial and financial capacity, which also  addresses
"green infrastructure" options and  their multiple benefits.  Federal dollars provided  through  the  State
Revolving Funds will act  as a catalyst  for  efficient system-wide planning  and ongoing management of
sustainable  water infrastructure.  New  infrastructure improvement projects for public  drinking  water
systems are supported by $757  million for the Drinking Water State  Revolving Fund and public water
treatment systems are supported by $1.018 billion under the Clean Water State Revolving Fund.

For Categorical Grants, a total of $1.13 billion is provided, which is an increase of $76 million from the FY
2014  enacted  budget. Increases above FY 2014 levels are included for tribal grants and environmental
information  grants.   Tribal environmental  and  health  needs far  outstrip  available  funding,  and
environmental  information grants directly support the agency's E-Enterprise business  model. Requested
increases over enacted levels  recognize the importance of state partners in the progress made to provide
air that is safe  to breathe, water that is safe  to drink, cleaner land and safer chemicals.

Maintaining and Strengthening a High Performing Environmental Protection Organization
An  integral  component of the agency's FY 2015  strategy is the  work to become  a high performing
organization. We are undertaking efforts to  attract and retrain the workforce of the future, modernize our
business practices  and  more fully  employ new  tools  and technologies. We are implementing or
accelerating a number of key efforts, including  realigning our workspace, launching new  collaboration
tools, and leaning our business  processes to bring about change and efficiency at the EPA, We are
realigning resources  and  staff to ensure the success of these efforts. This is not an effort to just save
money; the EPA is looking toward the future at ways to better serve the  American people.

This complements our work  in  E-Enterprise, a  major joint EPA and state  initiative to  modernize our
business practices to increase accessibility, efficiency, and responsiveness. The agency  is  expanding
efforts in the second  year of the multi-year E-Enterprise business model including realigning people and
resources to accelerate development of the  E-Manifest system and associated rule-making work. Benefits
of implementing the  E-Manifest system include annual savings estimated at $75 million for over 160,000
waste handlers.

In addition, we are making changes to long-standing business practices such as contracts and  grants
management  and  the regulation development  process.  One  area  of emphasis  is in  Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) and  records management, where existing processes are not effective or efficient,
and EPA is pursuing  new approaches. Achieving the full potential of these new approaches and tools we
are developing is only possible when the workforce has the skills to use them.

The  EPA also has  been focusing,  as  has most of the federal government, on reducing its physical
footprint and achieving greater energy efficiency. Since 2006, the EPA has released  approximately 428
thousand square feet of space at headquarters and facilities nationwide, resulting in a cumulative annual
rent  avoidance of over $14.6 million. But  space reconfiguration takes both time and resources. The
agency will  realign resources to accelerate the timeline to achieve  long-term rent avoidance through

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reducing and reconfiguring our space. These achieved savings and potential savings partially offset the
EPA's escalating rent and security costs.

Working Toward a Sustainable Future
Sustainability is not a new program,  but we are building it in to our day-to-day operations in partnership
with businesses, government and other stakeholders. We must move beyond the traditional foundation of
environmental protection that the EPA  has  built  with  our  state, tribal,  and community partners. As
problems become  more complicated we need new tools and approaches to meet the challenges. We
need new ways to deal with threats to  human health and the environment that cannot be effectively
managed through regulations alone, or for which  there are no existing regulations. Examples include
household disposal of Pharmaceuticals and other chemicals. Wherever possible, the agency is seeking to
grow its  capacity for local partnerships  and  engagement with  local organizations, and  for regionally-
focused outreach to cities, towns, and businesses. These efforts will build on where we are and promote
greater cross media  collaboration and innovation  to allow  us  to continue to move forward to a more
sustainable future for all of us.

Maintaining Core Enforcement Strength
In  FY 2015, the EPA seeks  to maintain the  strength  of its core national enforcement and compliance
assurance  program. Our objective is to pursue civil  and criminal enforcement that targets the most
serious  water,  air, and  chemical hazards in communities;  assuring strong, consistent, and  effective
enforcement of federal  environmental laws nationwide.  Recognizing the tight fiscal climate at both the
federal  and  state  level, EPA will  continue to  focus federal  enforcement on  the  most  important
environmental problems where noncompliance is a significant contributing factor and  where federal
enforcement attention can have a significant impact. EPA's top enforcement priorities will be  pursuing
large, complex cases that require significant investment and long term commitment.

As an  important supplement to a strong enforcement  program, EPA is investing in Next Generation
Compliance strategies and tools to increase compliance with environmental laws. The EPA has achieved
impressive   pollution control  and  health  benefits  through  vigorous  compliance  monitoring  and
enforcement, but the sheer number  of regulated facilities, the  contribution of large numbers of smaller
sources of  pollution, combined with federal and state budget constraints has made it necessary for the
EPA to  go beyond  the traditional  single  facility inspection  and  enforcement approach  to ensure
widespread  compliance. Next  Generation Compliance  is  part of the agency's  E-Enterprise  business
model  and  promotes  advanced  monitoring,  electronic reporting  and  transparency.  Next Generation
Compliance incorporates multiple components using state-of-the-art  monitoring  technology to detect
pollution  problems,  leverage  electronic reporting, expand  transparency,  develop  and  implement
innovative enforcement approaches, and structure regulations and permits to be easier to implement.

Priority Science and Research
Science  and research  continue  to  be  the  foundation  of  our work at the EPA. The Research and
Development program's integrated and cross-disciplinary organization of the scientific research programs
provides a  systems perspective that leverages expertise to address the  multi-dimensional  challenges
facing the agency, increasing the benefits from high-quality science. Superior science leads to shared
solutions; everyone benefits from clean  air and  clean water. Rigorous  science leads to innovative
solutions to complex environmental challenges. In  FY 2015, the EPA is  focusing  research on the most
critical  issues facing  the agency, ensuring the best scientific  underpinning  for regulatory actions and
finding  more sustainable solutions for environmental issues.  Realignments include efforts to minimize the
impacts of climate change, and developing effective, systems-based watershed management approaches
and forward-looking national, regional and community level strategies for green infrastructure,  chemical
safety and other innovative alternative practices.

Environmental Education
The EPA is committed to environmental education, a core part of our efforts to safeguard public health
and the  environment. Environmental education provides  communities  with the  necessary skills and
knowledge  to make  informed  choices and take  responsible action. The primary goals of the EPA's
educational activities are to share information  about how to protect the environment, and particularly how
the EPA  protects the water we  drink  and the air we breathe.  Environmental education activities also aim
to  improve  participation  in advanced programs in science, technology,  engineering, and mathematics
fields and thereby  foster the next generation of scientists  and engineers to tackle current and future
environmental challenges. The  EPA  fulfills its environmental education mission by connecting educators

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                                           Overview

with  the most up-to-date, science-based information and  research. Our programs also provide public
funding for projects and activities that enable environmental education in communities across the nation.
Moving forward, the EPA will ensure that there is an environmental education presence in every Regional
Office so that our agency has voices for environmental education across the country, supported by a core
staff at  headquarters. These  individuals will help develop and disseminate environmental  education
publications, curriculum, and training opportunities, and also manage related award programs and federal
grant assistance. To  assure that  all  EPA  programs are  participating and focused on environmental
education, funds for the agency-wide effort are distributed, and a chart has been included in the appendix
of this document. This distribution brings broader engagement both inside and outside the Agency.


                      FY 2015 Opportunity. Growth, and Security Initiative

Recognizing the importance of the two-year budget agreement Congress reached in  December, which
the President's Budget adheres to, levels are not sufficient to  expand opportunity to all Americans or to
drive the growth our economy needs.  For that reason, the Budget also includes a separate, fully paid for
$56 billion Opportunity, Growth, and  Security Initiative. The Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative,
which will  be split evenly between  defense and non-defense funding, shows how  additional discretionary
investments  in  FY 2015  can  spur economic  progress, promote opportunity, and strengthen national
security.


The Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative will support the efforts of the Climate Resilience Fund,
through  which the Budget will invest in research and  unlock data to better  understand the projected
impacts of a changing climate, help communities plan and prepare for impacts,  and  fund breakthrough
technologies and resilient infrastructure. Funding at EPA will support a nation that is better prepared for
the impacts of climate change by protecting and enhancing coastal wetlands and supporting urban forest
enhancement and protection.


                                     Eliminated Programs

The  EPA continues  to examine  its  programs to  find  those that  have  served their purpose  and
accomplished their mission. The FY 2015 President's Budget eliminates a  number of programs totaling
nearly $56 million including Beaches Protection categorical  grants;  State  Indoor Radon Grants; and
Diesel Emissions Reductions Assistance grants. Details are found in the  appendix to the EPA FY 2015
Congressional Justification.

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                               Summary Resource Charts
                  Environmental Protection Agency's
                         FY 2015 Budget by Goal

                            Total Agency: $7,890 Million
              • Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality


              • Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters


              • Goal 3: Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development


              • Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution


              • Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring
                Compliance
Notes: Dollar totals and percentages in chart exclude $5 million rescission of prior year funds.
      Totals may not add due to rounding.
                                         9

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                             Summary Resource Charts
                Environmental Protection Agency's
                  FY2015 Budget by Appropriation
                          Total Agency: $7,890 Million
       LUST
      $98 M
       1.2%
$24 M   B&F7$46M
 0.3%  $54 M  Q.6%
        0.7%
                                                            e Manifest
                                                              $10 M
                                                               0.1%
         • Science & Technology
         • E-Manifest
         D Buildings & Facilities
         D Hazardous Substance Superfund
         D State & Tribal Assistance Grants
                 D Environmental Programs & Management
                 • Inspector General
                 D Inland Oil Spill Programs
                 D Leaking Underground Storage Tanks
Notes: Dollar totals and percentages in chart exclude $5 million rescission of prior year funds.
     Totals may not add due to rounding.
                                      10

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                         Summary Resource Charts
           EPA's Enacted Budget FY2003 to 2015
                                   (Dollars in Billions)
      $10.0
   m
$8.0
       $6.0
       $4.0
       $2.0
       $0.0
                    OPresident's Budget
                       $8.0
                             $7.6   $7-7    $75
lEnacted Budgets
       $10.3
          |  $8.7

 '•4

 $8.5         -„,
nfin
                                                                              $7.9
            2003   2004   2005   2006   2007   2008   2009   2010   2011   2012   2013   2014   2015

                                          Fiscal Year
   Notes:
   FY 2006 Enacted excludes hurricane supplemental funding.
   FY 2009 Enacted excludes ARRA funding.
   FY 2013 Enacted reflects operating levels after sequestration and excludes Hurricane Sandy Relief supplemental
   appropriation of $608 million.
   All Enacted Budgets include rescissions.
                     EPA's F7E*  Ceiling History
    18,500
    18,000
           2003   2004   2005   2006   2007   2008  2009   2010   2011   2012   2013   2014   2015

                                         Fiscal Year
* FTE (Full Time Equivalent) = one employee working full time for a full year (52 weeks X 40 hours = 2,080 hours), or the equivalent number of
hours worked by several part-time or temporary employees.
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                                   Summary Resource Charts

                      Environmental Protection Agency's
                          Resources  by Major Category
                                       (Dollars in Billions)
                                  D Infrastructure Financing

                                  •Trust Funds

                                  B Operating Budget

                                  S Categorical Grants
  $12.0
  $10.0
   $8.0 --
   $6.0
   $4.0 --
                                              $10.3
{saBKiaffi
EO
™™™°"e
           $7.6    $7.7    $7.5    $7.6
                                                        $8.7
                            $7.9     $8'2    $7.9
          2006    2007    2008    2009    2010    2011
           EN      EN      EN      EN      EN      EN
                  2012   2013    2014    2015
                   EN      EN      EN      PB
Notes:
Totals may not add due to rounding
The Operating Budget includes funding provided for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.
FY 2006 Enacted reflects 0.476% rescission plus 1 % additional rescission and $80 M rescission to prior year funds
       Excludes hurricane supplemental funding
FY 2008 Enacted includes a 1.56% rescission and $5 M rescission to prior year funds
FY 2009 Enacted reflects a $10 M rescission to prior year funds
FY 2009 Enacted excludes ARRA funding
FY 2010 Enacted reflects a $40 M rescission to prior year funds
FY 2011 Enacted reflects a 0.2% rescission and $140 M rescission to prior year funds
FY 2012 Enacted reflects a 0.16% rescission and $50 M rescission to prior year funds
FY 2013 Enacted reflects operating levels after sequestration and excludes Hurricane Sandy Relief supplemental
appropriation of $608 million
Reflects a 0.2% rescission and $50 M rescission to prior year funds
FY 2015 Enacted reflects a $5 M  rescission to prior year funds
                                              12

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                  Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality


     Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality

Strategic   Goal:  Reduce   greenhouse   gas   emissions   and  develop
adaptation  strategies to address climate change, and protect  and improve
air quality.
                                                  Resource Summary
                                                    (Dollars in Thousands)

1
2
13.1% of Budget
- Address Climate Change
- Improve Air Quality
FY2013
Enacted
$183,773
$720,420
FY2014
Enacted
$189,470
$744,419
FY2015
President's
Budget
$234,678
$741,931
Difference
FY 201 4 EN
to FY 201 5
PresBud
$45,208
($2,489)
3 - Restore and Protect the Ozone
Layer
4 - Minimize Exposure to Radiation
Goal 1 Total
Workyears
$16,725
$34,730
$955,648
2,613
$16,799
$34,365
$985,053
2,526
$17,319
$37,252
$1,031,179
2,509
$520
$2,887
$46,126
(17)
NOTE: Numbers may not add due to rounding.

Introduction

The EPA is dedicated to protecting and improving the quality of the nation's air to protect public health
and the environment. The  agency continues to partner with states, tribes, and local governments to
implement programs  and standards. Air pollution concerns are diverse and significant, and include: the
changing climate, outdoor and indoor air quality, stratospheric ozone depletion, and radiation exposure.

Since passage of the Clean Air Act Amendments (CAAA) in 1990, nationwide air quality has improved
significantly. Levels of those pollutants linked to the greatest health impacts continue to decline. From
2003 to 2012, population-weighted ambient concentrations of fine particulate matter and ozone have
decreased 26 percent and  13 percent, respectively. Even with this progress, in 2012, approximately 45
percent of the U.S. population lived in counties with air that did not meet health-based standards for at
least one pollutant. Long-term exposure to elevated levels of certain air pollutants has been associated
with  increased risk  of cancer,  premature mortality,  and  damage  to  the  immune,  neurological,
reproductive, cardiovascular, and respiratory systems.  Short-term exposure to elevated levels of certain
air pollutants can exacerbate asthma and lead to other adverse health effects and economic costs.

The issues  of highest importance facing the air  program over the next few years will continue to be
greenhouse gas (GHG)  mitigation and climate change adaptation, ozone, and particulate air pollution and
their precursors. The  program also works to reduce interstate transport of these air pollutants, emissions
                                           13

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                      Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
from transportation sources, toxic air pollutants, and  indoor air pollutants. The EPA uses a variety of
approaches  to  reduce  pollutants  that include traditional regulatory tools;  innovative market-based
techniques; public- and  private-sector partnerships; community-based approaches; voluntary programs
that  promote environmental  stewardship; and programs that encourage adoption  of  cost-effective
technologies and practices.

EPA's  strategies to address climate  change reflect the President's 2013 Climate Action Plan, which,
among other initiatives,  tasks the  EPA with setting carbon pollution standards for power  plants and
applying its authorities and other tools to address hydrofluorocarbons (MFCs) and methane. Specifically,
using authority under section 111(b) of the Clean Air Act, on September 20, 2013, the EPA issued a new
proposal for carbon pollution from new power plants and will finalize that rule after consideration of public
comment as appropriate. Using authority under sections 111(d) of the Act, the EPA will propose carbon
pollution standards, regulations, or guidelines, as appropriate, for modified, reconstructed, and existing
power plants by June 1, 2014, and finalize these standards, regulations, or guidelines by June  1, 2015.

The  EPA also will promote the use of low  global warming  potential (GWP) alternatives  to MFCs through
application  of the Significant  New  Alternatives Policy  (SNAP) program. Specifically, the  EPA will use
authority under section 612  of the Act to list more environmentally friendly alternatives with lower GWPs,
and  review existing SNAP listings to consider whether any change to the status of currently acceptable
higher-GWP alternatives is appropriate.

The  EPA will continue to address the impacts of climate change through careful, cost-effective rulemaking
and  voluntary programs  that focus  on the  largest entities and encourage businesses and consumers to
limit  unnecessary greenhouse gas emissions. The EPA  will continue to implement  its  draft Climate
Change Adaptation Plan, released to  the public in February 2013,  to meet the agency-wide priorities on
climate adaptation.

Scientific consensus shows  that as a result of human  activities,  GHG concentrations in the atmosphere
are at record high levels and data shows that the Earth has been warming over the past 100 years, with
the steepest increase in warming in  recent decades.  The evidence of human-induced climate change
goes beyond observed increases in average surface temperatures; it includes melting  ice in the Arctic,
melting glaciers around the  world, increasing ocean temperatures, rising sea levels, acidification of the
oceans due to  excess carbon  dioxide,  changing precipitation  patterns,  and  changing patterns  of
ecosystems and wildlife.

As the number of days with extremely hot temperatures increases, severe heat waves are projected to
intensify and lead to increased heat-related  mortality and  sickness. The  increase in frequency and
intensity of extreme weather events also has contributed to mortalities across the country. Additionally,
with  time,  more Americans  are likely  to be affected by certain diseases that thrive in areas with higher
temperatures and greater  precipitation,  including pest-borne  diseases  and  food  and water-borne
pathogens. The  costs of these climate change  associated impacts include  increased hospital visits,
respiratory and  cardiovascular diseases, and even premature death - especially for certain vulnerable
populations like the elderly, and children.

The  EPA continues to implement climate change programs that work with  key industry sectors to reduce
greenhouse gases and facilitate energy-efficiency improvements.  As an example, the  ENERGY STAR
program introduced new and  more rigorous requirements  for homes to earn the  ENERGY STAR label.
These  new home specifications represent a multiyear development process that redefined nearly every
aspect of the program, which had already labeled more than 1.3 million homes and achieved a 26 percent
national market share in 2011.

Among the most common and significant  sources of air pollution  are highway motor vehicles  and their
fuels. The EPA establishes  national emissions  standards to reduce air pollution from these sources. The
agency also provides emissions and fuel economy information for new cars to educate consumers on the
ways their actions affect the environment. The  EPA's motor vehicle GHG and renewable fuels standards
have already begun changing the cars Americans drive and the fuels they use. The diversity of biofuels in
                                              14

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                   Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
America grows every year, and new automobile technologies, including several new plug-in hybrids and
all-electric vehicles, continue  to  "hit the road." The EPA,  in coordination with  the National Highway
Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA), will continue to reduce GHGs from light-duty and heavy-
duty mobile sources. In model year 2025, the EPA and NHTSA  standards will require  average fuel
economy for cars and light trucks of approximately 54.5 miles to the gallon, a significant increase from
current average  vehicle fuel efficiency. The  national program  of fuel economy  and greenhouse gas
standards for model year 2012 through 2025 light-duty vehicles will save approximately 12 billion barrels
of oil and prevent 6 billion metric tons of GHG emissions over the lifetimes of the vehicles sold through
model year 2025. Under the Climate Action Plan,  EPA and  NHTSA will develop Phase 2 GHG and fuel
efficiency standards for Heavy Duty Vehicles. A proposal will be issued in March 2015, and a final rule is
expected to be issued in March 2016. The EPA will continue  to implement the Renewable  Fuels program,
which requires a percentage of vehicle fuel sold in the country to be from renewable sources.

The EPA's air toxic control programs are critical to continued progress in  reducing public health risks and
improving the quality of the environment. The EPA will continue to focus efforts on communities with
greater levels of  industrial and  mobile source activity (e.g., near ports  or distribution  areas), which,
according to  the 2005  National-Scale  Air Toxics Assessment (NATA), often  have greater cumulative
exposure to air toxics than non-industrial areas. In  2014 and  2015, approximately 21 stationary source air
toxics rules are on court-ordered deadlines and are in some stage of development.  The EPA will focus its
efforts on rules under section 112 of the CAA under court  orders.  To develop effective standards, the
EPA needs accurate information about actual emissions, their composition, specific emission points, and
transport into communities.

Because  people spend  much of their lives indoors, the quality of indoor air is a  major  concern. For
example, indoor allergens  and irritants play a significant role in making  asthma worse and  triggering
asthma attacks.  Over 25 million  Americans currently have asthma, which annually accounts for over
500,000 hospitalizations, more than 10 million  missed school days, and  over $50 billion in  economic
costs. In addition, indoor radon causes an estimated 21,000 lung cancer deaths annually in the U.S.


Major FY 2015 Changes

While continuing EPA's ongoing  commitment  to  science, the rule of law and transparency, we  have
updated and  refined our current  direction to maximize our effectiveness  and guide our agenda in the
months and years ahead.  Goal  1  resources includes extramural resources  and FTE that have  been
realigned to enhance our core work in targeted areas and build on progress to date to advance priorities
in  FY 2015. In implementing these changes, we will seek to  increase effectiveness and efficiency without
undermining vital environmental protection activities or quality and financial  management.

Address Climate Change
The FY 2015 budget addresses climate change and reflects the President's 2013 Climate Action  Plan.
The broad based plan will cut carbon pollution that causes climate change  and affects public health. The
EPA's Climate Protection Program promotes efforts to reduce greenhouse  gas (GHG) emissions and will
implement the President's  Climate  Action Plan through  programs such  as regulatory support for state
programs,  encouraging energy  efficiency and   renewable energy policies  in  the  carbon pollution
standards, voluntary partnerships  with key industries, technical assistance  and reporting, verification and
publication of GHG data, and  strengthening communities' ability and capacity to anticipate, prepare for,
respond to, and recover from the  impacts of climate change.  $19.8million is requested for state capacity
development and implementation  of the key work under the President's Climate Action Plan.

These programs complement and support the agency's implementation efforts across all elements of the
President's Climate Action Plan. Key Climate Action Plan elements supported include:
•   Cutting carbon pollution from power plants
•   Cutting energy waste in homes,  businesses, and factories
•   Reducing methane and HFCs emissions
                                              15

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                      Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
•   Reducing GHG emissions from the transportation sector
•   Protecting our country from the impacts of climate change
•   Leading international efforts to address climate change, including supporting efforts to control MFCs
    under the Montreal Protocol

In FY 2015, the EPA will continue to consider the results of scientific assessments to address the climate
impacts of  short-lived  climate pollutants. These air pollutants, including black carbon, MFCs and ozone
are having  an immediate effect on climate, particularly in the Arctic region. Reducing emissions of these
pollutants can reap near-term climate and public health benefits. The EPA will  continue to  identify the
most significant domestic and international sources of black carbon and ozone  precursor emissions by
working through the multilateral Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC), through collaboration with the
Arctic Council and the  Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution (LRTAP), and other related
international efforts. Based  on these findings and enhanced analytical capabilities, the EPA will pursue
effective steps for reducing  these emissions. The EPA will continue its collaboration with CCAC partners
to develop  a  rapid  assessment tool  to enable countries to determine the benefits, particularly to human
health, of mitigating short lived climate pollutants.

Improve Air Quality
Toxic air pollutants are known  to cause or suspected of causing  increased risk  of cancer and other
serious health effects, such as neurological damage and reproductive harm.  Realigned resources will
provide additional  capabilities to enhance  the analytical  components required to develop  effective
regulations, to continue progress in developing the National Air Toxics Assessment (NATA), to update
methods for estimating area  and mobile source emissions, and to incorporate  recent  advances in the
science into updated air dispersion  modeling. The  funding will allow the EPA to continue to coordinate
actions to  meet multiple CAAA objectives  for controlling  both criteria and toxic  air pollutants while
considering their cost  effectiveness and technical feasibility,  as well as providing  greater certainty for the
regulated industry.

In FY 2011, the EPA  launched the Federal Radon  Action Plan (FRAP). The Action Plan is designed to
catalyze industry and  nonprofit action to build on, leverage and amplify the impact that  federal agencies
make to reduce radon risk. During the next phase of the Action Plan, federal partners are  focused on
maintaining momentum, increasing impacts, and fostering relationships that will advance the ultimate goal
of the Federal Radon Action Plan - the  elimination  of preventable, radon-induced cancer through
increased testing and  mitigation of high  radon  levels in existing homes and  schools and construction of
radon-resistant new homes.  In  FY  2015, the  EPA will continue to lead and drive action on radon in
collaboration  with other federal agencies. Realigned resources will be  targeted  towards updating  radon
risk assessment and  cost-benefit analyses,  beginning work to  improve radon  data management, and
providing support to drive sustainable changes in radon policy and action in  health, medical,  real estate,
construction, and finance sectors.

Building a High Performing Environmental Protection Enterprise
E-Enterprise is part of an agency-wide effort to modernize our business processes and systems to reduce
reporting burden on states and  regulated facilities. In FY 2015, the  agency will enhance its ability to
collect electronic submissions of emissions data  directly from sources subject to  the  Clean Air Act
Amendments (CAAA). By requiring facilities to report emissions data electronically,  over time, reporting
burden and costs for industry, states, and tribes will  be minimized. Electronic submissions also will reduce
the  need to develop information collection requests that are  otherwise a part of the rule development
process, and to expedite the development and revision of emissions factors and improve the quality of the
data the agency uses for rulemakings.  As part of the EPA's broad E-Enterprise  business  model, the
agency is building  a public portal for improved access to environmental data. As part of that effort, the
EPA will upgrade its AirNow air quality data and system to provide the public with improved  access and
higher quality information for real-time air quality data and forecasts nationwide.1
1 For more information about AirNow, visit www.airnow.qov
                                               16

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                   Goal 1:  Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
Agency Priority Goals

As part of the formulation of the FY2015 budget, the EPA has developed FY 2014-2015 Agency Priority
Goals that advance the Administrator's Priorities and the agency's Strategic Plan.

Through  September 30, 2015, the EPA, in coordination  with the Department of Transportation's fuel
economy standards program, will be implementing vehicle and truck greenhouse gas standards that are
projected to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 6 billion metric tons and reduce oil consumption
by about 12 billion barrels over the lifetime of the affected vehicles and trucks.

Additional information on the EPA's Agency Priority Goals can be found at
www.performance.gov.
FY 2015 Activities

Objective 1: Address Climate Change. Minimize  the threats posed by climate change by reducing
greenhouse  gas emissions and taking actions that help to protect human health and help communities
and ecosystems become more sustainable and resilient to the effects of climate change.

The EPA's strategy to address climate change supports the President's GHG reduction goals. Climate
change poses risks to public health, the environment, cultural resources, the economy, and quality of life.
Many impacts of climate change are already evident and will intensify in the  future. Climate change
impacts include  increased  temperatures and  more stagnant air  masses  that make  it increasingly
challenging to achieve  air quality standards for smog in  many regions of the country. This adversely
affects public health  if areas cannot attain or maintain  clean air  and could increase  costs  to local
communities.

The agency's budget includes nearly $200 million that will allow it to work with partners and stakeholders
to provide tools  and  information related to greenhouse  gas  emissions  and impacts and will reduce
emissions domestically and  internationally through  cost-effective, voluntary  programs while  pursuing
additional  regulatory actions  as  needed.  In FY 2015, the agency will focus  on  core  program activities
including:

•   Implementing the ENERGY STAR program across the residential, commercial and industrial sectors.
•   Overseeing compliance  with recently revised  vehicle fuel economy  labelling  requirements, which
    provide consumers with GHG as well as fuel economy information. The new label enables consumers
    to compare the energy  and environmental impacts  of both traditionally- and  alternatively-fueled
    vehicles, including those using renewable fuels, gaseous fuels,  and electricity.
•   Implementing the harmonized DOT and EPA fuel economy and GHG emission standards for light-
    duty vehicles (model years 2012-2016) and heavy-duty vehicles  (model years 2014-2018). The EPA
    plans to  propose a  second phase of  heavy-duty GHG regulations that incorporate a wider range of
    advanced technologies, including hybrid vehicle drive trains. The  EPA is considering several petitions
    asking the agency  to develop  GHG  emission standards for a wide range of non-road equipment,
    locomotives, aircraft, and transportation fuels.
•   Supporting implementation and compliance with  GHG emission  standards for light-duty and heavy-
    duty  vehicles  and  the   National  Highway  and  Transportation  Safety  Administration's (NHTSA)
    Corporate Average  Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards. Under the CAA and the Energy Policy Act, the
    EPA is responsible for issuing certificates and ensuring compliance with both the GHG and CAFE
    standards.
•   Finalizing standards for  carbon dioxide (CO2)  emissions from existing power plants and evaluating
    petitions  seeking the establishment of GHG emissions standards for a variety of industrial sectors and
    mobile source categories.
•   Supporting reporting and verification in the GHG  Reporting Program of emissions across 41  industry
    sectors  and  emission sources and  approximately  8,000 reporters.  Work in  FY 2015  includes
                                              17

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                      Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
    continued support for users on how to  comply with the rule and how to report emissions using the
    electronic reporting tool. Continuing activities also will include expanding the database management
    systems to ensure alignment with regulatory amendments, verifying reported data and sharing data
    with the public, other federal agencies, state and local governments and reporting entities.
•   Prioritizing and reviewing low GWP options for use in key consumer and industrial use sectors under
    SNAP,  while  carefully considering existing listings that may  require  reassessment based on the
    advent of new, more environmentally friendly options. Work in  FY 2015 will involve continued SNAP
    listings,  rulemakings and  technical support  for  stakeholders  and  innovative firms  with new
    alternatives.
•   Leading the  Global Methane  Initiative  (GMI)  and  enhancing public-private sector  cooperation to
    reduce global methane emissions and deliver clean energy to markets.


