[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 61 (Tuesday, March 31, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 17156-17220]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-06280]



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Vol. 80

Tuesday,

No. 61

March 31, 2015

Part II





 Department of Agriculture





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 Office of the Secretary





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7 CFR Part 1





 Department of the Interior





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 Office of the Secretary





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43 CFR Part 45





 Department of Commerce





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 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration





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50 CFR Part 221





Resource Agency Hearings and Alternatives Development Procedures in 
Hydropower Licenses; Interim Rule

  Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Rules 
and Regulations  

[[Page 17156]]


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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

Office of the Secretary

7 CFR Part 1

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Office of the Secretary

43 CFR Part 45

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 221

[Docket No.: DOI-2015-0001]
RINs 0596-AC42, 1090-AA91, and 0648-AU01


Resource Agency Hearings and Alternatives Development Procedures 
in Hydropower Licenses

AGENCIES: Office of the Secretary, Agriculture; Office of the 
Secretary, Interior; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 
Commerce.

ACTION: Revised interim rules with request for comment.

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SUMMARY: The Departments of Agriculture, the Interior, and Commerce are 
jointly revising the procedures they established in November 2005 for 
expedited trial-type hearings required by the Energy Policy Act of 
2005. The hearings are conducted to expeditiously resolve disputed 
issues of material fact with respect to conditions or prescriptions 
developed for inclusion in a hydropower license issued by the Federal 
Energy Regulatory Commission under the Federal Power Act. The 
Departments are also revising the procedures for considering 
alternative conditions and prescriptions submitted by a party to a 
license proceeding.

DATES: 
    Effective date: These rules are effective on April 30, 2015.
    Comment date: You should submit your comments by June 1, 2015.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by any of the Regulation 
Identifier Numbers (RINs) shown above (0596-AC42, 1090-AA91, or 0648-
AU01), by either of the methods listed below. Comments submitted to any 
one of the three Departments will be shared with the others, so it is 
not necessary to submit comments to all three Departments.
    1. Federal rulemaking portal: http://www.regulations.gov. Follow 
the instructions for submitting comments on-line.
    2. Mail or hand delivery to any of the following:
    a. Deputy Chief, National Forest Systems, c/o WO Lands Staff, 
Department of Agriculture, Mail stop 1124, 1400 Independence Avenue 
SW., Washington, DC 20250-1124;
    b. Office of Hearings and Appeals, 801 N. Quincy Street, Suite 300, 
Arlington, Virginia 22203; or
    c. Chief, Habitat Protection Division, Office of Habitat 
Conservation, National Marine Fisheries Service, 1315 East-West 
Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Washington Office Director, Lands and 
Realty Management, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 202-
205-1769; John Rudolph, Solicitor's Office, Department of the Interior, 
202-208-3553; or Melanie Harris, Office of Habitat Conservation, 
National Marine Fisheries Service, 301-427-8636. Persons who use a 
telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal 
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800-877-8339.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. Executive Summary

    The Departments of Agriculture, the Interior, and Commerce (the 
Departments) are revising the interim final rules they published 
jointly in November 2005 to implement section 241 of the Energy Policy 
Act of 2005. That section created additional procedures applicable to 
conditions or prescriptions that a Department develops for inclusion in 
a hydropower license issued by Federal Energy Regulatory Commission 
(FERC). Specifically, section 241 amended sections 4 and 18 of the 
Federal Power Act (FPA) to provide for trial-type hearings on disputed 
issues of material fact with respect to a Department's conditions or 
prescriptions; and it added a new section 33 to the FPA, allowing 
parties to propose alternative conditions and prescriptions.
    The Departments are promulgating three substantially similar 
rules--one for each agency--with a common preamble. The rules and 
preamble address a few issues that were left open in the 2005 
rulemaking, such as who has the burden of proof in a trial-type hearing 
and whether a trial-type hearing is an administrative remedy that a 
party must exhaust before challenging conditions or prescriptions in 
court. In addition, the rules and preamble respond to the public 
comments we received on the 2005 rules, and they make a number of 
changes reflecting our experience in implementing those rules.
    The rules are being made effective as revised interim final rules, 
so that interested parties and the agencies may avail themselves of 
improvements being made to the procedures adopted in 2005. The 
Departments are also requesting comments on additional ways the rules 
can be improved.
    A detailed explanation of the revisions is provided below, but some 
of the highlights of the revised rules are as follows:
     The rules clarify the availability of the trial-type 
hearing and alternatives processes in the situation where a Department 
has previously reserved its authority to include conditions or 
prescriptions in a hydropower license, and it now decides to exercise 
that authority. The rules also extend the period of time for a party to 
request a hearing or submit an alternative in that situation.
     The rules extend a few of the deadlines in the 2005 rules, 
while not adopting some commenters' recommendations that the 
Departments significantly expand the hearing schedule. Specifically, 
parties are given 5 additional days to take each of the following 
steps: file a notice of intervention and response; update their witness 
and exhibit lists and submit written testimony following discovery; 
prepare for the hearing; and submit post-hearing briefs.
     The rules allow for a stay, not to exceed 120 days, to 
facilitate settlement negotiations among the parties. As necessary, the 
parties would coordinate with FERC regarding any effect on the time 
frame established for the license proceeding.
     The rules adopt the unanimous position of the 
Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) in the cases adjudicated to date, that 
the party requesting a hearing has the burden of proof.
     The rules accept the argument of some commenters that the 
ALJ decision can come after the statutory 90-day period specified for 
the hearing itself. However, the rules require that the decision come 
no later than 120 days after the case was referred to the ALJ, to keep 
the whole process within FERC's time frame for the license proceeding.
     The rules allow a party who has participated in a trial-
type hearing and has filed an alternative condition or prescription to 
submit a revised alternative within 20 days after the ALJ decision, 
based on the facts as found by the ALJ.
     The rules clarify that FPA section 33 requires a 
Department to prepare an equal consideration statement only

[[Page 17157]]

when a party has submitted an alternative condition or prescription.
     Finally, the preamble provides additional guidance on the 
term ``disputed issues of material fact.''

II. Public Comments

    You may submit your comments by either of the methods listed in the 
ADDRESSES section above. We will consider all comments received by the 
deadline stated in the DATES section above. Based on the comments 
received, we will consider promulgation of further revised final rules.
    Please make your comments as specific as possible and explain the 
reason for any changes you recommend. Where possible, your comments 
should reference the specific section or paragraph of the rules that 
you are addressing.
    We will make comments available for public review during regular 
business hours. To review the comments, you may contact any of the 
individuals listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section 
above.
    Before including your personal address, telephone number, email 
address, or other personal identifying information in your comment, you 
should be aware that your entire comment--including your personal 
identifying information--may be made publicly available at any time. 
While you can ask us in your comments to withhold your personal 
identifying information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we 
will be able to do so.

III. Background

A. Interim Final Rules

    On November 17, 2005, at 70 FR 69804, the Departments jointly 
published interim final rules implementing section 241 of the Energy 
Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct), Public Law 109-58. Section 241 of EPAct 
amended FPA sections 4(e) and 18, 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 811, to provide 
that any party to a license proceeding before FERC is entitled to a 
determination on the record, after opportunity for an agency trial-type 
hearing of no more than 90 days, of any disputed issues of material 
fact with respect to mandatory conditions or prescriptions developed by 
one or more of the three Departments for inclusion in a hydropower 
license. EPAct section 241 also added a new FPA section 33, 16 U.S.C. 
823d, allowing any party to the license proceeding to propose an 
alternative condition or prescription, and specifying the consideration 
that the Departments must give to such alternatives.
    The interim final rules were made immediately effective, but a 60-
day comment period was provided for the public to suggest changes to 
the interim regulations. The Departments stated in the preamble that, 
based on the comments received and the initial results of 
implementation, they would consider publication of revised final rules. 
Since that time, the Departments have gained experience under the 
interim regulations necessary to properly evaluate the comments 
received, and have developed these revised interim final rules.
    The November 17, 2005, preamble to the interim final rules contains 
additional background information that the reader may wish to consult 
concerning EPAct, the FPA, FERC's integrated licensing process (ILP), 
the trial-type hearing process, and the alternative conditions and 
prescriptions process.

B. Comments Received

    The Departments received substantive comments on the interim final 
rules from the following organizations:
     American Public Power Association, Sacramento Municipal 
Utility District, and Public Utility District No. 1 of Snohomish 
County, Washington;
     Association of California Water Agencies;
     Center for Biological Diversity (CBD);
     Edison Electric Institute and National Hydropower 
Association (EEI/NHA);
     Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife 
Resources Division;
     Greater Yellowstone Coalition (GYC);
     Hoopa Valley Tribe (HVT);
     Hydropower Reform Coalition (HRC);
     Idaho Rivers United;
     Los Angeles Department of Water and Power
     Ohio Department of Natural Resources;
     PacifiCorp;
     Ponderay Newsprint Company;
     Power Authority of the State of New York;
     Public Utility District No. 1 of Pend Oreille County, 
Washington;
     Public Utility District No. 2 of Grant County, Washington; 
and
     Southern Company.
    The Departments also received about 3,000 nearly identical letters 
from individuals expressing concern about the environmental effects of 
the new procedures. Taken together, the comments were extensive and 
very helpful to the Departments in determining what changes were needed 
to the interim regulations. Responses to the comments are provided 
below in the section-by-section analysis of the revised regulations.

C. Litigation Challenging the Interim Final Rules

    Following publication of the interim final rules, lawsuits were 
filed challenging certain aspects of the rulemaking.
    In American Rivers v. U.S. Department of the Interior, 2006 WL 
2841929 (W.D. Wash. 2006), seven non-governmental organizations sued 
the three Departments, alleging that (1) publication of the interim 
final rules without prior notice and comment violated the 
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 553, and (2) the rules 
were impermissibly retroactive. In its October 3, 2006, decision, the 
court rejected plaintiffs' arguments, holding that (1) the rules were 
exempt from the APA's notice and comment requirements because they were 
procedural and interpretative, and (2) the rules did not result in an 
impermissible retroactive application of EPAct.
    In Public Utility District No. 1 of Pend Oreille County, Washington 
v. U.S. Department of the Interior, No. 1:06cv00365 (D.D.C., filed Mar. 
1, 2006), a licensee challenged the decision of the Departments in the 
interim final rules to limit the trial-type hearing and alternatives 
processes to license proceedings in which the license had not been 
issued as of November 17, 2005. FERC had issued a licensing order to 
the plaintiff in July 2005, but the plaintiff had sought rehearing from 
FERC and therefore argued that its license proceeding was still pending 
as of November 17, 2005. A nearly identical suit was filed the 
following month, Ponderay Newsprint Co. v. U.S. Department of the 
Interior, No. 1:06cv00768 (D.D.C., filed Apr. 26, 2006), and the two 
cases were consolidated. In March 2010, the plaintiffs voluntarily 
dismissed their lawsuits as part of a comprehensive settlement 
agreement with the Departments of Agriculture and the Interior.

D. Other Significant Litigation

    Another notable legal development since publication of the interim 
final rule was the issuance of the decision in City of Tacoma, 
Washington v. Federal Energy Regulatory Comm'n, 460 F.3d 53 (D.C. Cir. 
2006). The case involved several consolidated petitions challenging the 
license issued by FERC in 1998 (and amended in 2005) for the

[[Page 17158]]

Cushman Project located in the State of Washington. While a detailed 
discussion of the court's multiple holdings is beyond the scope of this 
preamble, the Departments note that the decision provides useful 
guidance in the implementation of Federal agencies' various authorities 
under the FPA, including those addressed in these regulations.
    For example, in one holding, the court discussed the relationships 
among the delegated authorities possessed by FERC and the Departments, 
respectively, under the FPA. Noting that the conditioning authority 
conferred on the Secretaries by section 4(e) is mandatory and 
independent of FERC's authorities, the court stated,

Though FERC makes the final decision as to whether to issue a 
license, FERC shares its authority to impose license conditions with 
other federal agencies. To the extent Congress has delegated 
licensing authority to agencies other than FERC, those agencies, and 
not FERC, determine how to exercise that authority, subject of 
course to judicial review.

460 F.3d at 65 (citations omitted). The court held that, while the 
Departments ``should certainly make every effort to cooperate and to 
coordinate their efforts, because license conditions imposed by one 
agency may alter the conditions the other agency deems necessary,'' 
FERC may not unilaterally place restrictions (such as a strict time 
limit) on the exercise of the other Departments' authorities. Id. In 
another holding, the court adopted an expansive interpretation of the 
section 4(e) requirement that a project and associated license be 
located ``within'' a reservation. Id. at 65-66.

E. Request for Additional Comment Period

    In July 2009, NHA and HRC sent a joint letter to the three 
Departments, asking that an additional 60-day comment period be 
provided before publication of final rules. The organizations noted 
that they and their members had gained extensive experience with the 
interim final rules since their initial comments were submitted in 
January 2006, and they now have additional comments to offer on ways to 
improve the trial-type hearing and alternatives processes.
    The Departments have decided to grant NHA and HRC's request. 
Instead of publishing final rules, we are publishing these revised 
interim final rules with a 60-day comment period. Under this approach, 
we are putting into effect several improvements to the November 2005 
interim final rules, while providing the public with updated 
information on which to base additional comments, including our 
responses to the prior comments we received.

F. Government Accountability Office (GAO) Report

    In September 2010, GAO released Report GAO-10-770 entitled, 
``Hydropower Licensing: Stakeholders' Views on the Energy Policy Act 
Varied, but More Consistent Information Needed.'' The report analyzed 
implementation of EPAct section 241 since 2005 and made two 
recommendations. The first recommendation was that the Secretaries of 
Agriculture, Commerce, and the Interior

[d]irect cognizant officials, where the agency has not adopted a 
proposed alternative condition or prescription, to include in the 
written statement filed with FERC (1) its reasons for not doing so, 
in accordance with the interim rules and (2) whether a proposed 
alternative was withdrawn as a result of negotiations and an 
explanation of what occurred subsequent to the withdrawal. . . .

GAO Report at 19.
    As noted by GAO, the interim final rules already require each 
Department to file with FERC, along with any modified condition or 
prescription the Department adopts, a statement explaining (i) the 
basis for the modified condition or prescription and (ii), if the 
Department is not adopting a proposed alternative, its reasons for not 
doing so. 7 CFR 1.673(c); 43 CFR 45.73(c); 50 CFR 221.73(c).
    However, the Departments pointed out in their comments to GAO that, 
in some cases, a license party that submitted an alternative condition 
or prescription later withdraws it, often as a result of negotiations 
with the Department. In cases where there is no longer an alternative 
to consider because a proposed alternative has been voluntarily 
withdrawn, the statutory requirement to provide a reason for not 
adopting an alternative does not apply. The Departments' written 
statement will, however, include an explanatory notation indicating 
that a proposed alternative was voluntarily withdrawn.
    GAO's second recommendation was that the Departments ``[i]ssue 
final rules governing the use of the section 241 provisions after 
providing an additional period for notice and an opportunity for public 
comment and after considering their own lessons learned from their 
experience with the interim rules.'' GAO Report at 19. As explained 
above, we are publishing these revised interim final rules with a 60-
day comment period, as requested by NHA and HRC and as recommended by 
GAO.

G. Other Developments Since Release of Interim Final Rules

    In developing the interim final regulations, the Departments 
anticipated that the Department of Commerce involvement in licensing 
proceedings under the FPA would be limited to issuance of fishway 
prescriptions under FPA section 18. This was consistent with Commerce's 
traditional experience in implementing the FPA. The Commerce 
regulations therefore referenced only the National Marine Fisheries 
Service (NMFS) and section 18 of the Act.
    However, in the years since promulgation of the interim final 
regulations, alternative energy projects that would use new 
technologies to harness tidal and wave energy have been increasingly 
proposed for development. As applicants have moved into the marine 
environment in proposing projects to be licensed by FERC, impacts not 
traditionally associated with licenses under the FPA have emerged. For 
example, projects have been proposed within areas designated as 
National Marine Sanctuaries.
    These developments have necessarily required broader interest and 
involvement in the licensing process throughout the Department of 
Commerce, including within the National Marine Sanctuary Program 
(NMSP). In 2006, in response to a proposal to site a wave energy 
project within the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, NMSP filed 
conditions with FERC under FPA section 4(e) to address impacts of the 
proposed Makah Bay Offshore Wave Pilot Project (Project No. 12751-001, 
applicant Finavera Renewables Ocean Energy, Ltd.). It is likely that 
the interest and involvement of Commerce agencies beyond NMFS will 
continue and will include the need to address impacts other than to 
fish migration under section 18.\1\
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    \1\ FERC initially accepted and proposed to incorporate all of 
the NMSP conditions into the draft project license. See Finavera 
Renewables Ocean Energy, Ltd., 121 FERC ] 61,288 (2007). On 
rehearing, FERC reversed itself, stating that it did not believe the 
sanctuary constituted a ``reservation'' under the FPA, although it 
continued to include most of the NMSP conditions in the license. See 
122 FERC ] 61,248 (March 20, 2008). On May 19, 2008, FERC granted 
NOAA's request for rehearing on the revised order, but on rehearing 
declined to reverse its determination that a sanctuary does not 
constitute a ``reservation'' under the FPA. See, 124 FERC ] 61,063 
(July 18, 2008). No Court of Appeals has addressed these issues.
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    While the wording of the current regulations does not foreclose 
issuance of such conditions, and the procedures of EPAct would be 
available under the

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current regulations where such conditions are issued, the Departments 
believe the regulations should be changed to expressly apply to those 
situations. Therefore, Commerce is revising its regulations to make 
clear that any Commerce agency that identifies a basis to issue 
conditions under section 4(e) will be subject to these regulations. 
Currently, NMSP is the only known such agency.

IV. Section-by-Section Analysis

    The following discussion explains the changes made to the 
regulations published in November 2005 and provides the Departments' 
response to the comments received. Regulations that have not been 
changed and that were not the subject of public comments are not 
discussed. The reader may wish to consult the section-by-section 
analysis in the interim final rules for additional explanation of all 
the regulations.
    Three separate versions of the revised interim final regulations 
are provided, one version each for Agriculture, Interior, and Commerce. 
The structure and content of the regulations are substantially similar, 
but there are variations, such as to account for differences in the 
names of the Departments and their organizational components. The three 
versions also vary somewhat in their references to conditions and 
prescriptions, since Agriculture does not develop prescriptions under 
FPA section 18, while Interior and Commerce may develop either 
conditions or prescriptions or both.
    For each section discussed below, the CFR title, section number, 
and heading for each Department are shown, 7 CFR for Agriculture, 43 
CFR for Interior, and 50 CFR for Commerce.

7 CFR 1.601 What is the purpose of this subpart, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?

43 CFR 45.1 What is the purpose of this part, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?

50 CFR 221.1 What is the purpose of this part, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?

    Paragraphs (a)(1)-(2) of these sections in the interim final rules 
provided that the trial-type hearing process in these regulations 
applies to mandatory conditions and prescriptions developed by a 
Department under FPA section 4(e) or 18 and does not apply to 
recommendations that a Department may submit to FERC under FPA section 
10(a) or (j). The Departments have expanded paragraph (a)(2) in the 
final rules to exclude more generally provisions that a Department may 
submit to FERC under any authority other than FPA section 4(e) or 18. 
Such provisions would include recommendations under section 10(a) or 
(j), terms and conditions under section 30(c), or any other provisions 
not submitted under section 4(e) or 18.
    Commenters raised four sets of issues concerning the applicability 
of the EPAct hearing and alternatives processes, as set forth in 
paragraphs (c) and (d) of these regulations.
    Cases pending on November 17, 2005. Paragraph (d)(1) provides that 
the regulations apply to any hydropower license proceeding for which 
the license had not been issued as of November 17, 2005, and for which 
one or more preliminary conditions or prescriptions have been or are 
filed with FERC. Some commenters contended that applying the 
regulations to proceedings where preliminary or ``final'' conditions or 
prescriptions had been submitted before November 17, 2005, would be 
disruptive, would impose an undue burden on stakeholders, and would 
constitute an impermissible retroactive application of the EPAct 
provisions. Others argued that claims of retroactivity are groundless, 
since proposed conditions and prescriptions are not final or closed 
until FERC has made its licensing decision.
    The Departments agree that applying the EPAct provisions to 
licensing proceedings pending at the time of enactment does not 
constitute retroactive application. The same allegation of retroactive 
application was considered and rejected by the court in American 
Rivers. There, the court held that the interim regulations did not have 
an impermissible retroactive impact, noting that conditions and 
prescriptions that have not been included in a final FERC license 
cannot be regarded as completed events. Paragraph (d)(1) therefore 
remains substantially unchanged.
    Reserved authority. On occasion, a Department does not submit 
conditions or prescriptions for inclusion in a license during the 
license proceeding, but reserves the authority to do so at a later 
point, e.g., if conditions change or the Department obtains additional 
information. The interim regulations provided that, if the Department 
notifies FERC that it is reserving its authority, the hearing and 
alternatives processes would be available to the license parties if and 
when the Department subsequently exercised its reserved authority.
    Some commenters asserted that these processes should be available, 
not only when the Department subsequently exercises reserved 
conditioning or prescriptive authority, but also when the Department 
initially decides to reserve its authority. According to these 
commenters, the reservation of authority is a decision not to impose a 
condition or prescription, with consequences for natural resources, and 
should be subject to the hearing and alternatives processes.
    Under the terms of EPAct, license applicants and other parties are 
entitled to trial-type hearings with respect to conditions or 
prescriptions that a Department deems necessary. Similarly, the 
opportunity to propose an alternative arises when the Department deems 
a condition or prescription to be necessary. Thus, under EPAct, it is 
only when a Department affirmatively exercises its discretion to 
mandate a condition or prescription that the hearing and alternatives 
processes are triggered. Allowing for trial-type hearings and 
alternatives when the agencies have not exercised this authority would 
be both inconsistent with the legislation and an inefficient use of the 
Departments' resources. Consequently, the revised interim final 
regulations continue to provide that the hearing and alternatives 
processes are available only when a Department submits a preliminary 
condition or prescription to FERC, either during the initial licensing 
proceeding or subsequently through the exercise of reserved authority.
    Exercise of reserved authority. Other commenters noted that, with 
respect to the exercise of reserved authority, the language of the 
interim regulations appeared to limit the availability of these 
processes to a Department's exercise after November 17, 2005, of an 
authority it reserved on or after that date. They argued that the 
processes should be equally available to a Department's exercise after 
November 17, 2005, of an authority it reserved before that date. The 
Departments agree that Congress intended the hearing and alternatives 
processes to apply to any case in which a Department issues mandatory 
conditions or prescriptions on or after the date of EPAct's enactment. 
Paragraph (c) has been revised and a new paragraph (d)(2) has been 
added to clarify this point. Interim paragraph (d)(2) has been deleted 
as no longer needed, for the reasons explained below in connection with 
7 CFR 1.604, 43 CFR 45.4, and 50 CFR 221.4.
    Exhaustion of administrative remedies. Several parties commented 
that utilizing EPAct's trial-type hearing and alternatives processes 
should not be a condition precedent to seeking appellate court review 
of mandatory

[[Page 17160]]

conditions and prescriptions. According to these commenters, the 
failure to request a trial-type hearing on disputed issues of material 
fact or to propose an alternative should not be considered a failure to 
exhaust administrative remedies.
    Section 241 of EPAct does not itself contain an express exhaustion 
requirement, and there have been no court decisions addressing the 
issue of exhaustion in the context of EPAct trial-type hearings to 
date. Whether the doctrine of exhaustion applies to a given claim will 
be determined by the court based on the specific circumstances 
involved, such as whether any exhaustion provision from another statute 
applies, the nature of the claim being raised, and the applicability of 
any exhaustion defenses.
    The Departments note that license parties have ample opportunities 
to provide input into the processes for developing mandatory conditions 
and prescriptions. In addition to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes, the FERC licensing process provides 
opportunities for parties to comment on a Department's preliminary 
conditions or prescriptions, and on FERC's environmental assessment or 
draft environmental impact statement that discusses such preliminary 
conditions or prescriptions, See, e.g., 18 CFR 5.23(a), 5.24(b)-(c), 
5.25(b)-(c). Presenting information and concerns to the Departments 
well before the court of appeals review is the best way to ensure that 
the Departments are aware of the concerns and have an opportunity to 
consider them in formulating their conditions and prescriptions.
    No changes have been made to the regulations in response to the 
comments on this issue.

7 CFR 1.602 What terms are used in this subpart?

43 CFR 45.2 What terms are used in this part?

50 CFR 221.2 What terms are used in this part?

    These sections define the meaning of various terms used in the 
regulations. They are unchanged from the interim regulations, except 
for two address changes and the following two modifications.
    First, a definition of ``modified condition or prescription'' has 
been added, as recommended by a commenter.
    Second, the definition of ``preliminary condition or prescription'' 
has been revised by changing ``a'' to ``any'' in the first line and by 
omitting the citations to FERC's regulations in the last line. While 
the Departments make every effort to submit their preliminary 
conditions and prescriptions in accordance with the requirements in 
FERC's regulations, circumstances on occasion may necessitate the 
submission of a preliminary condition or prescription after FERC's 
regulatory deadline. See City of Tacoma, discussed under section II.D. 
of this preamble. In such instances, the license parties should still 
have an opportunity to request a trial-type hearing as to disputed 
issues of material fact and to submit alternative conditions or 
prescriptions.
    Some commenters suggested that the Departments clarify the 
definition of ``material fact'' in these sections to expressly exclude 
allegations of law or policy, or any argument directed at whether a 
preliminary condition or prescription should be adopted, modified, or 
rejected, or whether a proposed alternative should be adopted or 
rejected. The comments cited several specific examples of issues that 
parties have sought to raise in trial-type hearing proceedings that the 
commenters considered inappropriate.
    The Departments agree that the commenters accurately described both 
the intent of the statute and interim regulations and the experience to 
date in trial-type hearing proceedings. The regulations clearly 
prohibit an ALJ from rendering a conclusion on the ultimate question of 
whether a condition or prescription should be affirmed, modified, or 
withdrawn, because that conclusion is reserved to the Secretary's 
discretion and expert judgment. 7 CFR 1.660(b)(3), 43 CFR 45.60(b)(3), 
50 CFR 221.60(b)(3). Therefore, the November 2005 preamble made clear 
that issues of law or policy are not appropriate for resolution in a 
trial-type hearing. 70 FR at 69809.
    The Departments do not find it necessary to change the regulatory 
text on this point but are including an extended preamble discussion of 
``disputed issues of material fact,'' which provides further 
clarification and draws from the Departments' experience to date under 
the rules. See section IV.A. below.

7 CFR 1.603 How are time periods computed?

43 CFR 45.3 How are time periods computed?

50 CFR 221.3 How are time periods computed?

    Some commenters requested that the regulations allow extensions of 
time for filing hearing requests, notices of intervention, or answers 
upon a showing of extraordinary circumstances. The interim final rules 
provided that no extension of time could be granted for these 
particular filings. 7 CFR 1.603(b), 43 CFR 45.3(b), 50 CFR 221.3(b). 
The revised interim final regulations do not incorporate these 
requested changes, but we have extended the time for filing a notice of 
intervention and response (see 7 CFR 1.622, 43 CFR 45.22, 50 CFR 
221.22).
    As noted in the preamble to the interim final rules, strict time 
limitations are necessary to ensure timely completion of the hearing 
and alternatives processes and to avoid delays in the FERC licensing 
proceeding. 70 FR at 69809. Parties with a significant interest in the 
proceeding will presumably have already participated in the pre-filing 
consultation, scoping, and study processes for at least 3 years prior 
to the submission of preliminary conditions or prescriptions. A 
substantial and voluminous record will also have been developed during 
that time. Most parties should therefore be sufficiently prepared to 
respond to the Departments' preliminary conditions or prescriptions and 
prepare a hearing request or notice of intervention and response within 
the allotted time, without the need for extensions.
    The preamble to the interim rules also explained that, as a 
practical matter, no ALJ would be available prior to referral to rule 
on an extension motion. According to the commenters, an ALJ is not 
necessary to rule on extension requests and ``the Departments could 
make such a determination during their initial adequacy review of the 
hearing request or alternate condition.'' HRC Comments at 41. The 
Departments disagree. These rules establish stringent time frames to 
which all parties must abide, absent an extension granted by a neutral 
and impartial ALJ or a provision of these rules.
    The commenters further observed that the hearing request imposes a 
significant burden on all parties that should be avoided if there is an 
available resolution that simply needs time to succeed. A new provision 
for a limited stay of the proceedings to allow settlement negotiations 
should provide an opportunity for such resolution. See 7 CFR 1.624, 43 
CFR 45.24, 50 CFR 221.24, discussed below.

[[Page 17161]]

7 CFR 1.604 What deadlines apply to pending applications?

43 CFR 45.4 What deadlines apply to pending applications?

50 CFR 221.4 What deadlines apply to pending applications?

    These sections from the interim regulations dealing with pending 
applications have been removed and replaced in the revised interim 
final regulations. They applied to license proceedings in which (1) a 
Department had filed a preliminary condition or prescription before the 
November 17, 2005, effective date of the regulations, and (2) FERC had 
not issued a license as of that date. They provided that hearing 
requests and alternatives in such cases would be due on or before 
December 19, 2005. All license parties in such proceedings that wished 
to request a hearing or submit alternatives by the latter date have 
done so, and all but one of those cases has since been resolved.\2\ 
Therefore, these sections are no longer needed; their removal does not 
represent a substantive change to the regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ Timely hearing requests filed by PacifiCorp with respect to 
its Condit Hydroelectric Project remain pending before Interior and 
Commerce. The Departments have notified PacifiCorp that they will 
establish a time frame for the hearing process if and when FERC 
reinstates the proceeding to evaluate PacifiCorp's 1991 license 
application.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Some commenters raised concerns that there would be no comment 
opportunity on alternative conditions and prescriptions in pending 
cases where review under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) 
had already been completed when the interim final rules were issued. 
They suggested that, for such cases, the regulations require reissuance 
or supplementation of the NEPA document. Under 7 CFR 1.674, 43 CFR 
45.74, and 50 CFR 221.74, the Department must consider evidence and 
supporting material provided by any license party or otherwise 
reasonably available to it, including information on the environmental 
effects of conditions, prescriptions, and alternatives. On a case-by-
case basis, FERC should consider whether supplemental NEPA analysis is 
appropriate under 40 CFR 1502.9.

7 CFR 1.604 What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes?

43 CFR 45.4 What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes?

50 CFR 221.4 What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes?

    In place of the removed interim regulations dealing with pending 
applications (discussed above), the revised interim final regulations 
include tables summarizing the steps in the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes and indicating the deadlines generally 
applicable to each step. The regulations state that, if the deadlines 
in the tables are in any way inconsistent with the deadlines as set by 
other sections of the regulations or by the ALJ, the deadlines as set 
by those other sections or by the ALJ control.
    For example, under 7 CFR 1.603, 43 CFR 45.3, or 50 CFR 221.3, a 
deadline as shown in the table may be extended because it falls on a 
Saturday, Sunday, or holiday, or because the ALJ has granted a motion 
to extend it. See also 7 CFR 1.631(c), 43 CFR 45.31(c), and 50 CFR 
221.31(c). The deadlines in the table may also be extended if the 
hearing requester and the Department agree to a stay to allow for 
settlement negotiations under 7 CFR 1.624, 43 CFR 45.24, or 50 CFR 
221.24, discussed below.

7 CFR 1.610 Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to a 
representative?

43 CFR 45.10 Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to 
a representative?

50 CFR 221.10 Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to 
a representative?

    Three minor changes have been made to these sections regarding 
representation of a party in the hearing process. Environmental 
organizations objected that the regulations did not allow them to 
designate one organization to represent another, as they have done in 
the past. In response to this comment, paragraph (b)(3) has been 
revised to change ``officer or full-time employee'' to ``officer or 
agent,'' leaving it up to an organization to decide what type of agent 
it wishes to designate to represent its interests.
    Paragraph (c) has been revised to clarify that an individual 
representing himself or herself must file a notice or appearance, as 
must any other representative of a party.
    And a new paragraph (d) has been added to expressly authorize the 
administrative law judge (ALJ) to require a party that has more than 
one representative to designate a lead representative for service of 
documents under 7 CFR 1.613, 43 CFR 45.13, or 50 CFR 221.13. This 
authority was implicit in the interim rules.

7 CFR 1.611 What are the form and content requirements for documents 
under Sec. Sec.  6.610 through 1.660?

43 CFR 45.11 What are the form and content requirements for documents 
under this subpart?

50 CFR 221.11 What are the form and content requirements for documents 
under this subpart?

    Two minor changes have been made to these regulations. Paragraph 
(a)(2) has been revised to state that service copies of a document may 
be printed on both sides of a page, to save paper. And paragraph (a)(4) 
has been revised to increase the minimum font size from 10 to 11 points 
to improve readability.

7 CFR 1.612 Where and how must documents be filed?

43 CFR 45.12 Where and how must documents be filed?

50 CFR 221.12 Where and how must documents be filed?

    Paragraph (b) of these regulations has been revised to specify that 
an original and two copies of any document must be filed with the 
appropriate office under paragraph (a). This change will facilitate the 
expedited hearing process. Under paragraph (b)(2), supporting 
materials, which may be burdensome to copy, may be submitted in the 
form of a hard-copy original and an electronic copy on compact disc or 
other suitable media.
    Several commenters suggested that the Departments revise the 
regulations to allow parties to file documents electronically, using 
email or FERC's eFiling system. The Departments agree that, in many 
circumstances, the electronic transmission of documents is a preferable 
means of providing documents to another party. As a result, the revised 
regulations in 7 CFR 1.613, 43 CFR 45.13, and 50 CFR 221.13 allow for 
electronic service of documents on a party who consents to such 
service. However, the Departments and their ALJ offices do not 
currently have the capacity or resources to accept electronically and 
print off the large volume of documents typically filed in connection 
with a trial-type hearing.
    The Departments disagree with the commenters' suggestion to use 
FERC's

[[Page 17162]]

eFiling system because EPAct places the responsibility of administering 
the trial-type hearing process exclusively with the Departments. In 
addition, the Departments do not believe it is advisable to rely for 
filing on an electronic system of another agency over which the 
Departments have no control. Given the tight time frames involved, any 
technical problems or other issues that rendered FERC's eFiling system 
unavailable even for a limited time could prove disruptive to the 
trial-type hearing process.
    Paragraph (d) dealing with nonconforming documents has been revised 
by deleting the second sentence concerning minor defects, which had 
stated that parties may be notified of ``minor'' technical defects and 
given a chance to correct them. Commenters objected that no definition 
of a ``minor'' defect was provided, thus presenting a risk of 
inconsistent and subjective interpretations. Commenters proposed the 
following definition: ``For this purpose, `minor' means that the filing 
is substantively in compliance with the requirements for the filing.'' 
HRC comments at 57.
    This proposed definition fails to provide additional clarity and 
has not been adopted. Rather than trying to catalogue possible defects 
as ``minor'' or ``major,'' the Departments have deleted the second 
sentence. The revised interim final regulation thus puts parties on 
notice that non-conforming documents may be rejected, thereby helping 
to ensure compliance with technical filing requirements. The form, 
content, and filing requirements in the regulations are straightforward 
and clear, and the Departments expect compliance for documents to be 
accepted. It remains within the Departments' discretion to determine 
the appropriate remedy for failure to comply with these requirements.

7 CFR 1.613 What are the requirements for service of documents?

43 CFR 45.13 What are the requirements for service of documents?

50 CFR 221.13 What are the requirements for service of documents?

    These regulations have been revised in response to comments 
advocating the use of electronic means of service.
    Use of FERC's service procedures. Several commenters proposed that 
the Departments allow parties to use FERC's eService and eSubscription 
systems to ensure a cost-effective and reliable means of effectuating 
service on other parties. The Departments have adopted this suggestion 
to a limited extent.
    For service on license parties as required under paragraphs (a)(1) 
and (a)(2)(ii) of these sections, the revised regulations authorize 
service under FERC's procedures at 18 CFR 385.2010(f)(3) for those 
license parties that have agreed to receive electronic service. For 
service on hearing parties under paragraph (a)(3), the use of FERC's 
procedures is not authorized. In the Departments' experience, the 
number of hearing parties generally is substantially less than the 
number of license parties. This limited approach balances the interests 
in cost-effective means of service on a large number of parties with 
the Departments' interest in retaining control over the administration 
of the trial-type hearing process, for which the Departments are 
exclusively responsible under EPAct. The latter interest predominates 
for most of the hearing process, when service is limited to the much 
smaller number of hearing parties.
    Service by other electronic means. Service on either license 
parties or hearing parties is also authorized under paragraph (c) of 
these regulations, which has been expanded in two ways.
    First, paragraph (c)(4) has been revised in 7 CFR 1.613 and 50 CFR 
221.13 and has been added to 43 CFR 45.13. Under this paragraph, 
service may be made by electronic means if the party to be served has 
consented to that means of service in writing. However, if the serving 
party learns that the document did not reach the party to be served, 
the serving party must re-serve the document by another method. This 
provision, which is modeled on Rule 5(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil 
Procedure (FRCP), takes the place of former paragraph (c)(4)(ii) both 
in 7 CFR 1.613 and 50 CFR 221.13, which required the person served by 
electronic mail to acknowledge receipt of the document.
    Second, the introductory language in paragraph (c) has been revised 
to allow the ALJ to order methods of service other than those 
enumerated in paragraphs (c)(1) through (c)(4), upon agreement of the 
parties.
    Service via Internet posting. Commenters suggested that the 
Departments allow parties to post documents filed in support of a 
hearing request on a Web site to reduce service costs associated with 
those sometimes voluminous documents. Other commenters suggested that 
the Departments place electronic or scanned copies of all materials 
received during the trial-type hearing onto a public Internet site to 
make the documents more accessible to other interested parties. The 
Departments do not adopt this suggestion due to the time and resource 
constraints during the trial-type hearing. Parties who wish to place 
documents on public Internet sites are not prohibited from doing so, 
but such posting will not substitute for service under these 
regulations.
    Timing of service. Commenters proposed that the Departments revise 
the regulations to clarify that all served documents must arrive by 5 
p.m. on the filing date. The Departments disagree with the commenters' 
proposal and preserve the requirement established in the interim final 
rules. This requirement provides that service is effected when a party 
initiates the transmission of a document through one of the specified 
methods of service at the same time the document is delivered or sent 
for filing. This requirement ensures that parties receive served 
documents in a cost-effective and timely fashion. Indeed, unless a 
document was served by hand-delivery or facsimile, the commenters' 
proposal would require parties to serve a document a day or more in 
advance of filing in order to have service copies arrive by 5 p.m. on 
the filing date. This would unnecessarily shorten the already tight 
regulatory time frames.
    Service on the Department. Comments were received requesting that 
the regulations be clarified with respect to timing of service and 
agency personnel to be served. With respect to timing, paragraphs 
(a)(1) through (a)(3) have been revised to specify that documents to be 
served must be delivered or sent to the other parties at the same time 
the documents are delivered or sent for filing.
    With respect to agency personnel to be served, the Departments do 
not believe that any changes to the regulations are needed. Under 
paragraph (a)(1), a request for a hearing must be served on each 
license party; FERC's service list for the license proceeding will 
identify the persons or entities to be served and their addresses. 
Under paragraph (a)(2), a notice of intervention and response must be 
served on the Departmental entity that developed the preliminary 
condition or prescription; the preliminary condition or prescription 
will identify the persons or entities to be served and their addresses. 
Subsequent documents in the hearing process will be served on the 
Departmental representatives identified in the Department's answer or 
notice under 7 CFR 1.625, 43 CFR 45.25, and 50 CFR 221.25.

[[Page 17163]]

7 CFR 1.620 What supporting information must the Forest Service provide 
with its preliminary conditions?

43 CFR 45.20 What supporting information must a bureau provide with its 
preliminary conditions or prescriptions?

50 CFR 221.20 What supporting information must NMFS provide with its 
preliminary conditions or prescriptions?

    Some commenters suggested amending these sections to require that 
the agency rationale for its preliminary conditions or prescriptions 
include a clear and concise statement of the material facts relied upon 
and an ``analysis of the project's impacts on the resources the agency 
administers.'' HRC comments at 33.
    The Departments agree that the rationale for a preliminary 
condition or prescription must contain sufficient information to enable 
license parties to identify disputed issues of material fact in light 
of the relevant legal standards under the FPA. The Departments' 
rationales also generally identify the nature of project-related 
impacts on agency-managed resources that their conditions or 
prescriptions are designed to address. However, EPAct is not reasonably 
interpreted to require the Departments to catalogue every fact 
considered in developing a preliminary condition or prescription. 
Accordingly, the Departments are not amending the regulatory text on 
this point.

7 CFR 1.621 How do I request a hearing?

43 CFR 45.21 How do I request a hearing?

50 CFR 221.21 How do I request a hearing?

    The Departments received comments on various aspects of these 
regulations, including the time for filing hearing requests, page 
limits, and reliance on new evidence.
    Time for filing hearing requests generally. Commenters suggested 
that the Departments extend the deadline for filing hearing requests 
because, in their view, the interim regulations do not provide parties 
with sufficient time to prepare such requests or attempt an informal 
resolution of contested issues. Specifically, the commenters suggested 
that the Departments extend the deadline for filing hearing requests 
from 30 days to 45 days to be consistent with FERC's ILP, which 
provides parties with 45 days to respond to preliminary conditions and 
prescriptions. Additionally, these commenters argued that, since FERC's 
ILP-prescribed deadlines may not be met in certain cases, the 
Departments should extend the deadline for filing hearing requests 
instead of conforming the trial-type hearing process to the ILP 
schedule.
    The Departments disagree with this proposal (except in cases where 
the Department is issuing conditions or prescriptions pursuant to 
reservations of authority, as discussed below). As the commenters 
recognize, the Departments have tried ``to conform the trial-type 
hearing to the ILP schedule'' (EEI/NHA comments at 21). Even though 
FERC's ILP schedule provides parties with 45 days to submit comments on 
preliminary conditions and prescriptions, the 30-day deadline for 
filing trial-type hearing requests is necessary both to fit the hearing 
process within the time frame established by FERC for each license 
proceeding, as required by EPAct, and to provide intervenors and the 
Department with sufficient time to evaluate hearing requests and 
prepare responses before the matter is referred to an ALJ. The 30-day 
deadline applies to any request for a hearing on a preliminary 
condition or prescription submitted to FERC before the license is 
issued.
    Time for filing hearing requests as related to the exercise of 
reserved authority. Some commenters complained that the interim 
regulations do not include an express, separate timetable for 
requesting a hearing or proposing alternatives in response to a 
Department's exercise of reserved authority under 7 CFR 1.601(d)(2), 43 
CFR 45.1(d)(2), or 50 CFR 221.1(d)(2). Under these circumstances, 
parties may have less advance notice concerning the justification for 
and content of any proposed conditions or prescriptions. The 
Departments agree that a separate timetable should be provided.
    Accordingly, paragraph (a)(2) of these regulations has been revised 
to provide a longer period of time--60 days as compared to 30 days--for 
a license party to request a hearing on disputed issues of material 
fact with respect to a preliminary condition or prescription in 
situations where the Department is exercising its reserved authority 
after the license has been issued.
    Time for filing hearing requests as related to preliminary versus 
modified conditions and prescriptions. Industry commenters took 
differing positions on whether the trial-type hearing should be held to 
address disputed issues of fact at the preliminary or modified 
condition/prescription stage. Some commenters supported holding trial-
type hearings at the preliminary stage, acknowledging that doing so is 
appropriate in most cases, is consistent with FERC's licensing 
timetable, and will help inform the NEPA process. Other commenters 
stated that hearings are more appropriately held after modified 
conditions or prescriptions are submitted. Commenters also requested 
that the regulations provide for trial-type hearings at the modified 
stage if the modifications are based on new facts that did not exist or 
were not anticipated at the preliminary stage, or if the agency submits 
an entirely new condition or prescription at the modified stage.
    As set forth in the interim final rules, the trial-type hearing 
procedures were carefully crafted to work within FERC's time frame, as 
required by Congress, while affording interested parties an opportunity 
to present evidence on disputed issues of material fact with respect to 
the Departments' mandatory conditions and prescriptions. 70 FR at 
69806. Holding a hearing after submission of preliminary conditions and 
prescriptions allows for resolution of disputed factual issues at the 
most relevant time--before the Department completes necessary 
modifications to the conditions or prescriptions, before the close of 
the NEPA comment period, and before completion of the final 
environmental impact statement (EIS).
    This approach also promotes efficiency by allowing the Departments 
to assess all relevant information--including any ALJ opinion, comments 
on FERC's NEPA document, and alternative conditions or prescriptions 
with supporting information--and to modify the conditions or 
prescriptions in one coordinated effort.
    Providing for trial-type hearings solely at the modified stage is 
not a reasonable or efficient use of resources. Issuance of an ALJ 
opinion after conditions and prescriptions have already been modified 
could require the Departments to revise and resubmit conditions and 
prescriptions, thereby adding an additional step and additional time to 
the process. This second round of revisions would delay license 
issuance in most cases. Indeed, under current practice, the Departments 
submit modified conditions and prescriptions 60 days after the close of 
the NEPA comment period, with FERC's final EIS being issued just 90 
days later. An ALJ opinion resolving disputed facts on modified 
conditions and prescriptions would almost certainly be issued after 
FERC's completion of the final NEPA document.
    The Departments disagree with comments that holding an adversarial 
hearing at the preliminary stage will jeopardize the possibility of 
settlement. The Departments' experience has been that several cases 
have settled after

[[Page 17164]]

hearing requests were filed at the preliminary condition or 
prescription stage.
    The revised interim final regulations therefore continue the 
approach taken in the interim regulations of scheduling the trial-type 
hearing process immediately following the issuance of preliminary 
conditions and prescriptions. Nevertheless, the Departments acknowledge 
that exceptional circumstances may arise where facts not in existence 
and not anticipated at an earlier stage necessitate a new preliminary 
condition or prescription. This circumstance would be handled on a 
case-by-case basis, in coordination with FERC as necessary.
    Page limits for hearing requests. Some commenters objected that the 
page limits for hearing request are too restrictive, and they requested 
that the limit for describing disputed issues of material fact be 
increased from two pages to five pages and that the limit for witness 
and exhibit identification be increased from one page to three pages. 
The Departments believe that the page limits set forth in the interim 
regulations are generally appropriate and provide sufficient space for 
parties to identify disputed issues, particularly in light of the 
expedited nature of the proceeding. The Departments further note that 
they are bound by the same page limits in submitting an answer. See 7 
CFR 1.622, 43 CFR 45.22, and 50 CFR 221.22.
    Nevertheless, having considered this comment and the purpose of the 
rule, the Departments have concluded that the required list of specific 
citations to supporting information and the list of exhibits need not 
be included in the page restrictions. The rule has been revised 
accordingly for the hearing request and the notice of intervention and 
response. See 7 CFR 1.621(d), 43 CFR 45.21(d), 50 CFR 221.21(d) and 7 
CFR 1.622(d), 43 CFR 45.22(d), 50 CFR 221.22(d). This change will 
provide the parties with additional space to describe the disputed 
issues of material fact and to summarize expected witness testimony.
    Reliance on new evidence. Other commenters suggested that the final 
rules require parties who wish to submit new evidence when requesting a 
trial-type hearing or in support of an alternative condition or 
prescription to show good cause for not having previously submitted the 
information in the license proceeding record. Otherwise, these 
commenters argued, parties would have an incentive ``to `hide the ball' 
from others and disrupt proceedings at the last minute,'' which may 
create delays or unfair advantage. HRC Comments at 30.
    While the Departments share the commenters' interest in ensuring an 
expeditious and fair trial-type hearing, we disagree with the proposal 
to include a ``good cause'' requirement. Such a requirement could harm 
the Department's ability to rely on relevant information from the 
parties, such as newly completed studies, that might assist the 
Department in evaluating conditions and fishway prescriptions. 
Moreover, such a requirement may run counter to the parties' and the 
Department's interests in ensuring a ``full and accurate disclosure of 
the facts.'' 7 CFR 1.651(a), 43 CFR 45.51(a), 50 CFR 221.51(a).
    Service by electronic means. Consistent with the changes to 7 CFR 
1.613(c), 43 CFR 45.13(c), and 50 CFR 221.13(c), a new paragraph (b)(4) 
has been added to these regulations, requiring a hearing requester to 
state whether or not it consents to service by electronic means and, if 
so, by what means.

7 CFR 1.622 How do I file a notice of intervention and response?

43 CFR 45.22 How do I file a notice of intervention and response?

50 CFR 221.22 How do I file a notice of intervention and response?

    Commenters objected that the 15-day period provided in the interim 
regulations for filing a notice of intervention and response to a 
hearing request was too short, pointing out that the Departments have 
30 days to file their answers under interim 7 CFR 1.624(a), 43 CFR 
45.24(a), and 50 CFR 221.24(a). While the Departments need the 
additional time to coordinate with each other and with the respective 
ALJ offices regarding the possible consolidation of related hearing 
requests, the Departments agree that a 15-day intervention and response 
period is very tight.
    As revised, paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of these regulations gives license 
parties 20 days for filing a notice of intervention and response, thus 
adding 5 days to the overall hearing process. A diagram of the trial-
type hearing process under these revised interim final rules is found 
in the discussion of 7 CFR 1.660, 43 CFR 45.60, and 50 CFR 221.60, 
below.
    Paragraph (a)(2) has also been revised, to clarify the permissible 
scope of a notice of intervention and response.
    Paragraph (b)(3) has been added, requiring an intervenor to state 
whether or not it consents to service by electronic means and, if so, 
by what means.
    Finally, paragraph (d) has been revised to specify that citations 
to scientific studies, literature, and other documented information do 
not count against the page limits for the response.

7 CFR 1.623 Will hearing requests be consolidated?

43 CFR 45.23 Will hearing requests be consolidated?

50 CFR 221.23 Will hearing requests be consolidated?

    These sections, including the section headings, have been revised 
slightly to focus on the substance rather than the timing of the 
Departments' interagency coordination regarding multiple hearing 
requests. A decision on consolidation of hearing requests must still be 
made before the Departments file their responses under revised 7 CFR 
1.625, 43 CFR 45.25, and 50 CFR 221.25; but it is not necessary to 
specify the timing of steps within the interagency coordination 
process.
    The introductory language to paragraph (c) has also been revised to 
clarify that two or more hearing requests may be consolidated only in 
part, which could be appropriate if they have only some issues in 
common.
    Some commenters proposed that the regulations provide for 
consecutive rather than simultaneous 90-day hearings for those cases 
that the Departments do not consolidate. Similarly, they proposed that 
a consolidated hearing involving two Departments last up to 180 days 
and a consolidated hearing involving three Departments last up to 270 
days. The Departments do not agree that EPAct affords this level of 
flexibility regarding timing.
    EPAct requires that any trial-type hearing be conducted within the 
time frame established by FERC for each license proceeding. To fulfill 
this requirement, trial-type hearings are generally completed 180 days 
or so before completion of the final NEPA document and license 
issuance. Those 180 days are needed to complete several procedural 
steps, including the comment period on FERC's draft NEPA document, 
submission of revised alternatives, review of comments on the draft 
NEPA document, preparation of the alternatives analysis, modification 
of conditions or prescriptions, issuance of FERC's final NEPA document, 
and license issuance. Many if not all of these steps are dependent on 
receipt of the ALJ's decision.
    Increasing the overall time frame for hearings from 90 to 180 or 
270 days--either through consecutive 90-day hearings or one extended 
consolidated

[[Page 17165]]

hearing--would push back these subsequent steps and raise a significant 
potential for delay in license issuance, a result Congress expressly 
sought to avoid. The revised interim final regulations do not adopt the 
commenters' proposals.
    Some commenters questioned the authority of the Departments to 
consolidate hearing requests, thereby giving an ALJ for one Department 
the authority to decide disputed issues of material fact for another. 
This issue is addressed below in connection with 7 CFR 1.660(d), 43 CFR 
45.60(d), and 50 CFR 221.60(d).

7 CFR 1.624 Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?

43 CFR 45.24 Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?

50 CFR 221.24 Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?

    These sections are new and reflect the Departments' experience in 
implementing the interim final rules, which did not contain any 
provision for a stay of the hearing process. As noted previously, the 
Departments have been able to settle several cases after hearing 
requests were filed. However, in other cases, the Departments found 
that settlement might have been possible, but once the hearing request 
was referred to the ALJ, the expedited hearing schedule left little 
time for further settlement discussions. Under these revised interim 
final regulations, before a case is referred to the ALJ, the hearing 
requester and the Department may agree to stay the hearing process for 
a limited period of time, not to exceed 120 days, to allow for 
settlement discussions. The Department's agreement to a stay will be 
based on its judgment as to the likelihood of achieving settlement 
within the period of the potential stay.
    If necessary, the relevant Department and hearing requester(s) may 
request that FERC revise the time frame established for the license 
proceeding to accommodate the stay period and any subsequent hearing 
process that may be necessary if negotiations fail. FERC's regulations 
at 18 CFR 5.29(g) provide that FERC will consider such requests on a 
case-by-case basis. However, during our consultation process on these 
rules, FERC staff noted that the ILP is designed to allow for 
collaboration and coordination early in the process, with the goal that 
disagreements are worked out prior to the NEPA document stage. FERC 
staff expressed concern that allowance of stays of the trial-type 
hearing proceeding could encourage participants to wait until this late 
date to work out their differences.
    A stay would not affect the deadline for filing a notice of 
intervention and response, so that the hearing requester and the 
Department will be aware of other parties' interest in the case.

7 CFR 1.625 How will the Forest Service respond to any hearing 
requests?

43 CFR 45.25 How will the bureau respond to any hearing requests?

50 CFR 221.25 How will NMFS respond to any hearing requests?

    These sections have been renumbered because of the insertion of the 
stay provisions just discussed. Revisions to paragraph (a) adjust the 
deadline for the Departments to file their answers to accommodate the 
change made to 7 CFR 1.622(a)(1)(ii), 43 CFR 45.22(a)(1)(ii), and 50 
CFR 221.22(a)(1)(ii) regarding notices of intervention and responses 
and the addition of 7 CFR 1.624, 43 CFR 45.24, and 50 CFR 221.24 
regarding stays. The 50 days allowed for the Department's answer runs 
from the deadline for filing a hearing request, and it therefore 
includes the additional 5 days allowed above for filing a notice of 
intervention and response. Thus, the increase from 45 to 50 days in 
paragraph (a) will not further extend the overall hearing process.
    Paragraph (b)(3) has been added in response to comments. It 
requires the Department to provide a copy of any scientific studies, 
literature, and other documented information it relies on that are not 
already in the license proceeding record, as is required of the other 
parties by 7 CFR 1.621(b)(3), 43 CFR 45.21(b)(3), and 50 CFR 
221.21(b)(3) and by 7 CFR 1.622(b)(2), 43 CFR 45.22(b)(2), and 50 CFR 
221.22(b)(2).
    Paragraph (b)(4) has also been added, requiring the Department to 
state whether or not it consents to service by electronic means and, if 
so, by what means.
    The Departments received comments on various aspects of these 
regulations, including the content of the answer, filing a notice in 
lieu of an answer, and potential methods for avoiding an evidentiary 
hearing.
    Content of the answer. Some commenters suggested amending 7 CFR 
1.624(b), 43 CFR 45.24(b), and 50 CFR 221.24(b) to require the 
Department to indicate in its answer whether it would stipulate to 
facts as alleged by any intervenor, and not just to facts as alleged by 
the hearing requester. Adoption of this suggestion would require the 
Department to review all facts alleged in any notice of intervention 
and response and take a specific position on each.
    The Departments disagree that the regulations should be changed. 
The primary function of the answer is to present the Department's 
position on whether the hearing request raises issues that are factual, 
material, and in dispute. The answer may narrow the issues for a 
hearing or avoid one altogether if there is no disagreement between the 
primary parties (the hearing requester and the party Department) as to 
the facts. Given that intervenors cannot raise new issues, it is not 
necessary to respond to a notice of intervention and response in the 
same way as to a hearing request.
    Further, reviewing every allegation raised in notices of 
intervention and responses would likely require extensive effort at the 
same time the Department is reviewing the hearing request, consulting 
with other Departments regarding consolidation, assembling exhibits and 
identifying witnesses, and preparing an answer or notice. Nothing 
precludes a Department from noting its position on statements in other 
filings, if doing so may narrow the issues for hearing. Since the 
regulations allow any party to the licensing proceeding to file a 
hearing request, intervenors are not prejudiced by this decision not to 
adopt the commenters' suggestion.
    Filing a notice in lieu of an answer. The same commenters objected 
to the interim rule provision allowing the Department to file a notice 
in lieu of an answer, arguing that the Department should be required to 
file an answer in all cases, and offering revised regulatory language 
to that effect. The proposed revisions have not been adopted. 
Developing a formal answer in cases where the agency agrees that the 
issues are factual, material, and in dispute would not be an efficient 
use of agency resources. In those situations, the regulations provide 
that the agency will file a notice in lieu of answer and may also file 
a list of exhibits and witnesses. 7 CFR 1.625(e), 43 CFR 45.25(e), 50 
CFR 221.25(e).
    These commenters also stated that, if an answer remains permissive 
rather than mandatory, ``a Department's failure to file an answer 
should be deemed a denial of the hearing request for failure to raise a 
disputed issue of material fact.'' HRC comments at 35. It appears from 
the context that by ``denial'' the commenters mean rejection of the 
hearing request. As discussed below, the Departments favor leaving the

[[Page 17166]]

determination of which issues warrant a hearing to an independent ALJ.
    Avoidance of evidentiary hearing through use of a ``paper 
hearing.'' The commenters also requested that this section be revised 
to state that the Department is not required to refer a case for 
hearing if no disputed issues of material fact exist or if any such 
issues can be resolved through a ``paper hearing'' or other procedure. 
The commenters would require the hearing requester to demonstrate that 
formal procedures such as cross-examination ``will produce a fuller and 
truer disclosure of the facts than a paper hearing process.'' HRC 
comments at 28. The Departments do not believe such an approach would 
be consistent with EPAct.
    EPAct section 241 expressly entitles any party to the FERC license 
proceeding to ``a determination on the record, after opportunity for an 
agency trial-type hearing . . . on any disputed issues of material 
fact'' relating to mandatory conditions and prescriptions. Importantly, 
section 241 requires that the Departments' implementing regulations 
provide hearing parties the opportunity to undertake discovery and 
cross-examine witnesses. Thus, Congress did not contemplate that a `` 
`paper hearing' or other procedures'' would suffice.
    Avoidance of evidentiary hearing where no disputed issues of 
material fact exist. The commenters similarly proposed that the 
Department not be required to refer a case for hearing where ``the 
answer determines that there are no disputed issues of material fact.'' 
HRC comments at 38-40. These commenters would rely on the answer 
process to allow the Department to narrow or dispose of issues for 
hearing prior to referral to the ALJ. Other commenters supported giving 
the ALJ sole authority to determine whether disputed issues of material 
fact exist.
    HRC's approach would grant the Department a gatekeeper role in 
determining what issues actually go to hearing. Although failure to 
raise a disputed issue of material fact should result in dismissal of a 
hearing request or component issue, the Departments believe that this 
determination is more appropriately left to an independent ALJ. Thus, 
unless the hearing process is stayed for a limited time for settlement 
negotiations under 7 CFR 1.624, 43 CFR 45.24, 50 CFR 221.24, the 
regulations require referral of any hearing request, answer, and 
intervention to the appropriate ALJ's office, which can then determine 
the existence of disputed issues of material fact. This approach 
benefits all parties by providing necessary transparency and avoiding 
any appearance of bias in making the important threshold determination 
of whether particular issues warrant a hearing.
    Avoidance of evidentiary hearing by adoption of a proposed 
alternative condition or prescription. In the November 17, 2005, 
interim final rule, the Departments indicated that they would endeavor 
to review proposed alternatives at the earliest possible time and that, 
in some cases, review of a proposed alternative could ``preclude the 
need for a hearing.'' 70 FR at 69807. HRC asked for clarification as to 
whether the Departments contemplated formally adopting a proposed 
alternative on an expedited basis to avoid a hearing. The commenters 
stated that they oppose what they term ``fast-track adoption of a 
proposed alternative in order to forgo a hearing,'' suggesting that 
such an action would be inconsistent with the Departments' obligation 
to consider the information specified in the regulations for analyzing 
alternatives. HRC Comments at 70. They also suggested that public 
comment should be sought prior to any decision to forgo a hearing.
    In response to this comment, the Departments have considered their 
cumulative experience thus far with early evaluation of alternatives in 
connection with hearing requests filed under the interim final rule. As 
explained below (in discussing 7 CFR 1.671, 43 CFR 45.71, and 50 CFR 
221.71), early, informal evaluation of proposed alternatives in 
conjunction with hearing requests has led to several successful 
settlements. The resulting condition or prescription may differ from 
both the Department's preliminary condition or prescription and any 
proposed alternative. In revising its condition or prescription 
pursuant to a settlement, the Department would have to follow any 
applicable requirements for considering available information. Nothing 
in the FPA requires a Department to seek public comment on a settlement 
that avoids the need for a hearing. The Departments believe that 
developing conditions and prescriptions that achieve resource 
protection while avoiding litigation furthers the goals of the FPA (and 
particularly the EPAct amendments) and should be encouraged where 
feasible.

7 CFR 1.626 What will the Forest Service do with any hearing requests?

43 CFR 45.26 What will DOI do with any hearing requests?

50 CFR 221.26 What will NMFS do with any hearing requests?

    Revisions to paragraph (b) of these regulations (renumbered like 
the previous section) track the changes to 7 CFR 1.612(b)(1), 43 CFR 
45.12(b)(1), and 50 CFR 221.12(b)(1) concerning the number of copies.
    Paragraph (c)(4) has been revised to require the referral notice to 
specify the effective date of the referral, which will be the basis for 
computing other time periods during the hearing process--see 7 CFR 
1.630, 43 CFR 45.30, and 50 CFR 221.30 concerning docketing; 7 CFR 
1.640(a), 43 CFR 45.40(a), and 50 CFR 221.40(a) concerning the 
prehearing conference; 7 CFR 1.641(d), 43 CFR 45.41(d), and 50 CFR 
221.41(d) concerning discovery motions; and 7 CFR 1.660(a)(2), 43 CFR 
45.60(a)(2), and 50 CFR 221.60(a)(2) concerning the ALJ's decision. 
This change will eliminate the confusion that occasionally arose under 
the interim regulations as to the date on which a referral notice was 
``issued.''
    The interim final regulations provide that the Department receiving 
a hearing request will refer it to an appropriate ALJ office for a 
hearing by sending a ``referral'' package, which includes a ``referral 
notice.'' See 7 CFR 1.625(b)(5), 43 CFR 45.25(b)(5), 50 CFR 
221.25(b)(5). The referral notice must include, among other things, 
``the date on which [the agency] is referring the case for docketing.'' 
7 CFR 1.625(c), 43 CFR 45.25(c), 50 CFR 221.25(c). In establishing 
deadlines for key milestones in the hearing procedure (such as 
docketing of the case by the ALJ, filing motions, setting the initial 
prehearing conference, etc.), a number of provisions refer to the 
``issuance of the referral notice'' as the triggering event for 
calculating deadlines. See, e.g., 7 CFR 1.630; 43 CFR 45.30; 50 CFR 
221.30.
    Because the interim final regulations used slightly varying 
terminology throughout and did not define the ``issuance'' date, there 
was a potential for confusion as to how deadlines should be calculated. 
Despite the provision noting that the referral notice should state the 
date on which the agency ``is referring'' the case, there was potential 
to construe the triggering date as being either the date the notice was 
sent from the referring agency, the date it was received by the ALJ, or 
(if different) the date stated as the

[[Page 17167]]

``effective date'' on the notice itself. This led to confusion where, 
for example, an agency wished to send out the referral package in 
advance to ensure timely receipt by the ALJ, while avoiding 
accelerating the dates in the hearing process (such as sending the 
package by Federal Express on a Friday for receipt by the ALJ's office 
by the deadline the following Monday). The approach of specifying in 
the text of the referral notice an ``effective'' date that was 
different from the date the package was sent from the agency was 
expressly approved by the Coast Guard ALJ presiding in the Santee-
Cooper Project trial-type hearing. See Order Memorializing Prehearing 
Conference at 1-2 (FERC Project Number 199, license applicant South 
Carolina Public Service Authority) (September 15, 2006).
    Corresponding changes have been made to various other provisions of 
the revised interim final regulations. These changes are intended to 
make clear that, where any provision sets forth a period of time after 
referral of the case within which an act or event must take place, the 
trigger for calculating the due date will be the ``effective date'' 
stated in the text of the referral notice. This may or may not be the 
same as the date the notice was written, the date it was sent out from 
the Department, or the date it was received by the ALJ. This approach 
is consistent with the intent of the original regulations. If the text 
of the referral notice does not set forth an ``effective date,'' then 
the effective date will be the date shown as the date the notice was 
sent out from the Department.