Objective 2: Improve  Air  Quality. Achieve  and maintain health and welfare  based air  pollution
standards and reduce risk from toxic air pollutants and indoor air contaminants.

Clean Air
In FY 2015, the EPA will continue  its CAA prescribed responsibilities to administer the National Ambient
Air Quality Standards (NAAQS). The NAAQS improve air quality and reduce related health and welfare
impacts and  their costs to the nation. The EPA will continue to  implement a strategy that,  where
appropriate, supports the development and  evaluation of multiple pollutant measurements. This strategy
includes  changes, where  the  agency  deems necessary, to  effectively implement revised  NAAQS
monitoring requirements for ozone, lead, sulfur dioxide (SO2>, nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide
(CO), and Particulate Matter  (PM). PM is linked to  tens of thousands of premature deaths per year and
repeated exposure to ozone can cause acute respiratory problems and lead to  permanent lung damage.
Short term exposure  to elevated  levels of  SO2  can  result  in adverse  respiratory effects, including
narrowing of the  airways which  can  cause  difficulty breathing  and increased  asthma  symptoms,
particularly in at risk populations including children, older adults, and people with asthma.

In FY 2015, the EPA will be  continuing  its  reviews of several NAAQS, including NO2, SO2,  and CO in
accordance with the statutory mandate to review the standards every five years, and make revisions, as
appropriate.  In particular, the EPA will be working to complete the review of the lead standards  by mid-
2015. The EPA also will be working on the completion of the ozone  NAAQS review. Implementation of the
PM NAAQS,  including the 2012 PM NAAQS revisions, is among the agency's highest priorities for FY
2015. The EPA will provide technical and policy assistance to states and tribes developing  or revising
attainment State  Implementation Plans (SIPs) and Tribal Implementation Plans  (TIPs) and will designate
areas as attainment or nonattainment, as appropriate. EPA will work with states to implement the 2010 1-
hour SO2 NAAQS, including  finalizing the data requirements rule.  The agency will continue consulting
with  states  and  tribes to determine additional methods to  improve  the  SIP/TIP development and
implementation process that are within current statutory limitations. The agency will also continue efforts
to reduce the number of SIPs  that the  agency has not taken action upon within the CAAA mandated
timeframe.

The EPA will continue to partner with states, tribes, and local governments  to create a comprehensive
compliance program  to  ensure that multi-source and  multi-pollutant reduction targets and  air quality
improvement objectives, including  consideration of  environmental justice issues, are met and sustained.
The budget includes $223.4 million in state and local air quality management grants to support core state
workload for  implementing NAAQS, reducing exposure to air toxics to ensure improved air quality in
communities, and  for  additional air monitors required  by revised  NAAQS.  In FY  2015, the EPA will
continue its work with states, tribes, and communities to implement the existing 2008 ozone standard.
The EPA will provide technical and policy assistance to states developing or  revising SIPs or regional
haze implementation plans and  will continue to review and act on SIP submissions in accordance with the
CAAA. These objectives are supported by ongoing technical assistance to state, tribal and local agencies.
This support  includes  source characterization  analyses,  emission  inventories, quality  assurance
protocols, improved testing and monitoring techniques, and air quality modeling. The EPA also will work
with  the states to address the interstate  transport of pollution that  contributes  to nonattainment or
                                              18

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                   Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
interferes with maintaining ozone and/or PM NAAQS in other areas. The agency is awaiting the outcome
of the Cross State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR)  litigation and will be working with states to implement
obligations to address the transportation of air pollution across state lines.

The EPA will continue to implement the new Renewable Fuel Standards (RFS2) program and  carry out
other actions required  by the Energy  Policy Act (EPAct) of 2005 and the Energy  Independence and
Security Act (EISA) of 2007. The EPA is responsible for  establishing test procedures to estimate the fuel
economy of new vehicles and for verifying car manufacturers' data on fuel economy. In FY 2015, the EPA
will utilize its upgraded  vehicle, engine, and fuel testing capabilities at the  National Vehicle and Fuel
Emissions Laboratory (NVFEL) to increase testing and certification capacity to ensure that new vehicles,
engines, and fuels are in compliance with  new vehicle and fuel standards. In 2015, the EPA anticipates
reviewing  and approving more than 5,000 vehicle and engine emissions  certification requests for over
4,100 different types of engines - a workload that has quadrupled over the past decade.  The EPA's
workload will continue to  grow, as the agency begins to  implement new  and more stringent GHG
emission standards promulgated in 2012 and 2013 for additional classes of vehicles  and engines. Also,
FY 2015 resources will support increased  oversight of credit  trading under RFS2 and engine regulations
and to manage critical data reporting systems.

Air Toxics
The agency will continue to work with state, tribal, and local air pollution control agencies and community
groups to assess and address air toxics emissions in areas of greatest concern. Additionally, the program
will focus on disproportionately impacted communities where the most  vulnerable members  of  our
population live, work, and go to school.

One of the top priorities for the air toxics program is to eliminate unacceptable  health risks and exposures
to air toxics in  affected communities  and to fulfill its CAAA and court-ordered obligations.  The CAAA
requires that all  technology-based standards be reviewed and updated as necessary every eight years. In
FY 2015, the EPA will continue to conduct risk assessments  to determine whether the technology-based
rules appropriately protect public health to comply with legal deadlines.

The EPA will continue development of its  multi-pollutant efforts by constructing and organizing  analyses
around industrial sectors. By addressing individual sectors'  emissions comprehensively and prioritizing
regulatory efforts  on  the pollutants of greatest concern, the EPA will  continue to identify ways to take
advantage of the co-benefits of pollution control. In developing sector and multi-pollutant approaches, the
agency seeks innovative solutions that address pollutants in the various sectors and minimize costs to the
EPA, states, tribes, local governments and  the regulated community.

The EPA will continue to improve the dissemination of information to state, tribal, and  local governments,
and the public, using analytical tools such as the NATA, enhancing quantitative assessment tools such as
BenMAP,  and improving emission inventory estimates for toxic air pollutants. The EPA anticipates that
these improvements  will increase the  agency's  ability to meet aggressive court-ordered schedules to
complete rulemaking activities, especially in the air toxics program.

Indoor Air
The EPA will continue to build the capacity of community-based organizations  to promote comprehensive
asthma care that integrates management of environmental asthma triggers and health care services. The
EPA will place a particular emphasis on improving asthma  health outcomes  for vulnerable  populations,
including children, and low-income and minority populations as  well as improving indoor air quality (IAQ)
in homes  and  schools.  Over the past four years, at  least  16,000 health care professionals,  including
school  nurses  and  primary care  physicians, have  been   trained  by the  EPA and its  partners on
environmental  management  of  asthma triggers.  Additionally,  approximately  one third of our nation's
schools now have effective indoor air quality management programs in place, helping to ensure asthma-
friendly school environments. The EPA will continue to  co-lead the implementation  of the Coordinated
Federal Action Plan to Reduce Racial and  Ethnic Asthma Disparities, an  initiative under the auspices of
the President's Taskforce on Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks to Children.
                                              19

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                      Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
The EPA will deliver clear and verifiable protocols and specifications to ensure good  indoor air quality in
homes and  schools through the Indoor airPlus program and protocols that protect  IAQ during energy
upgrades. The EPA will collaborate with public and private organizations to integrate these protocols and
specifications into existing energy-efficiency, green-building and health-related programs and initiatives.
FY2015 activities include equipping the affordable housing sector with training and guidance to promote
adoption of these best practices with  the aim of creating healthier, more energy-efficient homes for low
income families.

In FY 2015,  the EPA will continue to lead on radon activities in collaboration with other federal agencies,
as well  as continue to implement the agency's own multi-pronged radon  program.  The EPA will  drive
action at the national level to reduce radon  risk in  homes and schools using partnerships with the private
sector and public health groups, public outreach, and education activities.  The agency will encourage
radon risk reduction as a normal part  of doing business in the real estate marketplace, will promote local
and  state adoption of  radon  prevention  standards  in building  codes, and  will  participate in the
development of national voluntary standards (e.g., mitigation and construction protocols) for adoption by
states and the radon industry.


Objective 3: Restore and Protect the Ozone Layer. Restore and protect the earth's stratospheric ozone
layer and protect the public from the harmful effects of ultraviolet (UV) radiation.

Restore the Ozone Layer
The stratospheric ozone program implements the provisions of the CAAA and the Montreal Protocol on
Substances  that Deplete the Ozone Layer (Montreal  Protocol). Under the CAAA  and the Montreal
Protocol, the EPA is authorized to control and reduce ozone depleting substances (ODS) in the U.S., and
to contribute to the Montreal Protocol Multilateral Fund. As of January 1, 2010,  ODS production and
imports were capped at 3,810 OOP-weighted metric tons, which is 25 percent of the U.S. baseline under
the Montreal Protocol. In 2015,  U.S. production and  import will be reduced further, to 10 percent of the
U.S. baseline, and in 2020, all production and import will  be phased out except for exempted amounts. As
ODS  and many of their substitutes  are  potent  GHGs, appropriate control  and  reduction of these
substances  also provides significant  benefits for climate protection. As  a signatory to the Montreal
Protocol, the U.S. is  committed to ensuring  that our  domestic program is at least  as stringent as
international obligations and to regulating and enforcing  its terms domestically. In FY2015, the  EPA will
focus its work to ensure that ODS production  and import caps under the  Montreal Protocol and CAAA
continue to be met. Funding for the SunWise program, which provided awareness of health risks from UV
radiation and sun safety behaviors, has been eliminated.


Objective 4: Minimize  Exposure to Radiation.  Minimize  releases  of radioactive material and be
prepared to  minimize  exposure through response and recovery actions  should unavoidable releases
occur.

In  FY 2015, the EPA Radiation program, in cooperation with federal  agencies,  states, tribes,  and
international radiation  protection organizations, will develop and use voluntary and regulatory programs,
public information, and training to protect the public from unnecessary exposures to radiation. In FY 2015
the  EPA will complete its  revisions  to the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act, Health  and
Environmental Protection Standards for Uranium and Thorium Mill Tailings (40 CFR 192), last reviewed in
1995, and the  related Hazardous Air  Pollutants, Subpart  W Standard for  Radon Emissions  from
Operating Uranium Mill Tailings  (40 CFR 61). The Agency plans to begin work to ensure that the nation
has generic, non-site-specific standards that protect public  health and the  environment from  risks
associated with geologic disposal of high-level radioactive waste.

The EPA's Radiological Emergency Response Team will maintain and improve the level of readiness to
support  federal radiological emergency response and recovery operations under the  National  Response
Framework and the National  Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan in FY 2015. The
agency's national ambient radiation air monitoring system,  RadNet, which  includes the  country's 100
                                               20

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                   Goal 1: Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality
most populous cities, will continue to provide data to assist in protective action determinations. The EPA
will continue to support waste site characterization and clean-up by providing field and fixed laboratory
environmental radioanalytical data and  technical  support, radioanalytical  training to state and  Federal
partners, and developing improved radioanalytical methods.


Research

Environmental challenges  in the 21st century are complex. These challenges are  complicated by the
interplay between air quality, climate change, and emerging energy options, and they require different
thinking and solutions than those used in the past.  These solutions require  research that transcends
disciplinary lines  and includes all stakeholders in the process - the EPA's regional and program offices,
states and communities - that rely on the EPA's research.

The Air, Climate and Energy (ACE) program, funded at $101.9 million for FY2015, conducts high priority
research on  environmental and  human health impacts  related to  air pollution, climate  change,  and
biofuels.  This work  directly supports the  EPA's  goal of addressing climate  change and  improving air
quality.

Human exposure to an evolving array of air pollutants is a considerable challenge to human health and
the environment. By integrating air, climate and energy research, the EPA can better understand, define
and address the complexity of these interactions. The agency will provide models and tools  necessary for
communities and for decision makers at all levels of government to make the best decisions.

The ACE research program will continue to address critical science questions under three major research
themes.

Theme 1: Assess Air Quality and Climate Impacts - Assess human and ecosystem exposures and effects
associated with air pollutants and climate change.  Evaluate the effects of air pollution and climate change
on individuals, ecosystems, communities, and  regions.

Theme  2: Prevent  and Reduce Emissions - Provide the science needed to develop  and evaluate
approaches to preventing and reducing  harmful air emissions. Decision makers and other stakeholders
need  such data and methods to   determine which  energy choices  are  most environmentally  and
economically appropriate.

Theme 3: Respond to Changes in Climate and Air Quality - Provide  modeling and monitoring tools,
metrics, and information on air pollution  exposure. Individuals,  communities, and governmental agencies
will use these tools and information to  make public  health decisions related to air quality and  climate
change.

In addition, in 2012,  the EPA signed a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) with DOE and DOI, to develop
a multi-agency program to  focus on timely, policy relevant science to support sound  policy decisions by
state and Federal agencies for ensuring  the prudent development of energy sources while protecting
human health and the environment. Additional goals include  minimizing potential  risks in developing
these resources, maximizing each  agency's  particular strength, and reducing interagency overlap.  In
particular the EPA's  ACE and the Safe and Sustainable Water (SSWR) research programs, will undertake
a coordinated effort to study the potential impacts  of  hydraulic fracturing on  air,  water quality,  and
ecosystems.
                                              21

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22

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                             Goal 2:  Protecting America's Waters


                     Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters

Strategic  Goal: Protect  and restore our waters to  ensure  that drinking
water is safe  and  sustainably  managed,  and  that  aquatic  ecosystems
sustain  fish,  plants,   wildlife,  and  other biota,   as   well  as  economic,
recreational, and subsistence activities.
                                                     Resource Summary
                                                        (Dollars in Thousands)
\J/ 	 /
44.2% of Budget
1 - Protect Human Health
2 - Protect and Restore Watersheds
and Aquatic Ecosystems
Goal 2 Total
Workyears
FY2013
Enacted
$1,218,045
$2,639,816
$3,857,861
3,308
FY2014
Enacted
$1,273,076
$2,771,692
$4,044,768
3,190
FY2015
President's
Budget
$1,117,696
$2,371,711
$3,489,407
3,138
Difference
FY 201 4 EN
to FY 201 5
PresBud
($155,380)
($399,981)
($555,361)
(52)
NOTES: Numbers may not add due to rounding.

Introduction

As we work to protect the nation's water, new approaches and new partnerships are needed to make and
sustain progress. While  much progress to improve water quality  has  been made over the  last two
decades, America's waters remain imperiled. Increased demands, land use practices, population growth,
aging infrastructure, and the impacts of climate change continue to pose challenges to our nation's water
resources.  The National Coastal Condition  Report IV shows that although improvement has taken place
since 1990, the overall condition of the nation's coastal resources continues to be rated fair1. In  addition,
the latest national assessments2 confirm that America's waters are stressed by nutrient pollution, excess
sedimentation, and degradation of shoreline vegetation,  which affect more than 50 percent  of our lakes
and streams. The rate at which new waters are listed for water quality impairments exceeds the pace at
which  restored waters are removed from the list. For many years, nonpoint source pollution—principally
nitrogen, phosphorus, and sediments—has been recognized as the largest remaining impediment to
improving water quality, and it is difficult to address the varied and widespread sources of this pollution.
1 U.S. EPA. 2012. National Coastal Condition Report IV. EPA-842-R-10-003. Available at
http://water.epa.qov/type/oceb/assessmonitor/nccr/upload/NCCR4-Report.pdf.
2 U.S. EPA, 2006. Wadeable Streams Assessment: A Collaborative Survey of the Nation's Streams. EPA
841-B-06-002. Available at http://www.epa.qov/owow/streamsurvey. See also EPA, 2010. National Lakes
Assessment: A Collaborative Survey of the Nation's Lakes. EPA 841-R-09-001. Available at
http://www.epa.gov/lakessurvey/pdf/nla chapter0.pdf.
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                               Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters


Pollution discharged from industrial,  municipal, agricultural, and  stormwater point sources continue to
cause  a decline in  the quality of our waters.  Other significant contributors to degraded water quality
include: loss of habitat; habitat fragmentation; and changes in the way water is infiltrated  into soils, runs
off the  land, and flows down streams (hydrologic alteration).

We can  no  longer  rely  on traditional tools and  approaches to protect our waters in urban and  rural
settings. We are focusing  on developing  new  targeting  tools, promoting green  infrastructure and
sustainable  solutions and  building  resiliency to deal  with the impacts from  climate  change, and
strengthening  our  partnerships  with federal  agencies, non-government  organizations  and  private
companies committed to  supporting local efforts to improve and  protect waterways.  From  nutrient
loadings and stormwater runoff, to invasive species,  energy extraction, and drinking water contaminants,
water  quality programs  face complex challenges that  can be  addressed effectively only through  a
combination of traditional and innovative strategies.  The EPA  will continue to work hand-in-hand with
states  and tribes to develop and implement nutrient limits  and intensify our work to restore and protect the
quality of the nation's streams, rivers, lakes, bays, oceans, and aquifers. We will continue the increased
focus  on  urban  and  rural  communities,  particularly  those  disadvantaged  communities  facing
disproportionate impacts, or that have been historically  underserved. We also will use our authority to
protect and restore threatened natural treasures such as  the Great Lakes, the Chesapeake Bay, and the
Gulf of Mexico;  address our neglected urban rivers; ensure safe  drinking water; and reduce pollution from
nonpoint and industrial dischargers.  The EPA  will continue to  address post-construction  runoff, water-
quality impairments from surface mining, and drinking water contamination.

As part of the agency's long-term strategy, the EPA is implementing a Sustainable Water Infrastructure
Policy3 that focuses on working with states and communities to promote more effective management and
enhance technical, managerial and financial  capacity within the drinking water and wastewater sectors.
Important to the enhanced technical capacity will be  alternatives analyses to expand green infrastructure
options and their multiple benefits. Federal dollars provided through the State Revolving Funds will act as
a catalyst for efficient system-wide planning and ongoing management of sustainable water infrastructure.

The EPA continues to work with  its partners across  the  Federal government to leverage  resources and
avoid duplication  of efforts.  The EPA and USDA continue to  enhance existing coordination efforts in
reducing nonpoint source pollution.  The EPA, DOI, and  DOE are working together to research the
impacts of hydraulic fracturing activities  to support the  state and Federal  agencies  that oversee this
growing energy extraction method.


Major  FY 2015  Changes

The FY 2015 Congressional Justification builds from our core  programs and identifies realignments to
support our top priority work in  six areas. In Goal 2, resources  have been  realigned to focus  on
Communities; Addressing  Climate  Change; Protecting Waters; Taking Action on Toxics  and Chemical
Safety; and  Building a High Performing  Environmental Protection Enterprise. Goal 2  resources  include
over $2.9 billion in extramural resources and 1,868.3  FTE. Resources and FTE been realigned to focus in
these targeted areas, building on progress to date and advancing these priorities in FY 2015. The total
increase to the  categorical grant funding  for state in support of core environmental programs in Goal 2 is
approximately $22.2 million4.  In FY 2015, the agency is  requesting $1.8 billion for the Clean Water and
Drinking  Water State Revolving Funds (SRFs), a reduction of  approximately $581  million from  the FY
2014 operating  level.
3 http://water.epa.gov/infrastructure/sustain/upload/Sustainability-Policy.pdf
4 $7.7 M PWSS categorical grant dollar increase, $18.4 Pollution Control (Section106) categorical grant
dollar increase, $5.7 Nonpoint Source grants increase fora total of $31.8 million, minus Beaches
categorical grant dollar decrease, $9.9million.
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                               Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters


Making a Visible Difference in Communities across the Country
The  agency's budget  realigns $5.0 million extramural resources and  30 FTE to strengthen green
infrastructure activities to further sustainability goals, particularly in urban,  underserved and economically
distressed communities. Incorporating green infrastructure and enhancing stormwater management helps
to create livable urban  communities and improve the quality of urban waters.  Green Infrastructure is a
cost-effective  and resilient  approach  to  our stormwater  infrastructure needs that  provides many
community benefits: improving water and air quality; reducing energy use  and mitigating climate change;
improving habitat  for wildlife; reducing a  community's infrastructure cost and promoting  economic
growth.5 More information is available at
http://water.epa.qov/infrastructure/qreeninfrastructure/qi  costbenefits.cfm.

Protecting Waters
Most waters  take years to recover fully, and although incremental  improvements represent progress,
these improvements are often difficult to measure. In FY 2015, the EPA will redirect $4.5  million and 10
FTE in a new approach for  measuring local improvements  in water quality. This new tool builds upon
efforts  that the EPA has already made in coordinating with USGS on the  National Hydrography  Dataset
Plus (NHDPIus), water quality monitoring, and providing information  in  a  common format via the Water
Quality Data Portal. This approach will provide data on water quality priority areas that will integrate with
national and state-scale statistical surveys to provide a complete picture on water quality.

The agency's budget realigns $2.5 million  extramural  resources for efforts directed toward  Municipal
Separate Storm Sewer Systems (MS4s).  These efforts will assist MS4s, particularly  newly regulated
MS4s,  and support clean water goals of protecting  the Nation's waterbodies from the harmful effects of
stormwater discharges.

In FY 2015, resources will be used to develop tools to identify priorities in support of the TMDL  10-year
vision.  The CWA 303(d) Listing and TMDL program has engaged with states to implement the new 10-
year vision for the program.  As part of this  effort, the EPA will continue to encourage states to identify
priority waters for assessment, development of TMDLs and other restoration plans for impaired segments
and watersheds, and pursuit of protection approaches for unimpaired  waters. The EPA  will work with
states and other partners to develop and implement activities and watershed plans to restore and protect
these waters.  This integrated approach will promote transparency, sharing of data and reduce reporting
burden.

In FY 2015, the EPA is  proposing a realignment of $1 million to support states and tribes in  making sound
permitting decisions and providing  oversight related to  implementation of EPA's guidance on hydraulic
fracturing with diesel fuels. On February 12, 2014,  the  EPA released an  interpretive  memorandum and
technical recommendations for EPA regions and  state and tribal Directors responsible for implementing
the Underground Injection Control (DIG) Program Class II requirements under the  Safe Drinking Water
Act for oil and gas hydraulic fracturing activities using diesel fuels. This work supports the agency's
priorities  of safeguarding public health and environmental justice, while recognizing the important role that
energy extraction,  including natural  gas development, plays in our energy future. These funds will  help
states and tribes review complex data. Funding will also be used to conduct inspections of permitted wells
to ensure  ongoing compliance.  Implementation support will ensure  that  authorized  agencies  are
effectively managing and overseeing the rapidly growing energy sector while preventing endangerment of
underground  sources of drinking  water. In addition, this also will help address the  increased volume of
wastewater and produced water that comes from hydraulic fracturing activities.

Addressing Climate Change
In FY 2015, in support for the President's Climate Action Plan, the EPA is realigning $2 million to advance
the long-term  sustainability of water sector  infrastructure and supplies  by incorporating climate  change
and resiliency considerations  into  effective utility  management practices. Climate change and  other
extreme events, in  the absence of adequate planning, directly threaten water systems' ability to fulfill their
public health and environmental missions as is evident from the devastation from Superstorm Sandy. We
5http://water.epa.gov/infrastructure/greeninfrastructure/gi_why.cfm#Community
                                               25

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                               Goal 2:  Protecting America's Waters


will continue working to  ensure that water sector utilities have tools and information to prevent, detect,
respond to, and  recover from serious  hazards including terrorist attacks, and extreme weather events.
The EPA will promote more robust drinking water, wastewater, and stormwater (water sector) system
adaptation by increasing the national prominence of the Climate Ready Water Utilities (CRWU) initiative
and our emergency response (ER) and preparedness efforts. These redirected resources will improve the
ability of drinking water and wastewater systems to continue to fulfill their public health and environmental
missions despite unprecedented extreme weather events.

Taking Action on Toxics and Chemical Safety
As part of the Drinking Water Strategy,  the agency is realigning $1 million and 2 FTE to increase its focus
on  regulating groups of drinking  water contaminants,  including  volatile organic compounds (VOCs).
Grouping contaminants can  more effectively addresses potential risks and demonstrates a predictable
strategy for regulating similar contaminants  and/or groups  in the future. This group regulation requires
more scientific input, complex analyses, and  supporting documentation than a  regulation for a single
contaminant.  The  innovative  nature of the  group regulation also dictates the  need for  increased
public/scientific outreach and comment in the form of webinars and/or public meetings.

Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Funds
The Administration has strongly supported the SRFs. Including the FY2015 request, federal capitalization
totals over $22  billion since  2009. Since their inception, the SRFs have been funded (including the FY
2015 request) at over $59 billion. Going forward, the EPA will work to target assistance to small and
underserved communities with a limited ability to repay loans, while maintaining state program integrity.
The Administration strongly  supports efforts to  expand the use of green  infrastructure to meet Clean
Water Act goals.  To further these  efforts, the budget targets 20 percent  of the CWSRF capitalization
grants to green  infrastructure projects  including those to manage stormwater, which helps  communities
improve water quality while creating green  space, mitigating  flooding, and  enhancing air quality. The
CWSRFs have  provided over $2.6 billion for water and  energy  efficiency, green infrastructure, and
environmentally innovative projects.


Agency Priority Goals

The EPA has developed  new FY  2014-2015 Agency Priority  Goals  that advance the Administrator's
Priorities and the agency's Strategic Plan. The  EPA's two proposed goals to improve water quality are:

Improve, restore, and  maintain water quality by enhancing nonpoint  source program leveraging,
accountability, and on-the-ground effectiveness to address the nation's largest sources of pollution. By
September 30, 2015, 100 percent of the states will have updated nonpoint source management programs
that comport  with the new Section 319 grant guidelines that will result in better targeting  of resources
through prioritization and increased coordination with USDA.

Improve public health protection for persons served by small drinking water systems,  which account for
more than 97%  of public water systems  in the U.S., by strengthening the  technical, managerial, and
financial capacity of those systems. By September 30, 2015, the EPA  will engage with an additional ten
states (for a  total of 30 states) and three tribes to improve small drinking  water system  capability to
provide safe drinking water, an invaluable resource.

Additional information on the EPA's Agency Priority Goals can be found at www.performance.gov.


FY 2015 Activities

The EPA will continue to  emphasize watershed stewardship, watershed-based approaches,  water
efficiencies, and best practices. In addition to the realignments highlighted above, the EPA will continue to
implement its core water programs to maximize efficiencies and environmental results.
                                               26

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                               Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters


Objective 1: Protect Human Health. Achieve  and maintain  standards and guidelines protective  of
human  health in drinking  water supplies, fish,  shellfish,  and recreational waters  and protect and
sustainably manage drinking water resources.

Drinking Water
To help achieve the agency's priority to protect America's waters, in FY 2015 the EPA will continue  to
implement its Drinking Water Strategy, an approach to expanding  public health protection for drinking
water.   The EPA's  goal is  to streamline decision-making,  expand  protection under existing laws, and
promote cost-effective new technologies to meet the  needs of rural,  urban and  other water-stressed
communities. The agency will focus on regulating groups of drinking water contaminants, improving water
treatment technology and expanding communication with states, tribes and urban and rural communities.
As part  of the strategy, the agency is investing an additional $1 million to increase its focus on regulating
groups  of drinking water contaminants which  more effectively addresses potential risks  and creates a
framework for regulating  similar contaminants and/or groups in the future.

In FY 2015, the EPA will invest an additional $7.7 million in PWSS grants to augment state and tribal efforts
in meeting existing drinking water regulations and prepare for implementation of new regulations, including the
Revised Total Coliform Rule. States and  tribes will  work to ensure that systems can acquire and  maintain
basic implementation capabilities and can conduct sanitary  surveys according  to required schedules.
These resources also will be used by states and tribes as they provide technical  assistance and training
to help meet the continued needs of the small water systems. The grants have been successful in helping
public water systems achieve compliance with standards,  as well  as decreasing the number of small
systems that have repeat health-based  violations of standards. As of the end of FY 2013, 92 percent  of
the population  served  by  community  water  systems (CWSs) received drinking  water that met all
applicable health-based drinking water standards.  This result equaled the performance target.

To help ensure water is safe to drink and to address the nation's aging drinking water infrastructure, $757
million for the Drinking Water State Revolving  Fund will support new infrastructure improvement projects
for public drinking water systems in  FY 2015  and beyond.  Getting these funds to where  they are most
needed  in a timely manner is important.  In FY2015, appropriated DWSRF funds will again be allocated  to
the states in accordance with each state's proportion of total drinking water infrastructure need based on
the new 2011 Needs Survey which  was reported to Congress in April 2013. 6 The EPA also published
data  concerning the drinking water infrastructure needs of water systems serving tribes and Alaskan
Native Villages as a special  focus of this survey.

These funds have been  utilized effectively by the  states. Since FY 2006, the fund utilization rate7 for the
DWSRF has surpassed its target, and most recently in FY2013, the  DWSRF utilization rate of 91 percent
exceeded the EPA's target of 89 percent. In concert with the states, the EPA will focus this affordable,
flexible  financial  assistance to support  utility compliance with safe  drinking water standards. The EPA
requests a funding floor for assistance  provided to Tribes, and will reserve the greater of $20 million  or
2% of appropriated  funds for the Indian Tribes and Alaska  Native Villages. The EPA also will work with
utilities  to  promote technical, financial, and  managerial  capacity as  a critical  means  to  meeting
infrastructure needs and  enhancing program performance and efficiency.