7 CFR 1.631 What are the powers of the ALJ?

43 CFR 45.31 What are the powers of the ALJ?

50 CFR 221.31 What are the powers of the ALJ?

    The introductory language to these regulations has been revised to 
include the phrase, ``relating to any . . . Department's condition or 
prescription that has been referred to the ALJ for hearing,'' 
previously found in interim 7 CFR 1.631(i), 43 CFR 45.31(i), and 50 CFR 
221.31(i). That phrase properly covers the entire hearing process, not 
merely the ALJ's decision.
    Paragraph (b) has been revised to affirm the authority of the ALJ 
to issue subpoenas under 7 CFR 1.647, 43 CFR 45.47, and 50 CFR 221.47. 
See Childers v. Carolina Power & Light Co., No. 98-77 (Dept. of Labor 
Admin. Review Board, Dec. 29, 2000), 2000 DOL Adm.Rev.Bd. LEXIS 123, 
2000 WL 1920346.
    Paragraph (c) has been added to allow the ALJ to shorten or enlarge 
the time periods set forth in the hearing process regulations 
generally. Several interim regulations specified that the ALJ could 
change the time period otherwise applicable, while others did not. The 
revised interim final regulations omit those context-specific 
authorizations in favor of this general authority of the ALJ to adjust 
time periods as necessary to effectively manage the hearing process. 
However, the revised interim final regulations state that the ALJ 
cannot extend the time period for rendering a decision on the disputed 
issues of material fact past the deadline set in 7 CFR 1.660(a)(2), 43 
CFR 45.60(a)(2), or 50 CFR 221.60(a)(2), except in the extraordinary 
situation where the ALJ must be replaced under 7 CFR 1.632, 43 CFR 
45.32, or 50 CFR 221.32 dealing with unavailability or 7 CFR 1.633, 43 
CFR 45.33, or 50 CFR 221.33 dealing with disqualification.
    Some commenters suggested that the regulations be amended to state 
expressly that the ALJ is authorized only to issue a decision limited 
to disputed issues of material fact and may not address the propriety 
of the Department's condition or prescription. Specifically, the 
commenters recommended that language from preamble to the interim final 
rules (70 FR at 69814) be incorporated into the regulations.
    The Departments find that the regulations already adequately state 
this principle, and thus regulatory changes are not needed. While the 
commenters focused on the provisions at 7 CFR 1.631(i), 43 CFR 
45.31(i), and 50 CFR 221.31(i), a separate provision of the regulations 
at 7 CFR 1.660(b), 43 CFR 45.60(b), and 50 CFR 221.60(b) specifies the 
content of an ALJ decision. That section provides that an ALJ decision 
must contain ``findings of fact on all disputed issues of material 
fact'' (paragraph (b)(1)) and only those ``conclusions of law necessary 
to make the findings of fact'' (paragraph (b)(2)). Paragraph (b)(3) 
then specifies, ``The decision [of the ALJ] will not contain 
conclusions as to whether any preliminary condition or prescription 
should be adopted, modified, or rejected, or whether any proposed 
alternative should be adopted or rejected.'' The experience of the 
Departments to date is that ALJs well understand the limitations on 
their authority under EPAct.
    These commenters suggested further that 7 CFR 1.631(j), 43 CFR 
45.31(j), and 50 CFR 221.31(j) be amended to specify that the ALJ is 
empowered, not just to ``[t]ake any action authorized by law,'' but in 
particular, to ``summarily dispose of a proceeding, or part of a 
proceeding,'' as provided under a comparable provision in the FERC 
procedural regulations, citing 18 CFR 385.504(b)(9). The commenters 
suggested that a new provision be added that lays out the procedures 
for summary disposition, either on motion of a party or at the 
initiative of the ALJ, following the example of the FERC regulations at 
18 CFR 385.217.
    The Departments agree that ALJs have the inherent authority to 
summarily dispose of a proceeding that fails to raise legitimate 
disputed issues of material fact; failure to raise such issues means 
the ALJ lacks jurisdiction to hear the matter. ALJs have recognized and 
used this authority in ruling on motions to dismiss in trial-type-
hearings conducted under the interim final rules. The Departments 
conclude that adding language to the regulations to make this authority 
explicit would be beneficial and thus are adding a new paragraph (j) 
expressly setting forth this authority.
    However, the Departments find it unnecessary to add a provision to 
these regulations comparable to 18 CFR 385.217. The term ``disputed 
issue of material fact'' has a distinct legal meaning in the context of 
these regulations, and whether or not such issues have been presented 
determines whether the ALJ has jurisdiction to hear any part of the 
matter. The inquiry is governed by the particular definition of 
``material fact'' and related parameters set forth in these 
regulations. It would be confusing to litigants to set forth a new 
provision that uses a similar phrase in a different context (``genuine 
issue of fact material to the decision of a proceeding or part of a 
proceeding''), as the referenced FERC provision (or FRCP 56) does.

7 CFR 1.635 What are the requirements for motions?

43 CFR 45.35 What are the requirements for motions?

50 CFR 221.35 What are the requirements for motions?

    Paragraph (a)(2)(iii) in the interim regulations imposed a 10-page 
limit for motions, but the regulations contained no page limit for 
responses. The revised interim final regulations increase the page 
limit for motions in paragraph (a)(2)(iii) to 15 pages, including 
supporting arguments, and impose the same page limit for responses to 
motions in paragraph (c).

[[Page 17168]]

7 CFR 1.640 What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?

43 CFR 45.40 What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?

50 CFR 221.40 What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?

    Two minor changes have been made to these sections. As mentioned 
previously, paragraph (a) has been revised to set the date for the 
initial prehearing conference at about 20 days after the effective 
date--rather than after ``issuance''--of the referral notice under 7 
CFR 1.626(c)(4), 43 CFR 45.26(c)(4), or 50 CFR 221.26(c)(4). And the 
list of topics to be covered in the initial prehearing conference under 
paragraph (a)(1)(iv) has been revised by adding the exchange of 
exhibits that will be offered as evidence under 7 CFR 1.654, 43 CFR 
45.54, and 50 CFR 221.54.
    Some commenters suggested that parties to a trial-type hearing be 
required to make ``all reasonable efforts'' to resolve procedural 
disputes before the pre-hearing conference, which they reason is 
critical to the effective conduct of that conference. HRC Comments at 
47. The Departments believe the existing requirement that parties make 
``a good faith effort'' is sufficient.
    The same commenters suggested that the scope of the prehearing 
conference be limited to issues raised in each party's hearing requests 
or intervention and response. The commenters reasoned that this 
limitation is necessary to ensure that parties are not burdened with 
discussing matters beyond their expertise.
    The Departments agree with this proposal in part and have revised 
paragraph (d) to provide that ``(e)ach party's representative must be 
fully prepared for a discussion of all issues pertinent to that party 
that are properly before the conference, both procedural and 
substantive.'' To promote administrative efficiency and judicial 
economy, ALJs must have the discretion to address any issue properly 
before the prehearing conference, and each party's representative must 
be fully prepared to discuss issues raised by the ALJ that are 
pertinent to that party.
    These commenters further stated that parties to a trial-type 
hearing should always have the option of participating in the 
prehearing conference via telephone. They argued that prohibiting 
participation by telephone could create an unfair advantage for parties 
that have a greater ability to travel.
    The revised interim final rule confirms that the prehearing 
conference will ordinarily be held via telephone, but preserves the 
flexibility established in the interim final rules for the ALJ to set 
the venue for a prehearing conference. This flexibility is important 
for cases where the ALJ and the parties would benefit from 
participating in a prehearing conference in person. The ALJ must retain 
the discretion to make this determination. In-person prehearing 
conferences may be justified in various circumstances, including cases 
where parties are located in close geographic proximity or where a 
large number of parties must interact with each other and the ALJ to 
resolve procedural and substantive issues.
    Finally, the commenters suggested that the final rules allow a 
party who shows ``good cause'' for not attending a prehearing 
conference to object to any agreements or orders resulting from the 
prehearing conference. HRC Comments at 48-49. The commenters reasoned 
that parties are given only a few days' notice prior to the prehearing 
conference and may not be able to attend due to preexisting or 
unforeseen circumstances, such as lack of resources, travel delays, or 
medical emergencies.
    The ALJ's ability to manage attendance at the prehearing conference 
is critical to ensuring timely resolution of issues in these expedited 
trial-type hearings. The revised interim final rules do not adopt the 
commenters' suggestion, but preserve the ALJ's discretion to 
accommodate a party who fails to attend a prehearing conference by not 
waiving that party's objection to any agreements or orders resulting 
from the conference. Parties may notify the ALJ if they have concerns 
about the schedule for the prehearing conference or will be unable to 
attend.

7 CFR 1.641 How may parties obtain discovery of information needed for 
the case?

43 CFR 45.41 How may parties obtain discovery of information needed for 
the case?

50 CFR 221.41 How may parties obtain discovery of information needed 
for the case?

    Minor editorial changes have been made to paragraphs (a)(1), 
(a)(2), (g), and (h)(1) in these regulations for greater clarity. The 
latter three changes are intended to clarify that paragraphs (g) and 
(h) are not separate bases for discovery but are subject to and further 
qualify the general provisions in paragraphs (a) and (b) applicable to 
all discovery requests.
    As mentioned previously, paragraph (d) has been revised to set the 
deadline for discovery motions at 7 days after the effective date--
rather than after the ``issuance''--of the referral notice under 7 CFR 
1.626(c)(4), 43 CFR 45.26(c)(4), or 50 CFR 221.26(c)(4).
    Paragraph (h)(4) has been added to provide that, unless otherwise 
agreed to by the parties or authorized by the ALJ upon a showing of 
extraordinary circumstances, a deposition is limited to 1 day of 7 
hours. This limitation is modeled on FRCP 30(d)(2).
    Some commenters recommended that discovery be authorized to begin 
immediately upon referral of a case to an ALJ, and argued that 
requiring authorization from an ALJ or agreement of the parties (as the 
current regulations do) needlessly limits discovery rights. The 
commenters recommended that the Departments adopt the approach of the 
FERC regulations at 18 CFR 385.402(a) and 385.403(a), which authorize 
discovery to begin without the need for ALJ involvement unless there 
are discovery disputes.
    The Departments disagree that the regulations should be changed. As 
noted in the preamble to the interim final rules, discovery procedures 
must be limited in this specialized trial-type hearing context to fit 
within the expedited time frame mandated by section 241 of EPAct. See 
70 FR at 69812. In addition, discovery must be carefully managed to 
ensure that it is appropriate in light of the particular history of the 
underlying licensing proceeding. In most cases, the licensing 
proceeding will have been ongoing for a number of years, and the 
parties will be familiar with the key documents and issues that have 
been developed. Further, the Department will have already filed an 
administrative record to support its preliminary condition or 
prescription, thus making wide-ranging discovery unnecessary.
    Moreover, the current regulations already provide for discovery to 
begin promptly and continue for an adequate time. Where the parties 
agree, discovery may begin right away, without a need for an 
authorizing order of the ALJ. Any discovery motions must be 
expeditiously filed, within 7 days of referral of the case to the ALJ. 
This prompt filing enables the parties to begin as soon as possible to 
formulate their discovery requests and to review one another's 
discovery requests. See 7 CFR 1.641(d), 43 CFR 45.41(d), 50 CFR 
221.41(d).
    The regulations further require the parties to make a good faith 
effort to reach agreement regarding discovery prior to the prehearing 
conference. See 7 CFR 1.640(d)(2), 43 CFR 45.40(d)(2), 50 CFR 
221.40(d)(2). Because the scope

[[Page 17169]]

of discovery is necessarily limited, as discussed above, the default 
date for the close of discovery (25 days after the prehearing 
conference, see 7 CFR 1.641(i), 43 CFR 45.41(i), 50 CFR 221.41(i)) 
should ordinarily be sufficient. However, the revised interim final 
regulations allow the ALJ to adjust the dates for key events, such as 
the prehearing conference and close of discovery, where appropriate.
    These commenters also suggested that the Departments should model 
the trial-type hearing discovery procedures on the FERC rules at 18 CFR 
part 385, subpart D. The Departments do not find it necessary to adopt 
procedures developed in the much broader FERC context. For the reasons 
discussed above, the limited procedures under these regulations are 
appropriate and adequately flexible for expedited trial-type hearing 
proceedings.
    Moreover, contrary to the commenters' suggestions, the procedures 
for initiating discovery under these regulations are not more onerous 
than FERC's. Discovery under the FERC procedures is not necessarily 
automatic, as Rule 410 of the FERC procedures states that a presiding 
officer ``may, by order, deny or limit discovery'' in order, among 
other things, to ``protect a participant or other person from undue 
annoyance, burden, harassment or oppression'' and ``prevent undue delay 
in the proceeding.'' 18 CFR 385.410(c) (emphasis added). See also 18 
CFR 402(a) (scope and right of discovery is dependent upon any relevant 
orders of the presiding officer). Further, similar to the requirement 
in the Departments' regulations that discovery issues be addressed at 
the prehearing conference, the FERC regulations provide that the 
presiding officer may hold a ``discovery conference'' for the purpose 
of resolving disputes or ``scheduling discovery.''
    The mechanisms included in these regulations are also similar to 
those under the FRCP. See Rule 26(d) (providing that, for most kinds of 
cases, parties are prohibited from directing discovery requests to 
other parties prior to conferring with other parties to develop a 
proposed discovery plan under Rule 26(f)).
    For these reasons, no changes to the discovery provisions are 
needed.

7 CFR 1.642 When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?

43 CFR 45.42 When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?

50 CFR 221.42 When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?

    Paragraph (b)(1) of these regulations has been revised to give the 
parties 10 days after the completion of discovery to update their 
witness and exhibit lists, as compared to 5 days in the interim 
regulations. The same change has been made to 7 CFR 1.652(a)(1)(iii), 
43 CFR 45.52(a)(1)(iii), and 50 CFR 221.52(a)(1)(iii) concerning the 
submission of written testimony. The additional time will assist the 
parties in preparing their cases for trial.
    This change will add 5 days to the overall hearing process, in 
addition to the 5 days added by 7 CFR 1.622(a)(1)(ii), 43 CFR 
45.22(a)(1)(ii), and 50 CFR 221.22(a)(1)(ii) concerning notices of 
intervention and responses. A diagram of the trial-type hearing process 
under these revised interim final rules is found in the discussion of 7 
CFR 1.660, 43 CFR 45.60, and 50 CFR 221.60, below.

7 CFR 1.643 What are the requirements for written interrogatories?

43 CFR 45.43 What are the requirements for written interrogatories?

50 CFR 221.43 What are the requirements for written interrogatories?

    A new paragraph (a)(2) has been added to these regulations, stating 
that, unless the parties agree otherwise, a party may propound no more 
than 25 interrogatories, counting discrete subparts as separate 
interrogatories, unless the ALJ approves a higher number upon a showing 
of good cause. This limitation is modeled on FRCP 33(a).

7 CFR 1.644 What are the requirements for depositions?

43 CFR 45.44 What are the requirements for depositions?

50 CFR 221.44 What are the requirements for depositions?

    Some commenters suggested that the regulations pose unnecessary 
hurdles to parties wishing to participate in a deposition via 
telephonic conference call, to record a deposition on videotape, or to 
offer testimony during the trial via telephone. They stated that the 
regulations, as written, allow parties to block others from 
participating in depositions and at the hearing via telephone, which 
may prejudice parties who lack the means to participate in person. The 
commenters stated that no party should be allowed to veto another's 
ability to participate by conference call or video conference, and the 
ALJ should not be allowed to prohibit witnesses from submitting 
testimony by telephone or video, in light of advances in technology.
    Specifically, the commenters suggested that the language ``if 
agreed to by the parties, or approved in the ALJ's order'' in paragraph 
(c)(4) of these regulations be struck from the provision regarding the 
participation in depositions by telephonic means and that the phrase 
``subject to any conditions the parties may agree to or the ALJ may 
impose'' in paragraph (g) be struck from the provision regarding 
recording of depositions on videotape. The commenters also recommended 
that the phrase ``the ALJ may by order allow'' be struck from 7 CFR 
1.652(c), 43 CFR 45.52(c), and 50 CFR 221.52(c) and be replaced with 
the phrase ``the ALJ will allow'' in the provision regarding allowing 
witness testimony by telephonic conference call during the trial.
    The Departments disagree that the regulations need to be amended. 
As written, the regulations do not prevent parties from participating 
in depositions via telephonic conference call, from recording 
depositions on videotape, or from offering testimony during the trial 
via telephone or video recording. Rather, the regulations offer parties 
the opportunity to address such matters by agreement. If the parties 
are unable to agree, the regulations appropriately allow the ALJ to 
manage these matters within his or her discretion, with input from the 
parties as appropriate. Because the ALJ will be in the best position to 
evaluate the parties' relative abilities to participate and the other 
needs in the case (need for expedition versus need for live testimony, 
availability of technologies, costs, etc.), this issue is best 
addressed on a case-by-case basis, as the current regulations 
contemplate.

7 CFR 1.647 What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

43 CFR 45.47 What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

50 CFR 221.47 What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

    Minor editorial changes have been made to paragraph (a)(1) and 
(a)(2) of these regulations to clarify that, while it is up to each 
party to decide whether or

[[Page 17170]]

not it wishes to have a subpoena issued, a party may obtain a subpoena 
only by filing a motion with the ALJ.

7 CFR 1.650 When and where will the hearing be held?

43 CFR 45.50 When and where will the hearing be held?

50 CFR 221.50 When and where will the hearing be held?

    As revised, paragraph (a) of these regulations states that the 
hearing will be held at the time and place set during the prehearing 
conference, generally within 25 days after the completion of discovery, 
an increase from the 15 days provided in the interim regulations. This 
25-day period includes the 5 days previously added by 7 CFR 
1.642(b)(1), 43 CFR 45.42(b)(1), and 50 CFR 221.42(b)(1) concerning 
updated witness and exhibit lists, so the net increase is a further 5 
days, to assist the parties in preparing their cases for trial.
    Thus, the regulatory changes discussed to this point add a total of 
15 days to the overall hearing process: 5 days for the notice of 
intervention and response under 7 CFR 1.622(a)(1)(ii), 43 CFR 
45.22(a)(1)(ii), and 50 CFR 221.22(a)(1)(ii); 5 days for the updated 
witness and exhibit lists under 7 CFR 1.642(b)(1), 43 CFR 45.42(b)(1), 
and 50 CFR 221.42(b)(1); and 5 days for the start of the hearing under 
7 CFR 1.650, 43 CFR 45.50, and 50 CFR 221.50. See the trial-type 
hearing process diagram in the discussion of 7 CFR 1.660, 43 CFR 45.60, 
and 50 CFR 221.60, below.
    Some commenters observed that the interim regulations are silent on 
the location of the trial-type hearing, other than stating that the 
location will be decided at the prehearing conference. They suggested 
that each hearing be held in a field location commonly used by the 
parties to discuss matters concerning the hydropower project that is 
the subject of the hearing or, if such a locale is not possible, in 
Washington, DC. The commenters thus recommended that paragraph (a) of 
these regulations be amended to include as a final sentence, ``A 
location local to the project and convenient to the parties will be 
preferred.'' HRC Comments at 46.
    The Departments agree that the hearings should be held in a 
location that is convenient to the parties whenever possible. However, 
no change in the regulatory language is necessary. As the rule is 
currently written, the ALJ has discretion to manage hearing locations. 
As the ALJs have done in prior cases, the Departments expect that an 
ALJ will take into consideration factors such as convenience to the 
parties and to the ALJ, the location of witnesses, and the availability 
of adequate hearing facilities when determining the location of a 
hearing.

7 CFR 1.651 What are the parties' rights during the hearing?

43 CFR 45.51 What are the parties' rights during the hearing?

50 CFR 221.51 What are the parties' rights during the hearing?

    Paragraph (a) of these regulations has been revised to clarify that 
the parties' right to present evidence is qualified by the requirements 
of other regulations governing the parties' initial pleadings and 
prehearing submissions.

7 CFR 1.652 What are the requirements for presenting testimony?

43 CFR 45.52 What are the requirements for presenting testimony?

50 CFR 221.52 What are the requirements for presenting testimony?

    Two changes have been made to these sections with respect to 
written direct testimony. First, paragraph (a) has been revised to 
distinguish between direct testimony for each party's initial case and 
direct rebuttal testimony. As revised, the regulations provide that all 
direct testimony for each party's initial case must be prepared and 
submitted in written form; it will be up to the ALJ to decide whether 
to allow rebuttal testimony, and if so, whether to require that it be 
submitted in written form also.
    Second, as previously mentioned, paragraph (a)(1)(iii) has been 
revised to increase from 5 days to 10 days the time that the parties 
have to submit their written testimony. These are the same additional 5 
days provided by revised 7 CFR 1.642(b)(1), 43 CFR 45.42(b)(1), and 50 
CFR 221.42(b)(1) concerning updated witness and exhibit lists, and they 
do not further extend the overall hearing process.

7 CFR 1.657 Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of 
proof applies?

43 CFR 45.57 Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of 
proof applies?

50 CFR 221.57 Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of 
proof applies?

    The interim regulations specified that the standard of proof 
applicable to a trial-type hearing is a preponderance of the evidence. 
The interim final rule did not address the issue of which party bears 
the burden of proof, other than to request comments on that question. 
70 FR at 69813.
    Commenters generally supported the rule with respect to the 
standard of proof; and they agreed that the burden of persuasion should 
be assigned, in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 556(d), to the party that is 
``the proponent of [the] rule or order.'' They disagreed, however, as 
to which party is the ``proponent.''
    According to EEI/NHA, ``In the mandatory conditioning context, the 
proponent is the Department that seeks to impose a condition on a 
license.'' EEI/NHA comments at 19. PacifiCorp and Southern Co. filed 
comments agreeing with EEI/NHA. According to HRC, on the other hand,

    The hearing requester is undoubtedly the proponent of a final 
decision by the ALJ resolving disputed issues of material facts in 
the requester's favor. While the Secretary's filing of mandatory 
conditions gives rise to the dispute, the conditions themselves are 
not the subject of the hearing. The conditions, and whether they are 
supported by substantial evidence, are only reviewable under FPA 
section 313[,] 16 U.S.C. 825l. As such, the Secretary is not the 
proponent of an order by the ALJ in the agency trial-type hearing. 
Rather, the proponent is the hearing requester.

HRC comments at 32. CBD and GYC filed similar comments on this issue. 
Other commenters argued that the hearing requester bears the burden of 
proof that a disputed issue of material fact exists and then the burden 
shifts to the Department to support its condition or prescription.
    The question of which party bears the burden of persuasion has been 
addressed in six proceedings initiated under the interim final rules. 
Each of six independent ALJs, including at least one from each 
Department, concluded that the hearing requester bears the burden of 
persuasion. Idaho Power Co. v. Bureau of Land Management, No. DCHD 
2006-01 (DOI, May 3, 2006); In re Idaho Power Co. Hells Canyon Complex, 
No. 06-0001 (USDA, May 31, 2006); In re Klamath Hydroelectric Project, 
No. 2006-NMFS-0001 (USCG, July 6, 2006); Public Service Co. of New 
Hampshire v. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, No. DCHD-2006-02 (DOI, 
Aug. 9, 2006); In re Santee Cooper Hydroelectric Project, No. 2006-
NMFS-0001 (USCG, Sept. 15, 2006); Avista Corp. v. Bureau of Indian 
Affairs, DCHD-2007-01 (DOI, Nov. 1, 2006).
    The Departments concur with HRC and the unanimous position of the 
ALJs on this issue. That position is consistent with the general rule 
that the burden of persuasion lies with the party seeking relief. See 
Schaffer v. Weast, 546 U.S. 49 (2005) (characterizing 5 U.S.C. 556(d) 
as applying the general rule and placing the burden of persuasion on 
parents

[[Page 17171]]

challenging an individualized education plan for their child, not on 
the school district that proposed the plan).
    A hearing request under EPAct section 241 is a challenge to the 
factual basis for a Department's preliminary condition or prescription. 
The validity of the condition or prescription is not itself at issue, 
as EPAct allows for a hearing only on disputed issues of material fact, 
and the ALJ has no authority to adopt, modify, or reject a preliminary 
condition or prescription. See 7 CFR 1.660(b)(3), 43 CFR 45.60(b)(3), 
50 CFR 221.60(b)(3). The requester seeks a decision from the ALJ that 
the facts are different from those assumed by the Department in its 
preliminary condition or prescription. The requester is thus the party 
seeking relief, the proponent of the order in the trial-type hearing, 
and the party that bears the burden of persuasion.
    The revised interim final regulations add a new paragraph (a) 
concerning the burden of persuasion and retain the standard of proof 
from the interim regulations in paragraph (b). The combined effect of 
the burden of persuasion and the standard of proof is that, in order 
for the hearing requester to prevail on any given issue, it must 
establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the facts are as the 
requester asserts, rather than as the Department asserts. If the ALJ 
finds that it is more likely than not that the facts are as the 
Department asserts, or that the evidence is so closely balanced that 
there is no preponderance in either direction, the requester will have 
failed to meet its burden of persuasion and the Department's factual 
assertions on the issue will stand.

7 CFR 1.659 What are the requirements for post-hearing briefs?

43 CFR 45.59 What are the requirements for post-hearing briefs?

50 CFR 221.59 What are the requirements for post-hearing briefs?

    Paragraph (a)(1) of these regulations has been revised to increase 
the time that the parties have to file their post-hearing briefs from 
10 days to 15 days. This change will add 5 days to the overall hearing 
process, beyond the 15 days added by regulatory changes discussed 
previously. See the trial-type hearing process diagram, below.

7 CFR 1.660 What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?

43 CFR 45.60 What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?

50 CFR 221.60 What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?

    Commenters raised a number of issues related to these regulations, 
including the timing and finality of the ALJ's decision and the ability 
of an ALJ from one Department to render a decision for another 
Department.
    Timing of the ALJ's decision in relation to the TTH process. The 
interim regulations provided that the ALJ must issue a decision within 
30 days after the close of the hearing or 90 days after issuance of the 
referral notice, whichever occurs first. As explained in the preamble 
to the interim final rules, the Departments interpreted EPAct's 
requirement of ``an agency trial-type hearing of no more than 90 days'' 
as mandating that the portion of the overall hearing process from 
referral to the ALJ to final decision be completed within 90 days. 
This, in turn, necessitated a highly compressed schedule for the 
prehearing conference, discovery, written testimony, and post-hearing 
briefing, so that the ALJ could meet the 90-day deadline for issuing a 
decision.
    The Departments received numerous comments about the tight time 
frames in the interim regulations and also received several suggestions 
for revisions extending certain procedural steps. In particular, 
several commenters argued that the time for the ALJ's decision should 
fall outside the 90-day hearing time frame. EEI/NHA argued that the 
Departments had misconstrued the statute on this issue:

    [T]he extraordinarily compressed hearing schedule is 
inconsistent with the plain language of section 241, which provides 
that a ``determination on the record,'' i.e., the ALJ's decision, 
shall occur ``after opportunity for agency trial-type hearing . . . 
.'' Therefore, the statute expressly requires that the ALJ's 
``determination on the record'' be made after completion of the 
hearing, not during the hearing process itself.

EEI/NHA Comments at 12. EEI/NHA buttressed their argument by relying on 
the distinction between hearings, which are governed by one section of 
the APA, 5 U.S.C. 556, and decisions, which are governed by another, 5 
U.S.C. 557. Reading EPAct and the APA together, EEI/NHA concluded that

the rule should be revised to require that only the hearing process 
itself, as defined by section 556 of the APA, be conducted within 
the 90-day limit. It is plainly inconsistent with the structure of 
the APA to include the briefing and decision-making process within 
the 90-day limit.

EEI/NHA Comments at 14. Commenters also argued that the 90-day hearing 
clock should exclude discovery, begin to run with the submission of 
written direct testimony, and close after rebuttal testimony and cross-
examination.

    The Departments agree in part. The provisions of EPAct and the APA 
that the commenters cite do provide a basis for considering the post-
hearing briefing and decision stages of the hearing process to be 
outside the 90-day requirement. However, other provisions of EPAct 
militate against EEI/NHA's expansive view that the 90-day period should 
not begin until discovery and other prehearing stages have been 
completed, and that the briefing and decision stages should extend for 
75 days beyond the end of the 90-day period.
    First, EPAct required the three Departments to ``establish jointly, 
by rule, the procedures for such expedited trial-type hearing, 
including the opportunity to undertake discovery and cross-examine 
witnesses.'' A schedule that allowed 90 days just for the taking of 
evidence at the hearing could hardly be considered ``expedited.'' 
Moreover, the statute's specific mention of discovery indicates that 
Congress intended the 90 days to cover both prehearing and hearing 
procedures.
    Second, EEI/NHA cites APA section 557 to support its argument that 
post-trial briefing should not be considered part of the 90-day hearing 
process, but rather part of the ``decision.'' EEI/NHA notes that this 
separate section addressing decisions specifically affords parties the 
opportunity to offer proposed findings of fact and conclusions. The 
relevant APA section, however, is 557(c), which expressly applies only 
to ``a recommended, initial, or tentative decision, or a decision on 
agency review of the decision of subordinate employees.'' 5 U.S.C. 
557(c). The ALJ's opinion in an EPAct trial-type hearing does not fall 
within any of these decisional categories. The preamble to the interim 
final rules recognized that the EPAct trial-type hearing decision is 
not the type contemplated by section 557(c). 70 FR at 69814. And at 
least one ALJ has recognized the unique nature of EPAct trial-type 
hearings, noting in the burden of proof context that the hearing 
provisions of the APA ``do not however directly or clearly apply to the 
postures of the parties in this unique new proceeding authorized by the 
EPAct.'' Avista Corp. at 6.
    Third, EPAct section 241 requires that the trial-type hearing be 
conducted ``within the time frame established by

[[Page 17172]]

[FERC] for each license proceeding.'' A hearing process extending more 
than 6 months after referral of the case to the ALJ, as urged by EEI/
NHA, would be difficult to square with this Congressional mandate in 
many cases. Indeed, as noted previously in connection with 7 CFR 1.623, 
43 CFR 45.23, and 50 CFR 221.23, several procedural steps remain to be 
completed after issuance of the ALJ's opinion; and many, if not all, of 
these subsequent steps are dependent on receipt of the ALJ's opinion. 
Excluding discovery and post-trial briefing from the 90-day time frame 
and expending 90 days solely on the presentation of testimony and 
evidence would extend the hearing process, push back these subsequent 
steps, and create delays in the licensing process--a result that 
Congress clearly sought to avoid.
    In any event, EPAct requires the Departments to afford license 
parties an ``opportunity for an agency trial-type hearing of no more 
than 90 days'' (emphasis added). This language leaves it to the 
Departments' discretion whether the hearing, even excluding post-
hearing briefing and the ALJ's decision, will take the full 90 days or 
something less than 90 days.
    In light of the competing considerations, the Departments have 
decided to extend some of the time frames in the hearing process that 
seemed particularly tight. As noted previously, 5 days have been added 
to the period for filing a notice of intervention and response, which 
occurs before the case is referred to the ALJ. Five days each have 
likewise been added to the periods for filing updated witness lists, 
exhibit lists, and written testimony, for commencing the hearing, and 
for filing post-hearing briefs, all of which occur after the case has 
been referred to the ALJ.
    Under this schedule, assuming a 5-day evidentiary hearing, the 
post-hearing briefs would be filed about 90 days after the case has 
been referred to the ALJ, as opposed to 75 days under the interim 
regulations. Under revised 7 CFR 1.660(a)(1), 43 CFR 45.60(a)(1), and 
50 CFR 221.60(a)(1), the ALJ would then have 15 days after the deadline 
for filing the post-hearing briefs, which is 30 days from the close of 
the hearing, to render his or her decision. This timing means that the 
ALJ decision would be issued within 105 days after the case was 
referred to him or her. If necessitated by the length of the 
evidentiary hearing, the desirability of reply briefs, or other 
circumstances, the ALJ could extend the deadline for his or her 
decision under revised 7 CFR 1.631(c), 43 CFR 45.31(c), and 50 CFR 
221.31(c), but not past 120 days after the case was referred to the 
ALJ, under 7 CFR 1.660(a)(2), 43 CFR 45.60(a)(2), and 50 CFR 
221.60(a)(2).\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ The only exception would be if the ALJ has to be replaced 
under 7 CFR 1.632, 43 CFR 45.32, or 50 CFR 221.32 dealing with 
unavailability or 7 CFR 1.633, 43 CFR 45.33, or 50 CFR 221.33 
dealing with disqualification.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Thus, the Departments have decided to keep the (initial) post-
hearing briefing within the 90-day schedule; but based on EEI/NHA's 
argument, have allowed the ALJ 15 to 30 days past the 90-day period to 
render his or her decision. Even if the ALJ takes the full 30 days, 
resulting in a decision 120 days after the case was referred, the 
decision would come before comments are due to FERC on its draft NEPA 
document under FERC's usual schedule set forth in 18 CFR 5.25(c). Even 
as extended, therefore, the trial-type hearing can be conducted 
``within the time frame established by [FERC] for each license 
proceeding,'' as required by EPAct.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ As noted above, a trial-type hearing process could be stayed 
for settlement negotiations up to 120 days under revised 7 CFR 
1.624, 43 CFR 45.24, or 50 CFR 221.24, further extending the overall 
hearing process, but only if FERC revises the time frame for the 
license proceeding to accommodate the stay period and any subsequent 
hearing process required if settlement discussions fail.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The following diagram shows the overall trial-type hearing process 
under the revised interim final rules. The number above each arrow 
shows the maximum number of days normally allowed from the completion 
of the previous step to the completion of the next step, while the 
number below each arrow shows the cumulative number of days from the 
beginning of the trial-type hearing process to the completion of the 
next step in the process.