The responsibility for communities and public water systems to continuously provide safe drinking water is
a key component of the nation's health and well being.  The delivery of safe drinking water is often taken
for granted and  is extremely undervalued.  More than 156,000 public water systems  provide drinking
water to the  approximately 320 million persons in  the U.S. More than 97% of these public water systems
serve fewer than 10,000 persons. While most small systems consistently provide safe, reliable drinking
water to their customers, many small systems are facing a number of significant challenges in their ability
6 Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment. April 2013.
http://water.epa.gov/grants_funding/dwsrf/upload/epa816r13006.pdf
7 Utilization rate is the cumulative dollar amount of loan agreements divided by cumulative funds available
for projects. Cumulative funds available include the federal capitalization grant portion and everything that
is in the SRF (state match, interest payments, etc.).
                                               27

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                               Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters


to achieve and maintain system sustainability. These challenges include aging infrastructure, increased
regulatory requirements, workforce shortages/high-turnover, increasing costs, and declining rate bases.

The  EPA is emphasizing attention to the needs  of these small communities/systems while balancing
current fiscal realities as the state grant and state assistance programs are implemented. In FY 2012, the
EPA re-energized its small systems focus by working more closely with state programs to improve public
water system sustainability and  public health protection for persons served by small water systems as
part  of an Agency Priority Goal.  Again in 2014 and 2015, by  continuing the Priority  Goal, the  EPA is
building on  its successful efforts to strengthen small system technical, managerial and financial capability
through the implementation of the Capacity Development Program, the Public Water System Supervision
state grant program and the Drinking Water State  Revolving Fund.  The Capacity Development Program
establishes a framework within which states and water systems can work together to help  these small
systems achieve  the  SDWA's public health  protection objectives. The state  Capacity Development
programs are supported federally by the Public Water System Supervision state grant funds and the set-
asides established in the Drinking Water  State Revolving Fund. Since the 1996  SDWA Amendments,
states have implemented  a variety of activities to assist small systems with their compliance challenges
and enhance their technical, managerial, and financial capacity.

The  EPA continues to increase  public awareness  of the risks to human health associated with the
consumption offish contaminated with mercury, an effort directly linked to the agency mission to protect
human  health. EPA analysis of  data from the Centers for Disease Control  and  Prevention's  (CDC's)
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES)), show that the geometric mean of blood
mercury levels decreased by 34  percent in  women of childbearing age between  the  first survey cycle
(1999 - 2000) and second survey cycle (2001-2002), and then remained fairly constant between 2003
and  2010.The study also found  that there  was  a 65  percent decrease  in the number of women of
childbearing age  with blood levels of mercury above the level of concern between the first  and second
survey cycles of NHANES. While the data  do not indicate that women are consuming less fish, the
analysis suggests  that women have  reduced  their consumption of the types of  fish  that have higher
mercury concentrations. Further information is available in the EPA study published in June 2013 entitled
Trends  in  Blood  Mercury Concentrations  and Fish Consumption among U.S. Women of Childbearing
Age;         http://water.epa.gov/scitech/swguidance/fishshellfish/fishadvisories/upload/Trends-in-Blood-
Mercury-Concentrations-and-Fish-Consumption-Among-U-S-Women-of-Childbearing-Age-NHANES-
1999-2010.pdf
Objective 2: Protect and Restore Watersheds and Aquatic Ecosystems: Protect, restore, and sustain
the quality of rivers, lakes, streams,  and wetlands on a watershed basis, and sustainably manage and
protect coastal and ocean resources and ecosystems.

Clean Water
In FY 2015, the EPA will continue to collaborate with states and tribes to make progress toward the EPA's
clean water goals. Programs for controlling  nonpoint sources of pollution are a key  to  reducing the
number of impaired waters nationwide. The programs provide a multi-faceted approach to the problem,
using innovative development strategies to help  leverage traditional tools. The EPA will support efforts of
states, tribes,  other  federal  agencies, and  local communities  to develop  watershed-based plans to
achieve water quality standards. Working with states to more fully utilize the revolving fund capitalization
grants will help build, revive, and  "green" our aging infrastructure. In FY 2015, funding  in categorical
grants for clean water programs will  enable the EPA, states, and tribes to  implement core clean water
programs  and promising innovations on a watershed basis to accelerate water quality improvements.

In FY2015, the EPA will continue to forge and strengthen strategic partnerships with other federal agency
programs, in particular with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, which implements Farm
Bill  conservation  programs that can help control nonpoint source  pollution. Agricultural sources of
pollution in the form of animal waste,  fertilizer, and sediments have a particularly profound effect on water
quality. In FY 2015, the EPA will partner with  USDA to focus federal  resources on watersheds  in every
state. As part of our joint work, in FY 2014, 173 priority watersheds were selected in 51 states and areas
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                               Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters


for targeted USDA conservation investments. In FY 2014, the EPA worked with states as they stood up
in-stream monitoring support in impaired watersheds to assess water quality progress from implemented
conservation practices in 68 of the NWQI watersheds; this monitoring will continue in FY2015. Tackling
nonpoint source pollution is an FY 2014-2015 Agency Priority Goal with quarterly milestones.

Building on 30 years of clean water successes,  the EPA, in  conjunction with states and tribes, will
address the requirements of the Clean Water Act by focusing on two primary tools: Total Maximum Daily
Loads8  (TMDLs)  and National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System  (NPDES)  permits, built upon
scientifically sound water quality standards  and technology-based pollutant discharge limits. In FY 2015,
the CWA 303(d) Listing and TMDL Program will continue to engage with states to implement the new 10-
year vision for the program. As part of this effort, the EPA will  continue to encourage  states to identify
priority waters for  assessment and for completing TMDLs and other restoration plans to address impaired
segments. The EPA  will work with states  and other partners to develop and implement  activities and
watershed plans to restore these waters.

The EPA also will  work with states and other partners to improve our ability to identify  and protect healthy
waters/watersheds, and to pursue integration and application of core program tools. As part of an agency-
wide effort to  make  regulations easier  to implement,  resources  have been realigned to accelerate
implementation of e-reporting, which will minimize burden for data entry and error resolution, reduce effort
in responding to public requests for data, establish consistent requirements for electronic reporting across
all states, and allow  more  timely access to NPDES program data in an electronic format for the EPA,
states, regulated entities, and the public.

The  EPA will  continue  to work with  states  to structure the  permit  program  to better  support
comprehensive protection of water quality on a watershed basis. Progress has been steady in improving
water quality conditions in  impaired watersheds  nationwide. Reductions in nutrient levels  in sources of
drinking water reduce treatment costs while strengthening public health protection. In  2008 there were
only 60 watersheds that experienced improved water quality conditions, as identified by removal of one or
more causes  of impairment. By FY 2013,  this number had risen to 376, exceeding the target of 370.
Water quality conditions remain a significant challenge, with approximately 41,000 known impaired water
bodies nationwide in 2013.  In FY 2015, the EPA will focus on: promoting the use of green infrastructure
and water quality-based effluent limits in stormwater permits; controlling discharges from concentrated
animal feeding operations; and addressing issues of permitting for new waste streams, such as shale gas
extraction; and steam electric power plants. To combat stormwater as a  main  contributor of nutrients and
sediments, the agency issued a final 2012  NPDES general permit for stormwater discharges from large
and  small  construction  activities.  The  general  permit will  strengthen  requirements  for  stormwater
discharges from, at minimum, eligible existing and new construction projects in all areas of the country
where the EPA is the  NPDES permitting authority.

The EPA requests $1.018 billion in capitalization to the Clean Water State  Revolving Fund (CWSRF). As
of June  2012,  the CWSRF  has  offered  over 33,000  assistance agreements to  local  communities,
providing approximately $100 billion in affordable financing for wastewater infrastructure, nonpoint source
pollution  control, and estuary management projects. In  FY 2015, the Agency continues to provide an
important tool  for reaching underserved and  disadvantaged  communities by allowing  the  CWSRF to
provide a portion of the federal funds as additional subsidy in the form of principal forgiveness, negative
interest, or grants. In  2015,  the Agency is requesting that not less than  10 percent but not more than 20
percent of the CWSRF appropriation made  available to each state be used to provide additional subsidy
to eligible recipients  in the form  of forgiveness of principal, negative  interest loans, or grants (or any
combination of these). The additional subsidy would apply to the entire CWSRF appropriation.

In FY 2015, the agency is requesting a Tribal set-aside  of two percent,  or $30  million, whichever is
greatest, of the funds appropriated from the  CWSRF.  The agency requests the  establishment  of a
funding  floor for the  Tribes  due to overall declining funding  levels that have negatively  impacted the
 1 For more information, visit: http://water.epa.qov/lawsreqs/lawsquidance/cwa/tmdl/index.cfm.
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                               Goal 2:  Protecting America's Waters


Tribes.  Resources for the tribes will provide  much  needed assistance to  these  communities whose
sanitation infrastructure lags behind the rest of the country causing significant public health concerns.

The  Section  106 Categorical  State  Grant Program  supports  prevention and control  measures that
improve water quality. In  FY 2015, the agency is requesting an additional $18.4 million  in Section 106
funding for states and tribes to implement water pollution control programs and support state and tribal
nutrient  management efforts consistent  with  EPA guidance  issued  in  March  2011.  Nitrogen and
phosphorus pollution is one of the costliest and most challenging environmental problems, but there are
solutions for both point and nonpoint sources that can yield progress.

Through the Monitoring and Assessment Partnership, the EPA will work with states to develop and apply
innovative and efficient monitoring tools and techniques to optimize availability of high-quality data to
support Clean Water Act program needs and to expand the use of monitoring data and geo-spatial tools
for water resource protection to set priorities and evaluate  effectiveness of water protection. The EPA,
states, and tribes will collaborate to plan  and mobilize to conduct  field sampling for the 2015 National
Coastal  Condition Assessment.  In FY 2015, the  EPA and  states will release the 2012 National Lakes
Assessment following partner and external peer review. The EPA and states will initiate data analysis and
peer review of the second National Rivers and Streams Assessment, and the report will be completed in
FY 2016. In FY 2015, the EPA/State  Steering Committee for the National Wetlands Assessment will  be
planning the next survey targeted to be conducted in the field in calendar year 2016.9

The EPA, in cooperation with federal, state and tribal governments and other stakeholders will continue to
make progress toward achieving  the national goal of no  net loss of wetlands  under the Clean Water Act
Section 404 regulatory program. In FY 2015, the agency is providing $14.7 million for Wetlands Program
Development  Grants. In  addition, in  FY  2015, the EPA will be working with  other federal and state
partners to maximize the effectiveness of resources provided through the Resources and Ecosystems
Sustainability, Tourist Opportunities, and Revived Economies of the Gulf Coast States Act (RESTORE
Act) and supporting the Natural Resource Damage Assessment associated with the Deepwater Horizon
oil spill to restore the Gulf of Mexico.

Since 2002, almost one and a half million acres of habitat have been protected or restored within National
Estuary Program study areas. The agency's FY 2015 budget requests $26.7 million for National Estuaries
Programs and Coastal Waterways that will enable the protection or restoration of more than one hundred
thousand habitat acres.

The agency will continue in FY 2015 to assist communities - particularly underserved communities  - in
their local efforts to  restore  and  protect the quality of their urban  waters. By integrating water quality
improvement  activities with local priorities,  the EPA will help to sustain local commitment for water quality
improvement  in urban watersheds. The EPA will provide grants and technical assistance and will partner
with federal, state, local, and non-governmental organizations to support community stewardship of local
urban water  restoration efforts, helping  communities revitalize  their  waterfronts and  accelerate
measurable water quality improvements. This work supports the President's American's Great Outdoors
(AGO) initiative. In FY 2015 the  EPA will  continue to  co-lead the Urban Waters Federal Partnership to
deliver technical assistance to 18 Federal Partnership locations to  help advance their water restoration
and community revitalization goals. In FY 2015 the Partnership will continue to align federal resources to
meet  local needs  more effectively and to  advance shared multi-agency priorities.  For example,  the
partnership will  help address  storm  water management  and  promote green infrastructure  through
identification  and transfer of best practices and successful  local  approaches. Also  in FY 2015,  the
Partnership will continue to support  public-private partnerships that leverage  additional resources to
support local efforts to restore watersheds.
9 National Water Quality Assessment Report. http://www.epa.gov/waters/ir/about_integrated.html
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                               Goal 2:  Protecting America's Waters


Climate Change- Management of Sustainable Resources
Climate change contributes to changes  in  water quality and  poses significant challenges to water
resource managers. Impacts of climate change include too little water in some places and too much water
in others, while some locations are subject to both of these conditions during different times of the year.
Water  cycle changes  are expected to  continue and  will adversely affect energy production and use,
human  health, transportation, agriculture,  and ecosystems. In 2012,  the  National Water Program
published the  second National Water  Program 2012 Strategy: Response to Climate Change, which
describes a set of long-term goals for  the  management  of sustainable water resources for future
generations in  light of climate  change and  charts the key "building blocks" that would need to be taken to
achieve those  goals. It also reflects the wider context of climate change-related activity that is underway
throughout the nation. The 2012 Strategy is  intended to be a roadmap to  guide future programmatic
planning.

WaterSense,  Climate  Ready  Estuaries, Climate Ready Water  Utilities, and Green Infrastructure are
examples of programs that will help stakeholders adapt to climate change in FY 2015. The Climate Ready
Water Utilities  initiative will help water systems of all sizes integrate climate variability considerations into
their long-range planning. Efforts to incorporate climate change considerations into key programs will help
protect  water   quality  and the   nation's  investment in drinking  water and  wastewater treatment
infrastructure.  The Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative would support additional  preparation for
the impacts of  climate change  by protecting and enhancing coastal wetlands.

Geographic Water Programs
The Administration has expanded and enhanced numerous cross-agency efforts to promote collaboration
and coordination among agencies, which  include a suite of  large aquatic ecosystem  restoration efforts.
Four prominent examples of the EPA of cross-agency restoration efforts are the Puget Sound, the Great
Lakes, the Chesapeake Bay, and the Gulf  of Mexico. Working with its partners and stakeholders, the EPA
has established special programs to protect and restore each of these unique natural resources.

The EPA's ecosystem protection programs encompass a wide range of approaches that address  specific
at-risk regional areas and larger categories of threatened systems, such as urban waters,  estuaries, and
wetlands. Locally generated pollution, combined with pollution carried by rivers and streams and  through
air deposition,  can accumulate in these ecosystems and degrade them overtime. The EPA and its federal
partners along with states, tribes, municipalities, and  private parties, will continue efforts to restore the
integrity of these waters.

Puqet Sound:
The Puget Sound program's  FY 2015 budget  request of $25  million will allow the  EPA to continue
supporting  efforts to protect  and  restore  the Puget Sound by  implementing the Puget  Sound Action
Agenda. The Action Agenda emphasizes  three areas: shellfish, stormwater, and habitat.  The goal is for
the estuary to support balanced indigenous populations of shellfish, fish and wildlife, and the extensive list
of recognized uses of the Puget Sound, as well as to meet obligations under federal tribal  treaties. In FY
2013 the Puget Sound was able to report 30,128 acres of near shore, riparian, and wetland habitat acres
protected or restored, an increase of over 6,000 since 2012.

The EPA provides leadership for the Puget Sound Federal Caucus and co-chairs the overall federal effort
to  address Treaty  Rights at Risk10. The EPA addresses its obligations  under federal Tribal  treaties by
funding Puget  Sound projects that support treaty-protected resources such as indigenous  populations of
shellfish, fish and other wildlife.  By emphasizing these areas, the agency's implementation of the EPA
actions  in  the Federal Habitat Plan and its  participation in the Tribal-Federal  Habitat  Forum further
demonstrate its commitment to Tribal concerns in Puget Sound. In FY 2015, the EPA proposes to provide
twenty-five percent of the total program funding directly to tribes. Additionally, fifty percent of the total
funding will be directed to  assistance agreements  addressing salmon and shellfish   recovery,  and
specifically riparian buffers and habitat protection.
10For more information, visit: http://nwifc.0rg/w/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2011/08/whitepaper628finalpdf.pdf
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                               Goal 2: Protecting America's Waters
Great Lakes:
In FY2015, $275 million in funding for the EPA-led Great Lakes Restoration Initiative will address priority
environmental issues (e.g., toxic substances, nonpoint source pollution, habitat degradation and loss, and
invasive species) in the largest freshwater system in the world. This carefully coordinated interagency
effort involves the White House Council on Environmental Quality, U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S.
Department  of  Commerce, Department of Health and  Human  Services, Department  of  Homeland
Security, Department of Housing and Urban Development, Department of State, Department of Defense,
Department of Interior, and Department of Transportation  and begins efforts under a new action plan
beginning  in 2015. This effort  has contributed to the removal of 29 Beneficial Use Impairments at  13
different Great Lakes Areas of Concern through FY 2013, meeting the EPA's FY 2013 cumulative target
of 41 for this measure.

The EPA expects to continue to achieve substantial public and environmental health results through both
federal projects and  projects conducted in collaboration with states, tribes, municipalities, universities,
and  other organizations.  The  EPA expects to  continue remediating  and  restoring Areas of Concern,
preventing and controlling invasive species, protecting nearshore areas and addressing nonpoint sources
of pollution, protecting and restoring habitats and species, and addressing other crosscutting issues.

The EPA will place a priority on: 1) cleaning up and de-listing Areas of Concern; 2) reducing phosphorus
contributions from agricultural and urban lands that contribute to harmful algal blooms and other water
quality impairments; and 3) invasive species prevention. Expected outcomes include remediation of over
400 thousand cubic yards of contaminated sediment; completing management actions at additional Areas
of Concern and delisting of one or more Areas of Concern; reduction or control of terrestrial invasive
species on about 1,000 acres; and targeting of sources of excess nutrients in sub-watersheds of the
western basin of Lake Erie, Saginaw Bay on Lake Huron, and Green Bay on Lake Michigan.

Chesapeake Bay:
The  Chesapeake Bay program is funded in FY 2015 at approximately $73 million which will allow the
EPA-led inter-agency Federal Leadership Committee to continue to implement the President's Executive
Order (EO) on Chesapeake Bay Protection and Restoration, to meet the  EPA's broad  responsibilities
under  Clean  Water  Act  Section 117.  Key initiatives  include:  completing and  implementing  a new
partnership agreement to establish management strategies  and outcomes for fisheries,  water  quality,
habitat, and other key areas that are consistent with the EO;  continuing to  assist  states in implementing
their Phase II Watershed Implementation Plans (WIPs); preparing for a mid-point assessment of progress
made  under  the  Bay  TMDL;  assisting  Bay jurisdictions in developing  effective offset and  trading
programs; conducting  assessments of jurisdictions' agricultural, stormwater and trading and offset
programs; conducting permit reviews; continuing compliance and  enforcement in accordance with the EO
strategy;  providing  financial support and technical guidance  for  innovative  environmental technologies,
market mechanisms, and alternative financing  approaches to more effectively achieve the goals of the
TMDL; developing  strategies to implement the goals to address toxics; improving the Bay  monitoring
system; implementing a basin-wide Best Management Practice verification framework; and improving the
publicly available  web-based  accountability   tools  ChesapeakeSfaf  and  the  Bay  Tracking and
Accountability System (BayTAS).

FY  2015  funding will  help the Chesapeake  Bay Program continue to  implement pollution controls
necessary to restore Bay water quality. The program met or exceeded its  FY 2013 targets for pollution
controls. Several of the Bay watershed jurisdictions have established or expanded water quality trading
programs to support the goals of their WIPs and other milestones. By FY 2015, the program  expects to
achieve 37.5 percent of its goals for implementing nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment reduction  actions
to achieve final TMDL  allocations (the FY 2010 baseline  is  0 percent,  and the  long term goal is 100
percent goal achievement by 2025).

The Chesapeake Bay Program's grant programs are important tools for ensuring  progress on the seven
Bay  jurisdictions' WIPs, and the EPA is  working  to ensure that the states provide support to local
governments as they take the on-the-ground actions necessary to achieve  the goals of the Chesapeake
Bay TMDL. The EPA also will direct investments toward local governments and watershed organizations
based on their ability to reduce  nutrient and sediment loads under such key sectors as development and
                                              32

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                               Goal 2:  Protecting America's Waters


agriculture. In FY 2015, the EPA will continue to provide resources to Bay watershed jurisdictions working
to improve the viability and integrity of their water quality offset and trading programs.


Gulf of Mexico Program:
The Gulf of Mexico program's FY 2015 budget request of $3.8 million will allow the EPA to continue its
support for Gulf restoration  work, such as habitat conservation and replenishment and protection of
coastal  and  marine  resources.  The  EPA will  actively support the  Resources  and  Ecosystems
Sustainability, Tourist Opportunities, and Revived Economies of the Gulf Coast States Act (RESTORE
Act) and other activities in the Gulf of Mexico. The coastal waters of the Gulf of Mexico received an
overall health rating of 2.4 out of 5 in the National Coastal Conditions Report, meeting its FY2012 target.
The index is a compilation of 5 individual  indices measuring a broad range of environmental conditions:
water quality, sediment quality, benthic zone  conditions,  condition of coastal  habitats, and fish tissue
contaminants.  During FY 2015, funding will  support (through  the competitive  federal process) the
development and  implementation of comprehensive, stakeholder-informed coastal  improvement projects
and tools. The focus will  be efforts that directly enhance community planning,  risk assessment, green
infrastructure and  smart growth implementation. The Gulf Program works extensively and collaboratively
with  multiple  agencies that  share  responsibility  in  this  area, including the  National  Oceanic  and
Atmospheric Administration's Sea Grant Programs and the U.S. Geological Survey.

Homeland Security

In FY 2015, the EPA will focus on conducting extensive training and outreach on the recently completed
electronic deployment tool, the Surveillance and Response System, that guides water systems though the
process of designing and deploying drinking water contamination warning systems. The EPA also will
continue to support  the  Water  Alliance for  Threat  Reduction to protect the nation's critical water
infrastructure and  oversee the national laboratory network that forms the Water Laboratory Alliance. The
Water Laboratory Alliance enables the water  sector to  rapidly analyze a surge of laboratory samples
during a significant contamination event.

In FY 2015, the  EPA will invest $500 thousand in cybersecurity in order to fulfill its obligations under
Executive Order (EO) 13636 - Improving Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity - which designates the EPA
as the lead agency  responsible for cybersecurity  in the water sector.  Recent  assessments  by the
Department of Homeland  Security have supported the widespread concern that the primary threat to the
nation's critical infrastructure  is cyber-attack on Industrial Control Systems (ICS). Both drinking water and
wastewater systems rely heavily on ICS that were designed in many cases decades ago with little or no
consideration of cyber security.  Any interruption  of a clean and safe water supply would erode public
confidence and could produce significant public health and economic consequences.  As such, the  EPA
will increase its efforts in cybersecurity as consistent with the President's direction.

In FY 2015, the EPA will continue to build its capacity to identify and respond to threats to critical national
water infrastructure. The EPA's wastewater and drinking water security efforts will continue to support the
water sector  by providing access to  information-sharing tools and  mechanisms that provide timely
information on contaminant properties, water treatment effectiveness,  detection technologies, analytical
protocols, and laboratory capabilities for use in responding to a water contamination  event.

Research

The Safe and Sustainable Water Resources (SSWR)  research program, funded at $114.2 million in  FY
2015, conducts research and provides the information and tools to  EPA, water resource managers, and
other  decision  makers at  all  levels  of government.  Research  integrates  social,  economic,   and
environmental sciences to support the nation's range of growing water-use and ecological requirements.
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                               Goal 2:  Protecting America's Waters


The SSWR research program conducts research around two inter-related themes:

Theme 1: Sustainable Water Resources - Integrates environmental,  economic, social, and sciences to
provide  effective  and efficient  tools to ensure  safe  and sustainable water quality and  availability.
Research focuses on protecting and restoring water resources for designated uses (e.g.,  drinking water,
aquatic life, recreation, agriculture, industrial processes).

Theme  2: Sustainable  Water  Infrastructure  Systems  - Focuses  on  developing innovative water
infrastructure management approaches and techniques  for reducing barriers to improved water-resources
management.   Research   encompasses  system  design,   treatment   alternatives   and  potential
negative/positive health  effects, life-cycle analysis, best management  practices  (BMP), resiliency  and
viability. SSWR is increasingly focusing on unique  needs for small water systems.

In  FY 2015,  the  EPA will  shift the emphasis of its Green  Infrastructure research efforts away from
performance monitoring of best management practices (BMP) at individual sites to  work with communities
and to expand research efforts with constructed and natural  green infrastructure  to a more  holistic,
watershed approach. This will include reinvesting  $2.3 million for the pilot-testing of approaches for:
    •   Integrating the use and placement of natural green infrastructure (wetlands, riparian buffers) and
       constructed green infrastructure (permeable pavement, green  roofs, etc.) within the watershed for
       maximum stormwater interception and mitigation;
    •   Mitigating flood events and "heat-island" effects that have associated public health and economic
       consequences, especially during extreme weather events and  a warming climate; and
    •   Reducing sediment  and nutrients in source water watersheds used for drinking water.

Research on long-term performance  monitoring and new BMP development will  continue through  support
for extramural research at academic institutions.

Energy and mineral extraction and production also have  the potential to impact surface and subsurface
water resources.  The SSWR program  is developing  assessment techniques  to assist  our policy  and
decision makers at the local, state, and  federal  levels, in creating an environmentally responsible energy
policy.  In  particular,  in  FY 2015  hydraulic fracturing  (HF) research will focus  on  understanding  any
potential  impacts of energy-associated activities on water resources. In conjunction with this, in 2012, the
EPA signed a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA)  with DOE and DOI,  to develop a multi-agency program
to  focus  on timely,  policy  relevant  science  to support  sound policy decisions  by state and  Federal
agencies for ensuring the prudent development of energy sources while  protecting human health  and the
environment.  Additional  goals  include minimizing  potential  risks  in developing  these  resources,
maximizing each  agency's  particular strength, and reducing  interagency overlap. Additionally,  in  a
coordinated effort between  the SSWR and the Air, Climate and Energy (ACE) research programs, the
EPA will  study potential  impacts of hydraulic fracturing  on air, water  quality, and  ecosystems.  The EPA
expects to publish the Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing on Drinking Water Resources draft synthesis report
for peer review in December 2014. This synthesis  report will outline the results of research focused on the
potential  impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources,  and, if so, what the driving factors
are.
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               Goal 3: Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development


        Goal 3:  Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable
                                     Development

   Strategic Goal: Clean up communities, advance sustainable development,
   and   protect  disproportionately   impacted   low-income   and   minority
   communities. Prevent releases  of harmful substances and  clean  up  and
   restore contaminated areas.
                                                    Resource Summary
                                                       (Dollars in Thousands)
       24.2% of Budget
  FY2013
  Enacted
  FY2014
  Enacted
   FY2015
President's
    Budget
 Difference
FY 2014 EN
 to FY 2015
  PresBud
1 - Promote Sustainable and Livable
   Communities
2 - Preserve Land
3 - Restore Land
4 - Strengthen Human Health and
   Environmental Protection in Indian
   Country	
  $451,416

  $219,421

$1,035,216


   $83,756
  $455,794

  $226,932

$1,018,489
  $457,466

  $236,298

 $1,094,801
   $86,687    $120,273
     $1,672

     $9,366

    $76,312


    $33,586
 Goal 3 Total
$1,789,809   $1,787,902   $1,908,838
                            $120,936
Workyears
     4,145
     3,890
      3,865
       (25)
   NOTE: Numbers may not add due to rounding.

   Introduction

   The EPA has made it a priority to work with other federal agencies, states, tribes and local communities to
   improve the health of American families and protect the environment one community at a time, all across
   the country. Resources in Goal 3 will: expand  the work we do to  enhance the livability and economic
   vitality of neighborhoods in and around brownfields sites and take into consideration the impacts of our
   decisions  on  environmental  justice communities.  Increased  resources will support improvements to
   oversight of chemical storage and manufacturing, carried out by EPA in coordination with our interagency
   partners.  These efforts will remain a key focus of attention. The EPA will continue to  enhance the
   tracking and management of hazardous waste through modern  e-Manifest tracking systems.

   The EPA strives to protect and restore land, by cleaning up communities to create a safer environment for
   all Americans. Hazardous and  non-hazardous wastes on  land can  migrate to air, groundwater and
   surface water, contaminating drinking water supplies, causing acute illnesses and chronic diseases, and
   threatening healthy ecosystems. Local  land use and infrastructure investments also can  generate
   unanticipated  environmental consequences, such as increased stormwater runoff,  loss of open space,
   and increased greenhouse gas emissions. By cleaning  up contaminated sites and returning  them to
   communities for reuse, assisting communities to use existing infrastructure and plan for more efficient and
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             Goal 3:  Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
livable communities, and encouraging the minimization of environmental impacts throughout the full life
cycle  of materials, EPA programs promote sustainability. The EPA leads efforts to preserve, restore, and
protect our land, for both current and future generations. We will continue our work to prevent and reduce
exposure  to contaminants,  accelerate the pace  of cleanups, and  reduce  the environmental impacts
associated with land use across the country. The EPA works  collaboratively with international, state,
tribal,  and local partners to achieve these aims. In addition, we will continue to work with communities to
address risks posed by intentional and accidental releases of hazardous substances into the environment
and ensure that  communities have an opportunity to  participate in  environmental  decisions that affect
them. Our efforts are guided by scientific data, tools, and research that  alert us to emerging issues and
inform decisions on managing materials and addressing contaminated properties.