[[Page 17173]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR31MR15.000

    Timing of the ALJ's decision in relation to FERC's NEPA process. 
The Hoopa Valley Tribe (HVT) raised a concern that, under the 
regulatory schedule, FERC will prepare its draft EIS at the same time 
the ALJ is resolving disputed material facts relating to the 
environment. HVT comments at 2. The Departments acknowledge that, in a 
given case, the ALJ's resolution of disputed factual issues may affect 
the timing for completing the NEPA analysis and document. Therefore, on 
a case-by-case basis, FERC should consider whether supplemental NEPA 
analysis is appropriate and proceed to supplement when a resolution of 
disputed factual issues results in substantial changes that are 
relevant to environmental concerns.
    Finality of the ALJ's decision. Some commenters recommended that 
the regulations be changed to provide that factual findings of an ALJ 
are advisory to the Secretaries of the Departments involved, rather 
than final. They contended that the Secretaries may not lawfully 
recognize an ALJ's finding of facts as binding, particularly where the 
findings are rendered by the designated ALJ of a different Department 
in a consolidated case. The commenters also disputed that ALJ findings 
may be fairly characterized as wholly factual and devoid of substantive 
legal rulings. Finally, the commenters contended that there is no 
precedent for the approach taken in the interim rules, and they pointed 
to the advisory nature of decisions of FERC's Dispute Resolution Panel 
(under 18 CFR 5.14). Specifically, the commenters suggested amending 
paragraph (d) of these regulations by changing the title from 
``Finality'' to ``Review,'' striking from the first sentence the word 
``final,'' and replacing it with the term ``advisory.''
    Regardless of what practice is followed for other aspects of the 
licensing process before FERC, EPAct mandates that disputed issues of 
material fact with respect to conditions and prescriptions ``shall be 
determined in a single trial-type hearing'' conducted by the relevant 
Department. 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 811 (emphasis added). The Departments 
have reasonably construed the statutory language to require that the 
factual findings of an ALJ be used by the Secretaries of the 
Departments involved in developing modified conditions and 
prescriptions.
    The Departments' view is supported by the district court's holding 
in American Rivers:

[T]he Energy Policy Act explicitly provides that `[a]ll disputed 
issues of material fact raised by any party shall be determined in a 
single trial-type hearing' and makes no provision for appeals of 
that determination. By making the ALJ's decision on factual issues 
final, it appears that the departments are simply interpreting what 
Congress has mandated and establishing agency procedures for 
fulfilling this mandate.

2006 WL 2841929, * 7.
    The Secretaries' authority to determine whether to issue mandatory 
conditions and prescribe fishways is not undercut by this approach. 
While the ALJ may determine specific facts, the resource agencies 
retain the responsibility of determining the weight and significance to 
be accorded such facts in finalizing mandatory conditions or 
prescriptions, in light of the resource agencies' objectives for the 
resources they manage. The Departments also have an obligation to 
ensure that their modified conditions and prescriptions are supported 
by substantial evidence as informed by all relevant information in the 
administrative record, which may include new information that was not 
available during the hearing.
    The Departments also note that, contrary to the commenter's 
suggestion, both EPAct and the interim final regulations clearly 
preserve the Secretaries' discretion to determine whether to issue 
conditions or prescriptions and how to structure them. The regulations 
are clear that the ALJ is empowered to render only factual findings. 
While conclusions of law necessary to reach those findings (such as 
rulings regarding the admissibility of evidence) may be made, the ALJs 
may not include substantive legal conclusions with their final 
determinations.
    Nevertheless, to avoid confusion over different possible meanings 
of the term ``final,'' the Departments have revised

[[Page 17174]]

paragraph (d) to state that the ALJ's decision with respect to the 
disputed issues of material fact ``will not be subject to further 
administrative review.''
    Ability of an ALJ from one Department to render a decision for 
another Department. With respect to the commenters' objection that an 
ALJ in one Department may not render findings of fact that would be 
determinative for another Department, the Departments respond that this 
would happen only where cases have been consolidated due to the 
commonality of some of the issues. Consolidation in these circumstances 
will benefit both the Departments and the parties by avoiding 
duplication of effort, scheduling conflicts, and the risk of 
inconsistent results. The court in American Rivers recognized 
consolidation as a valid practice.
    As amended by EPAct, FPA sections 4(e) and 18 provide that ``[a]ll 
disputed issues of material fact raised by any party shall be 
determined in a single trial-type hearing to be conducted by the 
relevant resource agency in accordance with the regulations promulgated 
under this subsection . . . '' 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 811 (emphasis added). 
Thus, when the Departments decide to consolidate hearing requests under 
these regulations and refer them to a single ALJ, they are exercising 
the authority given them by Congress to determine the relevant resource 
agency to conduct the hearing on their behalf. Such arrangements are 
also authorized by the Economy Act, 31 U.S.C. 1535.
    The interim final rules explained that hearing requests received by 
NOAA would be referred to an appropriate ALJ office outside the 
Department of Commerce because neither NOAA nor the Department of 
Commerce has a staff of ALJs. See 70 FR at 69810. NOAA is taking this 
opportunity to clarify that, for any trial-type hearings arising with 
respect to NOAA conditions or prescriptions under FPA sections 4(e) or 
18, the United States Coast Guard Office of Administrative Law Judges, 
within the Department of Homeland Security, is an appropriate forum.
    Authority to refer trial-type hearings involving NOAA under the FPA 
to the Coast Guard's Office of ALJs is set forth at 15 U.S.C. 1541, 
which provides that,

with respect to any marine resource conservation law or regulation 
administered by the Secretary of Commerce acting through the 
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, all adjudicatory 
functions which are required by chapter 5 of Title 5 to be performed 
by an Administrative Law Judge may be performed by the United States 
Coast Guard on a reimbursable basis.

Coast Guard ALJs have thus handled proceedings as needed with respect 
to several hearing requests arising under the interim final 
regulations.
    Other changes. The revised interim final regulations make a few 
additional changes to 7 CFR 1.660, 43 CFR 45.60, and 50 CFR 221.60. 
They add a new paragraph (c)(2), requiring the ALJ to prepare a list of 
all the documents that constitute the complete record for the hearing 
process and to certify that the list is complete. Under paragraph 
(c)(3), that list is then sent along with the record to FERC for 
inclusion in the record for the license proceeding. Two new sentences 
are added to paragraph (c)(3), specifying what documents should be 
forwarded to FERC for cases in which a settlement is reached.

7 CFR 1.671 How do I propose an alternative?

43 CFR 45.71 How do I propose an alternative?

50 CFR 221.71 How do I propose an alternative?

    As with the change to 7 CFR 1.621(a)(2), 43 CFR 45.21(a)(2), and 50 
CFR 221.21(a)(2) discussed above, paragraph (a)(2) of these regulations 
has been revised to provide a longer period of time--60 days as 
compared to 30 days--for a license party to submit a proposed 
alternative condition or prescription to a Department in cases where 
the Department is exercising its reserved authority after issuance of a 
license under 7 CFR 1.601(d)(2), 43 CFR 45.1(d)(2), or 50 CFR 
221.1(d)(2).
    Several commenters requested that the Departments extend the 
deadline for filing alternative conditions and prescriptions because 
they believe the interim regulations do not provide sufficient time to 
prepare alternatives or attempt informal resolution of contested 
issues. Specifically, these commenters suggested that the Departments 
extend the existing deadline for filing alternatives from 30 days to 45 
days
    The Departments have decided to retain a concurrent filing deadline 
for requests for hearings and proposals of alternative conditions. As 
explained in the preamble to the interim final rules, the 30-day 
deadline for filing alternative conditions and prescriptions provides 
several benefits for the parties, FERC, and the Departments. See 70 FR 
69807. Among these benefits are, first, that early submission of 
proposed alternatives helps ensure that such proposals are available to 
FERC during the development of its draft NEPA document. Second, the 
concurrent filing may help inform any settlement negotiations, thus 
potentially avoiding the need for a trial-type hearing.
    Both of these concerns remain relevant and have been reaffirmed in 
the Departments' experience implementing the interim final regulations. 
In practice, there have been a number of cases where the relevant 
parties were able to settle disputes without the need for a trial-type 
hearing. In several of those cases, the Departments found that having 
proposed alternatives in hand to review along with the hearing request 
furthered the goal of identifying conditions and prescriptions that 
achieved necessary resources protection while avoiding litigation.
    Also in practice, parties did not appear to be unduly burdened by 
the requirement to concurrently file hearing requests with proposed 
alternatives, as reflected in the number of alternatives filed in a 
timely manner. We previously noted how proposed alternatives may factor 
into settlement discussions (see discussion of 7 CFR 1.625, 43 CFR 
45.25, and 50 CFR 22.25).
    A diagram of the overall alternative condition and prescription 
process under these revised interim final rules is found in the 
discussion of 7 CFR 1.673, 43 CFR 45.73, and 50 CFR 221.73, below.

7 CFR 1.672 May I file a revised proposed alternative?

43 CFR 45.72 May I file a revised proposed alternative?

50 CFR 221.72 May I file a revised proposed alternative?

    These sections are new. They provide that, within 20 days after 
issuance of the ALJ's decision in a trial-type hearing, a license party 
may file a revised alternative condition or prescription, if two 
conditions are met. First, the party must have previously filed a 
proposed alternative under 7 CFR 1.671, 43 CFR 45.71, or 50 CFR 221.71. 
And second, the revised proposed alternative must be designed to 
respond to one or more specific findings of fact by the ALJ.
    These sections afford an opportunity to license parties who have 
previously proposed an alternative to submit a revised alternative, if 
the facts as found by the ALJ following the trial-type hearing are 
different from those assumed by the party as the basis for its original 
alternative. The revised proposed alternative must identify the 
specific ALJ findings that it addresses and how the revised alternative 
differs from the original alternative. Filing a revised alternative 
will constitute a withdrawal of the original alternative.

[[Page 17175]]

7 CFR 1.673 When will the Forest Service file its modified condition or 
prescription?

43 CFR 45.73 When will the bureau file its modified condition or 
prescription?

50 CFR 221.73 When will NMFS file its modified condition or 
prescription?

    These sections have been redesignated because of the insertion of 
the revised proposed alternative provisions just discussed. They have 
also been renamed to focus on the timing of the Department's filing of 
its modified condition or prescription. Under paragraph (a), the 
Department will generally take action on any proposed alternative and 
file its modified condition or prescription within 60 days after the 
deadline for filing comments on FERC's draft NEPA document under 18 CFR 
5.25(c) unless additional time is needed to complete supplemental 
analysis of the modified condition or prescription. This will typically 
be 75-90 days after the deadline for the parties to file revised 
alternatives under 7 CFR 1.672, 45 CFR 45.72, or 50 CFR 221.72, 
depending on when the ALJ decision is issued and any necessary 
supplemental analysis is completed. However, under new paragraph (b), 
if the Department needs additional time to complete the steps set forth 
in paragraph (a), it will so inform FERC within that same 60-day 
period. See City of Tacoma.
    The following diagram shows the overall alternative condition and 
prescription process under the revised rules. The number above each 
arrow shows the maximum number of days normally allowed from the 
completion of the previous step to the completion of the next step, 
while the number below each arrow shows the cumulative number of days 
from the beginning of the alternatives process to the completion of the 
next step in the process.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR31MR15.001

    HRC suggested that the regulations expressly provide instructions 
to parties who wish to submit comments regarding proposed alternative 
conditions or prescriptions. It noted that the regulations already 
obligate the Departments to consider ``evidence and supporting material 
provided by any license party,'' comments on the preliminary condition 
or prescription, and comments on FERC's draft or final NEPA documents. 
HRC suggested that the list of material to be considered in reviewing 
an alternative implies that any comments received on alternatives will 
be considered, without specifying how that should be done.
    HRC proposed that paragraph (a) of these regulations be amended to 
expressly include comments received on the proposed alternative. It 
further recommended that a new paragraph (e) be added to provide a 
discrete comment period on alternative conditions and prescriptions. 
Such comments, HRC suggested, should be accepted from any member of the 
public, whether or not they are parties to the license proceeding. 
According to HRC, the Departments cannot rely solely on comments 
submitted to the FERC on the draft NEPA document.
    Finally, HRC suggested adding a completely new section (to come 
after 7 CFR 1.671, 43 CFR 45.71, and 50 CFR 221.71) to address how 
comments on the proposed alternative may be submitted. It suggested 
that the regulations include: A 60-day comment period on proposed 
alternatives; filing and service requirements for comments similar to 
those for proposed alternatives; a requirement that parties provide 
specific citations to scientific studies, literature, and other 
documents and to supply copies of materials not already in the 
licensing proceeding; and a statement that parties may also file 
comments on the FERC NEPA document addressing the proposed alternative 
within the time frame established by FERC.
    The Departments disagree that a specific comment process for 
alternatives is needed. The statute lays out specific criteria for 
acceptance of an alternative, and the existing regulations require that 
the proponent submit information on each of the criteria. The 
regulations also require that alternatives and supporting documents be 
served on each party to the license proceeding, so that interested 
parties will have notice. Any license party is free to submit comments, 
either supporting or opposing a proposed alternative; and the 
Departments will consider comment materials timely submitted by all 
parties.
    As discussed below, the Departments are amending the regulations at 
7 CFR 1.674, 43 CFR 45.74, and 50 CFR 221.74 to clarify that they will 
consider information regarding alternatives submitted by any license 
party by the close of the FERC NEPA comment period.

7 CFR 1.674 How will the Forest Service analyze a proposed alternative 
and formulate its modified condition?

43 CFR 45.74 How will the bureau analyze a proposed alternative and 
formulate its modified condition or prescription?

50 CFR 221.74 How will NMFS analyze a proposed alternative and 
formulate its modified condition or prescription?

    Paragraph (a) of these regulations (redesignated like the previous 
section), has been revised slightly to clarify that a Department's 
burden in reviewing any proposed alternatives is to consider evidence 
and supporting material provided by any license party or otherwise 
reasonably available to the

[[Page 17176]]

Department, recognizing that the Department has a limited time to 
complete its review and prepare the required written analysis.
    As mentioned above, a new paragraph (c) has been added to specify 
that the Department will consider evidence and supporting material 
provided by any license party by the deadline for filing comments on 
FERC's draft NEPA document under 18 CFR 5.25(c). Given the complexity 
of the issues and the volume of material to be analyzed in the typical 
case, the Departments cannot reasonably be expected to continue to 
accept and incorporate new information right up until the FERC filing 
deadline for modified conditions and prescriptions.
    Finally, paragraph (d) (as redesignated) has been revised to 
specify that, if an alternative submitted by a license party under 7 
CFR 1.671, 43 CFR 45.71, or 50 CFR 221.71 was subsequently withdrawn, 
the Department will include in its statement to FERC an explanatory 
notation that a proposed alternative was voluntarily withdrawn. This 
provision responds to GAO's recommendation that the Department provide 
additional information in cases where an alternative was withdrawn, 
e.g., as the result of settlement negotiations with the Department.
    The Departments received comments on various aspects of these 
regulations, including the consideration to be given alternative 
conditions and prescriptions, the meaning of ``substantial evidence,'' 
``adequate protection,'' and ``cost,'' and the applicability of FPA 
section 33.
    Consideration of alternatives. Some commenters proposed regulatory 
revisions to this section clarifying that the Department has the right 
to reject alternatives that do not meet the FPA section 33 criteria for 
resource protection, cost, and improved project operation, and 
specifying that the Department must consider all proposed alternatives 
at the same time. These concepts are already captured by EPAct and 
these regulations, including the regulatory time frames for submitting 
and considering alternatives. No additional regulatory language or 
clarification is necessary.
    The same commenters also proposed a two-tiered approach under which 
alternatives not meeting the section 33 criteria for required 
acceptance would be moved into a category of alternatives that the 
Department ``may consider.'' HRC comments at 66. According to this 
proposal, where multiple alternatives have been submitted that do not 
meet the statutory criteria for required acceptance, ``[a]ll of these 
alternatives are then compared to the original condition the Department 
proposed, and the Department makes a determination as to which best 
protects the resource.'' HRC comments at 66.
    The commenters' proposal appears to impose a new substantive 
standard for selection of ``second tier'' alternatives--a standard that 
Congress did not require. These regulations are limited to implementing 
the specific requirements of section 33. No regulation is needed to 
address Departmental action where an alternative fails to meet the 
statutory criteria, as the Departments retain discretion to consider 
all record documents. The commenters' proposed revisions have not been 
adopted.
    Substantial evidence. Some commenters stated their assumption that 
the term ``substantial evidence'' in paragraph (b) refers only to the 
Department's obligation to base any conditions and prescriptions on 
substantial evidence. To clarify, it is incumbent on the proponent of 
an alternative to provide the supporting information required by 7 CFR 
1.671(b), 43 CFR 45.71(b), or 50 CFR 221.71(b) for the Secretary to 
consider in determining whether the statutory criteria are met.
    Adequate protection. Some commenters suggested that this section 
clarify the criteria of ``adequate protection'' as specified in EPAct 
and paragraph (b)(2)(i) of these regulations for adoption of 
alternative conditions under section 33. They argued that, in light of 
Endangered Species Act regulations, ``adequate protection'' includes 
both conservation and recovery of threatened and endangered species.
    The ``adequate protection'' standard in section 33(a)(2) applies 
specifically to the alternatives analysis process for conditions under 
FPA section 4(e). Section 4(e) in turn authorizes the Secretaries of 
the Interior, Commerce, and Agriculture to condition hydropower 
licenses on provisions deemed ``necessary for the adequate protection 
and utilization'' of Federal reservations under their jurisdiction. 16 
U.S.C. 797(e) (emphasis added).
    Determining what constitutes ``adequate protection'' when 
developing section 4(e) conditions falls within the sole authority and 
discretion of the relevant Secretary, and the answer will vary among 
cases and reservations depending on a variety of factors. Similarly, 
the relevant Secretary has sole authority and discretion to determine 
if a proposed alternative condition rises to the level of ``adequate 
protection.'' As such, the Departments do not believe that further 
clarification is feasible or necessary.
    Cost. The commenters also suggested that determining whether 
alternative conditions and prescriptions ``cost significantly less to 
implement'' under section 33 and paragraph (b)(1)(i) of these 
regulations not be limited to short-term economic considerations, but 
also include consideration of both the long-term costs of lost 
resources and the benefits of protection. The Departments agree that 
the section 33 alternatives process should examine costs in a broader 
context than simply short-term economic costs to the project operator. 
No regulatory revision is required, however, to effectuate this point.
    Applicability of FPA section 33. Under paragraph (c)(1) of the 
interim rules, when the Department files its modified condition or 
prescription, it must also file a written statement explaining the 
basis for the condition or prescription and the reasons for not 
adopting any alternative. Under paragraph (d) of the interim rules, the 
written statement must demonstrate that the Department gave equal 
consideration to the effects of the modified condition or prescription 
and any alternative not adopted on energy supply, distribution, cost, 
and use; flood control; navigation; water supply; air quality; and the 
preservation of other aspects of environmental quality. Revised 
versions of these provisions are now found in paragraphs (d) and (e).
    Some commenters argued that the plain language of FPA section 
33(a)(4) and (b)(4) must be interpreted to require that the Department 
file a written statement explaining the basis for its condition or 
prescription and show that it gave ``equal consideration'' to the 
factors identified in the statute whether or not a party has submitted 
a proposed alternative condition or prescription. Some commenters 
further suggested that a statement must be prepared for both 
preliminary and modified (final) conditions and prescriptions.
    The operative statutory language states,

The Secretary concerned shall submit into the public record of the 
Commission proceeding with any condition under section 4(e) or 
alternative condition it accepts under this section, a written 
statement explaining the basis for such condition, and reason for 
not accepting any alternative condition under this section. The 
written statement must demonstrate that the Secretary gave equal 
consideration to the effects of the condition adopted and 
alternatives not accepted on energy supply, distribution, cost, and 
use; flood control; navigation; water supply; and air quality (in 
addition to the preservation of other aspects of environmental 
quality); based on such information as may be available to the 
Secretary, including information voluntarily provided in a timely

[[Page 17177]]

manner by the applicant and others. The Secretary shall also submit, 
together with the aforementioned written statement, all studies, 
data, and other factual information available to the Secretary and 
relevant to the Secretary's decision.

16 U.S.C. 823d(a)(4). The language at section 823d(b)(4) (regarding 
fishway prescriptions) is substantially identical.
    The Departments disagree that the statute requires a written 
statement demonstrating ``equal consideration'' of the statutory 
factors in cases where no alternatives have been submitted. In 
determining the plain meaning of statutory language, the reviewing body

should not confine itself to examining a particular statutory 
provision in isolation. The meaning--or ambiguity--of certain words 
or phrases may only become evident when placed in context. . . . It 
is a ``fundamental canon of statutory construction that the words of 
a statute must be read in their context and with a view to their 
place in the overall statutory scheme.''

Food and Drug Admin. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 
132-33 (2000), quoting Davis v. Michigan Dept. of Treasury, 489 U.S. 
803, 809 (1989).
    Section 33 is entitled ``Alternative conditions and 
prescriptions,'' and it lays out a sequential series of steps for 
considering proposed alternatives and reaching a final determination. 
Section 33(a)(l) permits any party to a hydropower license proceeding 
to propose an alternative condition. Under section 33(a)(2), the 
Secretary must accept an alternative if it ``(A) provides for the 
adequate protection and utilization of the reservation; and (B) will 
either, as compared to the condition initially [deemed necessary] by 
the Secretary[,] (i) cost significantly less to implement; or (ii) 
result in improved operation of the project works for electricity 
production.'' 16 U.S.C. 823d(a)(2).
    When evaluating an alternative, section 33(a)(3) directs the 
Secretary to consider evidence otherwise available concerning ``the 
implementation costs or operational impacts for electricity production 
of a proposed alternative.'' And section 33(a)(4) directs the Secretary 
to submit a statement ``with any condition under section 4(e) or 
alternative condition [the Secretary] accepts'' to demonstrate that the 
Secretary ``gave equal consideration to the effects of the condition 
adopted and alternatives not accepted.'' 16 U.S.C. 823d(a)(4). Again, 
the language at section 823d(b) (regarding fishway prescriptions) is 
substantially identical.
    Thus, a contextual analysis of section 33 shows that the equal 
consideration requirement is triggered by the submission of an 
alternative condition or prescription. The requirement does not apply 
at the preliminary condition or prescription stage, since no 
alternatives have been submitted at that stage. And it does not apply 
at the modified condition or prescription stage, unless a license party 
has proposed an alternative.
    This contextual analysis of section 33 is buttressed by an 
important practical consideration. In the absence of an alternative 
that has been proposed and supported by a license party under 7 CFR 
1.671(b), 43 CFR 45.71(b), or 50 CFR 221.71(b), the Departments will 
generally lack sufficient information about the factors listed in 
section 33(a)(4) and (b)(4)--energy supply, distribution, cost, and 
use; flood control; navigation; water supply; air quality; and other 
aspects of environmental quality--to provide a meaningful equal 
consideration statement.
    Nevertheless, the Departments as a matter of course submit written 
explanations of the basis for their conditions or prescriptions, 
together with record materials supporting those conditions or 
prescriptions. See redesignated 7 CFR 1.674(c)(1)(i), (2); 43 CFR 
45.74(c)(1)(i), (2); or 50 CFR 221.74(c)(1)(i), (2). And as a matter of 
policy, in cases where a Department determines that it has sufficient 
information and staff resources to provide a meaningful analysis of the 
statutory factors even in the absence of an alternative, it may do so. 
No changes to the regulations are needed in response to the commenters' 
concern.

V. General Comments

A. Disputed Issues of Material Fact

    As noted previously, some commenters urged that the final rules 
provide additional guidance on the types of issues that are appropriate 
for resolution in a trial-type hearing under EPAct. A ``disputed issue 
of material fact'' must meet three fundamental requirements: The matter 
raised must (1) concern a ``fact,'' (2) be ``material,'' and (3) be 
``disputed.'' These are distinct inquiries, and all three must be fully 
considered by an ALJ.
Factuality
    In the context of ordinary litigation, an issue of fact is one that 
would typically be left to a jury in a proceeding where a jury is the 
trier of fact. See William W. Schwarzer, Summary Judgment under the 
Federal Rules: Defining Genuine Issues of Material Fact, 99 FRD. 465, 
470 (1984). Schwarzer explains:

The dictionaries define a fact as a thing done, an action performed, 
or an event or occurrence. One can safely say, therefore, that a 
dispute over whether a thing was done or an event occurred is an 
issue of fact. Such facts, which may be called historical facts, are 
jury issues.

Id.
    While this statement provides a useful starting point, the analogy 
to jury facts may be somewhat confusing in the context of EPAct trial-
type hearings because the ALJ is the factfinder. And while Federal 
litigation may involve a range of issues from purely factual to purely 
legal, with some mixed issues, trial-type hearings under these rules 
are limited to resolving ``disputed issues of material fact.'' Clear 
and specialized standards must be applied to hearing requests under 
these regulations.
    To determine whether an issue is ``factual'' for purposes of these 
regulations, it helps to first distinguish matters of fact from matters 
of law and policy. Substantive legal issues are excluded from the scope 
of the hearing. ALJs are empowered to render legal conclusions only to 
the extent necessary to facilitate the presentation of evidence and 
conduct of the trial on the underlying factual issues. See 7 CFR 
1.60(b)(1)(ii), 43 CFR 45.60(b)(1)(ii), 50 CFR 221.60(b)(1)(ii); 70 FR 
at 69814.
    It would not be appropriate, for example, to hold a hearing on 
whether or not a measure that the Secretary is considering prescribing 
would constitute a ``fishway,'' which is a term that has been partially 
defined by Congress. Public Law 102-486, Sec.  1701(b), 106 Stat. 3008 
(1992). Nor is the ALJ empowered to decide what substantive standards 
must be met to justify the Secretary's exercise of discretion under 
sections 4(e) and 18 (e.g., what level of impacts to resources from the 
existing project must be demonstrated to uphold a condition or 
prescription), or whether the Secretary's condition or prescription is 
``reasonable'' or is supported by substantial evidence in the record. 
Such legal issues can be raised later, in any judicial review of a 
final FERC license, pursuant to 16 U.S.C. 825l. The EPAct trial-type 
hearing process does not substitute for or preempt judicial review of 
final agency decisions, which will be available only after the FERC 
license has been issued.
    Matters of policy are also not appropriate for a trial-type 
hearing. Examples of such matters include what types and levels of 
adverse effects to a species from a project would be ``acceptable,'' or 
what kinds of mitigation measures may be desirable or ``necessary'' to 
protect a resource. These

[[Page 17178]]

are not matters of fact, but rather matters of policy judgment 
committed to the discretion of the Departments, in light of their 
management objectives for the resource. Under EPAct and these 
regulations, the Departments retain the prerogative to make these 
ultimate decisions in light of their policies; the ALJ may not 
appropriately address those issues. See 7 CFR 1.660(b)(3), 43 CFR 
45.60(b)(3), 50 CFR 221.60(b)(3).
    Having ruled out legal and policy issues, it is next useful to 
consider whether an issue presented may be either proved or disproved 
by a preponderance of the evidence. Good examples of factual inquiries 
that lend themselves to resolution via trial-type hearings are set 
forth in the November 2005 preamble--whether a fishery was historically 
warm water or cold water, and whether fish historically were present 
above a dam. 70 FR at 69809. Using the framework discussed above, these 
are clearly ``historical facts'' (or ``jury facts''). Such issues may 
be resolved based on available evidence and do not involve attempts to 
predict what may happen in the future.
Materiality
    To be appropriate for resolution, a factual issue must be 
``material'' to a Secretary's consideration of the preliminary 
condition or prescription, i.e., it must be of the type that lawfully 
``may affect a Department's decision whether to affirm, modify, or 
withdraw [the] condition or prescription.'' 7 CFR 1.602, 43 CFR 45.2, 
50 CFR 221.2. The inquiry is thus particular to the preliminary 
condition or prescription issued and the factual areas considered in 
the development of that condition or prescription. As an initial 
matter, the best indicators of the kinds of factual issues that may 
affect the Department's ultimate decision are the factors identified in 
the preliminary condition or prescription and supporting justification. 
A factual issue not closely related to one of those factors would not 
be material in the absence of a showing that resolution of the issue 
would affect the Department's ultimate decision. Similarly, issues that 
relate to the larger licensing proceeding and will be determined by 
FERC are not ``material'' to the Department's decision and are not 
appropriate for a trial-type hearing.
    In addition to the Department's stated basis for the preliminary 
condition or prescription, the ALJ must be aware of the relevant legal 
framework governing the exercise of conditioning and prescriptive 
authority. Only factual issues that involve the kinds of considerations 
that the Secretary may legally take into account should be viewed as 
potentially affecting the Secretary's ultimate decision. In other 
words, whether an issue of fact is ``material'' must be decided with 
reference to the substantive law governing the Department's exercise of 
authority under the FPA. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 
242, 248 (1986) (FRCP 56 context) (``As to materiality, the substantive 
law will identify which facts are material'').
    Other issues that are not material to a Department's preliminary 
condition or prescription include those that blur the distinction 
between the EPAct trial-type hearing process and the separate 
alternatives process created under new FPA section 33. Trial-type 
hearings are limited to resolving disputed issues of material fact 
relating to a Department's own preliminary condition or prescription. 
Where the hearing requester's purpose is to establish facts that may 
support an alternative proposed under the distinct section 33 process, 
but that do not otherwise affect the Department's ultimate decision 
whether to affirm, modify, or withdraw its preliminary prescription or 
condition, then the issue raised is not ``material'' to that condition 
or prescription.
    Such matters must be resolved by the relevant Department through 
the section 33 process, and the ALJ should not make findings that would 
preempt the Department's review. For example, it would be inappropriate 
to ask the ALJ to resolve whether an alternative method of passing fish 
would be more desirable or more effective than the method prescribed by 
the Secretary.
Dispute
    EPAct provides for a hearing only where specific material facts are 
actually in dispute. The implementing regulations thus require that a 
hearing requester specifically identify the factual statements made or 
relied upon by an agency that are disputed. 7 CFR 1.621(b)(2)(i), 43 
CFR 45.(b)(2)(i), 50 CFR 221.21(b)(2)(i). Further, the agency has the 
option of stipulating to the facts as presented in the hearing request. 
7 CFR 1.621(b)(1)(i), 43 CFR 45.(b)(1)(i), 50 CFR 221.24(b)(1)(i). Such 
a stipulation will mean that there is no dispute to be resolved through 
a trial-type hearing.

B. Separation of Functions

    Some commenters argued that the Departments should maintain a 
separation of functions during the EPAct section 241 trial-type 
hearing. Section 241 trial-type hearings are conducted by each 
Department's independent adjudicative body--the Office of Hearings and 
Appeals for the Department of the Interior, the Office of 
Administrative Law Judges for the Department of Agriculture, and the 
United States Coast Guard's Office of Administrative Law Judges for the 
Department of Commerce. Each of these ALJ offices is an independent 
entity with its own staff that is entirely separate from the 
conditioning or prescribing agency. Departmental staff that develop 
conditions or prescriptions or participate in the trial-type hearing 
have no more input into the ALJ's decision-making than the other 
parties to the hearing process and are subject to the same prohibition 
on ex parte communication. 7 CFR 1.634, 43 CFR 45.34, 50 CFR 221.34. 
The final rule therefore does not need a provision regarding separation 
of functions in section 241 trial-type hearings.
    Citing 5 U.S.C. 554(d)(2), these commenters further argued that 
Departmental staff involved in preparing preliminary conditions or 
prescriptions and representing the agency in the trial-type hearing are 
barred by the APA's separation of functions provision from advising 
senior staff and officials on any decision related to modified 
conditions, prescriptions, or section 33 alternatives.
    The Departments disagree. Section 554 provides that in every case 
of adjudication required by statute to be determined on the record 
after opportunity for an agency hearing . . . and an employee or agent 
engaged in the performance of investigative or prosecuting functions 
for an agency in a case may not, in that or a factually related case, 
participate or advise in the decision, recommended decision, or agency 
review pursuant to section 557 of this title, except as witness or 
counsel in public proceedings. 5 U.S.C. 554(a), (d)(2) (emphasis 
added).
    A Department's decision whether and how to modify the preliminary 
conditions or prescriptions does not constitute ``an adjudication 
required by statute to be determined on the record after opportunity 
for an agency hearing.'' See 2 K. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise 
Sec.  10:7 (1979). Although FPA section 33 establishes specific 
criteria for considering alternatives, neither EPAct nor the FPA 
requires the Departments to conduct an on-the-record hearing for this 
separate and distinct phase.\5\ Similarly, in accordance

[[Page 17179]]

with FERC regulations, the Departments have long provided modified 
conditions and prescriptions based on additional information, but they 
are under no statutory requirement to provide an on-the-record hearing 
when they do so. 18 CFR 4.34 (b)(4), 5.24(d), 5.25(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ The fact that EPAct requires a trial-type hearing for 
disputed issues of material fact does not alter this conclusion. The 
regulations make clear that the trial-type hearing and the decision 
to modify are two distinct proceedings: The hearing is strictly 
limited to resolving disputed issues of fact underlying the 
preliminary conditions; the ALJ's order is final, with no 
opportunity for administrative review; and the regulations 
specifically prohibit the ALJ from offering an opinion on how to 
modify the preliminary conditions. See 7 CFR 1.660(b), (d), 43 CFR 
45.60(b), (d), 50 CFR 221.60(b); 70 FR 69807.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Moreover, section 554(d)(2) only bars participation in decisions or 
agency reviews pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 557. Section 557 by its terms 
applies to initial hearing decisions or recommendations by a qualified 
presiding employee with the potential for subsequent agency review. 
Modifying preliminary conditions or prescriptions involves no such 
hearing, no presiding employee, and no initial or recommended decision. 
Instead, the Department conducts the appropriate review and analysis 
and provides modified conditions or prescriptions to FERC with 
accompanying written findings. 7 CFR 1.673, 43 CFR 45.73, 50 CFR 
221.73. Accordingly, section 554 does not apply to the Departments' 
decision whether and how to modify preliminary conditions or 
prescriptions.
    EEI and NHA cite Amos Treat & Co., Inc. v. SEC, 306 F.2d 260, 266-
67 (D.C. Cir. 1962) and American Gen. Ins. Co. v. FTC, 589 F.2d 462 
(9th Cir. 1979), for the proposition that any participation by agency 
staff in a decision to modify conditions is necessarily unfair. EEI/NHA 
Comments at 20-21. In each cited case, however, the agency employee who 
investigated or prosecuted an issue went on to become the decisionmaker 
on the same issues in the same proceeding. Such cases do not apply 
here, where a Department's decision to modify conditions or 
prescriptions does not address the same specific matters addressed by 
the ALJ. Indeed, as noted above, the ALJ is prohibited from offering an 
opinion on how to modify the preliminary conditions and the ALJ's 
hearing order is final.\6\ Courts have consistently rejected arguments 
of unfairness relating to multiple agency functions in cases involving 
such distinct phases of a proceeding. See, e.g., Withrow v. Larkin, 421 
U.S. 35 (1975); RSR Corp. v. FTC, 656 F.2d 718 (D.C. Cir. 1981); Porter 
County v. NRC, 606 F.2d 1363 (D.C. Cir. 1979); Pangburn v. CAB, 311 
F.2d 349 (1st Cir. 1962).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ See 7 CFR 1.660(b), (d), 43 CFR 45.60(b), (d), 50 CFR 
221.60(b), (d); 70 FR 69807.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Ex Parte Communication

    Some commenters argued that the section 33 alternatives process 
constitutes a quasi-judicial proceeding and thus should be subject to 
the APA's prohibition on ex parte communications. Under 5 U.S.C. 
557(d)(1), no interested person outside the agency shall make or 
knowingly cause to be made to any member of the body comprising the 
agency, administrative law judge, or other employee who is or may 
reasonably be expected to be involved in the decisional process of the 
proceeding, an ex parte communication relevant to the merits of the 
proceeding.
    As discussed previously, section 557 by its terms applies only to 
on-the-record hearings required by statute. Section 33 calls for a 
process of agency analysis subject to specific statutory criteria, but 
neither EPAct nor the FPA requires the Departments to conduct an on-
the-record hearing when considering alternative conditions and 
prescriptions. As such, the APA's prohibition on ex parte communication 
does not apply to the section 33 alternatives process.

VI. Consultation With FERC

    Pursuant to EPAct's requirement that the agencies promulgate rules 
implementing EPAct section 241 ``in consultation with the Federal 
Energy Regulatory Commission,'' the agencies have consulted with FERC 
regarding the content of these revised interim final rules.

VII. Procedural Requirements

A. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O. 12866 and E.O. 13563)

    The rules in this document are significant. Although these rules 
will not have an adverse effect or an annual effect of $100 million or 
more on the economy, OMB has determined that the expedited trial-type 
hearing and alternatives processes represent a novel approach to public 
participation and administrative review and have interagency 
implications. Therefore, OMB has reviewed these rules under Executive 
Order 12866.
    Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the principles of Executive Order 
12866 while calling for improvements in the nation's regulatory system 
to promote predictability; to reduce uncertainty; and to use the best, 
most innovative, and least burdensome tools for achieving regulatory 
ends. The executive order directs agencies to consider regulatory 
approaches that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of 
choice for the public where these approaches are relevant, feasible, 
and consistent with regulatory objectives. Executive Order 13563 
emphasizes further than regulations must be based on the best available 
science and that the rulemaking process must allow for public 
participation and an open exchange of ideas. These revised interim 
final rules have been developed in a manner consistent with these 
requirements.

B. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    As noted previously, the court in American Rivers v. U.S. 
Department of the Interior, 2006 WL 2841929 (W.D. Wash. 2006), upheld 
the Departments' November 17, 2005, interim final rules, holding that 
they were exempt from the APA's notice and comment requirements because 
they were procedural and interpretative in nature. These revised 
interim final rules are likewise procedural and interpretative in 
nature and do not require publication of a notice of proposed 
rulemaking. As a result, they are exempt from the requirements of the 
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
    Even if these rules were not exempt, they will not have a 
significant economic effect on a substantial number of small entities, 
for the reasons explained in the preamble to the November 17, 2005, 
interim final rules, 70 FR 69815-16. Because these rules are exempt, a 
regulatory flexibility analysis is not required and, thus, none was 
prepared.

C. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act

    These rules are not major under the Small Business Regulatory 
Enforcement Fairness Act, 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
    1. As explained above, these rules will not have an annual effect 
on the economy of $ 100 million or more.
    2. These rules will not cause a major increase in costs or prices 
for consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local 
government agencies, or geographic regions. A hearing process for 
disputed issues of material fact with respect to the Departments' 
conditions and prescriptions will not affect costs or prices.
    3. These rules will not have significant, adverse effects on 
competition, employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the 
ability of United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-
based enterprises. Implementing the 2005 amendments to the FPA by 
establishing the hearing procedures in these rules should have no 
effects, adverse or beneficial, on competition, employment, investment, 
productivity, innovation, or the ability

[[Page 17180]]

of United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based 
enterprises.

D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    In accordance with the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1531 
et seq., The Departments find that:
    1. These rules will not have a significant or unique effect on 
State, local, or Tribal governments or the private sector.
    2. These rules will not produce an unfunded Federal mandate of $100 
million or more on State, local, or Tribal governments in the aggregate 
or on the private sector in any year; i.e., they do not constitute a 
``significant regulatory action'' under the Unfunded Mandates Reform 
Act. The opportunity for a hearing will be available to a State, local, 
or Tribal government only if it is a party to the license proceeding 
and chooses to participate in the hearing process. Therefore, a 
statement containing the information required by the Unfunded Mandates 
Reform Act is not required.

E. Takings (E.O. 12630)

    In accordance with Executive Order 12630, the Departments conclude 
that these rules will not have significant takings implications. The 
conditions and prescriptions included in hydropower licenses relate to 
operation of hydropower facilities on resources not owned by the 
applicant, i.e., public waterways and/or reservations. Therefore, these 
rules will not result in a taking of private property, and a takings 
implication assessment is not required.

F. Federalism (E.O. 13132)

    In accordance with Executive Order 13132, the Departments find that 
these rules do not have sufficient federalism implications to warrant 
the preparation of a Federalism Assessment. There is no foreseeable 
effect on States from establishing hearing procedures for disputed 
issues of material fact regarding Departmental conditions and 
prescriptions. The rules will not have substantial direct effects on 
the States, on the relationship between the national government and the 
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the 
various levels of government. The rules will not preempt State law. 
Therefore, a Federalism Assessment is not required.

G. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)

    In accordance with Executive Order (E.O.) 12988, the Departments 
have determined that these rules will not unduly burden the judicial 
system and that they meet the requirements of sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) 
of E.O. 12988. The rules provide clear language as to what is allowed 
and what is prohibited. Litigation regarding FERC hydropower licenses 
currently begins with a rehearing before FERC and then moves to Federal 
appeals court. By offering a trial-type hearing on disputed issues of 
material fact with respect to conditions and prescriptions developed by 
the Departments, the rules will likely result in a decrease in the 
number of proceedings that are litigated before FERC and in court.

H. Paperwork Reduction Act

    With respect to the hearing process, these rules are exempt from 
the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. 
(PRA), because they will apply to the conduct of agency administrative 
proceedings involving specific individuals and entities. 44 U.S.C. 
3518(c); 5 CFR 1320.4(a)(2). However, with respect to the alternatives 
process, these rules contain provisions that would collect information 
from the public, and therefore require approval from OMB under the PRA. 
According to the PRA, a Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor, and 
a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information 
unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number that indicates 
OMB approval. OMB has reviewed the information collection in these 
rules and approved it under OMB control number 1094-0001. This approval 
expires November 30, 2015.
    The purpose of the information collection in this rulemaking is to 
provide an opportunity for license parties to propose an alternative 
condition or prescription. Responses to this information collection are 
voluntary. At the time of our request for OMB approval in 2009, we 
estimated that an average of 62 alternatives would be submitted per 
year over the next 3 years. We estimated that the average burden for 
preparing and submitting an alternative would be 200 hours; thus, the 
total information collection burden was estimated to be 12,400 hours 
per year.

I. National Environmental Policy Act

    The Departments have analyzed their respective rules in accordance 
with NEPA, Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) regulations, 40 CFR 
part 1500, and the Departments' internal NEPA guidance. CEQ 
regulations, at 40 CFR 1508.4, define a ``categorical exclusion'' as a 
category of actions that a department has determined normally do not, 
individually or cumulatively, have a significant effect on the human 
environment, and, therefore in the absence of extraordinary 
circumstances, neither an environmental assessment nor an environmental 
impact statement is required. The regulations further direct each 
department to adopt NEPA procedures, including categorical exclusions. 
40 CFR 1507.3.
    Each Department has determined that these rules are categorically 
excluded from further environmental analysis under NEPA in accordance 
with its own authorities, listed below. These rules promulgate 
regulations of an administrative and procedural nature relating to 
trial-type hearings and the submission and analysis of alternatives as 
mandated under FPA, as amended by EPAct. They do not individually or 
cumulatively have a significant impact on the human environment and, 
therefore, neither an EA nor an EIS under NEPA is required. The 
relevant authorities for each Department are as follows:
    Agriculture: 7 CFR 1b.3(b); Forest Service Handbook 1909.15, 31.12.
    Interior: 43 CFR part 46.
    Commerce: NOAA Administrative Order 216-6, sections 5.05 and 
6.03c3(i).

J. Consultation With Indian Tribes (E.O. 13175)

    Under the criteria in Executive Order 13175, the Departments have 
assessed the impact of these rules and have determined that they do not 
directly affect federally recognized Indian tribes or tribal resources. 
The rules are procedural and administrative in nature. However, 
conditions and actions associated with an actual hydropower licensing 
proposal may directly affect tribal resources; therefore the 
Departments will continue to consult with tribal governments when 
developing section 4(e) conditions and section 18 prescriptions needed 
to address the management of those resources.

K. Effects on the Nation's Energy Supply (E.O. 13211)

    In accordance with Executive Order 13211, the Departments find that 
these rules will not have substantial direct effects on energy supply, 
distribution, or use, including shortfall in supply or price increase. 
Analysis by FERC has found that, on average, installed capacity 
increased through licensing by 4.06 percent, and the average annual 
generation loss, attributable largely to increased flows to protect 
aquatic resources, was 1.59 percent. (Report on Hydroelectric Licensing 
Policies, Procedures, and Regulations: Comprehensive Review and

[[Page 17181]]

Recommendations Pursuant to Section 603 of the Energy Act of 2000, 
prepared by the staff of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, May 
2001.) Since the licensing process itself has such a modest energy 
impact, these rules, which affect only the Departments' administrative 
review procedures, are not expected to have a significant impact under 
the Executive Order (i.e., reductions in electricity production in 
excess of 1 billion kilowatt-hours per year or in excess of 500 
megawatts of installed capacity).

L. Data Quality Act

    In developing this rule, we did not conduct or use a study, 
experiment, or survey requiring peer review under the Data Quality Act, 
Public Law 106-554.

M. Clarity of These Regulations

    We are required by Executive Orders 12866 and 12988 and by the 
Presidential Memorandum of June 1, 1998, to write all rules in plain 
language. This means that each rule we publish must:
    (1) Be logically organized;
    (2) Use the active voice to address readers directly;
    (3) Use clear language rather than jargon;
    (4) Be divided into short sections and sentences; and
    (5) Use lists and tables wherever possible.
    If you feel that we have not met these requirements, send us 
comments by one of the methods listed in the ADDRESSES section. To 
better help us revise the rule, your comments should be as specific as 
possible. For example, you should tell us the numbers of the sections 
or paragraphs that you find unclear, which sections or sentences are 
too long, the sections where you feel lists or tables would be useful, 
etc.

List of Subjects

7 CFR Part 1

    Administrative practice and procedure, Fisheries, Hydroelectric 
power, Indians--lands, National forests, National parks, National 
wildlife refuge system, Public land, Waterways, Wildlife.

43 CFR Part 45

    Administrative practice and procedure, Fisheries, Hydroelectric 
power, Indians--lands, National forests, National parks, National 
wildlife refuge system, Public land, Waterways, Wildlife.

50 CFR Part 221

    Administrative practice and procedure, Fisheries, Hydroelectric 
power, Indians--lands, National forests, National parks, National 
wildlife refuge system, Public land, Waterways, Wildlife.

    Dated: March 10, 2015.
Robert F. Bonnie,
Undersecretary--Natural Resources and Environment, U.S. Department of 
Agriculture.
Kristen J. Sarri,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary--Policy, Management and Budget, 
U.S. Department of the Interior.
    Dated: December 15, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine 
Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 
U.S. Department of Commerce.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Departments of 
Agriculture, the Interior, and Commerce amend titles 7, 43, and 50 of 
the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:

Title 7--Department of Agriculture

PART 1--ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS

0
1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, unless otherwise noted.


0
2. Revise subpart O to read as follows:

Subpart O--Conditions in FERC Hydropower Licenses

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 811, 823d.

General Provisions

Sec.
1.601 What is the purpose of this subpart, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?
1.602 What terms are used in this subpart?
1.603 How are time periods computed?
1.604 What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes?

Hearing Process

Representatives

1.610 Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to a 
representative?

Document Filing and Service

1.611 What are the form and content requirements for documents under 
this subpart?
1.612 Where and how must documents be filed?
1.613 What are the requirements for service of documents?

Initiation of Hearing Process

1.620 What supporting information must the Forest Service provide 
with its preliminary conditions?
1.621 How do I request a hearing?
1.622 How do I file a notice of intervention and response?
1.623 Will hearing requests be consolidated?
1.624 Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?
1.625 How will the Forest Service respond to any hearing requests?
1.626 What will the Forest Service do with any hearing requests?
1.627 What regulations apply to a case referred for a hearing?

General Provisions Related to Hearings

1.630 What will OALJ do with a case referral?
1.631 What are the powers of the ALJ?
1.632 What happens if the ALJ becomes unavailable?
1.633 Under what circumstances may the ALJ be disqualified?
1.634 What is the law governing ex parte communications?
1.635 What are the requirements for motions?

Prehearing Conferences and Discovery

1.640 What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?
1.641 How may parties obtain discovery of information needed for the 
case?
1.642 When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?
1.643 What are the requirements for written interrogatories?
1.644 What are the requirements for depositions?
1.645 What are the requirements for requests for documents or 
tangible things or entry on land?
1.646 What sanctions may the ALJ impose for failure to comply with 
discovery?
1.647 What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

Hearing, Briefing, and Decision

1.650 When and where will the hearing be held?
1.651 What are the parties' rights during the hearing?
1.652 What are the requirements for presenting testimony?
1.653 How may a party use a deposition in the hearing?
1.654 What are the requirements for exhibits, official notice, and 
stipulations?
1.655 What evidence is admissible at the hearing?
1.6.56 What are the requirements for transcription of the hearing?
1.6.57 Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of proof 
applies?
1.658 When will the hearing record close?
1.659 What are the requirements for post-hearing briefs?
1.660 What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?

Alternatives Process

1.670 How must documents be filed and served under this subpart?
1.671 How do I propose an alternative?
1.672 May I file a revised proposed alternative?
1.673 When will the Forest Service file its modified condition?

[[Page 17182]]

1.674 How will the Forest Service analyze a proposed alternative and 
formulate its modified condition?
1.675 Has OMB approved the information collection provisions of this 
subpart?

General Provisions


Sec.  1.601  What is the purpose of this subpart, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?

    (a) Hearing process. (1) The regulations in Sec. Sec.  1.601 
through 1.660 contain rules of practice and procedure applicable to 
hearings on disputed issues of material fact with respect to mandatory 
conditions that the Department of Agriculture, Forest Service (Forest 
Service) may develop for inclusion in a hydropower license issued under 
subchapter I of the Federal Power Act (FPA), 16 U.S.C. 791 et seq. The 
authority to develop these conditions is granted by FPA section 4(e), 
16 U.S.C. 797(e), which authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to 
condition hydropower licenses issued by the Federal Energy Regulatory 
Commission (FERC).
    (2) The hearing process under this part does not apply to 
recommendations that the Forest Service may submit to FERC under FPA 
section 10(a), 16 U.S.C. 803(a).
    (3) The FPA also grants the Department of Commerce and the 
Department of the Interior the authority to develop mandatory 
conditions and prescriptions for inclusion in a hydropower license. 
Where the Forest Service and either or both of these other Departments 
develop conditions or prescriptions to be included in the same 
hydropower license and where the Departments agree to consolidate the 
hearings under Sec.  1.623:
    (i) A hearing conducted under this subpart will also address 
disputed issues of material fact with respect to any condition or 
prescription developed by one of the other Departments; or
    (ii) A hearing requested under this subpart will be conducted by 
one of the other Departments, pursuant to 43 CFR 45.1 et seq. or 50 CFR 
221.1 et seq., as applicable.
    (4) The regulations in Sec. Sec.  1.601 through 1.660 will be 
construed and applied to each hearing process to achieve a just and 
speedy determination, consistent with adequate consideration of the 
issues involved and the provisions of Sec.  1.660(a).
    (b) Alternatives process. The regulations in Sec. Sec.  1.670 
through 1.674 contain rules of procedure applicable to the submission 
and consideration of alternative conditions under FPA section 33, 16 
U.S.C. 823d. That section allows any party to the license proceeding to 
propose an alternative to a condition deemed necessary by the Forest 
Service under section 4(e).
    (c) Reserved authority. Where the Forest Service has notified or 
notifies FERC that it is reserving its authority to develop one or more 
conditions at a later time, the hearing and alternatives processes 
under this subpart for such conditions will be available if and when 
the Forest Service exercises its reserved authority.
    (d) Applicability. (1) This subpart applies to any hydropower 
license proceeding for which the license had not been issued as of 
November 17, 2005, and for which one or more preliminary conditions 
have been or are filed with FERC before FERC issues the license.
    (2) This subpart also applies to any exercise of the Forest 
Service's reserved authority under paragraph (c) of this section with 
respect to a hydropower license issued before or after November 17, 
2005.


Sec.  1.602  What terms are used in this subpart?

    As used in this subpart:
    ALJ means an administrative law judge appointed under 5 U.S.C. 3105 
and assigned to preside over the hearing process under this subpart.
    Alternative means a condition that a license party other than the 
Forest Service or another Department develops as an alternative to a 
preliminary condition from the Forest Service or another Department, 
under FPA sec. 33, 16 U.S.C. 823d.
    Condition means a condition under FPA sec. 4(e), 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 
for the adequate protection and utilization of a reservation.
    Day means a calendar day.
    Department means the Department of Agriculture, Department of 
Commerce, or Department of the Interior.
    Discovery means a prehearing process for obtaining facts or 
information to assist a party in preparing or presenting its case.
    Ex parte communication means an oral or written communication to 
the ALJ that is made without providing all parties reasonable notice 
and an opportunity to participate.
    FERC means the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
    Forest Service means the USDA Forest Service.
    FPA means the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 791 et seq.
    Hearing Clerk means the Hearing Clerk, OALJ, USDA, 1400 
Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC 20250; phone: 202-720-4443, 
facsimile: 202-720-9776.
    Intervention means a process by which a person who did not request 
a hearing under Sec.  1.621 can participate as a party to the hearing 
under Sec.  1.622.
    License party means a party to the license proceeding, as that term 
is defined at 18 CFR 385.102(c).
    License proceeding means a proceeding before FERC for issuance of a 
license for a hydroelectric facility under 18 CFR part 4 or 5.
    Material fact means a fact that, if proved, may affect a 
Department's decision whether to affirm, modify, or withdraw any 
condition or prescription.
    Modified condition or prescription means any modified condition or 
prescription filed by a Department with FERC for inclusion in a 
hydropower license.
    NEPA document means an environmental document as defined at 40 CFR 
1508.10 to include an environmental assessment, environmental impact 
statement (EIS), finding of no significant impact, and notice of intent 
to prepare an EIS. Such documents are issued to comply with the 
requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 
U.S.C. 4321 et seq., and the CEQ Regulations Implementing the 
Procedural Requirements of NEPA (40 CFR parts 21500-1508).
    NFS means the National Forest System and refers to:
    (1) Federal land managed by the Forest Service; and
    (2) The Deputy Chief of the National Forest System, located in the 
Forest Service's Washington, DC, office.
    Office of Administrative Law Judges (OALJ) is the office within 
USDA in which ALJs conduct hearings under the regulations in this 
subpart.
    Party means, with respect to USDA's hearing process:
    (1) A license party that has filed a timely request for a hearing 
under:
    (i) Section 1.621; or
    (ii) Either 43 CFR 45.21 or 50 CFR 221.21, with respect to a 
hearing process consolidated under Sec.  1.623;
    (2) A license party that has filed a timely notice of intervention 
and response under:
    (i) Section 1.622; or
    (ii) Either 43 CFR 45.22 or 50 CFR 221.22, with respect to a 
hearing process consolidated under Sec.  1.623;
    (3) The Forest Service; and
    (4) Any other Department that has filed a preliminary condition or 
prescription, with respect to a hearing process consolidated under 
Sec.  1.623.
    Person means an individual; a partnership, corporation, 
association, or other legal entity; an unincorporated organization; and 
any Federal, State,

[[Page 17183]]

Tribal, county, district, territorial, or local government or agency.
    Preliminary condition or prescription means any preliminary 
condition or prescription filed by a Department with FERC for potential 
inclusion in a hydropower license.
    Prescription means a fishway prescribed under FPA sec. 18, 16 
U.S.C. 811, to provide for the safe, timely, and effective passage of 
fish.
    Representative means a person who:
    (1) Is authorized by a party to represent the party in a hearing 
process under this subpart; and
    (2) Has filed an appearance under Sec.  1.610.
    Reservation has the same meaning as the term ``reservations'' in 
FPA sec. 3(2), 16 U.S.C. 796(2).
    Secretary means the Secretary of Agriculture or his or her 
designee.
    Senior Department employee has the same meaning as the term 
``senior employee'' in 5 CFR 2637.211(a).
    USDA means the United States Department of Agriculture.
    You refers to a party other than a Department.


Sec.  1.603  How are time periods computed?

    (a) General. Time periods are computed as follows:
    (1) The day of the act or event from which the period begins to run 
is not included.
    (2) The last day of the period is included.
    (i) If that day is a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday, the 
period is extended to the next business day.
    (ii) The last day of the period ends at 5 p.m. at the place where 
the filing or other action is due.
    (3) If the period is less than 7 days, any Saturday, Sunday, or 
Federal holiday that falls within the period is not included.
    (b) Extensions of time. (1) No extension of time can be granted to 
file a request for a hearing under Sec.  1.621, a notice of 
intervention and response under Sec.  1.622, an answer under Sec.  
1.625, or any document under Sec. Sec.  1.670 through 1.674.
    (2) An extension of time to file any other document under this 
subpart may be granted only upon a showing of good cause.
    (i) To request an extension of time, a party must file a motion 
under Sec.  1.635 stating how much additional time is needed and the 
reasons for the request.
    (ii) The party must file the motion before the applicable time 
period expires, unless the party demonstrates extraordinary 
circumstances that justify a delay in filing.
    (iii) The ALJ may grant the extension only if:
    (A) It would not unduly prejudice other parties; and
    (B) It would not delay the decision under Sec.  1.660.


Sec.  1.604  What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes?

    (a) The following table summarizes the steps in the trial-type 
hearing process under this subpart and indicates the deadlines 
generally applicable to each step. If the deadlines in this table are 
in any way inconsistent with the deadlines as set by other sections of 
this subpart or by the ALJ, the deadlines as set by those other 
sections or by the ALJ control.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Process step                Process day    Must generally be completed           See section
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Forest Service files preliminary                0  .............................  1.620.
 condition(s) with FERC.
(2) License party files request for                30  Within 30 days after Forest    1.621(a).
 hearing.                                               Service files preliminary
                                                        condition(s) with FERC.
(3) Any other license party files                  50  Within 20 days after deadline  1.622(a).
 notice of intervention and response.                   for filing requests for
                                                        hearing.
(4) NFS refers case to ALJ office for              85  Within 55 days after deadline  1.626(a).
 hearing and issues referral notice                     for filing requests for
 to parties.                                            hearing.
(5) Parties may meet and agree to               86-91  Before deadline for filing     1.641(a).
 discovery (optional step).                             motions seeking discovery.
(6) ALJ office sends docketing                     90  Within 5 days after effective  1.630.
 notice, and ALJ issues notice                          date of referral notice.
 setting date for initial prehearing
 conference.
(7) Party files motion seeking                     92  Within 7 days after effective  1.641(d).
 discovery from another party.                          date of referral notice.
(8) Other party files objections to                99  Within 7 days after service    1.641(e).
 discovery motion or specific                           of discovery motion.
 portions of discovery requests.
(9) Parties meet to discuss discovery         100-104  Before date set for initial    1.640(d).
 and hearing schedule.                                  prehearing conference.
(10) ALJ conducts initial prehearing              105  On or about 20th day after     1.640(a).
 conference.                                            effective date of referral
                                                        notice.
(11) ALJ issues order following                   107  Within 2 days after initial    1.640(g).
 initial prehearing conference.                         prehearing conference.
(12) Party responds to                         120-22  Within 15 days after ALJ's     1.643(c).
 interrogatories from another party                     order authorizing discovery
 as authorized by ALJ.                                  during or following initial
                                                        prehearing conference.
(13) Party responds to requests for            120-22  Within 15 days after ALJ's     1.645(c).
 documents, etc., from another party                    order authorizing discovery
 as authorized by ALJ.                                  during or following initial
                                                        prehearing conference.
(14) Parties complete all discovery,              130  Within 25 days after initial   1.641(i).
 including depositions, as authorized                   prehearing conference.
 by ALJ.
(15) Parties file updated lists of                140  Within 10 days after deadline  1.642(b).
 witnesses and exhibits.                                for completion of discovery.
(16) Parties file written direct                  140  Within 10 days after deadline  1.652(a).
 testimony.                                             for completion of discovery.
(17) Parties complete prehearing                  155  Within 25 days after deadline  1.650(a).
 preparation and ALJ commences                          for completion of discovery.
 hearing.
(18) ALJ closes hearing record.......             160  When ALJ closes hearing......  1.658.
(19) Parties file post-hearing briefs             175  Within 15 days after hearing   1.659(a).
                                                        closes.
(20) ALJ issues decision.............             190  Within 30 days after hearing   1.660(a).
                                                        closes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 17184]]

    (b) The following table summarizes the steps in the alternatives 
process under this subpart and indicates the deadlines generally 
applicable to each step. If the deadlines in this table are in any way 
inconsistent with the deadlines as set by other sections of this 
subpart, the deadlines as set by those other sections control.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Process step                Process day    Must generally be completed           See section
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Forest Service files preliminary                0  .............................  1.620.
 condition(s) with FERC.
(2) License party files alternative                30  Within 30 days after Forest    1.671(a).
 condition(s).                                          Service files preliminary
                                                        condition(s) with FERC.
(3) ALJ issues decision on any                    190  Within 30 days after hearing   1.660(a).
 hearing request.                                       closes (see previous table).
(4) License party files revised                   210  Within 20 days after ALJ       1.672(a).
 alternative condition(s) if                            issues decision.
 authorized.
(5) Forest Service files modified                 300  Within 60 days after the       1.673(a).
 condition(s) with FERC.                                deadline for filing comments
                                                        on FERC's draft NEPA
                                                        document.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hearing Process

Representatives


Sec.  1.610  Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to 
a representative?

    (a) Individuals. A party who is an individual may either represent 
himself or herself in the hearing process under this subpart or 
authorize an attorney to represent him or her.
    (b) Organizations. A party that is an organization or other entity 
may authorize one of the following to represent it:
    (1) An attorney;
    (2) A partner, if the entity is a partnership;
    (3) An officer or agent, if the entity is a corporation, 
association, or unincorporated organization;
    (4) A receiver, administrator, executor, or similar fiduciary, if 
the entity is a receivership, trust, or estate; or
    (5) An elected or appointed official or an employee, if the entity 
is a Federal, State, Tribal, county, district, territorial, or local 
government or component.
    (c) Appearance. An individual representing himself or herself and 
any other representative must file a notice of appearance. The notice 
must:
    (1) Meet the form and content requirements for documents under 
Sec.  1.611;
    (2) Include the name and address of the party on whose behalf the 
appearance is made;
    (3) If the representative is an attorney, include a statement that 
he or she is a member in good standing of the bar of the highest court 
of a state, the District of Columbia, or any territory or commonwealth 
of the United States (identifying which one); and
    (4) If the representative is not an attorney, include a statement 
explaining his or her authority to represent the entity.
    (d) Lead representative. If a party has more than one 
representative, the ALJ may require the party to designate a lead 
representative for service of documents under Sec.  1.613.
    (e) Disqualification. The ALJ may disqualify any representative for 
misconduct or other good cause.

Document Filing and Service


Sec.  1.611  What are the form and content requirements for documents 
under this subpart?

    (a) Form. Each document filed in a case under Sec. Sec.  1.610 
through 1.660 must:
    (1) Measure 8\1/2\ by 11 inches, except that a table, chart, 
diagram, or other attachment may be larger if folded to 8\1/2\ by 11 
inches and attached to the document;
    (2) Be printed on just one side of the page (except that service 
copies may be printed on both sides of the page);
    (3) Be clearly typewritten, printed, or otherwise reproduced by a 
process that yields legible and permanent copies;
    (4) Use 11 point font size or larger;
    (5) Be double-spaced except for footnotes and long quotations, 
which may be single-spaced;
    (6) Have margins of at least 1 inch; and
    (7) Be bound on the left side, if bound.
    (b) Caption. Each document filed under Sec. Sec.  1.610 through 
1.660 must begin with a caption that sets forth:
    (1) The name of the case under Sec. Sec.  1.610 through 1.660 and 
the docket number, if one has been assigned;
    (2) The name and docket number of the license proceeding to which 
the case under Sec. Sec.  1.610 through 1.660 relates; and
    (3) A descriptive title for the document, indicating the party for 
whom it is filed and the nature of the document.
    (c) Signature. The original of each document filed under Sec. Sec.  
1.610 through 1.660 must be signed by the representative of the person 
for whom the document is filed. The signature constitutes a 
certification by the representative that he or she has read the 
document; that to the best of his or her knowledge, information, and 
belief, the statements made in the document are true; and that the 
document is not being filed for the purpose of causing delay.
    (d) Contact information. Below the representative's signature, the 
document must provide the representative's name, mailing address, 
street address (if different), telephone number, facsimile number (if 
any), and electronic mail address (if any).


Sec.  1.612   Where and how must documents be filed?

    (a) Place of filing. Any documents relating to a case under 
Sec. Sec.  1.610 through 1.660 must be filed with the appropriate 
office, as follows:
    (1) Before NFS refers a case for docketing under Sec.  1.626, any 
documents must be filed with NFS by directing them to the ``Deputy 
Chief, NFS.''
    (i) For delivery by regular mail, address to USDA Forest Service, 
Attn: Lands Staff, Mail Stop 1124, 1400 Independence Ave. SW., 
Washington, DC 20250-1124.
    (ii) For delivery by hand or private carrier, deliver to USDA 
Forest Service, Yates Bldg. (4 SO), 201 14th Street SW., Washington, DC 
(SW. corner of 14th Street and Independence Ave. SW.); phone (202) 205-
1248; facsimile (703) 605-5117. Hand deliverers must obtain an official 
date-time-stamp from Lands Staff.
    (2) The Forest Service will notify the parties of the date on which 
NFS refers a case for docketing under Sec.  1.626. After that date, any 
documents must be filed with:
    (i) The Hearing Clerk, if OALJ will be conducting the hearing. The 
Hearing Clerk's address, telephone number, and facsimile number are set 
forth in Sec.  1.602; or
    (ii) The hearings component of or used by another Department, if 
that Department will be conducting the

[[Page 17185]]

hearing. The name, address, telephone number, and facsimile number of 
the appropriate hearings component will be provided in the referral 
notice from the Forest Service.
    (b) Method of filing. (1) A document must be filed with the 
appropriate office under paragraph (a) of this section using one of the 
following methods:
    (i) By hand delivery of the original document and two copies;
    (ii) By sending the original document and two copies by express 
mail or courier service; or
    (iii) By sending the document by facsimile if:
    (A) The document is 20 pages or less, including all attachments;
    (B) The sending facsimile machine confirms that the transmission 
was successful; and
    (C) The original of the document and two copies are sent by regular 
mail on the same day.
    (2) Parties are encouraged, and may be required by the ALJ, to 
supplement any filing by providing the appropriate office with an 
electronic copy of the document on compact disc or other suitable 
media. With respect to any supporting material accompanying a request 
for hearing, a notice of intervention and response, or an answer, the 
party may submit in lieu of an original and two hard copies:
    (i) An original; and
    (ii) One copy on a compact disc or other suitable media.
    (c) Date of filing. A document under this subpart is considered 
filed on the date it is received. However, any document received after 
5 p.m. at the place where the filing is due is considered filed on the 
next regular business day.
    (d) Nonconforming documents. If any document submitted for filing 
under this subpart does not comply with the requirements of this 
subpart or any applicable order, it may be rejected.