In  FY 2015, the EPA will partner with state and tribes  to prevent and reduce exposure to contaminants.
For example, improved compliance at high-risk oil and  chemical facilities through  inspections will  help
prevent exposure and lower the risk of accidents. The EPA and  its key state, tribal, and local partners,
including affected communities, have matured in our collaborative approaches to identifying and cleaning
up contaminated sites and putting these sites back into productive use for communities. The Integrated
Cleanup Initiative (ICI) has moved into an  implementation phase. This initiatve  integrates and leverages
the full  range of the  agency's  land cleanup authorities  to accelerate the pace of  cleanups, address a
greater number of contaminated sites,  and put these sites back into  productive  use  while  protecting
human health and the environment. The agency will continue to apply lessons learned from conducting a
series of  project management  pilots under the  ICI which include  practices that better integrate  the
remedial design and remedial action phases of site cleanup.

The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA, or Superfund)
and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) provide legal authority for the EPA's work to
protect  the land. The  agency  and its partners use  Superfund  authority to clean up  uncontrolled  or
abandoned hazardous waste sites, allowing land to be  returned to productive use. Under RCRA, the EPA
works in partnership  with states and tribes to address risks associated with processes  that generates,
recycles, transports, treats, stores, or disposes of waste.

It is estimated that 27 million  people in the  U.S. live within  a  mile of hazardous waste management
facilities.1  In FY 2015, the agency is  providing over $1.1 billion to continue to apply the most effective
approaches  to  preserve and  restore  land  by developing  and implementing prevention programs,
improving  response capabilities, and maximizing the effectiveness of response and cleanup actions under
RCRA, Superfund,  Leaking  Underground Storage Tanks (LUST) and other authorities. This strategy will
help ensure that human health  and the environment are protected and that land is returned to beneficial
use in the most effective  way. Many communities across the country regularly  face  risks  posed  by
intentional and accidental releases of hazardous substances into the environment.

In  FY 2015, improvements  to  land cleanup programs (e.g., Superfund, Brownfields, RCRA Corrective
Action, and Leaking Underground Storage Tanks) to address the cleanup needs at individual sites will be
supported by scientific data, research, and cost-effective tools. The EPA  is making significant progress in
assuring that in advance of the full cleanup process, unacceptable human exposures are eliminated or
controlled  as soon  as possible. The RCRA Corrective Action  and Superfund programs have made
significant progress in stabilizing exposure, while longer-term cleanup moves forward. Across all cleanup
programs, the  EPA will continue to take action to address any unacceptable exposures and eliminate
acute risks while also  pursuing long-term, permanent cleanups. This approach is exemplified by  the
EPA's goal to control contaminated groundwater migration at 1,133 final  and deleted NPL sites and non-
NPL sites through Superfund Alternative Approach (SAA) agreements; and to control human exposures
1 Estimate drawn from OSWER Near Site Population Database, an internal EPA database that merges
facility size and location information from RCRAInfo with population data, at the block and block group
levels, from the U.S. Census Bureau's 2000 Census. The demographics were captured around the total
number of facilities that have approved controls in place that result in the protection of this population (20
million people).
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             Goal 3:  Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
to contamination at 1,421 final and deleted NPL sites and non-NPL sites through SAA agreements by the
end of FY 2015.

The EPA also will continue to implement its Community Engagement Initiative to ensure transparent and
accessible  decision-making processes, deliver  information  that  communities can use  to  participate
meaningfully, and help the EPA produce outcomes that are responsive to community  perspectives and
that ensure timely cleanup decisions.

Under federal environmental statutes, the EPA has responsibility for protecting  human health and the
environment in  Indian country.  Under the EPA's  1984 Indian Policy, the agency works with tribes on a
government-to-government  basis  in  recognition  of the  federal  government's  trust   responsibility to
federally-recognized  tribes  and that  the  "EPA  recognizes  tribes as the primary parties  for setting
standards,  making environmental policy decisions, and managing programs for reservations consistent
with agency standards and regulations."


Major FY 2015 Changes

The FY 2015 request funds our top priority work in six areas. In Goal 3,  resources are focused on Making
a Visible Difference in Communities Across the Country; Taking Action on Toxics and  Chemical Safety;
Working  Toward  a  Sustainable Future; and Building  a High  Performing  Environmental  Protection
Enterprise.  While continuing EPA's ongoing commitment to science, the rule of law and  transparency, we
have updated and refined our current direction to maximize our effectiveness and guide  our agenda in the
months  and years ahead.  Goal 3 resources  include extramural resources and FTE will be  focused to
enhance our core work in these targeted areas and build on progress to date to advance these priorities
in FY 2015. Further details are organized below by the Administrator's  themes and found  in the specific
program project narratives.

Making a Visible Difference in Communities across the Country
Resources  to strengthen an integrated approach to communities and  tribes across multiple programs are
essential. We are  realigning and focusing resources and substantial FTE for the regional offices to further
implement and coordinate activities and also  to provide support to enhance program design, build  new
tools, and leverage the work of other partners. Redirected FTE will build on current efforts and support
increased focus on  enhancing the  livability  and economic vitality of neighborhoods in and around
brownfields sites by furthering on-the ground implementation and coordination activities. The focus will be
enhancing program design by including considerations of resiliency,  adaptation, equitable development,
and environmental justice, and leveraging the work of other partners.

Taking Action on Toxics and Chemical Safety
Protecting communities and improving safety is a key responsibility of the EPA. The President's Executive
Order on Chemical Safety2 (August 1, 2013) recognized the need to take some common sense steps now
to improve  safety and security and build on ongoing work across federal agencies to reduce  the risks
associated  with hazardous chemicals. In  FY 2015, resources aligned to this priority  area will support
activities to expand tools, information and materials for State Emergency Response Commissions and
Local Emergency Planning Committees. Nearly $12 million and 12 FTE  in additional  resources will be
used to  fund technical support, EPA/interagency  data system enhancements, and outreach in the State
and Local Prevention  and Preparedness program.

Working Toward a Sustainable Future
We need to move  beyond the foundation of environmental  protection that the EPA has built with our state,
tribal, and community partners. The EPA's budget proposal provides  resources to multiple  programs and
regional offices to  support integrated cross-program approaches, which focus on increasing sustainability.
2 Executive Order on Improving Chemical Facility and Security #13650
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             Goal 3:  Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
A redirection of 5 FTE for Sustainable Materials Management will improve regionally-focused outreach to
cities, towns, and businesses.

Building a High Performing Environmental Protection Enterprise
Necessary to our strategic approach to the FY 2015 budget and constrained resources is redesigning the
way we do business. Resources have been realigned to focus on the building blocks of a modern, more
efficient EPA,  in  order  to  support  and even accelerate the pace  of  better integrating  technology,
enhancing internal programmatic leveraging, and  updating or implementing new  approaches to  core
business processes. As part of the E-Enterprise business model, resources and FTE have been realigned
to E-Manifest for system development and for support of on-going  efforts to incorporate e-reporting and
provide greater efficiency in implementation  across the full range of the agency's of rules  updates and
targeting tools.

To meet the FY 2015 target and provide support to our top priorities, we will make fundamental changes
to our long-standing business practices in contracts, grants and oversight of delegated programs, among
others. Implementing these changes requires realigning resources and  people to ensure that we increase
effectiveness without undermining vital protections or quality and financial management.

Agency Priority Goals

As part of the formulation of the FY 2015 budget, the EPA has developed FY 2014-2015 Agency Priority
Goals that advance the Administrator's Priorities and the agency's Strategic Plan.

Clean up contaminated sites to enhance the livability and  economic vitality of communities. By 2015, an
additional 18,970 sites will be made ready for anticipated use, protecting Americans and the environment
one community at a time.  All of  OSWER's cleanup  programs (Superfund,  RCRA  Corrective  Action,
Brownfields, and LUST) contribute to this goal and take positive action to protect human health and the
environment through the cleanup and revitalization of contaminated properties.

Additional information on the EPA's Agency Priority Goals can be found at_www.performance.gov.
FY 2015 Activities

In  FY 2015, the EPA will work to preserve and restore the nation's land by ensuring proper management
of waste and  petroleum products, reducing waste generation, increasing recycling and by supporting its
cleanup programs  and oversight of oil and chemical facilities. These efforts are integrated with the
agency's efforts to  promote sustainable and livable communities. Work under Goal 3 supports four
objectives: 1)  Promote Sustainable and Livable Communities, 2) Preserve Land; 3) Restore Land; and 4)
Strengthen Human  Health and Environmental Protection in Indian Country.

Objective 1: Promote Sustainable and Livable  Communities. Support sustainable, resilient, and
livable communities by working with local, state, tribal, and federal partners to promote smart growth,
emergency preparedness and recovery planning, redevelopment and reuse of contaminated and formerly
contaminated sites, and the equitable distribution of environmental benefits.

The EPA supports the goals of urban, suburban and rural communities to grow in ways that improve the
environment,  human health  and quality of life for their residents. With the support of partners across all
levels of government, communities can grow in ways that also strengthen the economy, help them adapt
to  climate change,  improve  their resiliency to disasters, use public resources more efficiently, revitalize
neighborhoods, and improve  access to jobs  and  amenities. By  making sustainable  infrastructure
investments,  communities can successfully  build innovative and functional systems on neighborhood
streets and  sidewalks to deal with  the run-off from stormwater and  still provide easy  access for
pedestrians,  bicyclists, on-street parking and other beneficial  uses.  Under local planning and  zoning
codes that account for the  environmental impacts  of development, the private sector can more easily
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             Goal 3: Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
construct market-ready "green" buildings serving a range of housing needs. Communities also can benefit
from tools, technology and research that better  engage citizens and  inform local decision  making to
support smart and sustainable growth.

In  FY 2015, the  EPA  will  continue  to  use several  approaches to promote sustainable, healthier
communities and protect vulnerable populations and  disproportionately impacted  low-income, minority,
and Tribal communities.  The agency especially is  concerned about threats to sensitive populations, such
as children, the elderly, and individuals with chronic diseases.

Brownfields:
The EPA's Brownfields program is funded at nearly $161  million, which includes related Smart Growth
activities.  This program  supports  states,  local communities,  and Tribes in their efforts to assess and
cleanup sites that may be contaminated within their jurisdiction and return them to productive reuse. The
Brownfields  program  also helps  address climate change by ensuring that potential  climate change
impacts are taken fully into account when brownfield cleanups are planned and implemented.

The EPA  plans to award approximately  119 assessment grants, 52 cleanup grants, 17 Environmental
Workforce Development and Job Training grants, 20 area wide planning grants, and a variety of technical
assistance, targeted assessment,  and petroleum  brownfields  grants. Beginning  in  FY 2015, the agency
plans  to alternate the grant  competition cycle and  award  Revolving Loan Fund  (RLF) cooperative
agreements to eligible recipients  every other year. By holding  this  competition every other year, the
program will be able to  reduce the costs of the grant competition and will  utilize the grant funds  in off
years  to fund eligible  high performing existing RLF grantees. Additionally, this alternating schedule will
allow  regional staff to provide more assistance and attention to managing existing grants and maximizing
results and promoting  timely implementation. This  would  have the additional benefit of reducing
unliquidated obligations in existing  RLF grants. The next RLF grant competition will occur in  FY 2016.

In addition, the Brownfields program, in collaboration with the EPA's Smart Growth  program, will address
critical issues for brownfields  redevelopment, including financing, coordination with local government
efforts to improve land use planning, and other factors that influence the economic viability of brownfields
redevelopment.  In FY 2015, the  Brownfields  program will continue to foster federal, state,  local, and
public-private partnerships to return 2,800 acres of brownfields properties to productive economic use in
communities. The Brownfields program generally,  and  area-wide  planning specifically, will continue  to be
a  component of  the  Investing  in Manufacturing  Communities  Partnership  (IMCP)  to  advance
manufacturing uses on redeveloped brownfield sites.

Chemical Safety:
In  FY 2015, the  EPA is providing $27.5 million for the State and Local Prevention and Preparedness
program, which includes a an  increase of over $12 million to support additional high-risk chemical facility
inspections, and  activities related  to the President's Executive Order on  Chemical Safety3. There is a
critical need for the agency to continue efforts to  prevent and respond to accidental releases  of harmful
substances by developing clear authorities and training  personnel. Accidents reported to the EPA  since
2005  by the current universe of Risk Management Program facilities have resulted in approximately 60
worker and public deaths,  over 1,300 injuries,  nearly 200 thousand people sheltered in place, and  more
than $1.6 billion  in on-site and off-site  damages,  including  recent  high  profile incidents. States and
communities  often  lack  the  strong  infrastructure  needed  to  prepare for and/or respond  to  these
emergencies or to prevent them from happening in the  first place.

Smart Growth:
The Smart Growth program helps community and government leaders protect the environment and public
health, build the  economy, and improve the quality of people's everyday  lives by  making smart growth
and  sustainable  design  practices commonplace.  Also,  through  the  Partnership  for Sustainable
Communities, in  its  fifth  year, EPA's  Smart Growth  program  works with the  U.S. Department of
3Executive Order on Improving Chemical Facility and Security #13650
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             Goal 3:  Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
Transportation (DOT)  and the U.S.  Department of Housing and  Urban Development (HUD)  to align
housing, transportation, and infrastructure investments and policies, and build capacity in communities to
grow in a more sustainable and resilient manner. The agency's Smart Growth program works across the
EPA and with other federal agencies to help communities strengthen their economies and protect the
environment through use of smart growth,  resilient, and sustainable design  approaches. This program
focuses on streamlining, concentrating, and leveraging state and federal assistance in urban, suburban,
and rural communities that offer the greatest opportunity for development that will deliver environmental
and economic benefits, and offer protection against the impacts of climate change.

In  FY  2015, the Smart Growth  program, under the  Integrated  Environmental  Strategies and  the
Brownfields  program projects, will  continue work  to help  community and  government leaders meet
environmental standards through sustainable community and building development, design,  policies, and
infrastructure investment strategies. The program does this by: providing technical assistance to states,
regions,  and local  and  Tribal  governments;  conducting  research  and developing tools  that  help
communities see the connection between  development and the  environment, the economy, and public
health; and, engaging,  leveraging and aligning  community-based activities and investments with other
federal agencies. The program will continue to innovate and use new mechanisms to  address the growing
demand from communities for more direct technical assistance, including in rural areas, in areas that are
disadvantaged,  or  in areas that  have been adversely  affected  by contamination  and environmental
degradation.

Environmental Justice:
The EPA is committed to fostering  public health  in communities disproportionately burdened by pollution
by integrating and addressing issues  of environmental justice (EJ) in the EPA's programs and policies as
part of its day-to-day  business. The EPA's EJ program promotes accountability  for compliance with
Executive Order 12898,  "Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income  Populations."  The  EPA's  program  offices  implement the  EPA's  strategic  plan   on
Environmental Justice, Plan EJ 20144. The EJ Program  facilities this implementation by: (1) supporting
and promoting the  agency's  efforts to address  environmental justice  issues; (2) supporting the EPA's
outreach to other federal agencies through the interagency working group on environmental justice; and,
(3) promoting opportunities for communities to be heard on environmental justice issues. In FY 2015, the
EPA is providing $8.5 million for the EJ program  to continue its  efforts to  facilitate the integration of
environmental justice  considerations into  planning and performance  measurement processes.  The
agency  will  implement  environmental justice activities  consistent with  the  vision and commitments
outlined in the agency's FY 2014-2018 Strategic Plan,  the  FY 2014 annual action plan for the Cross-
Cutting Fundamental Strategy for EJ and Children's  Health, and Plan EJ 2014.

Objective 2: Preserve Land. Conserve resources and prevent land  contamination by reducing waste
generation and toxicity, promoting proper management of waste and petroleum products, and increasing
sustainable materials management.

RCRA Waste Management
The FY 2015 budget  provides $70.5 million to the RCRA Waste Management program. The RCRA
program is critical to comprehensive and protective management of solid and hazardous materials for the
entire lifecycle.  In FY  2015,  RCRA permits for approximately 20,000 hazardous waste units  (such  as
incinerators and landfills) at 6,600 treatment, storage, and disposal facilities in the permitting  universe will
be issued, need to be updated or maintained. The EPA provides leadership, work-sharing, and support to
the 50 states and territories authorized to implement the permitting program and directly implements the
entire RCRA program  in Iowa and Alaska.5. The EPA is facing an  increasing amount of implementation
support responsibility at the  request of states,  including  addressing complex regulatory and statutory
interpretation issues. Requests for this type of support are expected to continue through FY2015.
4 Plan EJ 2014 can be found at http://www.epa.qov/compliance/environmentaliustice/plan-ei/index.html

5 http://www.epa.gov/wastes/hazard/tsd/permit/pqprarpt.htm
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             Goal 3: Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
The  agency also will support  national  PCB  cleanup and disposal  activities  by  assessing  emerging
technologies and  issuing  approvals (no states can  be authorized for PCBs),  evaluating  PCB wastes
against the criteria specified in TSCA. This effort will be tracked by a new performance measure that will
track all approvals issued  by the EPA under TSCA. Beginning in FY 2014, the Agency will have annual
targets  to  authorize approvals for cleanup,  storage, and  disposal activities. The EPA  estimates
approximately 20 disposal and  storage  approvals and 130 cleanup approvals are issued per  year. The
annual target for both FY 2014 and 2015 for the comprehensive measure for  cleanups, disposal, and
storage  activities is 150.

Hazardous Waste Electronic Manifest:
On October 5, 2012, the President signed the Hazardous Waste Electronic Manifest Establishment Act,
requiring the EPA to assemble and maintain the information contained in the estimated  5  million forms
accompanying hazardous  waste shipments across the nation. In FY 2013, the EPA initiated the effort to
develop a  program that provided for the submission of information electronically, as well as in paper form.
This  investment at the federal level will significantly reduce the  time and costs  for state regulators and
regulated  entities associated  with submitting, maintaining, processing, and publishing data  from
hazardous  waste manifests. When fully  implemented, the electronic  hazardous waste  manifest (e-
Manifest) program will reduce the reporting burden  for firms regulated under RCRA's hazardous waste
provisions  by approximately $75  million annually.  The  legislation  contains aggressive deadlines for
rulemaking and  system  development.   In 2014,  EPA completed the regulation that  authorizes the
electronic  transmittal of manifest, began  work under a new contract for development of the technical
architecture of the system,  and began work on the user fee rule.  Once this  system is  in place, the
legislation  provides that fees collected  through the program will be used  to fund  the operation of the
program and reimburse system development costs.

In FY 2015, the EPA is providing a total of $10.4 million within the RCRA Waste Management program, to
continue work on the e-Manifest system.  This funding will be used for system acquisition/development;
development of the  economic models  to support the user-fee  rule; and  analyses  to  support further
revision  of EPA regulations needed to implement an  e-Manifest system. E-Manifest  remains a  key
component of the E-Enterprise business model.

Sustainable Materials Management (SMM):
In  FY 2015,  the EPA  will  continue to  advance  SMM  practices and a  cradle-to-cradle  perspective
representing an  important emphasis shift from  waste management to  materials management. The
agency's approach to SMM integrates the safe reuse of materials with economic  opportunity. In FY 2015,
the EPA will utilize SMM to offset the use of virgin resources by 8,603,033 tons of materials and products.
In FY 2015, the EPA will continue to promote the SMM approach in high priority areas (e.g., Sustainable
Food  Management,  Used Electronics,  and  Federal  Government),  which are  selected based on an
analysis of opportunities for reducing environmental impacts in Sustainable Materials Management: The
Road Ahead6 In FY  2015, the EPA will continue to lead by example, and will help other federal agencies
adopt SMM approaches and promote the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, which  furthers the
goals of  Executive  Order  13514 ("Federal Leadership  in Environmental,  Energy,  and  Economic
Performance"), and also save money. For example, the EPA estimates that the  national  implementation
of the Federal Green Challenge will save the taxpayers more than $10 million by the end of FY 2014. The
EPA will also explore the application of the SMM approach into other high  priority  sectors,  based on
lessons  learned from the  first two years of the national SMM program and re-evaluation of The Road
Ahead.

LUST Prevention
There is a strong relationship between LUST clean up success and reducing the  number of new releases
through  the prevention program. Since 2007, the EPA has placed an increased  emphasis on monitoring
compliance through  increased frequency of inspections and other Energy Policy Act (EPAct) provisions.
During this time, compliance rates have  increased  and there has been a significant decrease in new
6 U.S. EPA OSWER ORCR. Sustainable Materials Management: The Road Ahead. June 2009
http://www.epa.qov/epawaste/conserve/smm/pdf/vision2.pdf.
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             Goal 3: Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
confirmed releases. The continued reduction in confirmed  releases will remain a critical component in
backlog reduction, but maintaining cleanup progress is essential as well.

In  FY  2015, the EPA will continue to assist states in complying with  release  prevention activities
authorized  by the EPAct. States rely primarily on federally funded assistance agreements to maintain
inspection frequency and ensure compliance which will help prevent  future confirmed releases. States
may use  money from LUST  assistance  agreements  for  inspections, other release  prevention  and
compliance  assurance activities for federally-regulated USTs,  and  enforcement  activities related to
release prevention.

Objective  3: Restore  Land.  Prepare for and respond to  accidental or intentional releases of
contaminants and clean up and restore polluted sites for reuse.

Land Cleanup and Revitalization
In  addition  to  promoting  sustainable and livable communities, the  EPA's cleanup programs (e.g.,
Superfund  Remedial, Superfund Federal  Facilities  Response,  Superfund Emergency  Response  and
Removal,   RCRA  Corrective  Action,  Brownfields, the   Toxic   Substances  Control  Act  (TSCA)
Polychlorinated biphenyl  (PCB) Cleanup and  Disposal, and LUST Cooperative Agreements) and its
partners are taking proactive steps to facilitate the cleanup and revitalization of contaminated properties.
To support the Land Revitalization Initiative, the EPA created the Land Revitalization  Agenda7 to integrate
reuse into  EPA's cleanup programs, establish partnerships, and help make land  revitalization  part of
EPA's organizational  culture.

In FY 2015, the agency will continue to help communities clean up and revitalize these once productive
properties  by:   removing  contamination;   helping  limit   urban  sprawl;  fostering ecologic  habitat
enhancements;  enabling  economic  development; taking   advantage of existing  infrastructure;  and
maintaining  or improving quality of  life.  There  are  multiple  benefits  associated with  cleaning  up
contaminated sites: reducing mortality and morbidity risk;  preventing  and  reducing  human exposure to
contaminants; making land available for commercial, residential, industrial,  or recreational reuse;  and
promoting community economic development. A  2011 study suggests that Superfund cleanups  reduce
the  incidence of congenital anomalies  in infants by roughly 20-25 percent to  mothers living within 2,000
meters of a site.8  In another case, the EPA contracted with researchers at Duke University and  the
University of Pittsburgh to conduct a study to determine the effects of Superfund site status on housing
values. The study  found  that when sites are cleaned up and deleted from  the  National Priorities List
(NPL), properties within three miles of the sites experience an 18.6 to 24.5 percent increase in value.9

A cummulative total of 1,694 sites have been listed on the Superfund National Priorities List (NPL), 366 of
which have been deleted. Sites are placed on the NPL when the presence of contamination, often from
complex chemical mixtures of hazardous substances, has impacted groundwater, surface water, and/or
soil. The precise impact of many contaminant mixtures on  human health remains  uncertain; however,
substances commonly found at Superfund sites have been linked to a variety of human health problems,
such as  birth defects, infertility,  cancer, and changes  in  neurobehavioral functions. In FY 2015,  the
agency plans to achieve control of all  identified  unacceptable  human exposures at 9 additional sites,
bringing the  program's cumulative total of Human  Exposure  Under  Control (HEUC)  sites to 1,408.
Additionally,  the agency expects to  achieve  Groundwater Migration Under Control  (GMUC)  at  13
additional sites, bringing the program's cumulative total to 1,119 sites.

The FY 2015  budget provides $187  million  for  the Superfund Emergency Response and Removal
program. The agency will continue to  support  all  emergency actions  and focus  on encouraging  viable
7 Additional information on this agenda can be found on http://www.epa.gov/landrevitalization/agenda_full.htm
8 Currie, Janet; Michael Greenstone, and Enrico Moretti. 2011. "Superfund Cleanups and Infant Health." American
Economic Review, 101(3): 435-41.
9 S. Gamper-Rabindran, C. Timmins. 2013. "Does cleanup of hazardous waste sites raise housing values? Evidence
of spatially localized benefits," Journal of Environmental Economics and Management.
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             Goal 3: Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
Potentially Responsible Parties (PRPs), when available, to conduct removal actions. In FY 2015, the EPA
will oversee 275 removal actions for both Superfund-lead and PRP removals.

The Superfund  Remedial program is funded at $543 million in FY 2015. The agency will continue to give
priority to completing projects at various stages  in the response process, such as investigation, remedy
design, and  remedy construction. This strategy will help support community revitalization and economic
redevelopment  and will provide  funding  to initiate cleanup construction work at several  construction
projects. The program estimates accomplishing 105 remedial action project completions in FY 2015.

RCRA Corrective Action
The FY 2015 budget provides $36 million for the  RCRA Corrective Action program. The EPA works in
partnership with states,  having authorized 44 states and  territories to directly implement the corrective
action  program.10  Resources  for state  implementation  are provided through the Hazardous Waste
Financial Assistance  categorical  grant. This program is responsible  for overseeing  and  managing
cleanups that protect human health and the environment at active RCRA sites.  The agency provides
leadership and  support to its state partners and serves as lead  regulator at a significant,  and increasing,
number of facilities. States have been challenged in the cleanup area due to downsizing and are looking
to the federal program for assistance. As a result and at the request of states, the EPA has resumed work
previously agreed  to  by states under work-sharing agreements and this  trend  has  been increasing,
particularly for sites that have complex issues11 or for more specialty components such as ecological risk
assessments.

Through  its  RCRA Corrective Action  program,  the EPA and  its state  partners  will issue, update,  or
maintain RCRA permits for 3,779 hazardous waste facilities. The facilities are a subset of approximately
6,000 sites  with  corrective  action  obligations  and include some of the most  highly  contaminated,
technically  challenging,  and  potentially threatening  sites the  EPA  confronts in any  of its  cleanup
programs.12  As of the end of FY 2013,  a  total of 3,212  RCRA facilities are designated as having with
human exposures to toxins under control.

In FY 2015, the EPA will focus resources on those sites that present the highest risk to human health and
the environment and implement actions to end or reduce these threats. The EPA will also place additional
focus on identifying facilities where the corrective action  process can  be considered completed (i.e.,
where cleanup  performance standards have been met, or no further cleanup action is necessary). These
activities will be consistent with the programmatic response developed by the agency after a 2011 GAO
report on the RCRA corrective  action program, which also is reflected in revisions  to targets for 3 RCRA
Corrective Action performance measures   In FY 2015, the EPA has also developed a new performance
measure to  account  for the last step in the cleanup process  and will  increase the number of RCRA
facilities with corrective action performance standards attained to 22 percent.14

LUST Cleanup:
The EPA's goal is to  prevent future releases of wastes in the environment. The agency understands that
accidents can happen but proper prevention leads to fewer and fewer releases. For example, the number
of annual confirmed  releases from Underground Storage Tanks (USTs)  has  dropped 25 percent, from
7,570 in FY 2007 to 5,674 in FY 2012. The number of active tanks over that  period dropped 6  percent,
from 629,866 to 583,508.
10 State implementation of the CA Program is funded through the STAG (Program Project 11) and matching State
contributions.
11 For example, vapor intrusion, wetlands contamination or extensive groundwater issues.
12 There are additional facilities that have corrective action obligations that the EPA does not track under GPRA, as
they  are typically smaller, less significant facilities or sites. The EPA recognizes that the total universe of such
facilities or sites "subject to" corrective action universe is between five and six thousand facilities or sites.
13 Hazardous Waste: Early Goals Have Been Met in EPA's Corrective Action Program but Resource and Technical
Challenges Will Constrain Future Progress (GAO-11-514), July 2011.
14 Hazardous Waste: Early Goals Have Been Met in EPA's Corrective Action Program but Resource and Technical
Challenges Will Constrain Future Progress (GAO-11-514), July 2011.
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             Goal 3:  Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
The  LUST program has  achieved  significant success in  closing releases since the beginning of the
program. Of the 507,540 total confirmed releases, by the end of FY 2012, 84 percent (or 424,637) were
closed. The LUST program continues to make progress  decreasing the overall backlog; however, the
pace of cleanups is declining. In FY2012, the program completed 97 percent of the annual cleanup goal
of 11,250 sites by finishing 10,927 cleanups. Achieving these  cleanup rates in the future will be more
challenging due to the complexity of remaining sites, an increased state  workload, a decrease in available
state resources and the increasing costs of cleanups. In FY 2011, the LUST program completed a study
of its cleanup backlog. The EPA's backlog  study helped identify potential  strategies  to address the
approximately 83 thousand UST releases remaining15. The EPA is working with states  to develop and
implement specific strategies and activities applicable to their particular sites to reduce the UST releases
remaining to be cleaned up.

Oil Spills Prevention:
The discharge of oil into U.S. waters can threaten  human  health, cause severe environmental damage,
and create financial loss to businesses and the public. The  Oil Spill program helps protect U.S. waters by
effectively preventing, preparing for, responding to,  and monitoring oil spills. The EPA serves as the lead
responder for cleanup  of all inland zone  spills,  including transportation-related spills  from  pipelines,
trucks, and other transportation systems, and provides technical assistance and support to the U.S. Coast
Guard  for coastal and maritime oil  spills. In FY 2015, the  EPA will continue to focus efforts on oil spill
prevention, preparedness, compliance assistance,  and enforcement activities associated with the more
than 600 thousand non-transportation-related  oil storage facilities that the EPA regulates  through its Spill
Prevention  Control  and  Countermeasure  (SPCC)  Program.  In  addition,  the  agency will finalize
development and  begin implementation of the National Oil Database including identifying requirements
for electronic submission of Facility Response Plans (FRP)  in order to create reporting efficiencies for the
agency, states, local government and industry.

In FY 2015, the EPA is providing a total  of $20.5 million for the Oil Spill Prevention, Preparedness and
Response program which  include a $2 million increase to improve the federal capacity to prevent oil spills
by conducting up to 34  additional high-risk  facility inspections. The  EPA will  perform inspections  of
regulated high-risk oil  facilities to better  implement prevention approaches and to  bring 60 percent  of
SPCC  and FRP inspected facilities found  to be non-compliant during the FY 2010 through  FY 2015
inspection cycle into compliance.

Homeland Security:
The EPA's Homeland Security work is an important component of the agency's prevention, protection,
and response activities. The FY 2015 President's Budget includes $33.8 million to: maintain its capability
to respond effectively to incidents that may involve harmful chemical, biological, and radiological (CBR)
substances; maintain the  Environmental  Response Laboratory Network (ERLN); develop and maintain
agency expertise and operational readiness for all phases of consequential management following a CBR
incident, specifically environmental characterization, decontamination, laboratory analyses and clearance;
maintain the Emergency Management Portal (EMP); and conduct CBR  training for agency responders to
improve CBR preparedness.

Objective 4: Strengthen Human Health and Environmental Protection in Indian Country. Directly
implement federal environmental programs in Indian country and support federal program delegation  to
tribes.  Provide tribes with technical assistance and support capacity development for the establishment
and implementation of sustainable environmental programs in Indian country.
The EPA works under two important Tribal infrastructure Memoranda of Understandings (MOU) amongst
five federal agencies16. The EPA, the Department of the Interior, the Department of Health and Human
Services, the Department of Agriculture, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development work as
15 For more information, please see The National LUST Cleanup Backlog: A Study of Opportunities at
http://www.epa.qov/swerust1/cat/backloq.html

16 http://www.epa.qov/tribal/trproqrams/2013-itf-memorandum-of-understandinq.pdf
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             Goal 3: Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
partners to improve infrastructure on Tribal lands and currently focus efforts on providing access to safe
drinking water and basic wastewater facilities to tribes.

The  first,  or umbrella  MOD, promotes coordination between federal  Tribal infrastructure programs,
including financial services, while allowing federal programs to retain their unique advantages. Under the
umbrella  MOD, for the first time,  five federal departments joined together and agreed to work across
traditional program boundaries on  Tribal infrastructure issues. The efficiencies and partnerships resulting
from this  collaboration will directly assist tribes  with  their infrastructure needs. The second  MOD,
addressing a specific infrastructure issue, was created under the umbrella authority and addresses the
issue of access to safe  drinking water and wastewater facilities  on Tribal lands. Currently, the five federal
agencies are working together to develop solutions for specific  geographic areas of concern  (Alaska and
the Southwest), engaging in  coordination of funding,  and promoting cross-agency efficiency. These
activities are completed in coordination with federally recognized tribes. For more information, please see
the web link: http://www.epa.gov/tribalportal/mous.htm.

The EPA continues to work closely with other federal agencies  as well as the Domestic Policy Council to
implement the President's directive regarding the Tribal consultation  process. The President's November
5th, 2009  Memorandum directs each  executive department to  develop a detailed plan to implement
Executive Order (EO) 13175,  "Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments17." Under
EO 13175,  "...all departments  and agencies are  charged with engaging  in regular  and meaningful
consultation and collaboration with Tribal officials in the  development of federal policies that have Tribal
implications, and are responsible for strengthening the government-to-government relationship between
the United States and Indian tribes." On May 4, 2011, the EPA  released its final policy on  consultation
and coordination with Indian tribes. The EPA is among the first of the federal agencies to finalize its
consultation policy in response to  President Obama's first tribal leaders summit in November 2009 and,
following  the issuance of Executive Order 13175, to establish  regular and meaningful consultation and
collaboration with tribal officials in the development of Federal policies that have tribal implications.

The  EPA recently partnered  with the Corporation  for  National and Community Service  to  leverage
AmeriCorps grant resources, announcing that Indian General Assistance Program (GAP) grants may be
used as  match  funding for tribally-sponsored AmeriCorps programs. More than $3  million  worth of
AmeriCorps funding is dedicated to support tribal communities every year, but often, tribal governments
face financial  challenges that prevent  them  from providing  the  required  matched  funding.  The
combination of AmeriCorps grants  and EPA program funding, such as GAP, enable tribal governments to
bring in energetic, committed people  to help build  an  environmental program.  Examples  of activities
eligible for funding include conducting environmental education, performing assessments  of  indoor air
quality  or  household pesticide usage, and assessing baseline environmental conditions.  Additionally, the
EPA has entered into a MOU 18with the Department of Energy and the Department of the  Interior and
formed an inter-agency work group to understand the implications of hydraulic fracturing on tribal lands.

Research

In  FY2015, the Sustainable and Healthy Communities (SHC) research program, funded at $158.6 million,
will continue to support the EPA's program offices, state, and Tribal partners in  protecting and  restoring
land, and  providing community  decision makers with decision tools to support community  health.  The
work of the SHC research program falls into four inter-related themes:

    •   Decision Support  and Innovation will use decision science, interactive  social media, spatial
       analyses, and sustainability assessment methods to provide communities with tools to frame their
       decision options, outcomes and potential costs and benefits.
17 http://vwvw.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/memoranda/2010/m10-33.pdf
18 http://unconventional.enerqv.gov/pdf/oil and gas research mou.pdf
                                               45

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             Goal 3:  Cleaning Up Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development
    •   Community  Well-being: Public Health  and  Ecosystem  Goods and  Services  will  utilize the
       sciences of  ecosystem services and  human  health to enable communities to assess  how the
       natural and built environment affects the health and well-being of their residents.  This research
       will address impacts in all communities including communities and tribes  that are  at risk for
       disproportionate environmental  and health impacts;

    •   Sustainable  Approaches for Contaminated Sites and Materials Management will build  upon
       federal, regional  and state  experiences. This research aims to  improve the efficiency and
       effectiveness of mechanisms that address  land and groundwater contamination. This research
       also will review and characterize innovative approaches that communities can use to:
           o   Reduce new sources of contamination,
           o   Enable recovery of energy, materials, and  nutrients from waste,  and
           o   Enable brownfields sites to  be  put to new, economically productive uses that benefit
               communities; and

    •   Integrated Solutions for Sustainable Outcomes research will develop methods and data that will
       allow communities to  consider the full costs and benefits of their decisions. For example, SHC will
       review and characterize systems modeling approaches that communities can use to account for
       the linkage among:
           o   Waste and materials management,
           o   Building codes and zoning for land use planning,
           o   Transportation options,  and
           o   Provision  of infrastructure, including water and energy.

The SHC research program will invest  $7.8 million  in ongoing research to develop  models, data bases,
metrics and other decision-support tools that will empower communities to make decisions regarding
sustainable approaches to environmental protection. These additional funds will allow EPA to increase its
capacity to provide  community based  decision support tools which  consider ecosystem goods and
services,  contaminated sites, multimedia pollutants within environmental justice communities,  and the
beneficial use of sustainable  materials.  In addition, the SHC program will realign $1.3 million to develop
tools for  at risk communities  and tribes to examine  the impacts  of climate change adaptation on
ecosystems goods and services to support the agency's goal of working with communities to  address
climate change.

Consistant  with Administration  priorities, EPA's Science  to Achieve  Results  (STAR)  and the Greater
Research  Opportunities (GRO) fellowship  programs, and  all funds,  will be  consolidated across the
government as part of a comprehensive reorganization to facilitiate a cohesive national strategy of STEM
education  programs to increase the impact of Federal investment in  four areas: K-12 instructions;
undergraduate education; fellowships and scholarships; and information education.

The SHC research program will continue to address many facets of site contamination and cleanup. This
includes source elimination of contaminated ground water and migration at Superfund sites and plume
management to reduce exposures via drinking water. This science will be used to develop guidance on
site assessment, remedial investigations, and to  provide technical support resources to agency programs
and regional offices.

The SHC research program will continue to develop or revise protocols to test oil spill control agents or
products  for  listing  on  the  National  Contingency  Plan  Product  Schedule, including dispersants'
performance  and   behavior  in  deep  water.  Additional  research  outcomes  include  improved
characterization and remediation methods for fuels released from leaking underground storage tanks.
                                              46

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                 Goal 4:  Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution


  Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution

Strategic Goal:  Reduce the risk and increase the safety of chemicals and
prevent pollution at  the source.
                                                       Resource Summary
                                                          (Dollars in Thousands)
8.5% of Budget
1 - Ensure Chemical Safety
2 - Promote Pollution Prevention
Goal 4 Total
FY2013
Enacted
$556,186
$52,279
$608,465
Difference
FY2015 FY 201 4 EN
FY2014 President's to FY 201 5
Enacted Budget PresBud
$578,592
$51,797
$630,388
$618,877
$54,041
$672,918
$40,285
$2,244
$42,530
Workyears
2,481
2,412
2,412
0
NOTE: Numbers may not add due to rounding.

Introduction

Chemicals  are  ubiquitous in our everyday  lives  and products. They are used  in the production  of
everything from our homes and cars to the cell phones we carry and the food we eat. Chemicals often are
released into the environment as a result of their manufacture, processing, use, and disposal. Vulnerable
populations, including low-income,  minority, and indigenous populations, may be disproportionately
impacted by, and thus particularly at risk from, exposure to chemicals123. In addition, research shows
that children receive greater relative  exposures to chemicals because they inhale or ingest more air, food,
and water on a body-weight basis than adults do.4567 The agency's FY 2015 funding level for Ensuring
the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution  is $672.9 million,  an increase of $42.5 million over the
FY2014 enacted operating plan.
1 Holistic Risk-based Environmental Decision Making: a Native Perspective
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.qov/pmc/articles/PMC1241171)
 Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low Income
Populations
3 Interim Guidance on Considering Environmental Justice During the Development of an Action
(http://www.epa.qov/compliance/ei/resources/policv/considerinq-ei-in-rulemakinq-quide-07-2010.pdf)
 Guide to Considering Children's Health When Developing EPA Actions: Implementing Executive Order 13045 and
EPA's Policy on Evaluating Health Risks to Children
(http://yosemite.epa.qov/ochp/ochpweb.nsf/content/ADPquide.htm/$File/EPA ADP Guide  508.pdf)
 Holistic Risk-based Environmental Decision Making: A native Perspective
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.qov/pmc/articles/PMC1241171)
 Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children from Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
7 Guide to Considering Children's Health When Developing EPA Actions: Implementing Executive Order 13045 and
EPA's Policy on Evaluating Health Risks to Children
(http://vosemite.epa.qov/ochp/ochpweb.nsf/content/ADPquide.htm/$File/EPA ADP Guide  508.pdf)
                                              47

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                  Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution
Under existing  Toxic Substances  Control  Act  (TSCA)  authorization, the EPA  is charged  with  the
responsibility of assessing the safety of commercial chemicals and to act upon those chemicals if they
pose significant risks to human health or the environment. The $62.7 million provided in FY2015 for the
Chemical Risk Review and Reduction Program will allow the EPA to sustain its success in managing the
potential risks of new chemicals entering  commerce without impacting progress in  assessing and
ensuring the safety  of existing  chemicals. In FY 2015, the approach focuses on:  1) using all  available
authorities under TSCA to take  immediate and lasting action  to eliminate or reduce identified  chemical
risks and develop proven  safer alternatives; 2)  using regulatory mechanisms to fill remaining gaps in
critical exposure data, and  increasing transparency and public  access to information on TSCA chemicals;
and 3) using data from all available sources to conduct detailed assessments of priority chemicals to
determine whether risk management action is warranted and, if so, what type of action.

In  FY 2015, the EPA's pesticide licensing program will continue to evaluate new pesticides before they
reach the market and ensure that pesticides already in commerce are safe when used in accordance with
the label. As directed by the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act  (FIFRA), the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA), and the Food Quality  Protection Act (FQPA), the  EPA will
register pesticides to protect consumers,  pesticide users, workers who may be exposed to pesticides,
children, and other sensitive populations. The EPA also will  review potential impacts on the environment,
with particular attention to endangered species.

The  EPA has  a long history  of  collaboration  to  address  a  wide  range  of  domestic and global
environmental issues. The EPA envisions that environmental  progress in cooperation with international
partners can catalyze even greater progress toward  protecting  our environment.  Examples include,
ensuring that trade-related  activities sustain environmental protection, enhancing the ability of our trading
partners to protect their environments and  develop  in a sustainable  manner,  enhancing opportunities
through effective consultation and collaboration  related to  environmental issues of mutual interest. To
advance all of these efforts, the EPA continues to focus on the following international priorities: building
strong environmental institutions and legal structures, improving  air quality, expanding access to clean
water, reducing exposure to toxic chemicals,  and cleaning  up e-waste.

Pollution prevention is central to the EPA's  sustainability strategies. In FY 2015, the EPA will enhance
cross-cutting efforts  to advance sustainable  practices, safer chemicals, sustainable lower risk processes
and practices, and  safer  products.  The  combined effect  of community-level  actions,  geographically-
targeted efforts, attention to chemicals, and concern for ecosystems — implemented through the lens of
science, transparency, and law — will bring real environmental  improvements and protections.

Major FY 2015 Changes

To meet the FY 2015 target and provide support to our top priorities we will make fundamental changes
to our long-standing business practices in contracts, grants and oversight of delegated programs, among
others.  Implementing these  changes requires realigning resources and  personnel to ensure that we
increase effectiveness without undermining vital protections or quality and financial management. The FY
2015  President's Budget funds our top priority work in six areas. In  Goal 4 resources  are focused on
Taking  Action  on   Toxics and  Chemical  Safety;  Sustainability; and  Building  a  High  Performing
Environmental Protection Enterprise. While continuing EPA's ongoing commitment to science, the rule of
law and transparency, we  have updated and refined our current direction to maximize our effectiveness
and guide our agenda in the months and years ahead.

Taking Action on Toxics and Chemical Safety
The EPA has evaluated its priorities and made necessary adjustments to focus FY 2015 resources on the
most  significant efforts that help protect health  and the environment from chemical risks. The EPA's
budget  represents  an increase  in FY 2015 of approximately $4 million  above the FY 2014 Enacted
Budget for critical work in the objective of Ensuring Chemical Safety under the Chemical Risk Review and
Reduction program.  In FY2015, EPA will be following up on its projected early-achievement in FY2014
of its  FY 2015 goal  to complete reviews and, where  appropriate, challenge all of the more than 22,000
                                              48

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                 Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution
TSCA CBI claims in  health and safety studies  in existence as of August 2010. The agency has  been
simultaneously reviewing and,  where appropriate, challenging all new TSCA CBI claims for chemical
identity in health and safety studies as they are submitted, consistent with the EPA's 2015 Strategic Plan
goal of making all health and safety studies available to the  public for chemicals in commerce, to the
extent allowed by law. The EPA will continue this important work in FY 2015. In recent years, hundreds of
such claims have been submitted annually.


Agency Priority Goals

The EPA has developed FY 2014-2015 Agency Priority Goals  that advance the Administrator's Priorities
and the agency's Strategic Plan.

By  September 30, 2015, the EPA will have completed more  than 250 assessments of pesticides and
other commercially available  chemicals  to evaluate risks they  may pose to  human health  and the
environment,  including the potential for certain of these chemicals to disrupt endocrine systems. These
assessments are essential in determining whether products  containing these chemicals can be  used
safely for commercial, agricultural and/or industrial uses.

Additional information on the EPA's Agency Priority Goals can be found at www.performance.gov.


FY 2015 Activities

Objective 1:  Ensure Chemical Safety. Reduce the risk and increase the safety of chemicals that enter
our products,  our environment and our bodies.

The TSCA chemical  management program  addresses new chemicals, existing chemicals and legacy
chemicals. The major activity of the new chemicals program is  premanufacture notices (PMN) review and
management, which  addresses the  potential  risks from approximately  1,000  chemicals, products of
biotechnology, and new chemical nanoscale materials received annually prior to their entry into the U.S.
marketplace.  In FY 2015, EPA's toxics program will maintain its 'zero tolerance'  goal for preventing the
introduction of unsafe new chemicals  into commerce.

The greatest challenge is to address  existing chemicals already in use but where  available information is
limited. Existing chemicals activities fall into three  major categories: 1) obtaining,  managing, and making
chemical information  public; 2) screening  and assessing  chemical risks; and 3) taking action to  manage
chemical risks. Progress will be made to address existing  chemicals already in commerce under the
EPA's comprehensive approach to  enhance the agency's existing chemicals  management  program,
giving particular emphasis to assessing the 83  TSCA Work Plan  Chemicals identified  by the agency in
March 2012.

In FY 2015, the agency will continue to implement the chemicals risk management program to further
eliminate risks from  high-risk "legacy" chemicals, albeit  at a substantially reduced level. The EPA will
continue to maintain a base resource level to enable the agency to meet any continuing obligations under
statutes associated with  PCBs and other  long-standing chemical risks. The budget request sustains the
lead program at historic levels.  As illustrated in the figure below, the EPA will build on the successful
national effort to  reduce childhood blood  lead levels and continue ongoing implementation of the  Lead
Renovation,  Repair and  Painting (RRP) Rule through outreach efforts and targeted activities to support
renovator certifications.
                                              49

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                  Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution
                                      Children's Risk
                        Blood Lead Levels for Children aged 1-5
                                                                                      •>10 ug/dL
                                                                                       Elevated
                                                                                       Lead Levels
                                                                                      ->5 ug/dL
                                                                                       New
                                                                                       Concern
                                                                                       Lead Levels
                                                                                       £5 ug/dL
                                                                                       TARGET
                                                                                       Lead Levels
                                                                                       For near
                                                                                       future
* Values are not CDC data; interpolated for graphical display only
* * >10 ug/dL estimate is considered unreliable (relative standard error greater than 40 percent).
Note: 2007-2010 data is the most currently available data.
During FY 2015, the agency will  fulfill several  key milestones  in the Endocrine  Disrupter Screening
Program including:
    •   Prioritizing and  selecting  additional  chemicals for Tier 1 screening using a scientific process
        informed  by a combination  of scientifically  peer-reviewed, in silico, structure  activity,  expert
       judgement,  physiochemical properties based, read across,  chemical categorization, and other
        computational toxicology-based approaches, (e.g., high throughput technology);
    •   Continuing to issue additional Tier 1 Test Orders for select chemicals in the EDSP universe of
        chemicals informed by a combination of scientifically peer-reviewed, in  silico, structure activity,
        expert judgement, physiochemical properties based, read across, chemical categorization, and
        other computational toxicology-based approaches, (subject to obtaining an approved Information
        Collection Request;  without an approved ICR, test orders cannot be issued to registrants,
        manufacturers or importers for Tier 1  assay data for chemical screening);
    •   Continuation of the multi-year transition away from the traditional assays used in EDSP through
        efforts to validate and use computational toxicology and high throughput screening methods. This
       will allow the agency to more quickly, efficiently, and cost-effectively assess potential chemical
       toxicity.
    •   Continued collaboration with the EPA's Research and Development program on computational
       toxicology-based approaches to support more refined chemical prioritization and continue  efforts
       to increase  scientific  confidence in  these approaches so they can expedite and streamline  the
       scientific methods used by the EDSP for screening chemicals for the potential to interact with  the
        endocrine system.
    •   Coordination and  collaboration with  the Research and Development program to determine  the
        applicability of computational toxicology-based approaches for developing more targeted testing
        approaches that better assess a chemical's potential to interact with the estrogen, androgen, and
       thyroid systems.
                                               50

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                  Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution
    •   The EPA  will  continue  to  evaluate  endocrine-relevant  ToxCast  high  throughput  assays to
       increase coverage for known endocrine toxicity pathways through the scientific understanding of
       adverse outcome pathways.

The agency also will  continue to collaborate with  international partners, through the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), to maximize the efficiency of the EPA's resource use
and promote adoption of internationally harmonized  test methods for identifying endocrine disrupting
chemicals. The EPA represents the U.S. as either the lead or a participant in OECD projects involving the
improvement of  assay systems  including the development of non-animal prioritization and screening
methods and validation of Tier 2 assays.

Identifying, assessing,  and reducing the  risks presented by the  pesticides on which our society and
economy  depend are integral  to  ensuring environmental and human safety.  Chemical and  biological
pesticides help meet national and global demands for food. They provide effective  pest control for homes,
schools, gardens,  highways, utility  lines, hospitals, and drinking water treatment facilities,  while  also
controlling vectors of disease.  The program  ensures that the pesticides available in the U.S.  are  safe
when  used as directed. In addition, the program places priority on  reduced risk pesticides that, once
registered, will result in increased societal benefits.

In FY 2015, $128.8 million is provided  to support the  EPA pesticide applications  review and registration
program.  The EPA will focus  this  funding on  improving pesticide  registrations' compliance  with  the
Endangered Species Act. A portion of the funding will ensure that pesticides are correctly registered and
applied in a manner that protects water  quality. The EPA will continue registration and reregistration
requirements for antimicrobial pesticides which differ somewhat from those of other pesticides. The EPA
will continue to emphasize the protection of  potentially sensitive groups,  such as children, by  reducing
exposures from pesticides used in and around homes, schools, and  other public areas.  In addition, the
agency worker protection, certification, and training programs will encourage safe application practices.
Together,  these  programs will minimize exposure  to pesticides,  maintain  a safe and affordable food
supply, address public health issues, and minimize property damage that can occur from insects, pests
and microbes.
Objective 2: Promote Pollution Prevention. Conserve and protect natural resources by promoting
pollution  prevention  and the adoption of other sustainability  practices by  companies, communities,
governmental organizations, and individuals.

In FY 2015,  the funding level of $18.3 million for the EPA's pollution prevention (P2) program will target
technical assistance, information,  and  assessments to encourage  the use of greener  chemicals,
technologies, processes,  and products. The  P2 program's efforts advance  the  agency's  priorities to
pursue sustainability, take action on climate change and reduce chemical risks. The interplay  between
different media and different statutes requires renewed attention to improve "synergy" to achieve long-
term solutions.

The Pollution Prevention Program accomplishes its mission by fostering the development of P2 solutions
to environmental problems that eliminate or reduce pollution, waste and risks at the source, such as:
cleaner production processes and technologies; safer, "greener" materials and products; and improved
practices such as conservation  techniques and  reuse and  remanufacturing  of  hazardous secondary
materials in lieu of their discard, including offsite reuse/remanufacturing under appropriate conditions. The
program promotes the adoption,  use and market penetration of those solutions through such activities as
providing technical assistance and demonstrating the benefits of P2 solutions. The EPA will continue to
support the  Green Suppliers Network  and the Economy, Energy, and  Environment (E3)  Partnership
among federal  agencies, local  governments, and  manufacturers to promote energy efficiency, job
creation,  and environmental  improvement. In  FY 2015, the EPA will  continue to work  with its federal
partners and state pollution prevention  programs to conduct facility-specific assessments for small and
medium-sized suppliers and increase the implementation rate of E3 final report recommendations to help
suppliers reduce  business costs, improve productivity and efficiency, and measure greenhouse gas
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                  Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution
(GHG) emissions. The E3 Initiative and GSN have conducted more than 600 assessments, by leveraging
existing resources across the E3 federal agency partners. In FY 2015, the EPA will leverage expertise
from other EPA programs to enhance new sustainability and pollution prevention education and outreach
resources. Through an intra-agency  working group, each program office will disseminate  educational
resources and information to the public.


International Priorities

To achieve our domestic environmental and human health  goals,  international  partnerships, including
those with the business community and entrepreneurs, are essential. Pollution is often carried by winds
and water across  national boundaries, posing risks to human  health and ecosystems many hundreds and
thousands of miles away.

Through these partnerships, the EPA will maintain focus on  several priorities. In FY 2015, the EPA will
work with other nations to build strong environmental  institutions and  legal structures with  the  goal of
combating climate change by limiting pollutants and improving air quality in the U.S. and  around the
world. The EPA will work to expand access to clean water, and protect vulnerable  communities from toxic
pollution  that impacts North  America and nations worldwide. Through joint efforts with  partners from
around the world, the EPA is working to facilitate commerce, promote sustainable development, protect
vulnerable populations  and engage  in  environmental  issues. The  agency's  international priorities will
guide collaboration with Commission on  Environmental Cooperation (CEC) and all international partners.

In  FY 2015,  the  EPA  will  enhance  sustainability  principles through expanded  partnership efforts in
multilateral forums and in key bilateral relationships.  In addition, we will strengthen existing and build new
international partnerships to encourage increased international commitment to sustainability goals and to
promote a new era of global environmental stewardship based on common interests, shared  values, and
mutual respect. And finally, the EPA will continue to focus on technical and policy support for global and
regional  efforts  such as  strengthening the  EPA  leadership in  the  Arctic  Council and   with  other
governments to improve policies and implement cooperative projects that address climate change and
reduce contamination of the arctic.
Research

The EPA's Chemical Safety and Sustainability, Human Health Risk Assessment, and Homeland Security
Research programs underpin  the analysis  of  risks and  potential  health impacts  across  the  broad
spectrum  of  EPA  programs and provide the  scientific foundation  for chemical safety and  pollution
prevention. In FY 2015, the EPA will further strengthen its planning and delivery of science by continuing
an integrated research approach that tackles problems systematically instead of individually.

In  FY 2015, the EPA will continue the multi-year transition away from the traditional assays used in the
endocrine disrupter screening program through efforts to validate and use  computational toxicology and
high throughput screening methods. This is expected to allow the agency to more quickly, efficiently, and
cost-effectively  assess  potential chemical toxicity.  In  FY  2015, the EPA will continue to  evaluate
endocrine-relevant ToxCast high throughput  assays to increase coverage for known endocrine toxicity
pathways through the scientific understanding of adverse outcome pathways.

In  FY 2015, EPA will accelerate EPA's expansion  of the risk-based prioritization  effort for application to
TSCA  chemicals,  across toxicological endpoints and  exposure scenarios  beyond those  used with
endocrine disrupters. Specifically, these funds would be used to: (1)  model and generate exposure data;
(2) evaluate background  exposure levels  and biological relevance of environmental exposures; and (3)
translate for fit-for-purpose risk-based prioritization. This effort supports the agency's priority of taking
action on toxics and chemical safety. This will complement efforts of the Chemical  Safety and  Pollution
Prevention program to apply high throughput  and other 21st  Century exposure information to  TSCA
                                               52

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                 Goal 4: Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution
chemical prioritization. This directly supports the EPA's efforts to take action on  toxics and chemical
safety.

In  FY 2015, the Agency's Human Health Risk Assessment Research Program will continue to develop
assessments and scientific products that are used extensively by EPA program and regional offices and
the risk  management community to estimate the potential risk to public  health from  exposure to
environmental contaminants. These include:
    •   Integrated Risk Information System health hazard and dose-response assessments;
    •   Integrated Science Assessments of criteria air pollutants;
    •   Community Risk and Technical Support; and
    •   Methods, models, and approaches to modernize risk assessment for the 21st Century.

The Homeland Security research program (HSRP) will  continue to enhance the  nation's preparedness,
response, and recovery capabilities for homeland security  incidents and  other hazards  by providing
stakeholders  and partners with valuable  detection and response  analytics  for incidents involving
chemical, biological, or radiological agents. The program will continue to emphasize the research needed
to  support response and recovery from wide-area attacks involving radiological agents, nuclear agents,
and biothreat agents such as anthrax.

The EPA will allocate $162.6  million to  the Chemical Safety and Sustainability,  Human Health Risk
Assessment,  and Homeland Security Research programs in FY2015.
                                              53

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  Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance


  Goal 5:  Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing
                        Laws and Assuring Compliance

Strategic  Goal:  Protect human health and the environment through vigorous and
targeted civil and criminal enforcement.  Use  Next Generation Compliance strategies
and tools to improve compliance with environmental laws.
                                                    Resource Summary
                                                       (Dollars in Thousands)
10.0% of Budget
1 - Enforce Environmental Laws to
Achieve Compliance
Goal 5 Total
Difference
FY2015 FY 201 4 EN
FY2013 FY2014 President's to FY 201 5
Enacted Enacted Budget PresBud
$739,321 $751,889 $792,678 $40,789
$739,321 $751,889 $792,678 $40,789
Workyears
3,655
3,503
3,400
(103)
NOTE: Numbers may not add due to rounding

Introduction

The EPA's civil and criminal enforcement programs assure compliance with our nation's environmental
laws. A strong and effective enforcement program is essential to ensuring compliance with our laws and
regulations and  to maintaining a  level economic playing field, and to realizing the public health and
environmental protections  our federal statutes were created to achieve. The EPA is  committed  to
supporting public health in communities disproportionately burdened by pollution by integrating and
addressing issues of environmental justice (EJ) in the EPA's programs and policies as part of its day-to-
day business. The  EPA's  EJ program promotes accountability for compliance  with Executive Order
12898, "Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice  in Minority Populations  and Low-Income
Populations."