Sec.  1.613  What are the requirements for service of documents?

    (a) Filed documents. Any document related to a case under 
Sec. Sec.  1.610 through 1.660 must be served at the same time the 
document is delivered or sent for filing. Copies must be served as 
follows:
    (1) A complete copy of any request for a hearing under Sec.  1.621 
must be delivered or sent to FERC and each license party, using one of 
the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section or under 18 CFR 
385.2010(f)(3) for license parties that have agreed to receive 
electronic service.
    (2) A complete copy of any notice of intervention and response 
under Sec.  1.622 must be:
    (i) Delivered or sent to FERC, the license applicant, any person 
who has filed a request for hearing under Sec.  1.621, and the Forest 
Service office that submitted the preliminary conditions to FERC, using 
one of the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section; and
    (ii) Delivered or sent to any other license party using one of the 
methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section or under 18 CFR 
385.2010(f)(3) for license parties that have agreed to receive 
electronic service, or by regular mail.
    (3) A complete copy of any answer or notice under Sec.  1.625 and 
any other document filed by any party to the hearing process must be 
delivered or sent to every other party to the hearing process, using 
one of the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section.
    (b) Documents issued by the Hearing Clerk or ALJ. A complete copy 
of any notice, order, decision, or other document issued by the Hearing 
Clerk or the ALJ under Sec. Sec.  1.610 through 1.660 must be served on 
each party, using one of the methods of service in paragraph (c) of 
this section.
    (c) Method of service. Unless otherwise agreed to by the parties 
and ordered by the ALJ, service must be accomplished by one of the 
following methods:
    (1) By hand delivery of the document;
    (2) By sending the document by express mail or courier service for 
delivery on the next business day;
    (3) By sending the document by facsimile if:
    (i) The document is 20 pages or less, including all attachments;
    (ii) The sending facsimile machine confirms that the transmission 
was successful; and
    (iii) The document is sent by regular mail on the same day; or
    (4) By sending the document, including all attachments, by 
electronic means if the party to be served has consented to that means 
of service in writing. However, if the serving party learns that the 
document did not reach the party to be served, the serving party must 
re-serve the document by another method set forth in paragraph (c) of 
this section (including another electronic means, if the party to be 
served has consented to that means in writing).
    (d) Certificate of service. A certificate of service must be 
attached to each document filed under Sec. Sec.  1.610 through 1.660. 
The certificate must be signed by the party's representative and 
include the following information:
    (1) The name, address, and other contact information of each 
party's representative on whom the document was served;
    (2) The means of service, including information indicating 
compliance with paragraph (c)(3) or (c)(4) of this section, if 
applicable; and
    (3) The date of service.

Initiation of Hearing Process


Sec.  1.620  What supporting information must the Forest Service 
provide with its preliminary conditions?

    (a) Supporting information. (1) When the Forest Service files its 
preliminary conditions with FERC, it must include a rationale for each 
condition, explaining why the Forest Service deems the condition 
necessary for the adequate protection and utilization of the affected 
NFS lands, and an index to the Forest Service's administrative record 
that identifies all documents relied upon.
    (2) If any of the documents relied upon are not already in the 
license proceeding record, the Forest Service must:
    (i) File them with FERC at the time it files its preliminary 
conditions; and
    (ii) Provide copies to the license applicant.
    (b) Service. The Forest Service will serve copies of its 
preliminary conditions on each license party.


Sec.  1.621   How do I request a hearing?

    (a) General. To request a hearing on disputed issues of material 
fact with respect to any preliminary condition filed by the Forest 
Service, you must:
    (1) Be a license party; and
    (2) File with NFS, at the appropriate address provided in Sec.  
1.612(a)(1), a written request for a hearing:
    (i) For a case under Sec.  1.601(d)(1), within 30 days after the 
Forest Service files a preliminary condition with FERC; or
    (ii) For a case under Sec.  1.601(d)(2), within 60 days after the 
Forest Service files a preliminary condition with FERC.
    (b) Content. Your hearing request must contain:
    (1) A numbered list of the factual issues that you allege are in 
dispute, each stated in a single, concise sentence;
    (2) The following information with respect to each issue:
    (i) The specific factual statements made or relied upon by the 
Forest Service under Sec.  1.620(a) that you dispute;
    (ii) The basis for your opinion that those factual statements are 
unfounded or erroneous; and
    (iii) The basis for your opinion that any factual dispute is 
material.
    (3) With respect to any scientific studies, literature, and other

[[Page 17186]]

documented information supporting your opinions under paragraphs 
(b)(2)(ii) and (b)(2)(iii) of this section, specific citations to the 
information relied upon. If any such document is not already in the 
license proceeding record, you must provide a copy with the request; 
and
    (4) A statement indicating whether or not you consent to service by 
electronic means under Sec.  1.613(c)(4) and, if so, by what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. Your hearing request must also list the 
witnesses and exhibits that you intend to present at the hearing, other 
than solely for impeachment purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, you must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony.
    (2) For each exhibit listed, you must specify whether it is in the 
license proceeding record.
    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided under paragraph (b)(2) of this section may not 
exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.


Sec.  1.622  How do I file a notice of intervention and response?

    (a) General. (1) To intervene as a party to the hearing process, 
you must:
    (i) Be a license party; and
    (ii) File with NFS, at the appropriate address provided in Sec.  
1.612(a)(1), a notice of intervention and a written response to any 
request for a hearing within 20 days after the deadline in Sec.  
1.621(a)(2).
    (2) A notice of intervention and response must be limited to one or 
more of the issues of material fact raised in the hearing request and 
may not raise additional issues.
    (b) Content. In your notice of intervention and response you must 
explain your position with respect to the issues of material fact 
raised in the hearing request under Sec.  1.621(b).
    (1) If you agree with the information provided by the Forest 
Service under Sec.  1.620(a) or by the requester under Sec.  1.621(b), 
your response may refer to the Forest Service's explanation or the 
requester's hearing request for support.
    (2) If you wish to rely on additional information or analysis, your 
response must provide the same level of detail with respect to the 
additional information or analysis as required under Sec.  1.621(b).
    (3) Your notice of intervention and response must also indicate 
whether or not you consent to service by electronic means under Sec.  
1.613(c)(4) and, if so, by what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. Your response and notice must also list 
the witnesses and exhibits that you intend to present at the hearing, 
other than solely for impeachment purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, you must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony; 
and
    (2) For each exhibit listed, you must specify whether it is in the 
license proceeding record.
    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided under paragraph (b) of this section (excluding 
citations to scientific studies, literature, and other documented 
information supporting your opinions) may not exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.


Sec.  1.623   Will hearing requests be consolidated?

    (a) Initial Department coordination. If NFS has received a copy of 
a hearing request, it must contact the other Departments and determine:
    (1) Whether any of the other Departments has also filed a 
preliminary condition or prescription relating to the license with 
FERC; and
    (2) If so, whether the other Department has also received a hearing 
request with respect to the preliminary condition or prescription.
    (b) Decision on consolidation. Where more than one Department has 
received a hearing request, the Departments involved must decide 
jointly:
    (1) Whether the cases should be consolidated for hearing under 
paragraphs (c)(3)(ii) through (iv) of this section; and
    (2) If so, which Department will conduct the hearing on their 
behalf.
    (c) Criteria. Cases will or may be consolidated as follows:
    (1) All hearing requests with respect to any conditions from the 
same Department will be consolidated for hearing.
    (2) All hearing requests with respect to any prescriptions from the 
same Department will be consolidated for hearing.
    (3) All or any portion of the following may be consolidated for 
hearing, if the Departments involved determine that there are common 
issues of material fact or that consolidation is otherwise appropriate:
    (i) Two or more hearing requests with respect to any condition and 
any prescription from the same Department;
    (ii) Two or more hearing requests with respect to conditions from 
different Departments;
    (iii) Two or more hearing requests with respect to prescriptions 
from different Departments; or
    (iv) Two or more hearing requests with respect to any condition 
from one Department and any prescription from another Department.


Sec.  1.624  Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?

    (a) Prior to referral to the ALJ, the hearing requester and the 
Forest Service may by agreement stay the hearing process under this 
subpart for a period not to exceed 120 days to allow for settlement 
discussions, if the stay period and any subsequent hearing process (if 
required) can be accommodated within the time frame established for the 
license proceeding.
    (b) Any stay of the hearing process will not affect the deadline 
for filing a notice of intervention and response, if any, pursuant to 
Sec.  1.622(a)(1)(ii).


Sec.  1.625  How will the Forest Service respond to any hearing 
requests?

    (a) General. NFS will determine whether to answer any hearing 
request under Sec.  1.621 on behalf of the Forest Service.
    (b) Content. If NFS answers a hearing request:
    (1) For each of the numbered factual issues listed under Sec.  
1.621(b)(1), NFS's answer must explain the Forest Service's position 
with respect to the issues of material fact raised by the requester, 
including one or more of the following statements as appropriate:
    (i) That the Forest Service is willing to stipulate to the facts as 
alleged by the requester;
    (ii) That the Forest Service believes the issue listed by the 
requester is not a factual issue, explaining the basis for such belief;
    (iii) That the Forest Service believes the issue listed by the 
requester is not material, explaining the basis for such belief; or
    (iv) That the Forest Service agrees that the issue is factual, 
material, and in dispute.
    (2) NFS's answer must also indicate whether the hearing request 
will be consolidated with one or more other hearing requests under 
Sec.  1.623 and, if so:
    (i) Identify any other hearing request that will be consolidated 
with this hearing request; and
    (ii) State which Department will conduct the hearing and provide 
contact

[[Page 17187]]

information for the appropriate Department hearings component.
    (3) If the Forest Service plans to rely on any scientific studies, 
literature, and other documented information that are not already in 
the license proceeding record, a copy of each item must be provided 
with NFS's answer.
    (4) NFS's answer must also indicate whether or not the Forest 
Service consents to service by electronic means under Sec.  1.613(c)(4) 
and, if so, by what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. NFS's answer must also contain a list 
of the Forest Service's witnesses and exhibits that the Forest Service 
intends to present at the hearing, other than solely for impeachment 
purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, the Forest Service must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony.
    (2) For each exhibit listed, the Forest Service must specify 
whether it is in the license proceeding record.
    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided under paragraph (b)(1) of this section may not 
exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.
    (e) Notice in lieu of answer. If NFS elects not to answer a hearing 
request:
    (1) The Forest Service is deemed to agree that the issues listed by 
the requester are factual, material, and in dispute;
    (2) The Forest Service may file a list of witnesses and exhibits 
with respect to the request only as provided in Sec.  1.642(b); and
    (3) NFS must include with its case referral under Sec.  1.623 a 
notice in lieu of answer containing the information required by 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, if the hearing request will be 
consolidated with one or more other hearing requests under Sec.  1.623, 
and the statement required by paragraph (b)(4) of this section.


Sec.  1.626  What will the Forest Service do with any hearing requests?

    (a) Case referral. Within 55 days after the deadline in Sec.  
1.621(a)(2) or 35 days after the expiration of any stay period under 
Sec.  1.624, whichever is later, NFS will refer the case for a hearing 
as follows:
    (1) If the hearing is to be conducted by USDA, NFS will refer the 
case to the OALJ.
    (2) If the hearing is to be conducted by another Department, NFS 
will refer the case to the hearings component used by that Department.
    (b) Content. The case referral will consist of the following:
    (1) Two copies of any preliminary condition under Sec.  1.620;
    (2) The original and one copy of any hearing request under Sec.  
1.621;
    (3) The original and one copy of any notice of intervention and 
response under Sec.  1.622;
    (4) The original and one copy of any answer or notice in lieu of 
answer under Sec.  1.625; and
    (5) The original and one copy of a referral notice under paragraph 
(c) of this section.
    (c) Notice. At the time NFS refers the case for a hearing, it must 
provide a referral notice that contains the following information:
    (1) The name, address, telephone number, and facsimile number of 
the Department hearings component that will conduct the hearing;
    (2) The name, address, and other contact information for the 
representative of each party to the hearing process;
    (3) An identification of any other hearing request that will be 
consolidated with this hearing request; and
    (4) The effective date of the case referral to the appropriate 
Department hearings component.
    (d) Delivery and service. (1) NFS must refer the case to the 
appropriate Department hearings component by one of the methods 
identified in Sec.  1.612(b)(1)(i) and (b)(1)(ii).
    (2) The Forest Service must serve a copy of the referral notice on 
FERC and each party to the hearing by one of the methods identified in 
Sec.  1.613(c)(1) and (c)(2).


Sec.  1.627  What regulations apply to a case referred for a hearing?

    (a) If NFS refers the case to the OALJ, these regulations will 
continue to apply to the hearing process.
    (b) If NFS refers the case to the Department of Interior's Office 
of Hearing and Appeals, the regulations at 43 CFR 45.1 et seq. will 
apply from that point on.
    (c) If NFS refers the case to the Department of Commerce's 
designated ALJ office, the regulations at 50 CFR 221.1 et seq. will 
apply from that point on.

General Provisions Related to Hearings


Sec.  1.630  What will OALJ do with a case referral?

    Within 5 days after the effective date stated in the referral 
notice under Sec.  1.626(c)(4), 43 CFR 45.26(c)(4), or 50 CFR 
221.26(c)(4):
    (a) The Hearing Clerk must:
    (1) Docket the case;
    (2) Assign an ALJ to preside over the hearing process and issue a 
decision; and
    (3) Issue a docketing notice that informs the parties of the docket 
number and the ALJ assigned to the case; and
    (b) The ALJ must issue a notice setting the time, place, and method 
for conducting an initial prehearing conference under Sec.  1.640. This 
notice may be combined with the docketing notice under paragraph (a)(3) 
of this section.


Sec.  1.631  What are the powers of the ALJ?

    The ALJ will have all powers necessary to conduct a fair, orderly, 
expeditious, and impartial hearing process relating to Forest Service's 
or other Department's condition or prescription that has been referred 
to the ALJ for hearing, including the powers to:
    (a) Administer oaths and affirmations;
    (b) Issue subpoenas under Sec.  1.647;
    (c) Shorten or enlarge time periods set forth in these regulations, 
except that the deadline in Sec.  1.660(a)(2) can be extended only if 
the ALJ must be replaced under Sec.  1.632 or 1.633;
    (d) Rule on motions;
    (e) Authorize discovery as provided for in Sec. Sec.  1.641 through 
1.647;
    (f) Hold hearings and conferences;
    (g) Regulate the course of hearings;
    (h) Call and question witnesses;
    (i) Exclude any person from a hearing or conference for misconduct 
or other good cause;
    (j) Summarily dispose of any hearing request or issue as to which 
the ALJ determines there is no disputed issue of material fact;
    (k) Issue a decision consistent with Sec.  1.660(b) regarding any 
disputed issue of material fact; and
    (l) Take any other action authorized by law.


Sec.  1.632  What happens if the ALJ becomes unavailable?

    (a) If the ALJ becomes unavailable or otherwise unable to perform 
the duties described in Sec.  1.631, the Hearing Clerk will designate a 
successor.
    (b) If a hearing has commenced and the ALJ cannot proceed with it, 
a successor ALJ may do so. At the request of a party, the successor ALJ 
may recall any witness whose testimony is material and disputed, and 
who is available to testify again without undue burden. The successor 
ALJ may, within his or her discretion, recall any other witness.

[[Page 17188]]

Sec.  1.633  Under what circumstances may the ALJ be disqualified?

    (a) The ALJ may withdraw from a case at any time the ALJ deems 
himself or herself disqualified.
    (b) At any time before issuance of the ALJ's decision, any party 
may move that the ALJ disqualify himself or herself for personal bias 
or other valid cause.
    (1) The party must file the motion promptly after discovering facts 
or other reasons allegedly constituting cause for disqualification.
    (2) The party must file with the motion an affidavit or declaration 
setting forth the facts or other reasons in detail.
    (c) The ALJ must rule upon the motion, stating the grounds for the 
ruling.
    (1) If the ALJ concludes that the motion is timely and meritorious, 
he or she must disqualify himself or herself and withdraw from the 
case.
    (2) If the ALJ does not disqualify himself or herself and withdraw 
from the case, the ALJ must continue with the hearing process and issue 
a decision.


Sec.  1.634  What is the law governing ex parte communications?

    (a) Ex parte communications with the ALJ or his or her staff are 
prohibited in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 554(d).
    (b) This section does not prohibit ex parte inquiries concerning 
case status or procedural requirements, unless the inquiry involves an 
area of controversy in the hearing process.


Sec.  1.635  What are the requirements for motions?

    (a) General. Any party may apply for an order or ruling on any 
matter related to the hearing process by presenting a motion to the 
ALJ. A motion may be presented any time after the Hearing Clerk issues 
a docketing notice under Sec.  1.630.
    (1) A motion made at a hearing may be stated orally on the record, 
unless the ALJ directs that it be reduced to writing.
    (2) Any other motion must:
    (i) Be in writing;
    (ii) Comply with the requirements of Sec. Sec.  1.610 through 1.613 
with respect to form, content, filing, and service; and
    (iii) Not exceed 15 pages, including all supporting arguments.
    (b) Content. (1) Each motion must state clearly and concisely:
    (i) Its purpose and the relief sought;
    (ii) The facts constituting the grounds for the relief sought; and
    (iii) Any applicable statutory or regulatory authority.
    (2) A proposed order must accompany the motion.
    (c) Response. Except as otherwise required by this part, any other 
party may file a response to a written motion within 10 days after 
service of the motion. The response may not exceed 15 pages, including 
all supporting arguments. When a party presents a motion at a hearing, 
any other party may present a response orally on the record.
    (d) Reply. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, no reply to a response 
may be filed.
    (e) Effect of filing. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, the filing 
of a motion does not stay the hearing process.
    (f) Ruling. The ALJ will rule on the motion as soon as practicable, 
either orally on the record or in writing. He or she may summarily deny 
any dilatory, repetitive, or frivolous motion.

Prehearing Conferences and Discovery


Sec.  1.640  What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?

    (a) Initial prehearing conference. The ALJ will conduct an initial 
prehearing conference with the parties at the time specified in the 
notice under Sec.  1.630, on or about the 20th day after the effective 
date stated in the referral notice under Sec.  1.626(c)(4), 43 CFR 
45.26(c)(4), or 50 CFR 221.26(c)(4).
    (1) The initial prehearing conference will be used:
    (i) To identify, narrow, and clarify the disputed issues of 
material fact and exclude issues that do not qualify for review as 
factual, material, and disputed;
    (ii) To consider the parties' motions for discovery under Sec.  
1.641 and to set a deadline for the completion of discovery;
    (iii) To discuss the evidence on which each party intends to rely 
at the hearing;
    (iv) To set deadlines for submission of written testimony under 
Sec.  1.652 and exchange of exhibits to be offered as evidence under 
Sec.  1.654; and
    (v) To set the date, time, and place of the hearing.
    (2) The initial prehearing conference may also be used:
    (i) To discuss limiting and grouping witnesses to avoid 
duplication;
    (ii) To discuss stipulations of fact and of the content and 
authenticity of documents;
    (iii) To consider requests that the ALJ take official notice of 
public records or other matters;
    (iv) To discuss the submission of written testimony, briefs, or 
other documents in electronic form; and
    (v) To consider any other matters that may aid in the disposition 
of the case.
    (b) Other conferences. The ALJ may in his or her discretion direct 
the parties to attend one or more other prehearing conferences, if 
consistent with the need to complete the hearing process within 90 
days. Any party may by motion request a conference.
    (c) Notice. The ALJ must give the parties reasonable notice of the 
time and place of any conference. A conference will ordinarily be held 
by telephone, unless the ALJ orders otherwise.
    (d) Preparation. (1) Each party's representative must be fully 
prepared to discuss all issues pertinent to that party that are 
properly before the conference, both procedural and substantive. The 
representative must be authorized to commit the party that he or she 
represents respecting those issues.
    (2) Before the date set for the initial prehearing conference, the 
parties' representatives must make a good faith effort:
    (i) To meet in person, by telephone, or by other appropriate means; 
and
    (ii) To reach agreement on discovery and the schedule of remaining 
steps in the hearing process.
    (e) Failure to attend. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, a party 
that fails to attend or participate in a conference, after being served 
with reasonable notice of its time and place, waives all objections to 
any agreements reached in the conference and to any consequent orders 
or rulings.
    (f) Scope. During a conference, the ALJ may dispose of any 
procedural matters related to the case.
    (g) Order. Within 2 days after the conclusion of each conference, 
the ALJ must issue an order that recites any agreements reached at the 
conference and any rulings made by the ALJ during or as a result of the 
conference.


Sec.  1.641  How may parties obtain discovery of information needed for 
the case?

    (a) General. By agreement of the parties or with the permission of 
the ALJ, a party may obtain discovery of information to assist the 
party in preparing or presenting its case. Available methods of 
discovery are:
    (1) Written interrogatories as provided in Sec.  1.643;
    (2) Depositions of witnesses as provided in paragraph (h) of this 
section; and
    (3) Requests for production of designated documents or tangible 
things or for entry on designated land for inspection or other 
purposes.
    (b) Criteria. Discovery may occur only as agreed to by the parties 
or as authorized by the ALJ during a prehearing conference or in a 
written order under Sec.  1.640(g). The ALJ may authorize discovery 
only if the party requesting discovery demonstrates:
    (1) That the discovery will not unreasonably delay the hearing 
process;

[[Page 17189]]

    (2) That the information sought:
    (i) Will be admissible at the hearing or appears reasonably 
calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence;
    (ii) Is not already in the license proceeding record or otherwise 
obtainable by the party;
    (iii) Is not cumulative or repetitious; and
    (iv) Is not privileged or protected from disclosure by applicable 
law;
    (3) That the scope of the discovery is not unduly burdensome;
    (4) That the method to be used is the least burdensome method 
available;
    (5) That any trade secrets or proprietary information can be 
adequately safeguarded; and
    (6) That the standards for discovery under paragraphs (f) through 
(h) of this section have been met, if applicable.
    (c) Motions. A party may initiate discovery:
    (1) Pursuant to an agreement of the parties; or
    (2) By filing a motion that:
    (i) Briefly describes the proposed method(s), purpose, and scope of 
the discovery;
    (ii) Explains how the discovery meets the criteria in paragraphs 
(b)(1) through (b)(6) of this section; and
    (iii) Attaches a copy of any proposed discovery request (written 
interrogatories, notice of deposition, or request for production of 
designated documents or tangible things or for entry on designated 
land).
    (d) Timing of motions. A party must file any discovery motion under 
paragraph (c)(2) of this section within 7 days after the effective date 
stated in the referral notice under Sec.  1.626(c)(4), 43 CFR 
45.26(c)(4), or 50 CFR 221.26(c)(4).
    (e) Objections. (1) A party must file any objections to a discovery 
motion or to specific portions of a proposed discovery request within 7 
days after service of the motion.
    (2) An objection must explain how, in the objecting party's view, 
the discovery sought does not meet the criteria in paragraphs (b)(1) 
through (6) of this section.
    (f) Materials prepared for hearing. A party generally may not 
obtain discovery of documents and tangible things otherwise 
discoverable under paragraph (b) of this section if they were prepared 
in anticipation of or for the hearing by or for another party's 
representative (including the party's attorney, expert, or consultant).
    (1) If a party wants to discover such materials, it must show:
    (i) That it has substantial need of the materials in preparing its 
own case; and
    (ii) That the party is unable without undue hardship to obtain the 
substantial equivalent of the materials by other means.
    (2) In ordering discovery of such materials when the required 
showing has been made, the ALJ must protect against disclosure of the 
mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories of an 
attorney.
    (g) Experts. Unless restricted by the ALJ, a party may discover any 
facts known or opinions held by an expert through the methods set out 
in paragraph (a) of this section concerning any relevant matters that 
are not privileged. Such discovery will be permitted only if:
    (1) The expert is expected to be a witness at the hearing; or
    (2) The expert is relied on by another expert who is expected to be 
a witness at the hearing, and the party shows:
    (i) That it has a compelling need for the information; and
    (ii) That it cannot practicably obtain the information by other 
means.
    (h) Limitations on depositions. (1) A party may depose an expert or 
non-expert witness only if the party shows that the witness:
    (i) Will be unable to attend the hearing because of age, illness, 
or other incapacity; or
    (ii) Is unwilling to attend the hearing voluntarily, and the party 
is unable to compel the witness's attendance at the hearing by 
subpoena.
    (2) Paragraph (h)(1)(ii) of this section does not apply to any 
person employed by or under contract with the party seeking the 
deposition.
    (3) A party may depose a senior Department employee only if the 
party shows:
    (i) That the employee's testimony is necessary in order to provide 
significant, unprivileged information that is not available from any 
other source or by less burdensome means; and
    (ii) That the deposition would not significantly interfere with the 
employee's ability to perform his or her government duties.
    (4) Unless otherwise stipulated to by the parties or authorized by 
the ALJ upon a showing of extraordinary circumstances, a deposition is 
limited to 1 day of 7 hours.
    (i) Completion of discovery. All discovery must be completed within 
25 days after the initial prehearing conference.


Sec.  1.642  When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?

    (a) Discovery. A party must promptly supplement or amend any prior 
response to a discovery request if it learns that the response:
    (1) Was incomplete or incorrect when made; or
    (2) Though complete and correct when made, is now incomplete or 
incorrect in any material respect.
    (b) Witnesses and exhibits. (1) Within 10 days after the date set 
for completion of discovery, each party must file an updated version of 
the list of witnesses and exhibits required under Sec.  1.621(c), Sec.  
1.622(c), or Sec.  1.625(c).
    (2) If a party wishes to include any new witness or exhibit on its 
updated list, it must provide an explanation of why it was not feasible 
for the party to include the witness or exhibit on its list under Sec.  
1.621(c), Sec.  1.622(c), or Sec.  1.625(c).
    (c) Failure to disclose. (1) A party will not be permitted to 
introduce as evidence at the hearing testimony from a witness or other 
information that it failed to disclose under Sec.  1.621(c), Sec.  
1.622(c), or Sec.  1.625(c), or paragraph (a) or (b) of this section.
    (2) Paragraph (c)(1) of this section does not apply if the failure 
to disclose was substantially justified or is harmless.
    (3) A party may object to the admission of evidence under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section before or during the hearing.
    (4) The ALJ will consider the following in determining whether to 
exclude evidence under paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this section:
    (i) The prejudice to the objecting party;
    (ii) The ability of the objecting party to cure any prejudice;
    (iii) The extent to which presentation of the evidence would 
disrupt the orderly and efficient hearing of the case;
    (iv) The importance of the evidence; and
    (v) The reason for the failure to disclose, including any bad faith 
or willfulness regarding the failure.


Sec.  1.643  What are the requirements for written interrogatories?

    (a) Motion; limitation. Except upon agreement of the parties:
    (1) A party wishing to propound interrogatories must file a motion 
under Sec.  1.641(c); and
    (2) A party may propound no more than 25 interrogatories, counting 
discrete subparts as separate interrogatories, unless the ALJ approves 
a higher number upon a showing of good cause.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  1.641(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the use of written 
interrogatories. The order will:

[[Page 17190]]

    (1) Grant the motion and approve the use of some or all of the 
proposed interrogatories; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Answers to interrogatories. Except upon agreement of the 
parties, the party to whom the proposed interrogatories are directed 
must file its answers to any interrogatories approved by the ALJ within 
15 days after issuance of the order under paragraph (b) of this 
section.
    (1) Each approved interrogatory must be answered separately and 
fully in writing.
    (2) The party or its representative must sign the answers to 
interrogatories under oath or affirmation.
    (d) Access to records. A party's answer to an interrogatory is 
sufficient when:
    (1) The information may be obtained from an examination of records, 
or from a compilation, abstract, or summary based on such records;
    (2) The burden of obtaining the information from the records is 
substantially the same for all parties;
    (3) The answering party specifically identifies the individual 
records from which the requesting party may obtain the information and 
where the records are located; and
    (4) The answering party provides the requesting party with 
reasonable opportunity to examine the records and make a copy, 
compilation, abstract, or summary.


Sec.  1.644  What are the requirements for depositions?

    (a) Motion and notice. Except upon agreement of the parties, a 
party wishing to take a deposition must file a motion under Sec.  
1.641(c). Any notice of deposition filed with the motion must state:
    (1) The time and place that the deposition is to be taken;
    (2) The name and address of the person before whom the deposition 
is to be taken;
    (3) The name and address of the witness whose deposition is to be 
taken; and
    (4) Any documents or materials that the witness is to produce.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  1.641(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the taking of a 
deposition. The order will:
    (1) Grant the motion and approve the taking of the deposition, 
subject to any conditions or restrictions the ALJ may impose; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Arrangements. If the parties agree to or the ALJ approves the 
taking of the deposition, the party requesting the deposition must make 
appropriate arrangements for necessary facilities and personnel.
    (1) The deposition will be taken at the time and place agreed to by 
the parties or indicated in the ALJ's order.
    (2) The deposition may be taken before any disinterested person 
authorized to administer oaths in the place where the deposition is to 
be taken.
    (3) Any party that objects to the taking of a deposition because of 
the disqualification of the person before whom it is to be taken must 
do so:
    (i) Before the deposition begins; or
    (ii) As soon as the disqualification becomes known or could have 
been discovered with reasonable diligence.
    (4) A deposition may be taken by telephone conference call, if 
agreed to by the parties or approved in the ALJ's order.
    (d) Testimony. Each witness deposed must be placed under oath or 
affirmation, and the other parties must be given an opportunity for 
cross-examination.
    (e) Representation of witness. The witness being deposed may have 
counsel or another representative present during the deposition.
    (f) Recording and transcript. Except as provided in paragraph (g) 
of this section, the deposition must be stenographically recorded and 
transcribed at the expense of the party that requested the deposition.
    (1) Any other party may obtain a copy of the transcript at its own 
expense.
    (2) Unless waived by the deponent, the deponent will have 3 days 
after receiving the transcript to read and sign it.
    (3) The person before whom the deposition was taken must certify 
the transcript following receipt of the signed transcript from the 
deponent or expiration of the 3-day review period, whichever occurs 
first.
    (g) Video recording. The testimony at a deposition may be recorded 
on videotape, subject to any conditions or restrictions that the 
parties may agree to or the ALJ may impose, at the expense of the party 
requesting the recording.
    (1) The video recording may be in conjunction with an oral 
examination by telephone conference held under paragraph (c)(4) of this 
section.
    (2) After the deposition has been taken, the person recording the 
deposition must:
    (i) Provide a copy of the videotape to any party that requests it, 
at the requesting party's expense; and
    (ii) Attach to the videotape a statement identifying the case and 
the deponent and certifying the authenticity of the video recording.
    (h) Use of deposition. A deposition may be used at the hearing as 
provided in Sec.  1.653.


Sec.  1.645  What are the requirements for requests for documents or 
tangible things or entry on land?

    (a) Motion. Except upon agreement of the parties, a party wishing 
to request the production of designated documents or tangible things or 
entry on designated land must file a motion under Sec.  1.641(c). A 
request may include any of the following that are in the possession, 
custody, or control of another party:
    (1) The production of designated documents for inspection and 
copying, other than documents that are already in the license 
proceeding record;
    (2) The production of designated tangible things for inspection, 
copying, testing, or sampling; or
    (3) Entry on designated land or other property for inspection and 
measuring, surveying, photographing, testing, or sampling either the 
property or any designated object or operation on the property.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  1.641(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the production of 
documents or tangible things or entry on land for inspection, copying, 
or other purposes. The order will:
    (1) Grant the motion and approve the use of some or all of the 
proposed requests; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Compliance with order. Except upon agreement of the parties, 
the party to whom any approved request for production is directed must 
permit the approved inspection and other activities within 15 days 
after issuance of the order under paragraph (a) of this section.


Sec.  1.646  What sanctions may the ALJ impose for failure to comply 
with discovery?

    (a) Upon motion of a party, the ALJ may impose sanctions under 
paragraph (b) of this section if any party:
    (1) Fails to comply with an order approving discovery; or
    (2) Fails to supplement or amend a response to discovery under 
Sec.  1.642(a).
    (b) The ALJ may impose one or more of the following sanctions:
    (1) Infer that the information, testimony, document, or other 
evidence withheld would have been adverse to the party;
    (2) Order that, for the purposes of the hearing, designated facts 
are established;
    (3) Order that the party not introduce into evidence, or otherwise 
rely on to

[[Page 17191]]

support its case, any information, testimony, document, or other 
evidence:
    (i) That the party improperly withheld; or
    (ii) That the party obtained from another party in discovery;
    (4) Allow another party to use secondary evidence to show what the 
information, testimony, document, or other evidence withheld would have 
shown; or
    (5) Take other appropriate action to remedy the party's failure to 
comply.