On January 18,  2011, President Obama issued a "Presidential Memoranda - Regulatory Compliance"1
which reaffirms  the importance of effective enforcement and compliance  with regulations. It states
"[s]ound regulatory enforcement promotes the welfare of Americans in many ways, by increasing public
safety,  improving  working conditions,  and  protecting the  air we breathe  and  the   water  we
drink. Consistent regulatory enforcement also levels the playing field among regulated entities, ensuring
that those that fail  to comply with the law do not have an  unfair  advantage over their  law-abiding
competitors."

In FY 2015, the EPA seeks to maintain the strength of its core national enforcement and  compliance
assurance program. Recognizing the tight fiscal climate at both the federal and state level, the agency will
implement strategies that use resources more efficiently and  find opportunities to focus and leverage
 Please see: http://www.whitehouse.qov/the-press-office/2011/01/18/presidential-memoranda-requlatorv-compliance
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  Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance
efforts  to assure  compliance with environmental laws.  Our objective is  to pursue  vigorous civil  and
criminal enforcement that targets the most serious water,  air, and  chemical  hazards  in communities;
assure strong, consistent, and effective enforcement of federal environmental laws nationwide; and use
modern, streamlined and data-rich techniques, strategies  and tools to  improve targeting and transparency
and increase compliance with environmental laws. The EPA will continue to focus resources on the most
important environmental problems where noncompliance is having  a significant  impact. This strategy
means EPA's  top enforcement  priority will be pursuing large, complex cases that  require significant
investment and a long-term commitment.

The  EPA has  achieved impressive pollution control  and health benefits  through vigorous  compliance
monitoring and enforcement, but  the  sheer number of regulated  facilities, the contribution of  large
numbers of smaller sources of pollution, combined with federal and state budget constraints has made it
necessary for the EPA to find ways to go  beyond the traditional single facility inspection and enforcement
approach to  ensure  widespread  compliance. In light of fiscal constraints,  the need to innovate is even
greater in order for the EPA to reduce pollution and increase compliance over the long-term.  The EPA is
developing  and implementing new methods based on  advances in both monitoring  and  information
technology benefiting government and  business  alike that will improve compliance and our ability to
focus on the most serious violations, and through  electronic reporting will reduce paperwork burdens on
business and our governmental partners.

This initiative,  Next  Generation  Compliance, incorporates  multiple  components: using state-of-the-art
monitoring  technology to  detect  pollution  problems;   leveraging   electronic reporting to  enhance
government efficiency,  reducing  paperwork  reporting burden and having more accurate, complete and
timely information on pollution sources, pollution, and compliance; expanding transparency so  the public
is aware of facility and government environmental  performance; developing and implementing innovative
enforcement approaches; and structuring  regulations and permits to be easier to implement with a goal of
improved compliance and environmental outcomes.2 Implementation  of the Next Generation Compliance
effort will enable the EPA to better evaluate the effectiveness  of its enforcement  and  compliance
strategies using evidence-based performance approaches. The agency is working to develop  tools that
will help collect  data to establish a baseline level  of environmental compliance  information. More
complete,  timely  information will  allow  the agency  to evaluate  compliance, experiment  with  new
approaches and to identify what works. This more complete data can be made publicly available,  with
transparency itself serving as a compliance driver.

In  FY 2015, the agency proposes to accelerate its Next  Generation Compliance approaches to harness
state-of-the-art technology making  this program more efficient and effective.  In particular, the  burden of
monitoring and compliance reporting will be reduced for the EPA and others by investing in state-of-the-
art monitoring  technology and supporting electronic interaction with  the regulated community. This will
allow the EPA and  others to more effectively deploy its inspection  resources. In July 2013, the EPA
proposed a new rule to convert the NPDES paper based reporting systems to  a more effective  and
efficient national  electronic  based  system. The final rule, expected  in FY 2015, will benefit the  public
regulated facilities, states, and the EPA by providing high quality,  complete,  and timely data  for the
NPDES program.

Efforts already being implemented  have shown that these approaches will have meaningful benefits. For
example, the EPA's Region 6 implemented the first federal General Permit in the nation that required
electronic submission of data through EPA's electronic reporting tools. Implemented for the Offshore Oil &
Gas NPDES General Permit program, the effort uses electronic reporting to reduce reporting burden on
permitted entities and the EPA, while allowing for automated tracking  of permit limits and  reporting
requirements, enhancing data quality, and increasing transparency  for regulators and the  public.  The
agency estimates that without deployment of the electronic reporting  tools, data entry alone would have
cost the EPA's Region 6 approximately $2.6 million over  a five year permit cycle. This demonstrates that
2 See September/October 2013 article in the Environmental Forum on Next Generation Compliance.
http://www.eli.orq/pdf/forum/30-5/30-5nextqenerationcompliance.pdf
                                              56

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  Goal 5:  Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance
the benefits from requiring electronic reporting in other programs (such as Ohio's NPDES program and
the EPA's TRI program) are likely to be expanded as electronic reporting becomes the norm. The EPA
also is developing an exporter interface to enable exporters of hazardous waste to  submit  notification
data electronically to the EPA, in order to avoid the expense and errors associated with manual entry and
to facilitate more effective compliance monitoring.

Next Generation Compliance is part  of the agency's E-Enterprise business model which promotes
advanced  monitoring, electronic reporting and transparency. E-Enterprise supports all of the agency's
goals and programs, and will make Next Generation Compliance easier to implement and should result in
higher compliance.  E-Enterprise resources in the Enforcement and Compliance Assurance program will
support  a  variety of projects, including:  1)  developing a field collection, evidence  management,  and
reporting system for conducting  compliance  monitoring inspections; 2) partnering with states  to develop
and implement tillable e-forms for electronically reporting NPDES information; 3) supporting  e-reporting
rule  development and  program evaluation;  4)  purchasing  advanced monitoring equipment;  and 5)
supporting  transparency  through  modernization   of  Integrated   Data   and  Enforcement Analysis
(IDEA)/Enforcement and Compliance History Online (ECHO).

Data transparency is a key foundation of ECHO and the EPA  believes making  compliance  information
publicly  available to better serve the  American people and provide an  incentive to promote  greater
compliance with environmental laws. ECHO is the EPA's premier web-based tool that provides public
access to  compliance and enforcement information  for approximately 800,000 EPA-regulated facilities.
The  EPA,  state and local  environmental  agencies collect/report data from facilities and from their own
activities and submit that data to EPA databases. ECHO usage has grown to more than 2 million  queries
in FY 2013.
                             ECHO Use By Fiscal Year
                                                                                     Mart

                                                                                I Loadings

                                                                                I Mainframe
    NOTES: Includes public and gov't use. ECHO Data Mart is gradually replacing mainframe.  Data
    Mart now includes State Comparative Maps, Dashboards, and SRF Round 3.
                                             57

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  Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance
Major FY 2015 Changes

In  FY 20153, the key changes to the enforcement and compliance budget reflect efforts to reshape and
realign the workforce to support the Administrator's themes and  priorities and  to  reflect changes in
programmatic direction and efficiencies gained from modernizing our business processes. The EPA is
accelerating our efforts under both E-Enterprise and Next Generation Compliance to  reflect advances in
pollutant monitoring and information technology. These advances, combined with a focus on designing
rules  and  permits  that  are easier to implement, will  result in reduced  pollution and  improved
environmental results. In  addition to the realigned resources supporting the EPA as  a High Performing
Environmental Protection Enterprise, resources across Goal 5 will be focused on advancing efforts in the
Administrator's priorities: Addressing Climate Change  and Improving Air Quality;  Cleaning Up  Our
Communities  and Advancing Sustainable  Development; and  Ensuring  the Safety  of Chemicals  and
Preventing Pollution.

Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality:
In  FY 2015, the  EPA will help improve air quality in communities by targeting large pollution sources,
especially in the coal-fired  utility,  acid, cement,  glass  and natural  gas exploration  and production
industries that  are not complying with environmental laws and  regulations. Where the EPA finds  non-
compliance, the  agency will take action to bring them into compliance, which may  include  installing
controls that will benefit communities or improving emission monitoring. Enforcement  activities which cut
toxic air pollution in communities will improve the health of residents, particularly those overburdened by
pollution. In FY 2015  the EPA will  undertake  an effort to examine the general deterrent effect of  EPA
enforcement actions on the pollution control practices of air toxics emitters. The  EPA also will work to
ensure compliance with climate change standards, including greenhouse gas rules effective in FY2015.

Protecting America's Waters:
In  FY 2015, the EPA will work with states to use compliance and  enforcement approaches which more
effectively and efficiently address the most important water pollution problems. Our focus will include
getting raw sewage out  of water, cutting pollution related to animal waste, and reducing pollution  from
stormwater runoff. The EPA also will continue  to promote an integrated planning strategy for addressing
municipal sewage and stormwater challenges,  including the use of lower cost and innovative approaches
and incorporation of green infrastructure in enforcement remedies where appropriate. These efforts will
help to clean up great waters like the Chesapeake Bay and will  focus on revitalizing  urban communities
by protecting and restoring urban waters. These options are proving attractive to communities that need
to  make changes to their CSO programs. Enforcement efforts also will support the goal of assuring clean
drinking water for all  communities, including small  systems and in Indian country,  and improving the
quality of Safe Drinking Water Act data reported by states to ensure compliance.

Cleaning Up Our Communities and Advancing Sustainable Development:
In  FY 2015, the EPA  will continue to protect communities by ensuring that responsible parties conduct
Superfund and other  cleanups, saving federal dollars for sites  where there are  no  viable contributing
parties.  Ensuring  that responsible parties clean up the sites also reduces direct human  exposure to
hazardous pollutants and contaminants, provides for long-term  human health protection, and ultimately
makes contaminated properties available for reuse. We will  continue to  integrate environmental  justice
(EJ) considerations into  the site remediation enforcement program by using EJ criteria when enforcing
RCRA corrective action requirements to meet RCRA 2020 goals and ensuring that institutional controls
are implemented at sites with potential environmental justice concerns.

Ensuring the Safety of Chemicals and Preventing Pollution:
In  FY 2015, the  EPA will strengthen chemical safety enforcement and reduce exposure to pesticides,
improving the health of Americans.  An active enforcement program reduces direct human exposures to
toxic chemicals and pesticides and supports  long-term  human  health protection. Ensuring compliance
with the Toxic Substances Control  Act  (TSCA) lead based  paint  requirements is a  top priority for the
3 EPA is providing a total of $552 million for the National Enforcement and Compliance Assurance
program. There are additional resources for the program under Goals 2, 3 and 4.
                                              58

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  Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance
TSCA monitoring and enforcement program. Lead exposure is particularly dangerous to children as even
low levels of exposure have been associated with delays in physical and mental development, lower IQ
levels, shortened attention spans, and increased behavior problems. An important remaining source of
lead exposure in children is dust that accumulates on the floors and window sills of homes that were
painted with pre-1970's lead-based paint.


Agency Priority Goal

The EPA has developed FY 2014-2015 Agency Priority Goals that advance the Administrator's Priorities
and  the  agency's  Strategic  Plan.  E-Enterprise  is a  state-EPA  joint approach  to  environmental
management across the agency,  including regional offices.  The  State-EPA E-Enterprise leadership
council has been convened and is actively working to prioritize and consolidate projects to maximize the
benefits. The priority goal is housed in Goal 5,  but E-Enterprise work will occur in agency programs that
interact with states, tribes, and industry. The FY 2014-2015 Priority Goal is:

E-Enterprise: Use advanced monitoring,  information technologies, optimized business  processes, and
increased  transparency  to  improve  environmental  outcomes  and  enhance service to the regulated
community and the public. By September 30, 2015 reduce reporting burdens to EPA by one million hours
through streamlined regulations, provide real-time environmental data to at least two communities, and
establish a  new portal to service the regulated community and public.

Additional information on the EPA's Agency Priority Goals can be found at
www.performance.gov


FY 2015 Activities

Objective 1: Enforce Environmental Laws. Pursue vigorous civil and criminal enforcement that targets
the most serious water, air, and chemical hazards in communities to achieve  compliance. Assure strong,
consistent,  and effective enforcement of federal environmental laws nationwide. Use Next Generation
Compliance strategies and tools to increase compliance with environmental laws.

It is critically important that the EPA continually assess priorities and  embrace new approaches that can
help achieve the agency's goals more efficiently and effectively. The  EPA's FY 2015 budget submission
for the Enforcement and Compliance Assurance program continues  to invest resources in high priority
areas with the greatest impact on public health, while reducing resources where we have made significant
progress  (and therefore no longer require  as active an enforcement presence), or that, while important,
do not address the most substantial impacts to human health. The EPA carefully evaluated program
activities  and directed limited resources to where they can  best  protect public health, especially in
disadvantaged communities; support core work of state and Tribal partners; and focus on the largest
pollution problems. The  EPA  will continue to examine the areas most appropriate for reduction while
implementing new enforcement approaches through Next Generation Compliance to make the program
more efficient and effective.

The agency remains committed to implementing a strong enforcement and compliance program focused
on identifying and reducing non-compliance and deterring future violations. To meet this commitment, the
program employs  a variety  of activities, including data collection and analysis,  compliance  monitoring,
assistance, civil and criminal  enforcement efforts and innovative and  evidence-based  problem-solving
approaches to identify and address the most significant environmental issues. In FY 2015 these efforts
will be  enhanced through Next Generation Compliance approaches  that rely on modern  reporting and
monitoring tools to advance implementation of the agency's priorities and core program work.

Furthermore,  in designing and implementing Compliance Monitoring  program activities, the EPA tracks
and  assesses recent studies and evaluations regarding the  effectiveness  and  limits  of compliance
monitoring  and  enforcement in  promoting compliance  and deterrence. The  evidence in the  literature
                                              59

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  Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance
consistently  demonstrates that strong and active compliance monitoring  and enforcement increases
compliance and reduces pollution.111 EPA's Compliance Research Literature web page references many
of these studies and reports.121 In addition, the EPA has commissioned its own studies of compliance and
enforcement interventions, compliance, deterrence, and recidivism to better understand their relationship
and to support measures development.

Compliance Monitoring - Targeting the Most Serious Hazards in Communities

The  EPA's  compliance monitoring  program  reviews  and evaluates the  activities of the regulated
community to determine compliance  with applicable laws, regulations, permit conditions and settlement
agreements.  The program also determines  whether conditions  at facilities present imminent and
substantial endangerment exist.

In FY 2015, the EPA's compliance  monitoring activities will be both environmental media-based and
sector-based. The EPA's media-based inspections complement those performed by  states and Tribes,
and are a key part of the strategy for meeting the long-term and  annual goals established for the air,
water, pesticides, toxic substances and hazardous waste programs. The EPA will target its inspections to
the highest priority areas and coordinate  inspection  activity with states and Tribes  to better leverage
resources and enhance collaboration. In FY 2013, the EPA conducted nearly 18,000 federal inspections
and evaluations.

In FY 2015,  as part of Next Generation Compliance,  the agency will continue to enhance the efficiency
and effectiveness of the  compliance  monitoring program by leveraging electronic reporting to reduce
paperwork burdens, increasing transparency by enhancing systems to report, synthesize, utilize, and
disseminate  monitoring data, designing analytic tools to help understand and utilize data and deploying
state of the art  monitoring equipment to the  field.  Synchronizing data systems to utilize electronic
transmissions from regulated facilities will benefit the compliance monitoring program by allowing  the EPA
to better apply evidence-based approaches to the program and determine  what strategies achieve the
best results.

Compliance  monitoring also includes the EPA's management and  use of data systems to oversee  its
compliance  and  enforcement programs under  the  various statutes and  programs that the agency
enforces. In FY 2015, the EPA will accelerate the process of enhancing its data  systems to integrate with
E-Enterprise and to support electronic interaction with  regulated facilities, providing more comprehensive,
accessible data to the public and improving integration of environmental information with health data and
other pertinent data  sources from other federal agencies and private entities. The agency will complete
Phase  III of  the Integrated Compliance  Information System (ICIS),  the modernization of the Air Facility
System (AFS). ICIS supports both compliance monitoring  and civil enforcement. In  addition, the EPA
plans to work toward modernization  of Integrated Data and Enforcement Analysis (IDEA)/Enforcement
and Compliance  History Online (ECHO). ECHO includes State Performance dashboards  for the Clean
Water Act (CWA), Clean Air Act (CAA) and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) to allow
users to assess  each state's performance in enforcing the various environmental statutes, as well  as
integrate facility information across media  specific data systems. Through  ECHO and its reports, users
can now view this data in a comprehensive and organized manner, including a search function. ECHO
reports provide a snapshot of a facility's environmental record, showing dates and types of any violations,
as well as the state or federal government's response.  The system  allows  the  public to  monitor
environmental compliance in communities, corporations to monitor compliance across  facilities they own,
and investors to more easily factor environmental performance into their decisions.

In FY2015, the proposed compliance monitoring budget is $120.1 million.
[1] For example: R. Hanna & P. Oliva; The Impact of Inspections on Plant-Level Air Emissions underthe
Clean Air Act; 10 B.E Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy 1 (2010). And J. Shimshack & M. Ward,
Enforcement and Over-Compliance, J. Environ. Econ. 55(1): 90-105 (2008)
[2IFor more information, refer to:
http://www.epa.gov/Compliance/resources/reports/compliance/research/index.html
                                              60

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  Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance
Assuring Strong, Consistent and Effective Enforcement

Civil Enforcement
The  Civil  Enforcement  program's overarching  goal  is  to  assure  compliance  with the  nation's
environmental laws and regulations in order to protect human health and the environment. The program
collaborates with the Department of Justice, states, local agencies and Tribal governments to  ensure
consistent and fair enforcement of all environmental laws and regulations. The program seeks to protect
public health and the environment and ensure a level playing field by strengthening partnerships with co-
implementers in the states, encouraging regulated entities to rapidly correct their own violations, ensuring
that violators do not realize an  economic benefit from noncompliance and pursuing enforcement to deter
future violations.

The Civil Enforcement program develops,  litigates and settles administrative and  civil judicial cases
against  serious violators  of environmental laws.  In FY  2013, the  EPA's enforcement actions required
regulated entities to invest more than $7 billion in actions and equipment to control pollution (injunctive
relief). Also in FY 2013, the enforcement program obtained a total of $1.1 billion in federal administrative
and civil judicial penalties  primarily due to a record settlement of $1 billion reached  with Transocean for its
liability for the Deepwater Horizon Gulf of Mexico oil spill.   The  EPA's  enforcement actions required
regulated entities to reduce pollution by  an  estimated 1.3 billion pounds  per year. Sustained and focused
enforcement attention to the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) resulted in a 75 percent  reduction in the
number of public water systems with serious unresolved violations  in the past three years; this was the
result of combined federal and state actions and enforcement work.

In FY 2015,  the  EPA's civil enforcement program will focus on  the  national enforcement initiatives,
especially in communities that  may be  disproportionately exposed  to risks and harm from pollutants in
their environment, including minority and/or low-income areas. The National Enforcement Initiatives were
selected  for FY  2014-2016 through a  collaborative selection process completed  in FY 2013. These
national initiatives address problems that remain  complex and challenging.  Current initiatives keep  raw
sewage  and  contaminated  stormwater  out of  our   nation's  waters,  prevent animal  waste from
contaminating surface and  ground waters, and address violations of  the  Clean Air Act New  Source
Review/Prevention of Significant Deterioration requirements and Air Toxics regulations, RCRA violations
at mineral  processing facilities, and  multi-media  problems  resulting from  energy extraction activities.
Information on initiatives, regulatory requirements, enforcement alerts and  EPA results will be made
available to the public and the regulated  community through websites.4

As  with  the compliance monitoring  program,  the  EPA's  enforcement  program  will benefit from
synchronizing data systems to receive  electronic transmissions from regulated facilities and by having
more complete and timely data with which to evaluate which enforcement approaches are most effective.
This utilizes the transformative  information system-based work of the larger E-Enterprise business model.
The EPA and states will be able to better prioritize enforcement resources in those areas where they are
most needed such as complex industrial operations requiring physical inspection,  repeat violators, cases
involving significant harm to human health or the environment, or potential criminal  violations.

The Civil Enforcement program also will  focus on how tools, such as fence line monitoring can be  applied
in enforcement settlements, such as in the 2013 CAA settlement with Shell Deer  Park, in order to make
more data available, as well as using independent third parties to monitor compliance with the settlement
(e.g., the 2013 CWA settlement with Transocean). Fence line monitoring can be used to  monitor the
environment  immediately surrounding   a  regulated  entity,  thereby  providing  the  community  with
information about local emissions.

The  Civil Enforcement  program also  provides  support for other priority programs,  including  the
Environmental Justice program and the Chesapeake Bay program. For example, the civil  enforcement
4 For more information, refer to http://www.epa.qov/compliance/monitorinq/index.html
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  Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance
program  will  help  to  implement a  compliance and  enforcement strategy for the Chesapeake  Bay,
providing strong oversight to ensure existing regulations are complied with consistently and in a timely
manner, and making data on government and facility performance in the Bay watershed accessible and
understandable to the public.

In FY2015, the proposed budget for civil enforcement is $183.8 million.

Criminal Enforcement
Criminal enforcement underlies the EPA's commitment to pursuing the most serious pollution violations.
The EPA's criminal enforcement program  investigates and helps prosecute environmental violations that
involve intentional,  deliberate or criminal  behavior on the  part of the violator.  The Criminal Enforcement
program  deters violations of environmental laws and  regulations by demonstrating that the regulated
community will be held accountable through jail sentences and criminal fines. Bringing criminal cases to
court sends  a strong deterrence message to potential violators, enhances aggregate compliance with
laws and  regulations,  and  protects  communities at risk.  In FY  2013, the conviction  rate for  criminal
defendants was 94  percent.

To maximize efficient use of resources, in FY 2015 the program will reduce case work in lower priority
areas and will use  its  special agent  capacity to identify and investigate cases with the  most significant
environmental, human  health and deterrence impact. The EPA's criminal enforcement program will target
cases across  all media  that involve serious  harm or injury; hazardous or toxic releases;  ongoing,
repetitive, or multiple releases; serious documented exposure to pollutants; and violators with significant
repeat or chronic noncompliance or prior criminal conviction.

In FY 2015, the proposed budget for Criminal Enforcement is $58.3 million.

Forensics Support
The Forensics Support program provides specialized scientific and technical support for the nation's  most
complex  civil and criminal  enforcement  cases, as  well as technical expertise for agency compliance
efforts. The work  of  the  EPA's National Enforcement Investigations  Center  (NEIC)  is  critical  to
determining non-compliance and building viable enforcement cases. The NEIC maintains a sophisticated
chemistry laboratory and a corps of highly trained  inspectors  and  scientists with  a wide range  of
environmental scientific expertise. In  FY2015, NEIC will continue  to function under rigorous International
Standards Organization 17025 requirements  for  environmental  data measurements  to maintain  its
accreditation.

In FY 2015, the proposed budget for Forensics Support is $15.3 million.

Superfund Enforcement
The EPA's Superfund  Enforcement program protects communities by  ensuring that responsible  parties
conduct cleanups of hazardous waste sites, preserving federal dollars for sites where there are no viable
contributing parties. Superfund enforcement uses  an "enforcement first" approach that maximizes the
participation  of liable and viable parties in performing  and  paying for cleanups in  both the remedial and
removal  programs. The EPA will  focus  Superfund enforcement resources  to support  Potentially
Responsible Party  (PRP) searches,  cleanup settlements, and cost recovery. Similarly, the Superfund
Federal  Facilities enforcement program  will take action  to  ensure that federal  agencies actively and
appropriately manage their own cleanup efforts with the legally-required EPA oversight. The  agency will
continually assess  its  priorities and  embrace  new approaches that can help achieve its goals  more
efficiently and effectively.

Enforcement authorities play a unique role under the Superfund program. The authorities are  used to
ensure that responsible parties conduct a  majority of the cleanup actions and  reimburse  the federal
government for cleanups financed by federal resources. In tandem with this  approach,  various reforms
have been implemented to increase  fairness, reduce transaction costs, promote economic development
                                              62

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   Goal 5: Protecting Human Health and the Environment by Enforcing Laws and Assuring Compliance


and make sites available for appropriate reuse.5 Ensuring that responsible parties cleanup sites ultimately
reduces  direct human  exposures to hazardous  pollutants and  contaminants, provides for long-term
human health protections and makes contaminated properties available for reuse.

The Department of Justice supports the EPA's Superfund enforcement program through negotiations and
judicial actions to compel PRP cleanup and litigation to recover Trust Fund  monies. The agency will
provide $21.8 million to the Department of Justice through an Interagency Agreement. This partnership to
ensure polluters pay has been  very effective. In FY 2013, the Superfund Enforcement program secured
private party commitments exceeding $1.6 billion. This amount includes three components:  PRPs who
committed to perform future  response work with an estimated value of more than $1.2 billion; who agreed
to reimburse the  agency for  $292.3 million  in  past costs;  and  who were billed by the  EPA  for
approximately  $92.8  million  in oversight  costs. The EPA  also works  to ensure that required  legally
enforceable institutional controls  and financial  assurance instruments are in  place  and  adhered to at
Superfund sites and at facilities subject to RCRA Corrective Action to ensure the long-term  protectiveness
of cleanup actions.

In FY 2015 the proposed budget for Superfund enforcement is $154.3 million.

Partnering with States and Tribes
In FY  2015,  the  Enforcement and Compliance  Assurance  program  will sustain  its  environmental
enforcement partnerships  with states  and  Tribes and  work to strengthen their  ability  to address
environmental  and public  health threats.  In FY  2015,  the Enforcement and Compliance  Assurance
program  will provide  $23.0 million in grants to the states and Tribes to assist in  the implementation of
compliance and enforcement provisions of the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) and the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide  Act (FIFRA). These grants support state and Tribal compliance
activities  to protect human health and the environment from harmful chemicals and pesticides. Under the
Pesticides Enforcement Grant program, the EPA will continue to provide resources to states  and Indian
Tribes  to conduct FIFRA compliance inspections  and take appropriate enforcement  actions. The Toxic
Substances Compliance Grants protect the public and the environment from PCBs, asbestos, and lead-
based paint.
5 For more information regarding the EPA's enforcement program and its various components, please refer to
 http://vwvw.epa.qov/compliance/cleanup/superfund/
                                              63

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64

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Appendices
     65

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66

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                             Resources by Appropriation


        Summary of Agency Resources by Appropriation
                             (Dollars in Thousands)


Appropriation
Science & Technology (S&T)
Environmental Program & Management (EPM)
Inspector General (IG)
Building and Facilities (B&F)
Inland Oil Spill Programs (Oil)
Hazardous Substance Superfund (SF)
- Superfund Program
- Inspector General Transfer
- Science & Technology Transfer
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks (LUST)
State and Tribal Assistance Grants (STAG)
- Categorical Grants
- All Other STAG
E-Manifest
Rescission of Prior Year Funds
Agency Total

FY2013
Enacted
$743,791
$2,511,406
$39,740
$34,467
$17,291
$1,113,268
$1,082,118
$9,405
$21 ,745
$98,695
$3,392,446
$1,032,031
$2,360,415
$0
($50,000)
$7,901,104

FY2014
Enacted
$759,156
$2,624,149
$41,849
$34,467
$18,209
$1,088,769
$1,059,614
$9,939
$19,216
$94,566
$3,535,161
$1,054,378
$2,480,783
$3,674
$0
$8,200,000

FY2015
PresBud
$763,772
$2,737,156
$46,130
$53,507
$24,133
$1,156,603
$1,126,689
$11,064
$18,850
$97,922
$3,005,374
$1,130,374
$1,875,000
$10,423
($5,000)
$7,890,020
Delta
FY15PB-
FY14ENA
$4,616
$113,007
$4,281
$19,040
$5,924
$67,834
$67,075
$1,125
($366)
$3,356
($529,787)
$75,996
($605,783)
$6,749
($5,000)
($309,980)
Notes: S&T and IG totals do not include Superfund transfers—see the Superfund line items for
      annual amounts.
      FY 2013 Enacted total reflects operating levels after sequestration and excludes Hurricane Sandy
      Relief supplemental appropriation of $608 million.
                                       67

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68

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                         E-Enterprise
E-Enterprise - FY 2014 Enacted vs FY 2015 President's Budget
                     (Dollars in Thousands)

Program Project
Categorical Grant: Environmental
Information
Civil Enforcement
Compliance Monitoring
Drinking Water Programs
Exchange Network
Federal Support for Air Quality Management
Federal Vehicle and Fuels Standards and
Certification
IT/ Data Management
Legal Advice: Environmental Program
Pesticides: Protect Human Health from
Pesticide Risk
RCRA: Waste Management
Regulatory/Economic-Management and
Analysis
Superfund: Remedial
Toxic Substances: Chemical Risk Review and
Reduction

Total
FY 2014 Enacted
Dollars
Nonpay
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$2,414
$0
$0
$0

$2,414
Pay
$0
$0
$2,009
$108
$409
$236
$15
$0
$176
$91
$1,352
$0
$0
$123

$4,519
Total
$0
$0
$2,009
$108
$409
$236
$15
$0
$176
$91
$3,766
$0
$0
$123

$6,933

FTE
0.0
0.0
12.2
0.7
2.5
1.5
0.1
0.0
1.0
0.6
8.5
0.0
0.0
0.8

27.9
FY 2015 President's Budget
Dollars
Nonpay
$15,700
$71
$12,541
$3,300
$16,000
$2,430
$400
$2,315
$0
$575
$9,150
$200
$0
$575

$63,257
Pay
$0
$1,759
$2,213
$109
$507
$332
$15

$178
$92
$1,492
$0
$32
$124

$6,853
Total
$15,700
$1,830
$14,754
$3,409
$16,507
$2,762
$415
$2,315
$178
$667
$10,642
$200
$32
$699

$70,110

FTE
0.0
10.0
13.2
0.7
3.0
2.0
0.1

1.0
0.6
9.2
0.0
0.2
0.8

40.8
Delta FY 2015 PresBud - FY 2014 Enacted
Dollars
Nonpay
$15,700
$71
$12,541
$3,300
$16,000
$2,430
$400
$2,315
$0
$575
$6,736
$200
$0
$575

$60,843
Pay
$0
$1,759
$204
$1
$98
$96
$0
$0
$2
$1
$140
$0
$32
$1

$2,334
Total
$15,700
$1,830
$12,745
$3,301
$16,098
$2,526
$400
$2,315
$2
$576
$6,876
$200
$32
$576

$63,177

FTE
0.0
10.0
1.0
0.0
0.5
0.5
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.7
0.0
0.2
0.0

12.9
                             69

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                          Environmental Education
             FY 2015 Environmental Education Funding
                           (Dollars in Thousands)
Program Project Title
Brownfields
Drinking Water Programs
Federal Support for Air Quality Management
Pesticides: Protect Human Health from Pesticide Risk
Pollution Prevention Program
RCRA: Waste Management
Surface Water Protection
Executive Management and Operations
Total Environmental Education*
FY2015PresBud
Contracts
and Grants
Funding
$125
$875
$1,500
$1,000
$250
$375
$875
$0
$5,000
FTE
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
11.1
11.1
*Payroll funding not displayed.
                                   70

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                                           Categorical Grants
                            Categorical Program Grants (STAG)
                                  by National Program and State Grant
                                         (Dollars in Thousands)


NPM / Grant
Air & Radiation
State and Local Air Quality Management
Tribal Air Quality Management
Radon

Water
Pollution Control (Sec. 106)
Beaches Protection
Nonpoint Source (Sec. 319)
Wetlands Program Development

Drinkinq Water
Public Water System Supervision (PWSS)
Underground Injection Control (DIG)

Hazardous Waste
Hazardous Waste Financial Assistance
Brownfields
Underground Storage Tanks

Pesticides & Toxics
Pesticides Program Implementation
Lead
Toxics Substances Compliance
Pesticides Enforcement

Multimedia
Environmental Information
Pollution Prevention
Tribal General Assistance Program

Total Categorical Grants

FY2013
Actuals

$224,384
$12,285
$7,322
$243,992

$226,337
$9,452
$157,767
$14,253
$407,808

$99,681
$10,060
$109,740

$98,077
$45,871
$1,489
$145,436

$11,577
$13,515
$4,655
$17,370
$47,116

$9,924
$4,894
$66,494
$81,312
$1,035,404

FY2014
Enacted

$228,219
$12,829
$8,051
$249,099

$230,806
$9,549
$159,252
$14,661
$414,268

$101,963
$10,506
$112,469

$99,693
$47,745
$1,498
$148,936

$12,701
$14,049
$4,919
$18,050
$49,719

$9,646
$4,765
$65,476
$79,887
$1,054,378

FY2015
PresBud

$243,229
$12,829
$0
$256,058

$249,164
$0
$164,915
$14,661
$428,740

$109,700
$10,506
$120,206

$99,604
$47,745
$1,498
$148,847

$12,701
$14,049
$4,919
$18,050
$49,719

$25,664
$4,765
$96,375
$126,804
$1,130,374
Delta
FY15PB-
FY14EN

$15,010
$0
($8,051)
$6,959

$18,358
($9,549)
$5,663
$0
$14,472

$7,737
$0
$7,737

($89)
$0
$0
($89)

$0
$0
$0
$0
$0

$16,018
$0
$30,899
$46,917
$75,996


% Change

6.6%
0.0%
-100.0%
2.8%

8.0%
-100.0%
3.6%
0.0%
3.5%

7.6%
0.0%
6.9%

-0.1%
0.0%
0.0%
-0.1%

0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%

166.1%
0.0%
47.2%
58.7%
7.2% |
Notes:  1) Actuals refer to actual obligations.
       2) 2013 totals reflect operating levels after sequestration and excludes Hurricane
       Sandy Relief supplemental appropriation of $608 million.
       3) Totals  may not add due to rounding.
                                                  71

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72

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                                      Categorical Grants


                   Categorical Grants  Program (STAG)

                                     (Dollars in millions)
$1,400
$1,200
$1,000
$800
$600
$400
$200
<^^m.^^ -^—



-




-




-










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-
-





-





-

•
            2005   2006  2007   2008  2009   2010  2011   2012  2013   2014   2015
             EN    EN    EN     EN    EN     EN    EN    EN    EN    EN    PB

    *EN - Enacted, PB - President's Budget. 2013 totals reflect operating levels after sequestration.

Categorical Grants

In  FY 2015, the EPA  requests a total of $1.130  billion for 17  "categorical"  program grants for state,
interstate organizations, non-profit organizations, intertribal consortia, and Tribal governments. The EPA
will continue  to  pursue  its  strategy of building  and supporting  state,  local, and  Tribal capacity to
implement,  operate, and enforce the  nation's environmental laws. Most  environmental  laws envision
establishment of a decentralized nationwide structure to protect public health and the environment. In this
way, environmental goals will ultimately be achieved through the  actions, programs, and commitments of
state, Tribal, and local governments, organizations, and citizens.
In  FY 2015, the EPA will continue to  offer flexibility to state and Tribal governments to  manage their
environmental  programs as well  as  provide technical  and financial  assistance to achieve mutual
environmental  goals. First, the EPA and its  state and Tribal partners will continue  implementing the
National Environmental Performance Partnership System  (NEPPS). NEPPS is designed to allow states
more flexibility  to  operate their programs, while increasing emphasis  on  measuring  and  reporting
environmental  improvements. Second,  Performance  Partnership Grants (PPGs) will  continue to allow
states and  tribes  funding flexibility to combine categorical program grants to  address  environmental
priorities.

HIGHLIGHTS:

State & Local Air Quality Management, Radon, and Tribal Air  Quality
Management Grants

The FY2015 request includes $256.1 million for grants to support state, local, and Tribal air management
programs, an increase of $15.0  million from  the FY 2014 Enacted Budget. Grant funds for State  and
Local Air Quality  Management and Tribal Air Quality Management are requested in the amounts of
$243.2 million and $12.8 million,  respectively. These funds provide resources to  multi-state, state, local,
and Tribal air pollution control agencies for the development and implementation of programs for the
prevention  and control of air pollution  and  for the  implementation  of  National Ambient Air Quality
                                             73

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                                        Categorical Grants
Standards (NAAQS) set to protect public health and the environment. In FY 2015, the EPA will continue
to work with state and local air pollution control agencies to develop or implement state implementation
plans (SIPs) for NAAQS (including the 8-hour ozone standard, the fine particle  (PM-2.5) standard, and
the  lead standard) and also for regional haze. In addition, the EPA will continue to support state and local
operation  of the National  Air Toxics Trends  Stations network.  In FY 2015, states with approved  or
delegated permitting programs will continue to implement new greenhouse gas  requirements as part of
their permitting programs. Additionally, in FY 2015, states will begin to lay the ground work to support key
portions of the Climate Action Plan. The EPA will work closely with  the states  in order to achieve the
common goal of reducing carbon pollution from power plants.

The EPA will work with federally-recognized Tribal governments nationwide to continue development and
implementation of Tribal air quality management programs. Tribes are active in protection of air quality for
the  land over which they have sovereignty and work closely with the EPA to monitor and report air quality
information from over 300  monitors. Lastly, the FY 2015 budget  eliminates funding for the State Indoor
Radon Grant (SIRG) program. The SIRG program was authorized in 1988 to provide financial assistance
to states to develop, implement and enhance state capacity for reducing radon risk.  Now that most states
have indoor radon programs in place, EPA will narrow support to States to technical assistance alone and
eliminate financial assistance provided under the SIRG program.

Water Pollution Control (Clean Water Act Section 106) Grants

The FY 2015 EPA  request includes $249.2 million for Water Pollution Control grants. The $18.4 million
increase  will  strengthen the state,  interstate  and Tribal water quality programs. These  water quality
programs  assist state and Tribal  efforts to restore and maintain the quality of the nation's  waters  by
strengthening water quality standards, improving water quality monitoring and assessment, implementing
Total  Maximum Daily Loads  (TMDLs) and other watershed-related  plans, strengthening the National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit program and implementing  practices to reduce
pollution from all nonpoint sources. EPA will work with states, interstate agencies  and tribes to strengthen
their nutrient management efforts  consistent with  EPA  Water Program guidance issued in March 2011,
including the development of numeric nutrient criteria.  The EPA will work with states to implement the
rules governing discharges from Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) and will continue to
revise the stormwater regulations to better  protect the nation's waters from stormwater discharges. The
EPA also will work with states as they implement individual and general pesticide permit programs.

States and authorized tribes will continue to review and update their water quality standards as required
by the Clean Water Act. The EPA encourages states to continually review and update the water quality
criteria in their standards to reflect the latest scientific information from the EPA  and other sources. The
EPA's goal for FY 2015 is that 67.9 percent of states will have updated their standards to reflect the latest
scientific information in  the past three years. In FY 2015,  EPA requests $18.5 million for monitoring to
continue  to be  designated for states  and tribes that participate in  collecting  statistically valid water
monitoring data and implement enhancements in their water monitoring programs.

Wetlands Grants

In FY 2015, the request includes $14.7 million for Wetlands Program grants, which provide technical and
financial assistance to the  states,  tribes, and local governments. These grants support development of
state and Tribal wetland programs that further the national goal of an overall  increase in the acreage and
condition of wetlands. The Wetland Program Development Grants are the  EPA's primary resource for
supporting  state and Tribal wetland program development. Grants are used to develop new or refine
existing state and Tribal wetland  programs in one or  more of the following areas:  (1) monitoring and
assessment;  (2)  voluntary restoration  and protection; (3)  regulatory programs including Section 401
certification; and (4) wetland water quality standards.
                                              74

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                                       Categorical Grants


Public Water System Supervision Grants

In FY 2015, the EPA requests $109.7 million for Public Water System Supervision (PWSS) grants. These
grants provide  assistance to implement and  enforce National Primary Drinking Water Regulations  to
ensure the safety of the Nation's drinking water resources and to protect public  health. This  request
includes an additional $7.7 million to augment state and tribal efforts  in meeting existing drinking water
regulations and to prepare for implementation of new regulations, including the Revised Total Coliform Rule.
These resources also will be used by states and tribes as they provide  technical assistance and training
to help meet the continued needs of the small water systems.

Underground Injection Control (UIC) Grants

In FY 2015, the EPA  requests $10.5 million for the Underground Injection  Control  grants program.
Ensuring safe underground  injection of waste  materials and other fluids is  a  main  component of a
comprehensive  source  water  protection  program. Grants  are  provided  to states that have  primary
enforcement authority (primacy) to implement and maintain UIC programs. In December 2010, a rule was
finalized which  established  a  new  class of  underground  injection  well—Class VI—with new federal
requirements to allow the injection of CO2 for the purpose of Geologic Sequestration (GS). On September
15,  2011,  the EPA published a notice in the Federal Register indicating that the EPA will implement the
Class VI GS  program  as  no state has applied for, or received, approval for Class VI primacy either
through a state UIC  program  revision, or a new application  from states without any UIC  primary
enforcement authority. Therefore, in FY 2014, until states receive Class VI primacy approval, the EPA will
continue to carry out regulatory functions for Class VI geologic sequestration wells in most states, along
with other classes of wells for which the EPA  has direct  implementation responsibility. The EPA will
continue to process primacy applications and permit applications for carbon sequestration projects related
to Class VI wells. States and the EPA also will process Underground Injection Control  permits for other
nontraditional injection streams  such as desalination brines and treated waters injected for storage and
recovered at a later time.

Non-Point Source Program Grants (NPS - Clean Water Act Section 319)

In FY 2015, the EPA requests $164.9 million  for Nonpoint  Source Program grants to states, territories,
and tribes. These grants enable states to use a range of tools to implement their programs including: both
non-regulatory and regulatory programs, technical assistance, financial assistance, education, training,
technology transfer, and demonstration projects. The request also eliminates, for FY 2015, the statutory
one-third of one-percent cap on Clean Water Act Section 319 Nonpoint  Source Pollution grants that may
be  awarded to tribes,  allowing  the  Agency  to provide Tribal  funding  at the Agency's discretion  in
accordance with Tribal  needs.  In 2015, the  EPA and the USDA will work collaboratively in high  priority,
focused watersheds to  address agricultural nonpoint source pollution. The goal of our collaboration is to
coordinate agency  efforts, thereby increasing  conservation  on the  ground to better protect water
resources from nonpoint sources of pollution, including nitrogen and phosphorus.

Tribal General Assistance Program Grants

In FY 2015, the  EPA requests $96.4 million in General Assistance Program (GAP) grants to provide tribes
with a stronger  foundation to build their capacity to address environmental issues on  Indian lands. It will
further the EPA's  partnership and  collaboration  with tribes  to  address  a wider  set  of  program
responsibilities  and challenges.  The grants will assist Tribal  governments in building  environmental
capacity to assess environmental conditions, utilize available federal and other information, and build and
administer environmental  programs tailored to  their needs. This additional funding will  increase the
average level of grants made to eligible tribes and focus on mutually  agreed-upon concerns in Indian
country.
                                               75

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                                        Categorical Grants
Pesticide Enforcement and Toxics Substances Compliance Grants

The FY 2015 request includes $22.9 million to build environmental enforcement partnerships with states
and tribes and to strengthen  their ability to address environmental and  public health  threats.  The
enforcement state grants request consists of $18.0 million for Pesticides Enforcement and $4.9 million for
Toxic Substances Compliance Grants. The Toxic Substance Compliance Grants protect the public and
the environment from PCBs, asbestos, and lead-based paint. State and Tribal enforcement grants will be
awarded  to assist  in the implementation of compliance  and  enforcement provisions of the Toxic
Substances Control Act (TSCA) and  the Federal Insecticide,  Fungicide, and Rodenticide  Act (FIFRA).
These grants support state  and Tribal compliance activities  to  protect the  environment from harmful
chemicals and pesticides.

Under the Pesticides Enforcement Grant program, the EPA provides resources to states and Indian tribes
to conduct FIFRA compliance inspections and  take  appropriate enforcement actions and implement
programs for farm worker protection. The program  also sponsors training for state and Tribal inspectors
through the Pesticide Inspector  Residential Program (PIRT) and  for state and Tribal  managers through
the Pesticide Regulatory  Education Program (PREP). Under  the Toxic Substances  Compliance Grant
program, "non-waiver" states  inspect on behalf of the EPA and  receive funding for compliance inspections
of asbestos and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and "waiver" states inspect under their own regulations
and receive funding for compliance inspections and enforcement of the asbestos program. States  also
receive funding for  implementation of the state  lead-based paint certification and training, abatement
notification and  work  practice  standards  compliance  and  enforcement   program.  The  funds  will
complement other Federal program grants for building  state  capacity for lead abatement, and enhancing
compliance with disclosure, certification, and training requirements.

Pesticides Program Implementation Grants

The  FY  2015 request includes  $12.7 million for Pesticides Program Implementation grants. These
resources will assist  states, tribes,  and partners with  outreach, training,  technical assistance  and
implementation of various pesticide programs and issues, including, pesticide worker safety, protection of
endangered species and  water sources,  bed  bugs, pollinator protection,  spray drift reduction  and
promotion of environmental stewardship approaches to pesticide use. The EPA's mission  as related  to
pesticides is to protect human health and the  environment from pesticide risk and to realize the value of
pesticide availability by considering the economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of the use
of pesticides. Pesticides Program Implementation Grants help  state programs stay current with changing
requirements.

Lead Grants

The FY 2015 request includes $14.0 million for lead grants. This funding will provide assistance to states,
territories, the  District of Columbia, and tribes to develop and implement authorized programs for the
lead-based paint abatement program to operate  in  lieu of the federal program. Additionally, the program
will provide support to those entities to develop  and implement authorized Renovation,  Repair  and
Painting (RRP) Programs.  The EPA implements  these programs  in all areas  of the country that are not
authorized to do so. Activities conducted as part of this program include accrediting  training programs,
certifying individuals and firms, and providing education and compliance assistance to those subject to
the abatement and RRP regulations and the general public.

Pollution Prevention Grants

The FY 2015 request includes $4.8 million for Pollution Prevention grants. The program provides grant
funds to deliver technical assistance to specific sectors and to address priority environmental problems
aimed at reducing hazardous materials and hazardous pollution. The goal is to assist businesses  and
industries with identifying  improved environmental strategies  and solutions  for reducing waste at the
source. The program  demonstrates that source reduction  can  be a cost-effective way of  meeting  or
exceeding Federal and state regulatory requirements.
                                              76

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                                       Categorical Grants
Environmental Information Grants

In  FY 2015, the EPA requests $25.6 million for the Environmental  Information Exchange Network (EN)
grant program. The EN grants provide funding to states, territories, federally recognized Indian tribes and
tribal consortia  to support their participation in the  EN. These  grants help EN partners acquire and
develop the hardware and software needed to connect to the Network; use the EN to collect, report and
access the data they need with greater efficiency; and integrate environmental data across programs. In
collaboration with the  EPA, the Environmental Council  of the States accepts the EN as the  standard
approach  for EPA and state  data sharing.  Tribes and  territories  have adopted it as well. The grant
program has provided the funding to make this approach a reality. Specifically, grants will  be used to
develop publishing services, develop desktop and  mobile applications that can send and receive data via
the network, expand the  network to new priority data systems, transition network services to  an EPA-
hosted  cloud-based  node,  increase data  sharing  among  partners,  bring  electronic  reporting  into
compliance with the Cross-Media Electronic Reporting  Rule  (CROMERR)  using EPA—hosted shared
services as well as other priorities.

As part of the agency's E-Enterprise initiative, in FY 2015, the EPA requests an additional $15.7  million in
funding  for our state, local and Tribal partners to  achieve benefits that reach beyond the standardization
and  exchange  of data.   The grants will fund new efforts to streamline  and  harmonize the source
environmental regulations and the services for implementing them with a goal toward enabling the public
and the regulated community  to do business with the environmental protection enterprise in the United
States,  just like they  do with any  other company. Specific funded  efforts in  FY 2015 will include
participation in  integrated  project teams  for  regulatory analysis, business  process  reengineering,
enterprise architecture analysis, performance measures, and communication  efforts.  Funded  projects
and outcomes will include pilot approaches for a single sign-on across  federal and state programs with
shared electronic credentials,  cost for transitioning to  reusable shared solutions offered by the EPA, and
the joint development of new shared  services  and components. The return  on investment will be
measured in the numbers of legacy systems that are converted to shared approaches, the  hours of
reduced cumulative burden in  paperwork and regulatory reporting, and the costs avoided by avoiding the
redundant development and maintenance of technology  services and infrastructure. This work  will build
on the  successful state/EPA  collaboration with  the  Environmental Information Exchange Network, a
partnership  which  is enabling the exchange and sharing of critical  environmental data,  leading  to
enhanced analysis of environmental conditions and improved decision making.

State and Tribal Underground Storage Tanks Program

The FY 2015 request includes $1.5 million for Underground Storage Tank (UST) grants. In FY 2014, the
EPA will make grants to states under Section 2007 of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, available to support
core program activities as well as the leak prevention activities under Title XV, Subtitle B of the Energy
Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct).

In FY 2015, the  EPA will continue to focus attention on the need to bring  all UST systems into compliance
with release detection  and release prevention requirements and continue to  implement the provisions of
the EPAct.  States will continue to use the UST categorical grant funding to implement their  leak
prevention and detection programs. Specifically, with  these UST categorical grants, states will fund such
activities as: seeking state program approval to operate the UST program in  lieu of the Federal  program,
approving specific technologies to  detect leaks from tanks, ensuring that tank owners and operators are
complying  with  notification  and  other requirements,  ensuring equipment compatibility,  conducting
inspections, and implementing operator training.

Hazardous Waste Financial Assistance Grants

In FY 2015, the  EPA requests  $99.6 million for Hazardous Waste Financial Assistance grants. Hazardous
Waste  Financial Assistance grants are used for the  implementation of the Resource Conservation and
Recovery  Act  (RCRA) hazardous  waste  program, which  includes  permitting,  authorization, waste
                                              77

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                                        Categorical Grants
minimization, enforcement, and corrective action activities. In FY 2015, the EPA will work with states to
meet the annual target of 110 hazardous waste facilities with new or updated controls.

By the  end of FY  2015, the  EPA and the authorized states also will  control  human exposures  to
contamination at 90 percent of the 2020 universe of 3,779 facilities that  may need cleanup under the
RCRA Corrective Action Program. The EPA also will control migration of contaminated groundwater at 79
percent of these facilities and complete the construction of final remedies at 60 percent of these facilities.

Brownfields Grants

In FY 2015, the EPA requests $47.7 million for the Brownfields grant program that provides assistance to
states and  tribes to develop and enhance their state and  Tribal  Brownfields response  programs.  This
funding  will help states and tribes develop legislation, regulations, procedures, and guidance, to establish
or enhance the administrative and legal structure of their response programs.
                                               78

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                         SRF Obligations by State

  Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) Resources

Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF) Resources
        State-by-State distribution of Actual and Estimated Obligations
               Fiscal Years 2013 to 2015 - Dollars in Thousands
   The following tables show state-by-state distribution of resources for EPA's two
   largest State and Tribal Grant Programs, the Clean Water State Revolving Fund
   and the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund. These tables do not reflect total
   resources that EPA provides to individual states.
                                 79

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                                  SRF Obligations by State

                                 Infrastructure Assistance:
                         Clean Water State Revolving Fund (SRF)
                                     (Dollars in Thousands)


STATE
Alabama
Alaska
American Samoa
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Northern Mariana Islands
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virgin Islands, U.S.
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Tribal Resources
Undistributed National Resources
TOTAL:
Notes:
1. Includes $191.1 million from P. L.
2. Includes $283.1 million from P.L.
3. Includes $62 thousand for a SEE
FY2013
ACT. OBLIG.

$15,080
$8,071
$7,306
$14,812
$8,819
$98,111
$10,787
$16,521
$6,620
$6,620
$45,521
$22,801
$9,133
$10,095
$6,620
$60,992
$32,514
$11,176
$12,173
$17,316
$14,822
$10,439
$32,617
$45,786
$57,986
$24,787
$21,286
$37,709
$6,620
$13,812
$6,622
$13,477
$55,109
$6,617
$149,066
$49,846
$6,620
$3,396
$75,919
$10,892
$15,234
$53,539
$17,190
$9,055
$24,204
$6,620
$19,590
$61,142
$7,106
$6,620
$3,249
$27,599
$23,482
$21,023
$36,458
$6,620
$18,644
$4393
$1,422,330

113-2, the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act of 2013.
113-2, the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act of 2013.
FY2014
EST.
OBLIG.
$15,836
$8,476
$7,693
$9,566
$9,265
$101,290
$11,329
$17,350
$6,953
$6,953
$47,806
$23,946
$5,566
$10,969
$6,953
$64,052
$34,131
$19,168
$12,784
$18,025
$15,569
$10,963
$34,253
$48,084
$60,896
$26,031
$12,760
$39,261
$6,953
$7,244
$6,953
$14,153
$248,9801
$6,953
$439,41 32
$25,560
$6,953
$3,575
$79,729
$11,442
$15,999
$56,100
$18,472
$9,510
$14,509
$6,953
$20,574
$64,731
$7,462
$6,953
$4,465
$28,984
$24,629
$22,077
$38,288
$6,953
$28,978
$4,1224
$1,923,595



FY2015
EST.
OBLIG.
$11,048
$5,913
$5,353
$6,673
$6,463
$70,662
$7,903
$12,104
$4,850
$4,850
$33,350
$16,705
$3,873
$7,652
$4,850
$44,684
$23,811
$13,372
$8,918
$12,575
$10,861
$7,648
$23,896
$33,545
$42,482
$18,160
$8,902
$27,389
$4,850
$5,054
$4,850
$9,874
$40,374
$4,850
$109,056
$17,831
$4,850
$2,488
$55,621
$7,982
$11,161
$39,137
$12,886
$6,634
$10,122
$4,850
$14,353
$45,158
$5,206
$4,850
$3,107
$20,220
$17,182
$15,402
$26,710
$4,850
$30,000
$0
$1,018,000



employee supporting SRF activates in Region 7s states, $336 thousand for an award to the Indian 1
Service overseeing a project in the St. Regis Mohawk Tribe, and $41 thousand from P.L. 133-2 for the Management and Oversight of
Sandy Supplemental funds.
Includes $500 thousands for the Management and Oversight of Sandy Supplemental funds, PL 113-2. and $3,622 million for Buy American
Set Aside, P.L.113-2.
                                               80

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                                              SRF Obligations by State
                                             Infrastructure Assistance:
                                  Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (SRF)
                                                 (Dollars in Thousands)
STATE
Alabama
Alaska
American Samoa
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Northern Mariana Islands
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virgin Islands, U.S.
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Tribal Resources
Undistributed National Resources
FY2013
ACT.
OBLIG.
$10,438
$8,421
$1,287
$21,274
$12,743
$79,040
$14,937
$8,421
$8,421
$8,421
$27,496
$19,899
$5,158
$7,971
$8,421
$32,116
$14,046
$29,697
$10,302
$12,372
$8,421
$8,421
$13,066
$15,699
$25,579
$14,131
$8,773
$16,303
$8,421
$8,500
$8,421
$8,421
$17,990
$10,463
$55,485
$42,918
$8,421
$3,829
$27,058
$15,914
$8,421
$24,673
$8,421
$8,421
$17,396
$8,729
$9,359
$53,517
$8,421
$8,421
$9,021
$14,275
$21,499
$8,421
$14,518
$8,421
$14,371
$13,2793
FY2014
EST.
OBLIG.
$16,892
$8,845
$1,542
$15,969
$13,534
$83,221
$15,394
$8,962
$8,845
$8,845
$32,350
$19,284
$3,958
$8,845
$8,845
$36,911
$14,348
$13,229
$10,080
$13,770
$12,127
$8,845
$15,012
$16,441
$27,530
$15,827
$9,159
$17,855
$8,845
$8,845
$12,614
$8,845
$55,049'
$8,845
$99,0762
$20,695
$8,845
$3,389
$24,586
$14,251
$12,563
$28,280
$8,845
$8,845
$8,845
$8,845
$8,845
$63,953
$9,229
$8,845
$4,378
$14,654
$19,741
$8,845
$15,425
$8,845
$18,138
$4,7674
FY2015
EST.
OBLIG.
$14,037
$7,350
$1,282
$13,270
$11,246
$69,154
$12,793
$7,448
$7,350
$7,350
$26,883
$16,025
$3,289
$7,350
$7,350
$30,672
$11,923
$10,993
$8,377
$11,443
$10,077
$7,350
$12,475
$13,662
$22,877
$13,152
$7,611
$14,838
$7,350
$7,350
$10,482
$7,350
$13,984
$7,350
$35,280
$17,197
$7,350
$2,816
$20,431
$11,842
$10,439
$23,501
$7,350
$7,350
$7,350
$7,350
$7,350
$53,144
$7,670
$7,350
$3,638
$12,177
$16,404
$7,350
$12,818
$7,350
$20,000
$2,0006
TOTAL:
                                                                                  $926,699
                                                                                     $1,002,238
$757,000
Notes:
     1.
     2.
     3.
Includes $38.2 million from P.L. 113-2, the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act of 2013.
Includes $56.6 million from P.L. 113-2, the Disaster Relief Appropriations Act of 2013.
Includes 13.24 million for Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring (UCM), which is EPA is required by Section 1452(o) of the Safe Drinking
Water Act (SDWA), as amended, to annually set-aside $2 million of State Revolving Funds to pay the costs of small system monitoring and
sample analysis for contaminants for each cycle of the UCMR, and $36 thousand from P.L. 113-2 for the Management and Oversight of
Sandy Supplemental funds.
Includes $2 million for UCMR set aside, and $500 thousand from P.L. 113-2 for the Management and Oversight of Sandy Supplemental
funds.
UCMR set aside.
                                                            81

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82

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                                    Infrastructure Financing


                 Infrastructure / STAG Project Financing
                                   (Dollars in Thousands)
Type /Grant
Clean Water State Revolving Fund
Drinking Water State Revolving Fund
State Revolvinq Funds
Mexico Border
Alaska Native Villages
Special Needs Projects
Diesel Emissions Reduction Grant
Program
Brownfields Projects
Infrastructure Assistance Total
FY2013*
Enacted
$1,376,082
$861 ,326
$2,237,408
$4,732
$9,463
$14,195
$18,911
$89,901
$2,360,415
FY2014
Enacted
$1,448,887
$906,896
$2,355,783
$5,000
$10,000
$15,000
$20,000
$90,000
$2,480,783
FY2015
PresBud
$1,018,000
$757,000
$1,775,000
$5,000
$10,000
$15,000
$0
$85,000
$1,875,000
Delta
FY15PB-
FY14EN
($430,887)
($149,896)
($580,783)
$0
$0
$0
($20,000)
($5,000)
($605,783)
*FY2013 Enacted excludes Hurricane Sandy Relief supplemental appropriations.
Infrastructure and Special Projects Funds

The FY 2015 President's Budget includes a total of $1.9 billion for the EPA's Infrastructure programs in
the State and Tribal Assistance Grant (STAG) account. This budget funds the SRFs at $1.8 billion total.