Sec.  1.64  What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

    (a) Request for subpoena. (1) Except as provided in paragraph 
(a)(2) of this section, any party may request by written motion that 
the ALJ issue a subpoena to the extent authorized by law for the 
attendance of a person, the giving of testimony, or the production of 
documents or other relevant evidence during discovery or for the 
hearing.
    (2) A party may request a subpoena for a senior Department employee 
only if the party shows:
    (i) That the employee's testimony is necessary in order to provide 
significant, unprivileged information that is not available from any 
other source or by less burdensome means; and
    (ii) That the employee's attendance would not significantly 
interfere with the ability to perform his or her government duties.
    (b) Service. (1) A subpoena may be served by any person who is not 
a party and is 18 years of age or older.
    (2) Service must be made by hand delivering a copy of the subpoena 
to the person named therein.
    (3) The person serving the subpoena must:
    (i) Prepare a certificate of service setting forth:
    (A) The date, time, and manner of service; or
    (B) The reason for any failure of service; and
    (ii) Swear to or affirm the certificate, attach it to a copy of the 
subpoena, and return it to the party on whose behalf the subpoena was 
served.
    (c) Witness fees. (1) A party who subpoenas a witness who is not a 
party must pay him or her the same fees and mileage expenses that are 
paid witnesses in the district courts of the United States.
    (2) A witness who is not a party and who attends a deposition or 
hearing at the request of any party without having been subpoenaed is 
entitled to the same fees and mileage expenses as if he or she had been 
subpoenaed. However, this paragraph does not apply to Federal employees 
who are called as witnesses by the Forest Service or another 
Department.
    (d) Motion to quash. (1) A person to whom a subpoena is directed 
may request by motion that the ALJ quash or modify the subpoena.
    (2) The motion must be filed:
    (i) Within 5 days after service of the subpoena; or
    (ii) At or before the time specified in the subpoena for 
compliance, if that is less than 5 days after service of the subpoena.
    (3) The ALJ may quash or modify the subpoena if it:
    (i) Is unreasonable;
    (ii) Requires production of information during discovery that is 
not discoverable; or
    (iii) Requires disclosure of irrelevant, privileged, or otherwise 
protected information.
    (e) Enforcement. For good cause shown, the ALJ may apply to the 
appropriate United States District Court for the issuance of an order 
compelling the appearance and testimony of a witness or the production 
of evidence as set forth in a subpoena that has been duly issued and 
served.

Hearing, Briefing, and Decision


Sec.  1.650  When and where will the hearing be held?

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the 
hearing will be held at the time and place set at the initial 
prehearing conference under Sec.  1.640, generally within 25 days after 
the date set for completion of discovery.
    (b) On motion by a party or on the ALJ's initiative, the ALJ may 
change the date, time, or place of the hearing if he or she finds:
    (1) That there is good cause for the change; and
    (2) That the change will not unduly prejudice the parties and 
witnesses.


Sec.  1.651  What are the parties' rights during the hearing?

    Each party has the following rights during the hearing, as 
necessary to assure full and accurate disclosure of the facts:
    (a) To present testimony and exhibits, consistent with the 
requirements in Sec. Sec.  1.621(c), 1.622(c), 1.625(c), 1.642(b), and 
1.652;
    (b) To make objections, motions, and arguments; and
    (c) To cross-examine witnesses and to conduct re-direct and re-
cross examination as permitted by the ALJ.


Sec.  1.652  What are the requirements for presenting testimony?

    (a) Written direct testimony. Unless otherwise ordered by the ALJ, 
all direct hearing testimony for each party's initial case must be 
prepared and submitted in written form. The ALJ will determine whether 
rebuttal testimony, if allowed, must be submitted in written form.
    (1) Prepared written testimony must:
    (i) Have line numbers inserted in the left-hand margin of each 
page;
    (ii) Be authenticated by an affidavit or declaration of the 
witness;
    (iii) Be filed within 10 days after the date set for completion of 
discovery; and
    (iv) Be offered as an exhibit during the hearing.
    (2) Any witness submitting written testimony must be available for 
cross-examination at the hearing.
    (b) Oral testimony. Oral examination of a witness in a hearing, 
including on cross-examination or redirect, must be conducted under 
oath and in the presence of the ALJ, with an opportunity for all 
parties to question the witness.
    (c) Telephonic testimony. The ALJ may by order allow a witness to 
testify by telephonic conference call.
    (1) The arrangements for the call must let each party listen to and 
speak to the witness and each other within the hearing of the ALJ.
    (2) The ALJ will ensure the full identification of each speaker so 
the reporter can create a proper record.
    (3) The ALJ may issue a subpoena under Sec.  1.647 directing a 
witness to testify by telephonic conference call.


Sec.  1.653  How may a party use a deposition in the hearing?

    (a) In general. Subject to the provisions of this section, a party 
may use in the hearing any part or all of a deposition taken under 
Sec.  1.644 against any party who:
    (1) Was present or represented at the taking of the deposition; or
    (2) Had reasonable notice of the taking of the deposition.
    (b) Admissibility. (1) No part of a deposition will be included in 
the hearing record, unless received in evidence by the ALJ.
    (2) The ALJ will exclude from evidence any question and response to 
which an objection:
    (i) Was noted at the taking of the deposition; and
    (ii) Would have been sustained if the witness had been personally 
present and testifying at a hearing.
    (3) If a party offers only part of a deposition in evidence:
    (i) An adverse party may require the party to introduce any other 
part that ought in fairness to be considered with the part introduced; 
and
    (ii) Any other party may introduce any other parts.

[[Page 17192]]

    (c) Videotaped deposition. If the deposition was recorded on 
videotape and is admitted into evidence, relevant portions will be 
played during the hearing and transcribed into the record by the 
reporter.


Sec.  1.654  What are the requirements for exhibits, official notice, 
and stipulations?

    (a) General. (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) through (d) 
of this section, any material offered in evidence, other than oral 
testimony, must be offered in the form of an exhibit.
    (2) Each exhibit offered by a party must be marked for 
identification.
    (3) Any party who seeks to have an exhibit admitted into evidence 
must provide:
    (i) The original of the exhibit to the reporter, unless the ALJ 
permits the substitution of a copy; and
    (ii) A copy of the exhibit to the ALJ.
    (b) Material not offered. If a document offered as an exhibit 
contains material not offered as evidence:
    (1) The party offering the exhibit must:
    (i) Designate the matter offered as evidence;
    (ii) Segregate and exclude the material not offered in evidence, to 
the extent practicable; and
    (iii) Provide copies of the entire document to the other parties 
appearing at the hearing.
    (2) The ALJ must give the other parties an opportunity to inspect 
the entire document and offer in evidence any other portions of the 
document.
    (c) Official notice. (1) At the request of any party at the 
hearing, the ALJ may take official notice of any matter of which the 
courts of the United States may take judicial notice, including the 
public records of any Department party.
    (2) The ALJ must give the other parties appearing at the hearing an 
opportunity to show the contrary of an officially noticed fact.
    (3) Any party requesting official notice of a fact after the 
conclusion of the hearing must show good cause for its failure to 
request official notice during the hearing.
    (d) Stipulations. (1) The parties may stipulate to any relevant 
facts or to the authenticity of any relevant documents.
    (2) If received in evidence at the hearing, a stipulation is 
binding on the stipulating parties.
    (3) A stipulation may be written or made orally at the hearing.


Sec.  1.655  What evidence is admissible at the hearing?

    (a) General. (1) Subject to the provisions of Sec.  1.642(b), the 
ALJ may admit any written, oral, documentary, or demonstrative evidence 
that is:
    (i) Relevant, reliable, and probative; and
    (ii) Not privileged or unduly repetitious or cumulative.
    (2) The ALJ may exclude evidence if its probative value is 
substantially outweighed by the risk of undue prejudice, confusion of 
the issues, or delay.
    (3) Hearsay evidence is admissible. The ALJ may consider the fact 
that evidence is hearsay when determining its probative value.
    (4) The Federal Rules of Evidence do not directly apply to the 
hearing, but may be used as guidance by the ALJ and the parties in 
interpreting and applying the provisions of this section.
    (b) Objections. Any party objecting to the admission or exclusion 
of evidence must concisely state the grounds. A ruling on every 
objection must appear in the record.


Sec.  1.656  What are the requirements for transcription of the 
hearing?

    (a) Transcript and reporter's fees. The hearing will be transcribed 
verbatim.
    (1) The Forest Service will secure the services of a reporter and 
pay the reporter's fees to provide an original transcript to the OALJ 
on an expedited basis.
    (2) Each party must pay the reporter for any copies of the 
transcript obtained by that party.
    (b) Transcript corrections. (1) Any party may file a motion 
proposing corrections to the transcript. The motion must be filed 
within 5 days after receipt of the transcript, unless the ALJ sets a 
different deadline.
    (2) Unless a party files a timely motion under paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section, the transcript will be presumed to be correct and 
complete, except for obvious typographical errors.
    (3) As soon as practicable after the close of the hearing and after 
consideration of any motions filed under paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section, the ALJ will issue an order making any corrections to the 
transcript that the ALJ finds are warranted.


Sec.  1.657  Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of 
proof applies?

    (a) Any party who has filed a request for a hearing has the burden 
of persuasion with respect to the issues of material fact raised by 
that party.
    (b) The standard of proof is a preponderance of the evidence.


Sec.  1.658  When will the hearing record close?

    (a) The hearing record will close when the ALJ closes the hearing, 
unless he or she directs otherwise.
    (b) Evidence may not be added after the hearing record is closed, 
but the transcript may be corrected under Sec.  1.656(b).


Sec.  1.659  What are the requirements for post-hearing briefs?

    (a) General. (1) Each party may file a post-hearing brief within 15 
days after the close of the hearing.
    (2) A party may file a reply brief only if requested by the ALJ. 
The deadline for filing a reply brief, if any, will be set by the ALJ.
    (3) The ALJ may limit the length of the briefs to be filed under 
this section.
    (b) Content. (1) An initial brief must include:
    (i) A concise statement of the case;
    (ii) A separate section containing proposed findings regarding the 
issues of material fact, with supporting citations to the hearing 
record;
    (iii) Arguments in support of the party's position; and
    (iv) Any other matter required by the ALJ.
    (2) A reply brief, if requested by the ALJ, must be limited to any 
issues identified by the ALJ.
    (c) Form. (1) An exhibit admitted in evidence or marked for 
identification in the record may not be reproduced in the brief.
    (i) Such an exhibit may be reproduced, within reasonable limits, in 
an appendix to the brief.
    (ii) Any pertinent analysis of an exhibit may be included in a 
brief.
    (2) If a brief exceeds 20 pages, it must contain:
    (i) A table of contents and of points made, with page references; 
and
    (ii) An alphabetical list of citations to legal authority, with 
page references.


Sec.  1.660  What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?

    (a) Timing. The ALJ must issue a decision within the shorter of the 
following time periods:
    (1) 30 days after the close of the hearing under Sec.  1.658; or
    (2) 120 days after the effective date stated in the referral notice 
under Sec.  1.626(c)(4), 43 CFR 45.26(c)(4), or 50 CFR 221.26(c)(4).
    (b) Content. (1) The decision must contain:
    (i) Findings of fact on all disputed issues of material fact;
    (ii) Conclusions of law necessary to make the findings of fact 
(such as rulings on materiality and on the admissibility of evidence); 
and

[[Page 17193]]

    (iii) Reasons for the findings and conclusions.
    (2) The ALJ may adopt any of the findings of fact proposed by one 
or more of the parties.
    (3) The decision will not contain conclusions as to whether any 
preliminary condition or prescription should be adopted, modified, or 
rejected, or whether any proposed alternative should be accepted or 
rejected.
    (c) Service. Promptly after issuing his or her decision, the ALJ 
must:
    (1) Serve the decision on each party to the hearing;
    (2) Prepare a list of all documents that constitute the complete 
record for the hearing process (including the decision) and certify 
that the list is complete; and
    (3) Forward to FERC the complete record for the hearing process, 
along with the certified list prepared under paragraph (c)(2) of this 
section, for inclusion in the record for the license proceeding. 
Materials received in electronic form, e.g., as attachments to 
electronic mail, should be transmitted to FERC in electronic form. 
However, for cases in which a settlement was reached prior to a 
decision, the entire record need not be transmitted to FERC. In such 
situations, only the initial pleadings (hearing requests with 
attachments, any notices of intervention and response, answers, and 
referral notice) and any dismissal order of the ALJ need be 
transmitted.
    (d) Finality. The ALJ's decision under this section with respect to 
the disputed issues of material fact will not be subject to further 
administrative review. To the extent the ALJ's decision forms the basis 
for any condition or prescription subsequently included in the license, 
it may be subject to judicial review under 16 U.S.C. 825l(b).

Alternatives Process


Sec.  1.670  How must documents be filed and served under this subpart?

    (a) Filing. (1) A document under this subpart must be filed using 
one of the methods set forth in Sec.  1.612(b).
    (2) A document is considered filed on the date it is received. 
However, any document received after 5 p.m. at the place where the 
filing is due is considered filed on the next regular business day.
    (b) Service. (1) Any document filed under this subpart must be 
served at the same time the document is delivered or sent for filing. A 
complete copy of the document must be delivered or sent to each license 
party and FERC, using:
    (i) One of the methods of service in Sec.  1.613(c); or
    (ii) Regular mail.
    (2) The provisions of Sec.  1.613(d) regarding a certificate of 
service apply to service under this subpart.


Sec.  1.671  How do I propose an alternative?

    (a) General. To propose an alternative condition, you must:
    (1) Be a license party; and
    (2) File a written proposal with NFS, at the appropriate address 
provided in Sec.  1.612(a)(1):
    (i) For a case under Sec.  1.601(d)(1), within 30 days after the 
Forest Service files its preliminary conditions with FERC; or
    (ii) For a case under Sec.  1.601(d)(2), within 60 days after the 
Forest Service files its proposed conditions with FERC.
    (b) Content. Your proposal must include:
    (1) A description of the alternative, in an equivalent level of 
detail to the Forest Service's preliminary condition;
    (2) An explanation of how the alternative will provide for the 
adequate protection and utilization of the reservation;
    (3) An explanation of how the alternative, as compared to the 
preliminary condition, will:
    (i) Cost significantly less to implement; or
    (ii) Result in improved operation of the project works for 
electricity production;
    (4) An explanation of how the alternative will affect:
    (i) Energy supply, distribution, cost, and use;
    (ii) Flood control;
    (iii) Navigation;
    (iv) Water supply;
    (v) Air quality; and
    (vi) Other aspects of environmental quality; and
    (5) Specific citations to any scientific studies, literature, and 
other documented information relied on to support your proposal, 
including any assumptions you are making (e.g., regarding the cost of 
energy or the rate of inflation). If any such document is not already 
in the license proceeding record, you must provide a copy with the 
proposal.


Sec.  1.672  May I file a revised proposed alternative?

    (a) Within 20 days after issuance of the ALJ's decision under Sec.  
1.660, you may file with NFS, at the appropriate address provided in 
Sec.  1.612(a)(1), a revised proposed alternative condition if:
    (1) You previously filed a proposed alternative that met the 
requirements of Sec.  1.671; and
    (2) Your revised proposed alternative is designed to respond to one 
or more findings of fact by the ALJ.
    (b) Your revised proposed alternative must:
    (1) Satisfy the content requirements for a proposed alternative 
under Sec.  1.671(b); and
    (2) Identify the specific ALJ finding(s) to which the revised 
proposed alternative is designed to respond and how the revised 
proposed alternative differs from the original alternative.
    (c) Filing a revised proposed alternative will constitute a 
withdrawal of the previously filed proposed alternative.


Sec.  1.673  When will the Forest Service file its modified condition?

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, if any 
license party proposes an alternative to a preliminary condition or 
prescription under Sec.  1.671,the Forest Service will do the following 
within 60 days after the deadline for filing comments on FERC's draft 
NEPA document under 18 CFR 5.25(c):
    (1) Analyze under Sec.  1.674 any alternative condition proposed 
under Sec.  1.671 or 1.672; and
    (2) File with FERC:
    (i) Any condition the Forest Service adopts as its modified 
condition; and
    (ii) The Forest Service's analysis of the modified condition and 
any proposed alternative.
    (b) If the Forest Service needs additional time to complete the 
steps set forth in paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this section, it will 
so inform FERC within 60 days after the deadline for filing comments on 
FERC's draft NEPA document under 18 CFR 5.25(c).


Sec.  1.674  How will the Forest Service analyze a proposed alternative 
and formulate its modified condition?

    (a) In deciding whether to accept an alternative proposed under 
Sec.  1.671 or Sec.  1.672, the Forest Service must consider evidence 
and supporting material provided by any license party or otherwise 
reasonably available to the Forest Service, including:
    (1) Any evidence on the implementation costs or operational impacts 
for electricity production of the proposed alternative;
    (2) Any comments received on the Forest Service's preliminary 
condition;
    (3) Any ALJ decision on disputed issues of material fact issued 
under Sec.  1.660 with respect to the preliminary condition;
    (4) Comments received on any draft or final NEPA documents; and
    (5) The license party's proposal under Sec.  1.671 or Sec.  1.672.
    (b) The Forest Service must accept a proposed alternative if the 
Forest

[[Page 17194]]

Service determines, based on substantial evidence provided by any 
license party or otherwise available to the Forest Service, that the 
alternative:
    (1) Will, as compared to the Forest Service's preliminary 
condition:
    (i) Cost significantly less to implement; or
    (ii) Result in improved operation of the project works for 
electricity production; and
    (2) Will provide for the adequate protection and utilization of the 
reservation.
    (c) For purposes of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the 
Forest Service will consider evidence and supporting material provided 
by any license party by the deadline for filing comments on FERC's NEPA 
document under 18 CFR 5.25(c).
    (d) When the Forest Service files with FERC the condition that the 
Forest Service adopts as its modified condition under Sec.  
1.673(a)(2), it must also file:
    (1) A written statement explaining:
    (i) The basis for the adopted condition;
    (ii) If the Forest Service is not accepting any pending 
alternative, its reasons for not doing so; and
    (iii) If any alternative submitted under Sec.  1.671 was 
subsequently withdrawn by the license party, that the alternative was 
withdrawn; and
    (2) Any study, data, and other factual information relied on that 
is not already part of the licensing proceeding record.
    (e) The written statement under paragraph (d)(1) of this section 
must demonstrate that the Forest Service gave equal consideration to 
the effects of the condition adopted and any alternative not accepted 
on:
    (1) Energy supply, distribution, cost, and use;
    (2) Flood control;
    (3) Navigation;
    (4) Water supply;
    (5) Air quality; and
    (6) Preservation of other aspects of environmental quality.


Sec.  1.675  Has OMB approved the information collection provisions of 
this subpart?

    Yes. This subpart contains provisions in Sec. Sec.  1.670 through 
1.674 that would collect information from the public. It therefore 
requires approval by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under 
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. (PRA). 
According to the PRA, a Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor, and 
a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information 
unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number that indicates 
OMB approval. OMB has reviewed the information collection in this rule 
and approved it under OMB control number 1094-0001.

Title 43--Department of the Interior

0
3. Part 45 is revised to read as follows:

PART 45--CONDITIONS AND PRESCRIPTIONS IN FERC HYDROPOWER LICENSES

Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec.
45.1 What is the purpose of this part, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?
45.2 What terms are used in this part?
45.3 How are time periods computed?
45.4 What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and alternatives 
processes?
Subpart B--Hearing Process

Representatives

45.10 Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to a 
representative?

Document Filing and Service

45.11 What are the form and content requirements for documents under 
this subpart?
45.12 Where and how must documents be filed?
45.13 What are the requirements for service of documents?

Initiation of Hearing Process

45.20 What supporting information must DOI provide with its 
preliminary conditions or prescriptions?
45.21 How do I request a hearing?
45.22 How do I file a notice of intervention and response?
45.23 Will hearing requests be consolidated?
45.24 Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?
45.25 How will the bureau respond to any hearing requests?
45.26 What will DOI do with any hearing requests?
45.27 What regulations apply to a case referred for a hearing?

General Provisions Related to Hearings

45.30 What will the Hearings Division do with a case referral?
45.31 What are the powers of the ALJ?
45.32 What happens if the ALJ becomes unavailable?
45.33 Under what circumstances may the ALJ be disqualified?
45.34 What is the law governing ex parte communications?
45.35 What are the requirements for motions?

Prehearing Conferences and Discovery

45.40 What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?
45.41 How may parties obtain discovery of information needed for the 
case?
45.42 When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?
45.43 What are the requirements for written interrogatories?
45.44 What are the requirements for depositions?
45.45 What are the requirements for requests for documents or 
tangible things or entry on land?
45.46 What sanctions may the ALJ impose for failure to comply with 
discovery?
45.47 What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

Hearing, Briefing, and Decision

45.50 When and where will the hearing be held?
45.51 What are the parties' rights during the hearing?
45.52 What are the requirements for presenting testimony?
45.53 How may a party use a deposition in the hearing?
45.54 What are the requirements for exhibits, official notice, and 
stipulations?
45.55 What evidence is admissible at the hearing?
45.56 What are the requirements for transcription of the hearing?
45.57 Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of proof 
applies?
45.58 When will the hearing record close?
45.59 What are the requirements for posthearing briefs?
45.60 What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?
Subpart C--Alternatives Process
45.70 How must documents be filed and served under this subpart?
45.71 How do I propose an alternative?
45.72 May I file a revised proposed alternative?
45.73 When will DOI file its modified condition or prescription?
45.74 How will DOI analyze a proposed alternative and formulate its 
modified condition or prescription?
45.75 Has OMB approved the information collection provisions of this 
subpart?

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 811, 823d.

Subpart A--General Provisions


Sec.  45.1  What is the purpose of this part, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?

    (a) Hearing process. (1) The regulations in subparts A and B of 
this part contain rules of practice and procedure applicable to 
hearings on disputed issues of material fact with respect to mandatory 
conditions and prescriptions that the Department of the Interior (DOI) 
may develop for inclusion in a hydropower license issued under 
subchapter I of the Federal Power Act (FPA), 16 U.S.C. 791 et seq. The 
authority to develop these conditions and prescriptions is granted by 
FPA sections 4(e) and 18, 16 U.S.C. 797(e) and 811, which authorize the 
Secretary of the Interior to condition hydropower licenses issued by 
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and to prescribe 
fishways.
    (2) The hearing process under this part does not apply to 
provisions that DOI may submit to FERC under any

[[Page 17195]]

authority other than FPA section 4(e) and 18, including recommendations 
under FPA section 10(a) or (j), 16 U.S.C. 803(a), (j), or terms and 
conditions under FPA section 30(c), 16 U.S.C. 823a(c).
    (3) The FPA also grants the Department of Agriculture and the 
Department of Commerce the authority to develop mandatory conditions, 
and the Department of Commerce the authority to develop mandatory 
prescriptions, for inclusion in a hydropower license. Where DOI and 
either or both of these other Departments develop conditions or 
prescriptions to be included in the same hydropower license and where 
the Departments agree to consolidate the hearings under Sec.  45.23:
    (i) A hearing conducted under this part will also address disputed 
issues of material fact with respect to any condition or prescription 
developed by one of the other Departments; or
    (ii) A hearing requested under this part will be conducted by one 
of the other Departments, pursuant to 7 CFR 1.601 et seq. or 50 CFR 
221.1 et seq., as applicable.
    (4) The regulations in subparts A and B of this part will be 
construed and applied to each hearing process to achieve a just and 
speedy determination, consistent with adequate consideration of the 
issues involved and the provisions of Sec.  45.60(a).
    (b) Alternatives process. The regulations in subparts A and C of 
this part contain rules of procedure applicable to the submission and 
consideration of alternative conditions and prescriptions under FPA 
section 33, 16 U.S.C. 823d. That section allows any party to the 
license proceeding to propose an alternative to a condition deemed 
necessary by DOI under section 4(e) or a fishway prescribed by DOI 
under section 18.
    (c) Reserved authority. Where DOI has notified or notifies FERC 
that it is reserving its authority to develop one or more conditions or 
prescriptions at a later time, the hearing and alternatives processes 
under this part for such conditions or prescriptions will be available 
if and when DOI exercises its reserved authority.
    (d) Applicability. (1) This part applies to any hydropower license 
proceeding for which the license had not been issued as of November 17, 
2005, and for which one or more preliminary conditions or prescriptions 
have been or are filed with FERC before FERC issues the license.
    (2) This part also applies to any exercise of DOI's reserved 
authority under paragraph (c) of this section with respect to a 
hydropower license issued before or after November 17, 2005.


Sec.  45.2  What terms are used in this part?

    As used in this part:
    ALJ means an administrative law judge appointed under 5 U.S.C. 3105 
and assigned to preside over the hearing process under subpart B of 
this part.
    Alternative means a condition or prescription that a license party 
other than a bureau or Department develops as an alternative to a 
preliminary condition or prescription from a bureau or Department, 
under FPA sec. 33, 16 U.S.C. 823d.
    Bureau means any of the following organizations within DOI that 
develops a preliminary condition or prescription: The Bureau of Indian 
Affairs, Bureau of Land Management, Bureau of Reclamation, Fish and 
Wildlife Service, or National Park Service.
    Condition means a condition under FPA sec. 4(e), 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 
for the adequate protection and utilization of a reservation.
    Day means a calendar day.
    Department means the Department of Agriculture, Department of 
Commerce, or Department of the Interior.
    Discovery means a prehearing process for obtaining facts or 
information to assist a party in preparing or presenting its case.
    DOI means the Department of the Interior, including any bureau, 
unit, or office of the Department, whether in Washington, DC, or in the 
field.
    Ex parte communication means an oral or written communication to 
the ALJ that is made without providing all parties reasonable notice 
and an opportunity to participate.
    FERC means the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
    FPA means the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 791 et seq.
    Hearings Division means the Departmental Cases Hearings Division, 
Office of Hearings and Appeals, Department of the Interior, 301 South 
West Temple Street, Suite 6.300, Salt Lake City, UT 84101, telephone 
801-524-5344, facsimile number 801-524-5539.
    Intervention means a process by which a person who did not request 
a hearing under Sec.  45.21 can participate as a party to the hearing 
under Sec.  45.22.
    License party means a party to the license proceeding, as that term 
is defined at 18 CFR 385.102(c).
    License proceeding means a proceeding before FERC for issuance of a 
license for a hydroelectric facility under 18 CFR part 4 or 5.
    Material fact means a fact that, if proved, may affect a 
Department's decision whether to affirm, modify, or withdraw any 
condition or prescription.
    Modified condition or prescription means any modified condition or 
prescription filed by a Department with FERC for inclusion in a 
hydropower license.
    NEPA document means an environmental assessment or environmental 
impact statement issued to comply with the requirements of the National 
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
    OEPC means the Office of Environmental Policy and Compliance, 
Department of the Interior, 1849 C Street NW., Mail Stop 2462, 
Washington, DC 20240, telephone 202-208-3891, facsimile number 202-208-
6970.
    Party means, with respect to DOI's hearing process under subpart B 
of this part:
    (1) A license party that has filed a timely request for a hearing 
under:
    (i) Section 45.21; or
    (ii) Either 7 CFR 1.621 or 50 CFR 221.21, with respect to a hearing 
process consolidated under Sec.  45.23;
    (2) A license party that has filed a timely notice of intervention 
and response under:
    (i) Section 45.22; or
    (ii) Either 7 CFR 1.622 or 50 CFR 221.22, with respect to a hearing 
process consolidated under Sec.  45.23;
    (3) Any bureau whose preliminary condition or prescription has been 
filed with FERC; and
    (4) Any other Department that has filed a preliminary condition or 
prescription, with respect to a hearing process consolidated under 
Sec.  45.23.
    Person means an individual; a partnership, corporation, 
association, or other legal entity; an unincorporated organization; and 
any Federal, State, Tribal, county, district, territorial, or local 
government or agency.
    Preliminary condition or prescription means any preliminary 
condition or prescription filed by a Department with FERC for potential 
inclusion in a hydropower license.
    Prescription means a fishway prescribed under FPA sec. 18, 16 
U.S.C. 811, to provide for the safe, timely, and effective passage of 
fish.
    Representative means a person who:
    (1) Is authorized by a party to represent the party in a hearing 
process under this subpart; and
    (2) Has filed an appearance under Sec.  45.10.
    Reservation has the same meaning as the term ``reservations'' in 
FPA sec. 3(2), 16 U.S.C. 796(2).
    Secretary means the Secretary of the Interior or his or her 
designee.

[[Page 17196]]

    Senior Department employee has the same meaning as the term 
``senior employee'' in 5 CFR 2637.211(a).
    You refers to a party other than a Department.


Sec.  45.3  How are time periods computed?

    (a) General. Time periods are computed as follows:
    (1) The day of the act or event from which the period begins to run 
is not included.
    (2) The last day of the period is included.
    (i) If that day is a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday, the 
period is extended to the next business day.
    (ii) The last day of the period ends at 5 p.m. at the place where 
the filing or other action is due.
    (3) If the period is less than 7 days, any Saturday, Sunday, or 
Federal holiday that falls within the period is not included.
    (b) Extensions of time. (1) No extension of time can be granted to 
file a request for a hearing under Sec.  45.21, a notice of 
intervention and response under Sec.  45.22, an answer under Sec.  
45.25, or any document under subpart C of this part.
    (2) An extension of time to file any other document under subpart B 
of this part may be granted only upon a showing of good cause.
    (i) To request an extension of time, a party must file a motion 
under Sec.  45.35 stating how much additional time is needed and the 
reasons for the request.
    (ii) The party must file the motion before the applicable time 
period expires, unless the party demonstrates extraordinary 
circumstances that justify a delay in filing.
    (iii) The ALJ may grant the extension only if:
    (A) It would not unduly prejudice other parties; and
    (B) It would not delay the decision under Sec.  45.60.


Sec.  45.4  What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes?

    (a) The following table summarizes the steps in the trial-type 
hearing process under subpart B of this part and indicates the 
deadlines generally applicable to each step. If the deadlines in this 
table are in any way inconsistent with the deadlines as set by other 
sections of this part or by the ALJ, the deadlines as set by those 
other sections or by the ALJ control.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            Must generally be
              Process step                Process day           completed                   See section
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) DOI files preliminary condition(s)              0  ..........................  45.20.
 or prescription(s) with FERC.
(2) License party files request for                30  Within 30 days after DOI    45.21(a).
 hearing.                                               files preliminary
                                                        condition(s) or
                                                        prescription(s) with FERC.
(3) Any other license party files                  50  Within 20 days after        45.22(a).
 notice of intervention and response.                   deadline for filing
                                                        requests for hearing.
(4) Bureau may file answer.............            80  Within 50 days after        45.25(a).
                                                        deadline for filing
                                                        requests for hearing.
(5) OEPC refers case to ALJ office for             85  Within 55 days after        45.26(a).
 hearing and issues referral notice to                  deadline for filing
 parties.                                               requests for hearing.
(6) Parties may meet and agree to               86-91  Before deadline for filing  45.41(a).
 discovery (optional step).                             motions seeking discovery.
(7) ALJ office sends docketing notice,             90  Within 5 days after         45.30.
 and ALJ issues notice setting date for                 effective date of
 initial prehearing conference.                         referral notice.
(8) Party files motion seeking                     92  Within 7 days after         45.41(d).
 discovery from another party.                          effective date of
                                                        referral notice.
(9) Other party files objections to                99  Within 7 days after         45.41(e).
 discovery motion or specific portions                  service of discovery
 of discovery requests.                                 motion.
(10) Parties meet to discuss discovery        100-104  Before date set for         45.40(d).
 and hearing schedule.                                  initial prehearing
                                                        conference.
(11) ALJ conducts initial prehearing              105  On or about 20th day after  45.40(a).
 conference.                                            effective date of
                                                        referral notice.
(12) ALJ issues order following initial           107  Within 2 days after         45.40(g).
 prehearing conference.                                 initial prehearing
                                                        conference.
(13) Party responds to interrogatories         120-22  Within 15 days after ALJ's  45.43(c).
 from another party as authorized by                    order authorizing
 ALJ.                                                   discovery during or
                                                        following initial
                                                        prehearing conference.
(14) Party responds to requests for            120-22  Within 15 days after ALJ's  45.45(c).
 documents, etc., from another party as                 order authorizing
 authorized by ALJ.                                     discovery during or
                                                        following initial
                                                        prehearing conference.
(15) Parties complete all discovery,              130  Within 25 days after        45.41(i).
 including depositions, as authorized                   initial prehearing
 by ALJ.                                                conference.
(16) Parties file updated lists of                140  Within 10 days after        45.42(b).
 witnesses and exhibits.                                deadline for completion
                                                        of discovery.
(17) Parties file written direct                  140  Within 10 days after        45.52(a).
 testimony.                                             deadline for completion
                                                        of discovery.
(18) Parties complete prehearing                  155  Within 25 days after        45.50(a).
 preparation and ALJ commences hearing.                 deadline for completion
                                                        of discovery.
(19) ALJ closes hearing record.........           160  When ALJ closes hearing...  45.58.
(20) Parties file post-hearing briefs..           175  Within 15 days after        45.59(a).
                                                        hearing closes.
(21) ALJ issues decision...............           190  Within 30 days after        45.60(a).
                                                        hearing closes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) The following table summarizes the steps in the alternatives 
process under subpart C of this part and indicates the deadlines 
generally applicable to each step. If the deadlines in this table are 
in any way inconsistent with the deadlines as set by other sections of 
this part, the deadlines as set by those other sections control.