Infrastructure and targeted projects funding under the STAG appropriation provides financial assistance
to states, municipalities,   interstates,  and tribal  governments  to  fund a  variety  of drinking water,
wastewater,  air, and brownfields environmental projects. These funds help fulfill the federal government's
commitment to help our state, tribal and local  partners obtain adequate funding to construct the facilities
required  to  comply  with federal environmental requirements and  ensure public health and  revitalize
contaminated properties.

Providing STAG funds to capitalize State Revolving Fund (SRF) programs, the EPA works in partnership
with the states to provide low-cost loans to municipalities for infrastructure construction. All drinking water
and wastewater projects are funded based on state developed priority lists. Through SRF set-asides,
grants are available to Indian tribes and U.S. territories for infrastructure projects.

The resources included in this budget will enable the agency, in conjunction  with the  EPA's state, local,
and tribal partners,  to achieve important goals. For  example: 92 percent of the population served by
community water systems will receive drinking  water meeting all health-based  standards.

Capitalizing Clean Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Funds

The Clean Water and Drinking  Water  State Revolving  Fund programs  demonstrate  a true  partnership
between  states,  localities, and  the federal  government. These  programs provide federal financial
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                                     Infrastructure Financing
assistance to protect the nation's water resources by providing funds for the construction of drinking water
and wastewater treatment facilities. The state revolving funds are two important elements  of the nation's
substantial investment in sewage treatment and drinking water systems, which provides Americans with
significant benefits in the form of reduced water pollution and safe drinking water.

This federal investment also  will support the continued work of the SRFs  in ensuring that small and
underserved communities have ready access to funding that helps address their pressing wastewater
infrastructure and other water quality needs.

The EPA will continue to provide financial assistance for wastewater and  other water projects through the
Clean  Water State Revolving  Fund  (CWSRF). CWSRF  projects include  nonpoint source,  estuary,
stormwater,  and  sewer overflow  projects.  The dramatic  progress made  in  improving  the quality  of
wastewater treatment since the 1970s is  a national  success.  In  1972, only 78.2 million people  were
served by secondary or advanced wastewater treatment facilities. As of 2008 (from the most recent Clean
Watersheds  Needs  Survey), over 99 percent of Publicly Owned Treatment Works, serving 222.6 million
people, use secondary treatment  or  better. Water infrastructure  projects supported by the  program
contribute to direct ecosystem improvements by lowering the amount of nutrients and toxic pollutants in
all types of surface  waters. While great progress has  been  made, many rivers, lakes and  ocean/coastal
areas still suffer a significant  influx of pollutants after heavy rains  resulting  in beach closures, infected
fish, and degradation of the ability of watersheds to sustain a healthy ecosystem.

The FY 2015 request includes $1.018  billion in funding for the CWSRF.  Total CWSRF funding available
for loans from 1988 through June 2012 exceeds $97.4 billion. This total reflects loan repayments,  state
match  dollars, as well  as  other  funding  sources. The EPA  estimates that for every  federal dollar
contributed, more than two dollars are provided to municipalities.

Since its inception in 1997, the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF) program has made $28.3
billion available to finance 10,652  infrastructure improvement projects nationwide, with an average  of
$1.75 made available to localities  for  every $1  of federal  funds invested. As of June 30, 2013, $15.7
billion in capitalization grants  have been awarded,  amounting to loans/assistance of $25.8 billion. The
DWSRF helps address the costs of ensuring safe drinking water supplies and assists small communities
in  meeting their responsibilities.

Through both SRFs, the EPA will work to target assistance to small and underserved  communities with
limited ability to repay loans.

For FY 2015, the EPA requests that not less than 10 percent but not more than 20 percent of the CWSRF
appropriated funds and not less than 20 percent but not more than 30 percent of the DWSRF funds be
made available to each state to  be  used to provide additional subsidy to  eligible recipients in the form of
forgiveness  of principle,  negative  interest  loans, or grants (or a  combination of these). The  CWSRF
additional  subsidy would apply to  the entire  CWSRF appropriation thereby effectively increasing the
amount from recent years when the subsidy only applied to appropriated funds above  $1  billion. For FY
2015, the  EPA will  encourage states to utilize the subsidy to assist small drinking water systems with
standards compliance.  The EPA also  is requesting,  to the  extent there  are sufficient eligible project
applications, that not less than 20 percent of a portion of a CWSRF capitalization grant be made available
for green  infrastructure  projects.   For funds  made available to each State for Drinking Water  State
Revolving Fund  capitalization grants may,  at the discretion of each State,  be used for projects that
address green infrastructure,  water or energy efficiency improvements, or environmentally innovative
activities.

As part of the Administration's Sustainable  Water Infrastructure Policy, the EPA focuses on working with
federal  partners, states, and  communities  to develop sustainable  systems that employ effective  utility
management practices to build  and maintain the level of technical, financial, and  managerial  capacity
necessary to ensure long-term sustainability. The policy emphasizes the need to build on existing efforts
to  promote sustainable water infrastructure and to employ robust, comprehensive planning processes to
deliver  projects  that are cost  effective over their life cycle,  resource efficient, and consistent  with
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                                     Infrastructure Financing
community sustainability goals. Through this  policy, the  EPA  is  helping  to ensure  that  federal
investments, policies, and actions support water infrastructure  in efficient and sustainable locations to
best aid   existing   communities,   enhance   economic  competitiveness,   and  promote   affordable
neighborhoods.  The policy encourages that Federal dollars provided through the SRFs will act as a
catalyst for efficient system-wide planning and ongoing management of sustainable water infrastructure.
Overall, the Administration requests a combined total of $1.8 billion for the SRFs.

Set-Asides for Tribes and Territories

To improve public health and water quality on tribal lands, the agency is requesting to increase the tribal
set asides in the CWSRF to 2  percent, or $30  million, whichever  is greater, and to 2 percent, or $20
million, whichever is greater, in the DWSRF. The EPA also is requesting to maintain the SRF set aside for
territories at up to 1.5 percent for both the CWSRF and the DWSRF.

Alaska Native Villages

The  President's Budget requests $10 million for Alaska native villages for the construction of wastewater
and  drinking water facilities to address  serious sanitation problems. The EPA will continue to work with
the Department of  Health and Human Services' Indian Health Service, the State of Alaska, the Alaska
Native Tribal Health Council, and local communities to provide needed financial and technical assistance.

Brownfields Projects

The  President's Budget requests $85 million for Brownfields projects. With the FY 2015 request, the EPA
plans to fund  at least 119 assessment cooperative agreements and approximately 52 direct  cleanup
cooperative agreements. The EPA also  will support cleanup of up to 90 sites contaminated by petroleum
or petroleum products and award an estimated $3.4 million in environmental workforce development and
job training grants.  In FY 2015, the funding provided is expected to result in the assessment of 1,200
brownfields properties. Using EPA grant dollars, the brownfields grantees will leverage 4,750 cleanup and
redevelopment jobs and $1.1 billion in cleanup and redevelopment funding.

During FY 2015,  the Brownfields program will continue to support the agency's ongoing brownfields area-
wide planning efforts. The cooperative agreements  and technical  assistance provided  for brownfields
area-wide planning will assist approximately 20 communities to  identify viable reuses of brownfields
properties, as  well  as associated infrastructure  investments and environmental improvements  needed,
which will  help lead to site cleanup and area revitalization.

The  EPA will continue to provide technical assistance for brownfields redevelopment in cities in transition
which are struggling with high unemployment as a result of structural changes  to their economies. In
addition, the Brownfields program will continue to work closely with the EPA's Sustainable Communities
program to address critical issues for brownfields redevelopment, including land assembly, development
permitting issues, financing, and accountability to uniform systems of information for land use controls,
greener development practices, and other factors that influence the economic  viability of brownfields
redevelopment. The best practices, tools,  and lessons  learned  from the Sustainable Communities
program will directly inform and  assist the EPA's efforts to increase  area-wide planning for assessment,
cleanup, and redevelopment of  brownfields sites. In  FY 2015, the Brownfields program will continue to
foster federal, state, local, and public/private partnerships to  return properties to productive economic use
in communities. The Brownfields projects funding also supports participation in the Administration-wide
initiative, the America's Great Outdoors  (AGO), by promoting the planning of urban parks and greenways
on once abandoned or scarred lands.

Mexico Border

The  President's  Budget requests a total  of $5 million for water infrastructure projects along the  U.S.-
Mexico Border. The goal of this program is to reduce environmental and human health  risks along the
U.S.-Mexico Border. The EPA's U.S.-Mexico  Border program provides funds to support the planning,
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                                     Infrastructure Financing
design, and  construction of high priority water and wastewater treatment projects along the border. The
agency's goal is to provide protection to people in  the  U.S.-Mexico  border area from health risks by
connecting homes to potable water supply and wastewater collection and treatment systems.
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                                          Trust Funds


                                       Trust Funds
                                     (Dollars in Millions)
Trust Funds Program
Superfund2
Inspector General (Transfers)
Research & Development
(Transfers)
Superfund Total
Base Realignment and
Closure3
LUST4
Trust Funds Total5:
FY2013
Enacted
Budget1
$ FTE
$1,082 2,794
$9 59
$22 99
$1,113 2,952
$0 20
$99 64
$1,212 3,036
FY2014
Enacted
Budget1
$
$1,060
$10
$19
$1,089
$0
$95
$1,184
FTE
2,630
60
79
2,769
14
55
2,838
FY2015
President's
Budget1
$
$1,127
$11
$19
$1,157
$0
$98
$1,255
FTE
2,542
59
75
2,676
9
55
2,740
1 Totals may not add due to rounding.
2 FTE numbers include all direct and reimbursable Superfund employees, excluding Base Realignment
and Closure which is discussed below.
3 Funding for reimbursable FTE provided by the Department of Defense via an Interagency Agreement.
4 EPAct Grants for Prevention activities are included in the FY 2012 Enacted, FY 2013 Enacted, and FY
2014 President's Budget.
5  Trust  Funds Total includes reimbursable FTE for Base Realignment and Closure  as  well as other
Superfund reimbursable  FTE.

Superfund
In FY2015, the President's Budget requests a total of $1,157 million in discretionary budget authority and
2,676 FTE for Superfund. This funding level will address environmental and public health  risks resulting
from releases  or threatened releases of hazardous substances associated with any emergency site, as
well as the over 14,100 active Superfund National Priorities List (NPL) and non-NPL sites. It also provides
funding  to pursue responsible parties for cleanup costs, preserving federal dollars for sites where there
are no viable contributing parties. As of February 2014, there are 1,694 sites on the NPL. 1,157 sites (68
percent) are construction  completed or are deleted, 310 sites (18 percent)  are undergoing cleanup
construction,  215 sites  (13 percent)  are  pending investigation or being  investigated.  The EPA will
continue to give attention to all phases of the  investigation and  cleanup of NPL and non-NPL sites,
including post-construction  completion activities  to ensure that  Superfund  response actions  provide for
the long-term  protection of human health  and the environment. A significant  statutorily  required post-
construction activity is a Five-Year Review1,  which generally is necessary when hazardous substances
1  Five-Year Reviews  are used to evaluate the  implementation and performance of all  components  of the
implemented remedy and to determine whether the remedy remains protective of human health and the environment.
The Five-Year Review includes not only the physical remedy itself, but also institutional controls necessary to
manage the use of the site.  The EPA develops an annual Report to Congress describing the protectiveness of
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                                          Trust Funds
remain on-site above levels that permit unrestricted use and unlimited exposure. In FY 2015, the EPA
plans to conduct over 200 Five-Year Reviews.

Of the  total funding requested for Superfund, $763 million and 1,2572 FTE are for Superfund cleanups
which  include  the Superfund  Remedial,  Emergency  Response  and  Removal,  EPA  Emergency
Preparedness, and  Federal Facilities programs. The Superfund program  protects the  American public
and its resources by cleaning up sites which pose an imminent or long term risk of exposure and harm to
human health and the environment.  In FY  2015,  the  agency will continue to respond to emergency
releases of hazardous  substances,  stabilizing  sites and  mitigating  immediate threats to keep our
communities  safe and  healthy. The Superfund  Remedial program will continue to maintain focus on
completing projects at various stages in the response  process and maximizing the use of site-specific
special accounts. The EPA and its partners will focus on completing construction activities at 13 site wide
construction completions as well as 105  individual project completions by the end of FY 2015, while
achieving  human exposure and groundwater migration under control at 9 and 13 sites, respectively. This
strategy will help create jobs and reduce the growth in  the number of new sites that are ready to begin
construction of the remedy but are waiting for funding by the end of FY 2015.

The  agency works  with several federal agencies  that provide  essential  services in areas  where the
agency does not possess the specialized expertise. Over the last 30 years  of operations, the relationship
between the  federal agencies for cleanup activities has  become  more defined  and the agencies that
received automatic transfers from the EPA  have developed their own mission-specific funding for the
purposes that the EPA had previously subsidized. In FY 2013, the agency eliminated the last remaining
automatic  transfers to other federal agencies,  including  the United States  Coast Guard  (USCG), the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration  (NOAA), and the  Department of the Interior (DOI).
Funding for the other federal agencies may be pursued by Superfund-related support services, on an as-
needed basis.

Of the  total  funding requested,  $171  million  and 853  FTE  are for Superfund enforcement-related
activities.  One of the  Superfund  program's  primary goals is to have responsible parties pay for and
conduct cleanups  at  abandoned  or uncontrolled  hazardous waste  sites.  The agency focuses  on
maximizing  all  aspects of Potentially  Responsible  Party (PRP) participation;  including  reaching  a
settlement with or taking an enforcement  action by the time of  a  Remedial Action start for at least 99
percent of non-federal Superfund sites that have viable,  liable  parties.  The agency has  reached a
settlement or taken an enforcement action on 100 percent of non-federal Superfund sites with viable,
liable parties in FY2013.

CERCLA  authorizes the  agency to  retain and use funds received  pursuant  to  an agreement with a
potentially responsible party (PRP)  to carry  out the purpose of that agreement.  The EPA retains such
funds  in  special  accounts and  uses  them  to finance  site-specific CERCLA response  actions in
accordance with the settlement agreement, including, but not limited to, investigations,  construction and
implementation of the remedy, post-construction  activities, and oversight  of  PRPs  conducting the
cleanup. Through the use of special accounts, the EPA pursues its "enforcement first" policy - ensuring
responsible parties pay for cleanup - so that appropriated resources from the Superfund Trust Fund are
conserved for sites where no viable or liable  PRPs have been identified. Because response actions may
take  many years and the use of special account funding is limited by the  terms of the  settlement
agreements, the full use of special account funds may also take many years.  Since  the inception of
special accounts through the  end  of FY 2013, the EPA  has  collected approximately  $4.1  billion from
PRPs and earned  approximately $412.9 million  in  interest. In addition, the EPA  has transferred $23.7
million  to the Superfund Trust Fund. As of the end of FY 2013, over $2.5 billion  has been disbursed to
finance site response actions and approximately $270.1  million has been obligated but not yet disbursed.
The  EPA  has spent more than 62 percent ($2.8 billion) of all special account funds, an increase of 4

remedies as found through Five-Year Reviews including those conducted by  federal agencies and reviewed by the
EPA  through the Superfund Federal Facilities Response program.
2 This includes 9 Superfund reimbursable FTE.
                                              88

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                                          Trust Funds
percent compared from FY 2012. Both special account resources and appropriated resources are critical
to the Superfund program.

The EPA's Homeland Security work is an important component of the agency's prevention, protection,
and response activities. The FY 2015 President's Budget requests $33.8 million to: maintain its capability
to respond effectively to incidents that may involve harmful chemical,  biological, and radiological (CBR)
substances; maintain the Environmental  Response Laboratory Network (ERLN); develop and maintain
agency expertise and operational readiness for all phases of consequential management following a CBR
incident, specifically environmental characterization, decontamination, laboratory analyses and clearance;
maintain the Emergency Management Portal (EMP); and conduct CBR training for agency responders to
improve CBR preparedness.

The FY 2015 President's Budget also includes resources supporting agencywide resource management
and control functions. This includes essential infrastructure, contract and grant administration, financial
accounting, and other fiscal operations.

In addition, the agency provides funds for Superfund program research and for auditing. The President's
Budget requests $19  million and 75 FTE  to be transferred to Research and Development. Research will
enable the EPA's Superfund program to  accelerate scientifically defensible and cost-effective decisions
for cleanup at complex  contaminated Superfund sites. The Superfund research  program is driven by
program  office  needs to reduce the cost of cleaning up Superfund  sites,  improve the  efficiency of
characterizing and remediating sites, identify effective  remediation technologies, and reduce the scientific
uncertainties for improved decision-making at Superfund sites. The  President's Budget also requests $11
million and 59 FTE to  be transferred to the Inspector General for program auditing.

There are still sites where no viable PRP has been identified and there are many activities that the EPA
performs that are not  otherwise reimbursed. For this reason, the FY 2015 Budget supports reinstatement
of the Superfund tax.  The Superfund tax  on petroleum, chemical feedstock and corporate environmental
income expired  in 1995.  Since the expiration of Superfund  tax, Superfund  program funding  (the
"Superfund appropriation")  has been largely financed  from General Revenue transfers to the Superfund
Trust  Fund, thus burdening the  general public with  the costs of cleaning up hazardous waste sites.
Reinstating the Superfund taxes would provide a stable, dedicated source of revenue for the Superfund
Trust  Fund and  restore  the historic nexus that parties who benefit from the  manufacture  and sale of
substances found in hazardous waste sites contribute to the cost of cleanup. The reinstated Superfund
taxes  are estimated to generate a revenue level of approximately $1.8 billion beginning in January 2015
to more than $2.9 billion  annually by 2024. Total tax revenue over the period 2015 to 2024 is  predicted to
be $26.1 billion.  The  revenues will  be  placed in the  Superfund Trust Fund and would be available for
appropriation from  Congress to support the  assessment and cleanup of the  Nation's highest risk sites
within the Superfund program.

Base  Realignment and Closure Act

The FY 2015 President's Budget requests 9 reimbursable FTE to conduct the Base Realignment and
Closure (BRAG) program (BRAG I-IV). The EPA's participation in the first four  rounds of BRAG has been
funded by an interagency agreement which expires on September 30, 2016.  Since  1993, the EPA has
worked with the Department  of Defense (DOD) and  state environmental  programs to make property
environmentally acceptable for transfer, while protecting human health  and the environment at realigning
or closing  military installations. Between 1988 and 2005, over 500 major military installations representing
the Army, Navy,  Air Force, and Defense  Logistics Agency have been  slated for realignment or closure.
Under the first four  rounds of BRAG (BRAG  I-IV),  107  of  those sites were  identified  as requiring
accelerated cleanup.  The EPA provided  critical environmental support to DOD and  participated in the
acceleration process  of the first four rounds of BRAG. The accelerated cleanup process strives to make
parcels available for reuse as quickly as  possible, by  transfer of uncontaminated or remediated parcels,
lease  of contaminated parcels where cleanup is underway, or "early transfer"  of contaminated property
undergoing cleanup. Seventy-two Federal facilities currently listed  on the NPL were  identified under the
fifth round of BRAG (BRAG V)  as closing,  realigning, or gaining  personnel.
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                                          Trust Funds
The FY 2015 request does not include support for BRAC-related services to DOD at BRAG V facilities.
Rather, the EPA services and  resources to support the BRAG  V installations may be requested from
DOD, on an as-needed basis.

Leaking Underground Storage Tanks

The FY 2014 President's Budget requests $98 million and 55 FTE for the Leaking Underground Storage
Tank  (LUST) Trust Fund program. The agency, working with states and tribes, addresses public  health
and environmental threats from releases through  prevention and cleanup activities. As required by law
(42 U.S.C. 6991 c(f)), not less than 80 percent of  LUST appropriated funds will be  used for reasonable
costs  incurred under a cooperative agreements with any state to carry out specific purposes. The EPA
will continue  to work with the  states to achieve  more cleanups, and reduce the backlog of 78,717
cleanups not  yet  completed.  Between  1986 and 2013,  the  LUST  program  addressed  85  percent
(436,406) of all reported releases. In FY 2015, working with state partners, the LUST  program will strive
to achieve 8,600 cleanups, a decrease  relative to the FY 2013 target.  The  FY 2015 target reflects a
recalibration based on the expiration of this funding source, as well as an overall decrease  in expected
cleanups due to increasing costs of cleanups, and the complexity of remaining sites to be cleaned up.


The LUST Trust Fund financing  tax expired on March 30, 2012 and was extended by Public Law  112-141
through September 30, 2016. While tank owners and operators are liable for the cost of cleanups at sites
for which they have responsibility, EPA and  State regulatory agencies are not always able to identify
responsible parties and sometimes responsible parties are no longer financially viable or have a limited
ability to pay. In those cases,  the cost of the cleanup is distributed among fuel users through the targeted
fuel tax, which is available for appropriation from Congress to support the prevention and cleanup of sites
within the LUST program. For FY 2013, the Trust Fund received more than $185 million in tax receipts.
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                                        Acronyms
AA
ACE
ACE/ITDS
ACRES
ADR
AFS
ANCR
AOP
ARA
ARRA
ASTM
ATSDR
B&F
BFRs
BOSC
BRAG
CAA
CAFO
CAIR
CAPF
CARE
CBEP
CBP
CBR
CCAP
CCS
CCTI
CEIS
CENRS
CERCLA
CERFA
CMAQ
CMOS
COOP
CSI
CSO
CWA
CWAP
DASEES
DBP
DFAS
DfE
DMR
ECHO
EDSD
EISA
EJ
ELP
EMP
EN
EPAct
EPCRA
EPM
     Environmental Protection Agency
                List of Acronyms

Assistant Administrator
Air, Climate, and Energy
Automated Commercial Environment/International Trade Data System
Assessment Cleanup and Redevelopment Exchange System
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Air Facility System
Annual Non-Compliance Report
Adverse Outcome Pathway
Assistant Regional Administrator
American  Recovery and Reinvestment Act
American  Society for Testing and Materials
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Buildings and Facilities
Brominated Flame Retardants
Board of Scientific Counselors
Base Realignment and Closure
Clean Air Act
Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations
Clean Air Interstate Rule
Clean Air Partnership Fund
Community Action fora Renewed Environment
Community-Based Environmental Protection
Customs and Border Protection
Chemical, Biological and Radiological
Climate Change Action Plan
Carbon Capture and Storage
Climate Change Technology Initiative
Center for Environmental Information and Statistics
Committee on Environment, Natural Resources, and Sustainability
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act
Community Environmental Response Facilitation Act
Community Multiscale Air Quality
Content Management and Discovery Services
Continuity of Operations
Common Sense Initiative
Combined Sewer Overflows
Clean Water Act
Clean Water Action Plan
Decision Analysis for a Sustainable Environment, Economy & Society
Disinfection Byproducts
Defense Finance  and Accounting System
Design for the Environment
Discharge Monitoring Reports
Enforcement and  Compliance History Online
Endocrine Disrupter Screening Program
Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007
Environmental Justice
Environmental Leadership Project
Emergency Management Portal
Enacted (Budget)
Energy Policy Act of 2005
Emergency Preparedness and Community Right-to-Know Act
Environmental Programs and Management
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                                          Acronyms
EPP
ERRS
ESC
ETI
ETV
EU
EWDJT
FAN
FASAB
FCO
FFDCA
FIFRA
FLC
FMFIA
FQPA
FSMA
FSMP
FTE
GAPG
GHG
GHGRP
GPRA
GSN
HPPG
HPV
HS
HSWA
HWIR
IAG
ICR
IFMS
IPCC
IPM
IRM
ISA
ISTEA
ITMRA

LUST
M&O
MARL
MACT
MTM
NAAQs
NAFTA
NAPA
NAS
NATA
NCDC
NEA
NDPD
NEP
NEPPS
NESCA
NESHAP
NIPP
NLIC
NOA
Environmentally Preferable Purchasing Program
Emergency Rapid Response Services
Executive Steering Committee
Environmental Technology Initiative
Environmental Technology Verification
European Union
Environmental Workforce Development and Job Training
Fixed Account Numbers
Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board
Funds Certifying Officer
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act
Federal Leadership Committee
Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act
Food Quality Protection Act
Food Safety Modernization Act
Financial System Modernization Project
Full-Time Equivalent'
General Assistance Program Grants
Greenhouse Gas
Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program
Government Performance and Results Act
Green Suppliers Network
High Priority Performance Goals
High Production Volume
Homeland Security
Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984
Hazardous Waste Identification Media and Process Rules
Interagency Agreements
Information Collection Rule
Integrated Financial Management System
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
Integrated Pest Management
Information Resource Management
Integrated Science Assessments
Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act
Information Technology Management Reform Act of 1995-AKA
Clinger/Cohen Act
Leaking Underground Storage Tanks
Management and Oversight
Microarray Research Laboratory
Maximum Achievable Control Technology
Mountaintop Mining
National Ambient Air Quality Standards
North American Free Trade Agreement
National Academy of Public Administration
National Academy of Sciences
National-Scale Air Toxics Assessment
National Clean Diesel Campaign
Nuclear Energy Agency
National Data Processing Division
National Estuary Program
National Environmental Performance Partnership System
National Enforcement Strategy for Corrective Action
National Emissions Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
National Infrastructure Protection Plan
National Lead Information Center
New Obligation Authority
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                                          Acronyms
NPDES
NPDWRs
NPL
NPM
NPR
NPS
NPSR
NRCS
NROC
NRT
NVFEL
OA
OAM
OAR
OARM
OCFO
OCHP
OECA
OEI
OERR
OFA
OFPP
OGC
OIG
OMTR
OPAA
ORD
OSWER
OTAG
OW
PB
PBTs
PC&B
PHEV
PIP
PM
PNGV
POTWs
PPG
PPIN
PPRTV
PRC
PRIA
PRIRA
PWSS
RC
RCRA
RGI
RLF
RMP
ROE
RPIO
RR
RRP
RWTA
S&T
SALC
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
National Primary Drinking Water Regulations
National Priority List
National Program Manager
National Performance Review
Nonpoint Source
National Pesticide Standard Repository
Natural Resource Conservation Service
Northeast Regional Ocean Council
National Response Team
National Vehicle and Fuel Emissions Laboratory
Office of the Administrator
Office of Acquisition Management
Office of Air and Radiation
Office of Administration and Resources Management
Office of the Chief Financial Officer
Office of Children's Health Protection
Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance
Office of Environmental Information
Office of Emergency and Remedial Response
Other Federal Agencies
Office of Federal Procurement Policy
Office of General Counsel
Office of Inspector General
Open Market Trading Rule
Office of Planning, Analysis and Accountability
Office of Research and Development
Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response
Ozone Transport Advisory Group
Office of Water
President's Budget
Persistent Bioaccumulative Toxics
Personnel, Compensation and Benefits
Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles
Plant-incorporated Protectants
Particulate Matter
Partnership fora New Generation of Vehicles
Publicly Owned Treatment Works
Performance Partnership Grants
Pollution Prevention Information Network
Provisional Peer Reviewed Toxicity Values
Program Results Code
Pesticide Registration Improvement Act
Pesticide Registration Improvement Renewal Act
Public Water System Supervision
Responsibility Center
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
Regional Geographic Initiative
Revolving Loan Fund
Risk Management Plan
Report on the Environment
Responsible Planning Implementation Office
Reprogramming Request
Renovation, Repair and Painting
Rural Water Technical Assistance
Science and Technology
Sub-allocation (level)
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                                          Acronyms
SAP
SAB
SARA
SBO
SBLRBRA
SBREFA
SDWA
SDWIS
SHC
SIRG
SITE
SLC
SNEE
SRF
SRO
STAG
STAR METRICS

STORS
SWP
SWTR
TIM
TMDL
TRI
TRIO
TSCA
TSD
UIC
UST
WCF
WIF
WIPP
WSI
WHO
WTO
Science Advisory Panel
Science Advisory Board
Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986
Senior Budget Officer
Small Business Liability Relief and Brownfields Revitalization Act
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
Safe Drinking Water Act
Safe Drinking Water Information System
Sustainable and Healthy Communities
State Indoor Radon Grants
Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation
Senior Leadership Council
Southern  New England Estuaries
State Revolving Fund
Senior Resource Official
State and Tribal Assistance Grants
Science and Technology in America's Reinvestment-Measuring Effects of Research
on Innovation, Competitiveness, and Science
Sludge-to-Oil-Reactor System
Source Water Protection
Surface Water Treatment  Rule
Technology Infrastructure  Modernization
Total Maximum Daily Load
Toxic Release Inventory
Taskforce on Research to Inform and Optimize
Toxic Substances Control  Act
Treatment, Storage and Disposal
Underground Injection Control
Underground Storage Tanks
Working Capital Fund
Water Infrastructure Funds
Waste Isolation Pilot Project
Water Security Initiative
World Health Organization
World Trade Organization
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United States Environmental Protection Agency
                www.epa.gov

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