[[Page 17197]]



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            Must generally be
              Process step                Process day           completed                   See section
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) DOI files preliminary condition(s)              0  ..........................  45.20.
 or prescription(s) with FERC.
(2) License party files alternative                30  Within 30 days after DOI    45.71(a).
 condition(s) or prescription(s).                       files preliminary
                                                        condition(s) or
                                                        prescription(s) with FERC.
(3) ALJ issues decision on any hearing            190  Within 30 days after        45.60(a).
 request.                                               hearing closes (see
                                                        previous table).
(4) License party files revised                   210  Within 20 days after ALJ    45.72(a).
 alternative condition(s) or                            issues decision.
 prescription(s) if authorized.
(5) DOI files modified condition(s) or            300  Within 60 days after the    45.73(a).
 prescription(s) with FERC.                             deadline for filing
                                                        comments on FERC's draft
                                                        NEPA document.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subpart B--Hearing Process

Representatives


Sec.  45.10  Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to 
a representative?

    (a) Individuals. A party who is an individual may either represent 
himself or herself in the hearing process under this subpart or 
authorize an attorney to represent him or her.
    (b) Organizations. A party that is an organization or other entity 
may authorize one of the following to represent it:
    (1) An attorney;
    (2) A partner, if the entity is a partnership;
    (3) An officer or agent, if the entity is a corporation, 
association, or unincorporated organization;
    (4) A receiver, administrator, executor, or similar fiduciary, if 
the entity is a receivership, trust, or estate; or
    (5) An elected or appointed official or an employee, if the entity 
is a Federal, State, Tribal, county, district, territorial, or local 
government or component.
    (c) Appearance. An individual representing himself or herself and 
any other representative must file a notice of appearance. The notice 
must:
    (1) Meet the form and content requirements for documents under 
Sec.  45.11;
    (2) Include the name and address of the party on whose behalf the 
appearance is made;
    (3) If the representative is an attorney, include a statement that 
he or she is a member in good standing of the bar of the highest court 
of a state, the District of Columbia, or any territory or commonwealth 
of the United States (identifying which one); and
    (4) If the representative is not an attorney, include a statement 
explaining his or her authority to represent the entity.
    (d) Lead representative. If a party has more than one 
representative, the ALJ may require the party to designate a lead 
representative for service of documents under Sec.  45.13.
    (e) Disqualification. The ALJ may disqualify any representative for 
misconduct or other good cause.
Document Filing and Service


Sec.  45.11  What are the form and content requirements for documents 
under this subpart?

    (a) Form. Each document filed in a case under this subpart must:
    (1) Measure 8\1/2\ by 11 inches, except that a table, chart, 
diagram, or other attachment may be larger if folded to 8\1/2\ by 11 
inches and attached to the document;
    (2) Be printed on just one side of the page (except that service 
copies may be printed on both sides of the page);
    (3) Be clearly typewritten, printed, or otherwise reproduced by a 
process that yields legible and permanent copies;
    (4) Use 11 point font size or larger;
    (5) Be double-spaced except for footnotes and long quotations, 
which may be single-spaced;
    (6) Have margins of at least 1 inch; and
    (7) Be bound on the left side, if bound.
    (b) Caption. Each document filed under this subpart must begin with 
a caption that sets forth:
    (1) The name of the case under this subpart and the docket number, 
if one has been assigned;
    (2) The name and docket number of the license proceeding to which 
the case under this subpart relates; and
    (3) A descriptive title for the document, indicating the party for 
whom it is filed and the nature of the document.
    (c) Signature. The original of each document filed under this 
subpart must be signed by the representative of the person for whom the 
document is filed. The signature constitutes a certification by the 
representative that he or she has read the document; that to the best 
of his or her knowledge, information, and belief, the statements made 
in the document are true; and that the document is not being filed for 
the purpose of causing delay.
    (d) Contact information. Below the representative's signature, the 
document must provide the representative's name, mailing address, 
street address (if different), telephone number, facsimile number (if 
any), and electronic mail address (if any).


Sec.  45.12  Where and how must documents be filed?

    (a) Place of filing. Any documents relating to a case under this 
subpart must be filed with the appropriate office, as follows:
    (1) Before OEPC refers a case for docketing under Sec.  45.26, any 
documents must be filed with OEPC. OEPC's address, telephone number, 
and facsimile number are set forth in Sec.  45.2.
    (2) OEPC will notify the parties of the date on which it refers a 
case for docketing under Sec.  45.26. After that date, any documents 
must be filed with:
    (i) The Hearings Division, if DOI will be conducting the hearing. 
The Hearings Division's address, telephone number, and facsimile number 
are set forth in Sec.  45.2; or
    (ii) The hearings component of or used by another Department, if 
that Department will be conducting the hearing. The name, address, 
telephone number, and facsimile number of the appropriate hearings 
component will be provided in the referral notice from OEPC.
    (b) Method of filing. (1) A document must be filed with the 
appropriate office under paragraph (a) of this section using one of the 
following methods:
    (i) By hand delivery of the original document and two copies;
    (ii) By sending the original document and two copies by express 
mail or courier service; or
    (iii) By sending the document by facsimile if:
    (A) The document is 20 pages or less, including all attachments;
    (B) The sending facsimile machine confirms that the transmission 
was successful; and
    (C) The original of the document and two copies are sent by regular 
mail on the same day.
    (2) Parties are encouraged, and may be required by the ALJ, to 
supplement any filing by providing the appropriate

[[Page 17198]]

office with an electronic copy of the document on compact disc or other 
suitable media. With respect to any supporting material accompanying a 
request for hearing, a notice of intervention and response, or an 
answer, the party may submit in lieu of an original and two hard 
copies:
    (i) An original; and
    (ii) One copy on a compact disc or other suitable media.
    (c) Date of filing. A document under this subpart is considered 
filed on the date it is received. However, any document received after 
5 p.m. at the place where the filing is due is considered filed on the 
next regular business day.
    (d) Nonconforming documents. If any document submitted for filing 
under this subpart does not comply with the requirements of this 
subpart or any applicable order, it may be rejected.


Sec.  45.13  What are the requirements for service of documents?

    (a) Filed documents. Any document related to a case under this 
subpart must be served at the same time the document is delivered or 
sent for filing. Copies must be served as follows:
    (1) A complete copy of any request for a hearing under Sec.  45.21 
must be delivered or sent to FERC and each license party, using one of 
the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section or under 18 CFR 
385.2010(f)(3) for license parties that have agreed to receive 
electronic service.
    (2) A complete copy of any notice of intervention and response 
under Sec.  45.22 must be:
    (i) Delivered or sent to FERC, the license applicant, any person 
who has filed a request for hearing under Sec.  45.21, and any bureau, 
using one of the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section; 
and
    (ii) Delivered or sent to any other license party using one of the 
methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section or under 18 CFR 
385.2010(f)(3) for license parties that have agreed to receive 
electronic service, or by regular mail.
    (3) A complete copy of any answer or notice under Sec.  45.25 and 
any other document filed by any party to the hearing process must be 
delivered or sent on every other party to the hearing process, using 
one of the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section.
    (b) Documents issued by the Hearings Division or ALJ. A complete 
copy of any notice, order, decision, or other document issued by the 
Hearings Division or the ALJ under this subpart must be served on each 
party, using one of the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this 
section.
    (c) Method of service. Unless otherwise agreed to by the parties 
and ordered by the ALJ, service must be accomplished by one of the 
following methods:
    (1) By hand delivery of the document;
    (2) By sending the document by express mail or courier service for 
delivery on the next business day;
    (3) By sending the document by facsimile if:
    (i) The document is 20 pages or less, including all attachments;
    (ii) The sending facsimile machine confirms that the transmission 
was successful; and
    (iii) The document is sent by regular mail on the same day; or
    (4) By sending the document, including all attachments, by 
electronic means if the party to be served has consented to that means 
of service in writing. However, if the serving party learns that the 
document did not reach the party to be served, the serving party must 
re-serve the document by another method set forth in paragraph (c) of 
this section (including another electronic means, if the party to be 
served has consented to that means in writing).
    (d) Certificate of service. A certificate of service must be 
attached to each document filed under this subpart. The certificate 
must be signed by the party's representative and include the following 
information:
    (1) The name, address, and other contact information of each 
party's representative on whom the document was served;
    (2) The means of service, including information indicating 
compliance with paragraph (c)(3) or (c)(4) of this section, if 
applicable; and
    (3) The date of service.

Initiation of Hearing Process


Sec.  45.20  What supporting information must DOI provide with its 
preliminary conditions or prescriptions?

    (a) Supporting information. (1) When DOI files a preliminary 
condition or prescription with FERC, it must include a rationale for 
the condition or prescription and an index to the administrative record 
that identifies all documents relied upon.
    (2) If any of the documents relied upon are not already in the 
license proceeding record, DOI must:
    (i) File them with FERC at the time it files the preliminary 
condition or prescription;
    (ii) Provide copies to the license applicant; and
    (iii) In the case of a condition developed by the Bureau of Indian 
Affairs, provide copies to the affected Indian tribe.
    (b) Service. DOI will serve a copy of its preliminary condition or 
prescription on each license party.


Sec.  45.21  How do I request a hearing?

    (a) General. To request a hearing on disputed issues of material 
fact with respect to any preliminary condition or prescription filed by 
DOI, you must:
    (1) Be a license party; and
    (2) File with OEPC, at the address provided inSec.  45.2, a written 
request for a hearing:
    (i) For a case under Sec.  45.1(d)(1), within 30 days after DOI 
files a preliminary condition or prescription with FERC; or
    (ii) For a case under Sec.  45.1(d)(2), within 60 days after DOI 
files a preliminary condition or prescription with FERC.
    (b) Content. Your hearing request must contain:
    (1) A numbered list of the factual issues that you allege are in 
dispute, each stated in a single, concise sentence;
    (2) The following information with respect to each issue:
    (i) The specific factual statements made or relied upon by DOI 
under Sec.  45.20(a) that you dispute;
    (ii) The basis for your opinion that those factual statements are 
unfounded or erroneous; and
    (iii) The basis for your opinion that any factual dispute is 
material.
    (3) With respect to any scientific studies, literature, and other 
documented information supporting your opinions under paragraphs 
(b)(2)(ii) and (b)(2)(iii) of this section, specific citations to the 
information relied upon. If any such document is not already in the 
license proceeding record, you must provide a copy with the request; 
and
    (4) A statement indicating whether or not you consent to service by 
electronic means under Sec.  45.13(c)(4) and, if so, by what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. Your hearing request must also list the 
witnesses and exhibits that you intend to present at the hearing, other 
than solely for impeachment purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, you must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony.
    (2) For each exhibit listed, you must specify whether it is in the 
license proceeding record.
    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided

[[Page 17199]]

under paragraph (b)(2) of this section may not exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.


Sec.  45.22  How do I file a notice of intervention and response?

    (a) General. (1) To intervene as a party to the hearing process, 
you must:
    (i) Be a license party; and
    (ii) File with OEPC, at the address provided inSec.  45.2, a notice 
of intervention and a written response to any request for a hearing 
within 20 days after the deadline in Sec.  45.21(a)(2).
    (2) A notice of intervention and response must be limited to one or 
more of the issues of material fact raised in the hearing request and 
may not raise additional issues.
    (b) Content. In your notice of intervention and response you must 
explain your position with respect to the issues of material fact 
raised in the hearing request under Sec.  45.21(b).
    (1) If you agree with the information provided by DOI under Sec.  
45.20(a) or by the requester under Sec.  45.21(b), your response may 
refer to DOI's explanation or the requester's hearing request for 
support.
    (2) If you wish to rely on additional information or analysis, your 
response must provide the same level of detail with respect to the 
additional information or analysis as required under Sec.  45.21(b).
    (3) Your notice of intervention and response must also indicate 
whether or not you consent to service by electronic means under Sec.  
45.13(c)(4) and, if so, by what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. Your response and notice must also list 
the witnesses and exhibits that you intend to present at the hearing, 
other than solely for impeachment purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, you must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony; 
and
    (2) For each exhibit listed, you must specify whether it is in the 
license proceeding record.
    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided under paragraph (b) of this section (excluding 
citations to scientific studies, literature, and other documented 
information supporting your opinions) may not exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.


Sec.  45.23  Will hearing requests be consolidated?

    (a) Initial Department coordination. Any bureau that has received a 
copy of a hearing request must contact the other bureaus and 
Departments and determine:
    (1) Whether a preliminary condition or prescription relating to the 
license has been filed with FERC on behalf of any other bureau or 
Department; and
    (2) If so, whether the other bureau or Department has also received 
a hearing request with respect to the preliminary condition or 
prescription.
    (b) Decision on consolidation. Where more than one bureau or 
Department has received a hearing request, the bureaus or Departments 
involved must decide jointly:
    (1) Whether the cases should be consolidated for hearing under 
paragraphs (c)(3)(ii) through (iv) of this section; and
    (2) If so, which Department will conduct the hearing on their 
behalf.
    (c) Criteria. Cases will or may be consolidated as follows:
    (1) All hearing requests with respect to any conditions from the 
same Department will be consolidated for hearing.
    (2) All hearing requests with respect to any prescriptions from the 
same Department will be consolidated for hearing.
    (3) All or any portion of the following may be consolidated for 
hearing, if the bureaus and Departments involved determine that there 
are common issues of material fact or that consolidation is otherwise 
appropriate:
    (i) Two or more hearing requests with respect to any condition and 
any prescription from the same Department;
    (ii) Two or more hearing requests with respect to conditions from 
different Departments;
    (iii) Two or more hearing requests with respect to prescriptions 
from different Departments; or
    (iv) Two or more hearing requests with respect to any condition 
from one Department and any prescription from another Department.


Sec.  45.24  Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?

    (a) Prior to referral to the ALJ, the hearing requester and the 
Department may by agreement stay the hearing process under this subpart 
for a period not to exceed 120 days to allow for settlement 
discussions, if the stay period and any subsequent hearing process (if 
required) can be accommodated within the time frame established for the 
license proceeding.
    (b) Any stay of the hearing process will not affect the deadline 
for filing a notice of intervention and response, if any, pursuant to 
Sec.  45.22(a)(1)(ii).


Sec.  45.25  How will the bureau respond to any hearing requests?

    (a) General. Within 50 days after the deadline in Sec.  45.21(a)(2) 
or 30 days after the expiration of any stay period under Sec.  45.24, 
whichever is later, the bureau may file with OEPC an answer to any 
hearing request under Sec.  45.21.
    (b) Content. If the bureau files an answer:
    (1) For each of the numbered factual issues listed under Sec.  
45.21(b)(1), the answer must explain the bureau's position with respect 
to the issues of material fact raised by the requester, including one 
or more of the following statements as appropriate:
    (i) That the bureau is willing to stipulate to the facts as alleged 
by the requester;
    (ii) That the bureau believes the issue listed by the requester is 
not a factual issue, explaining the basis for such belief;
    (iii) That the bureau believes the issue listed by the requester is 
not material, explaining the basis for such belief; or
    (iv) That the bureau agrees that the issue is factual, material, 
and in dispute.
    (2) The answer must also indicate whether the hearing request will 
be consolidated with one or more other hearing requests under Sec.  
45.23 and, if so:
    (i) Identify any other hearing request that will be consolidated 
with this hearing request; and
    (ii) State which Department will conduct the hearing and provide 
contact information for the appropriate Department hearings component.
    (3) If the bureau plans to rely on any scientific studies, 
literature, and other documented information that are not already in 
the license proceeding record, it must provide a copy with its answer.
    (4) The answer must also indicate whether or not the bureau 
consents to service by electronic means under Sec.  45.13(c)(4) and, if 
so, by what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. The bureau's answer must also list the 
witnesses and exhibits that it intends to present at the hearing, other 
than solely for impeachment purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, the bureau must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony.
    (2) For each exhibit listed, the bureau must specify whether it is 
in the license proceeding record.

[[Page 17200]]

    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided under paragraph (b)(1) of this section may not 
exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.
    (e) Notice in lieu of answer. If the bureau elects not to file an 
answer to a hearing request:
    (1) The bureau is deemed to agree that the issues listed by the 
requester are factual, material, and in dispute;
    (2) The bureau may file a list of witnesses and exhibits with 
respect to the request only as provided in Sec.  45.42(b); and
    (3) The bureau must file a notice containing the information 
required by paragraph (b)(2) of this section, if the hearing request 
will be consolidated with one or more other hearing requests under 
Sec.  45.23, and the statement required by paragraph (b)(4) of this 
section.


Sec.  45.26  What will DOI do with any hearing requests?

    (a) Case referral. Within 55 days after the deadline in Sec.  
45.21(a)(2) or 35 days after the expiration of any stay period under 
Sec.  45.24, whichever is later, OEPC will refer the case for a hearing 
as follows:
    (1) If the hearing is to be conducted by DOI, OEPC will refer the 
case to the Hearings Division.
    (2) If the hearing is to be conducted by another Department, OEPC 
will refer the case to the hearings component used by that Department.
    (b) Content. The case referral will consist of the following:
    (1) Two copies of any preliminary condition or prescription under 
Sec.  45.20;
    (2) The original and one copy of any hearing request under Sec.  
45.21;
    (3) The original and one copy of any notice of intervention and 
response under Sec.  45.22;
    (4) The original and one copy of any answer under Sec.  45.25; and
    (5) The original and one copy of a referral notice under paragraph 
(c) of this section.
    (c) Notice. At the time OEPC refers the case for a hearing, it must 
provide a referral notice that contains the following information:
    (1) The name, address, telephone number, and facsimile number of 
the Department hearings component that will conduct the hearing;
    (2) The name, address, and other contact information for the 
representative of each party to the hearing process;
    (3) An identification of any other hearing request that will be 
consolidated with this hearing request; and
    (4) The effective date of the case referral to the appropriate 
Department hearings component.
    (d) Delivery and service. (1) OEPC must refer the case to the 
appropriate Department hearings component by one of the methods 
identified in Sec.  45.12(b)(1)(i) and (ii).
    (2) OEPC must serve a copy of the referral notice on FERC and each 
party to the hearing by one of the methods identified in Sec.  
45.13(c)(1) and (2).


Sec.  45.27  What regulations apply to a case referred for a hearing?

    (a) If OEPC refers the case to the Hearings Division, the 
regulations in this subpart will continue to apply to the hearing 
process.
    (b) If OEPC refers the case to the United States Department of 
Agriculture's Office of Administrative Law Judges, the regulations at 7 
CFR 1.601 et seq. will apply from that point on.
    (c) If OEPC refers the case to the Department of Commerce's 
designated ALJ office, the regulations at 50 CFR 221.1 et seq. will 
apply from that point on.

General Provisions Related to Hearings


Sec.  45.30  What will the Hearings Division do with a case referral?

    Within 5 days after the effective date stated in the referral 
notice under Sec.  45.26(c)(4), 7 CFR 1.626(c)(4), or 50 CFR 
221.26(c)(4):
    (a) The Hearings Division must:
    (1) Docket the case;
    (2) Assign an ALJ to preside over the hearing process and issue a 
decision; and
    (3) Issue a docketing notice that informs the parties of the docket 
number and the ALJ assigned to the case; and
    (b) The ALJ must issue a notice setting the time, place, and method 
for conducting an initial prehearing conference under Sec.  45.40. This 
notice may be combined with the docketing notice under paragraph (a)(3) 
of this section.


Sec.  45.31  What are the powers of the ALJ?

    The ALJ will have all powers necessary to conduct a fair, orderly, 
expeditious, and impartial hearing process relating to any bureau's or 
other Department's condition or prescription that has been referred to 
the ALJ for hearing, including the powers to:
    (a) Administer oaths and affirmations;
    (b) Issue subpoenas under Sec.  45.47;
    (c) Shorten or enlarge time periods set forth in these regulations, 
except that the deadline in Sec.  45.60(a)(2) can be extended only if 
the ALJ must be replaced under Sec.  45.32 or 45.33;
    (d) Rule on motions;
    (e) Authorize discovery as provided for in this subpart;
    (f) Hold hearings and conferences;
    (g) Regulate the course of hearings;
    (h) Call and question witnesses;
    (i) Exclude any person from a hearing or conference for misconduct 
or other good cause;
    (j) Summarily dispose of any hearing request or issue as to which 
the ALJ determines there is no disputed issue of material fact;
    (k) Issue a decision consistent with Sec.  45.60(b) regarding any 
disputed issue of material fact; and
    (l) Take any other action authorized by law.


Sec.  45.32  What happens if the ALJ becomes unavailable?

    (a) If the ALJ becomes unavailable or otherwise unable to perform 
the duties described in Sec.  45.31, the Hearings Division will 
designate a successor.
    (b) If a hearing has commenced and the ALJ cannot proceed with it, 
a successor ALJ may do so. At the request of a party, the successor ALJ 
may recall any witness whose testimony is material and disputed, and 
who is available to testify again without undue burden. The successor 
ALJ may, within his or her discretion, recall any other witness.


Sec.  45.33  Under what circumstances may the ALJ be disqualified?

    (a) The ALJ may withdraw from a case at any time the ALJ deems 
himself or herself disqualified.
    (b) At any time before issuance of the ALJ's decision, any party 
may move that the ALJ disqualify himself or herself for personal bias 
or other valid cause.
    (1) The party must file the motion promptly after discovering facts 
or other reasons allegedly constituting cause for disqualification.
    (2) The party must file with the motion an affidavit or declaration 
setting forth the facts or other reasons in detail.
    (c) The ALJ must rule upon the motion, stating the grounds for the 
ruling.
    (1) If the ALJ concludes that the motion is timely and meritorious, 
he or she must disqualify himself or herself and withdraw from the 
case.
    (2) If the ALJ does not disqualify himself or herself and withdraw 
from the case, the ALJ must continue with the hearing process and issue 
a decision.

[[Page 17201]]

Sec.  45.34  What is the law governing ex parte communications?

    (a) Ex parte communications with the ALJ or his or her staff are 
prohibited in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 554(d).
    (b) This section does not prohibit ex parte inquiries concerning 
case status or procedural requirements, unless the inquiry involves an 
area of controversy in the hearing process.


Sec.  45.35  What are the requirements for motions?

    (a) General. Any party may apply for an order or ruling on any 
matter related to the hearing process by presenting a motion to the 
ALJ. A motion may be presented any time after the Hearings Division 
issues a docketing notice under Sec.  45.30.
    (1) A motion made at a hearing may be stated orally on the record, 
unless the ALJ directs that it be reduced to writing.
    (2) Any other motion must:
    (i) Be in writing;
    (ii) Comply with the requirements of this subpart with respect to 
form, content, filing, and service; and
    (iii) Not exceed 15 pages, including all supporting arguments.
    (b) Content. (1) Each motion must state clearly and concisely:
    (i) Its purpose and the relief sought;
    (ii) The facts constituting the grounds for the relief sought; and
    (iii) Any applicable statutory or regulatory authority.
    (2) A proposed order must accompany the motion.
    (c) Response. Except as otherwise required by this part, any other 
party may file a response to a written motion within 10 days after 
service of the motion. The response may not exceed 15 pages, including 
all supporting arguments. When a party presents a motion at a hearing, 
any other party may present a response orally on the record.
    (d) Reply. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, no reply to a response 
may be filed.
    (e) Effect of filing. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, the filing 
of a motion does not stay the hearing process.
    (f) Ruling. The ALJ will rule on the motion as soon as practicable, 
either orally on the record or in writing. He or she may summarily deny 
any dilatory, repetitive, or frivolous motion.

Prehearing Conferences and Discovery


Sec.  45.40  What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?

    (a) Initial prehearing conference. The ALJ will conduct an initial 
prehearing conference with the parties at the time specified in the 
notice under Sec.  45.30, on or about the 20th day after the effective 
date stated in the referral notice under Sec.  45.26(c)(4), 7 CFR 
1.626(c)(4), or 50 CFR 221.26(c)(4).
    (1) The initial prehearing conference will be used:
    (i) To identify, narrow, and clarify the disputed issues of 
material fact and exclude issues that do not qualify for review as 
factual, material, and disputed;
    (ii) To consider the parties' motions for discovery under Sec.  
45.41 and to set a deadline for the completion of discovery;
    (iii) To discuss the evidence on which each party intends to rely 
at the hearing;
    (iv) To set deadlines for submission of written testimony under 
Sec.  45.52 and exchange of exhibits to be offered as evidence under 
Sec.  45.54; and
    (v) To set the date, time, and place of the hearing.
    (2) The initial prehearing conference may also be used:
    (i) To discuss limiting and grouping witnesses to avoid 
duplication;
    (ii) To discuss stipulations of fact and of the content and 
authenticity of documents;
    (iii) To consider requests that the ALJ take official notice of 
public records or other matters;
    (iv) To discuss the submission of written testimony, briefs, or 
other documents in electronic form; and
    (v) To consider any other matters that may aid in the disposition 
of the case.
    (b) Other conferences. The ALJ may in his or her discretion direct 
the parties to attend one or more other prehearing conferences, if 
consistent with the need to complete the hearing process within 90 
days. Any party may by motion request a conference.
    (c) Notice. The ALJ must give the parties reasonable notice of the 
time and place of any conference. A conference will ordinarily be held 
by telephone, unless the ALJ orders otherwise.
    (d) Preparation. (1) Each party's representative must be fully 
prepared to discuss all issues pertinent to that party that are 
properly before the conference, both procedural and substantive. The 
representative must be authorized to commit the party that he or she 
represents respecting those issues.
    (2) Before the date set for the initial prehearing conference, the 
parties' representatives must make a good faith effort:
    (i) To meet in person, by telephone, or by other appropriate means; 
and
    (ii) To reach agreement on discovery and the schedule of remaining 
steps in the hearing process.
    (e) Failure to attend. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, a party 
that fails to attend or participate in a conference, after being served 
with reasonable notice of its time and place, waives all objections to 
any agreements reached in the conference and to any consequent orders 
or rulings.
    (f) Scope. During a conference, the ALJ may dispose of any 
procedural matters related to the case.
    (g) Order. Within 2 days after the conclusion of each conference, 
the ALJ must issue an order that recites any agreements reached at the 
conference and any rulings made by the ALJ during or as a result of the 
conference.


Sec.  45.41  How may parties obtain discovery of information needed for 
the case?

    (a) General. By agreement of the parties or with the permission of 
the ALJ, a party may obtain discovery of information to assist the 
party in preparing or presenting its case. Available methods of 
discovery are:
    (1) Written interrogatories as provided in Sec.  45.43;
    (2) Depositions of witnesses as provided in paragraph (h) of this 
section; and
    (3) Requests for production of designated documents or tangible 
things or for entry on designated land for inspection or other 
purposes.
    (b) Criteria. Discovery may occur only as agreed to by the parties 
or as authorized by the ALJ during a prehearing conference or in a 
written order under Sec.  45.40(g). The ALJ may authorize discovery 
only if the party requesting discovery demonstrates:
    (1) That the discovery will not unreasonably delay the hearing 
process;
    (2) That the information sought:
    (i) Will be admissible at the hearing or appears reasonably 
calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence;
    (ii) Is not already in the license proceeding record or otherwise 
obtainable by the party;
    (iii) Is not cumulative or repetitious; and
    (iv) Is not privileged or protected from disclosure by applicable 
law;
    (3) That the scope of the discovery is not unduly burdensome;
    (4) That the method to be used is the least burdensome method 
available;
    (5) That any trade secrets or proprietary information can be 
adequately safeguarded; and
    (6) That the standards for discovery under paragraphs (f) through 
(h) of this section have been met, if applicable.
    (c) Motions. A party may initiate discovery:
    (1) Pursuant to an agreement of the parties; or
    (2) By filing a motion that:
    (i) Briefly describes the proposed method(s), purpose, and scope of 
the discovery;

[[Page 17202]]

    (ii) Explains how the discovery meets the criteria in paragraphs 
(b)(1) through (b)(6) of this section; and
    (iii) Attaches a copy of any proposed discovery request (written 
interrogatories, notice of deposition, or request for production of 
designated documents or tangible things or for entry on designated 
land).
    (d) Timing of motions. A party must file any discovery motion under 
paragraph (c)(2) of this section within 7 days after the effective date 
stated in the referral notice under Sec.  45.26(c)(4), 7 CFR 
1.626(c)(4), or 50 CFR 221.26(c)(4).
    (e) Objections. (1) A party must file any objections to a discovery 
motion or to specific portions of a proposed discovery request within 7 
days after service of the motion.
    (2) An objection must explain how, in the objecting party's view, 
the discovery sought does not meet the criteria in paragraphs (b)(1) 
through (6) of this section.
    (f) Materials prepared for hearing. A party generally may not 
obtain discovery of documents and tangible things otherwise 
discoverable under paragraph (b) of this section if they were prepared 
in anticipation of or for the hearing by or for another party's 
representative (including the party's attorney, expert, or consultant).
    (1) If a party wants to discover such materials, it must show:
    (i) That it has substantial need of the materials in preparing its 
own case; and
    (ii) That the party is unable without undue hardship to obtain the 
substantial equivalent of the materials by other means.
    (2) In ordering discovery of such materials when the required 
showing has been made, the ALJ must protect against disclosure of the 
mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories of an 
attorney.
    (g) Experts. Unless restricted by the ALJ, a party may discover any 
facts known or opinions held by an expert through the methods set out 
in paragraph (a) of this section concerning any relevant matters that 
are not privileged. Such discovery will be permitted only if:
    (1) The expert is expected to be a witness at the hearing; or
    (2) The expert is relied on by another expert who is expected to be 
a witness at the hearing, and the party shows:
    (i) That it has a compelling need for the information; and
    (ii) That it cannot practicably obtain the information by other 
means.
    (h) Limitations on depositions. (1) A party may depose an expert or 
non-expert witness only if the party shows that the witness:
    (i) Will be unable to attend the hearing because of age, illness, 
or other incapacity; or
    (ii) Is unwilling to attend the hearing voluntarily, and the party 
is unable to compel the witness's attendance at the hearing by 
subpoena.
    (2) Paragraph (h)(1)(ii) of this section does not apply to any 
person employed by or under contract with the party seeking the 
deposition.
    (3) A party may depose a senior Department employee only if the 
party shows:
    (i) That the employee's testimony is necessary in order to provide 
significant, unprivileged information that is not available from any 
other source or by less burdensome means; and
    (ii) That the deposition would not significantly interfere with the 
employee's ability to perform his or her government duties.
    (4) Unless otherwise stipulated to by the parties or authorized by 
the ALJ upon a showing of extraordinary circumstances, a deposition is 
limited to 1 day of 7 hours.
    (i) Completion of discovery. All discovery must be completed within 
25 days after the initial prehearing conference.


Sec.  45.42  When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?

    (a) Discovery. A party must promptly supplement or amend any prior 
response to a discovery request if it learns that the response:
    (1) Was incomplete or incorrect when made; or
    (2) Though complete and correct when made, is now incomplete or 
incorrect in any material respect.
    (b) Witnesses and exhibits. (1) Within 10 days after the date set 
for completion of discovery, each party must file an updated version of 
the list of witnesses and exhibits required under Sec.  45.21(c), Sec.  
45.22(c), or Sec.  45.25(c).
    (2) If a party wishes to include any new witness or exhibit on its 
updated list, it must provide an explanation of why it was not feasible 
for the party to include the witness or exhibit on its list under Sec.  
45.21(c), Sec.  45.22(c), or Sec.  45.25(c).
    (c) Failure to disclose. (1) A party will not be permitted to 
introduce as evidence at the hearing testimony from a witness or other 
information that it failed to disclose under Sec.  45.21(c), Sec.  
45.22(c), or Sec.  45.25(c), or paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section.
    (2) Paragraph (c)(1) of this section does not apply if the failure 
to disclose was substantially justified or is harmless.
    (3) A party may object to the admission of evidence under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section before or during the hearing.
    (4) The ALJ will consider the following in determining whether to 
exclude evidence under paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this section:
    (i) The prejudice to the objecting party;
    (ii) The ability of the objecting party to cure any prejudice;
    (iii) The extent to which presentation of the evidence would 
disrupt the orderly and efficient hearing of the case;
    (iv) The importance of the evidence; and
    (v) The reason for the failure to disclose, including any bad faith 
or willfulness regarding the failure.


Sec.  45.43  What are the requirements for written interrogatories?

    (a) Motion; limitation. Except upon agreement of the parties:
    (1) A party wishing to propound interrogatories must file a motion 
under Sec.  45.41(c); and
    (2) A party may propound no more than 25 interrogatories, counting 
discrete subparts as separate interrogatories, unless the ALJ approves 
a higher number upon a showing of good cause.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  45.41(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the use of written 
interrogatories. The order will:
    (1) Grant the motion and approve the use of some or all of the 
proposed interrogatories; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Answers to interrogatories. Except upon agreement of the 
parties, the party to whom the proposed interrogatories are directed 
must file its answers to any interrogatories approved by the ALJ within 
15 days after issuance of the order under paragraph (b) of this 
section.
    (1) Each approved interrogatory must be answered separately and 
fully in writing.
    (2) The party or its representative must sign the answers to 
interrogatories under oath or affirmation.
    (d) Access to records. A party's answer to an interrogatory is 
sufficient when:
    (1) The information may be obtained from an examination of records, 
or from a compilation, abstract, or summary based on such records;
    (2) The burden of obtaining the information from the records is 
substantially the same for all parties;
    (3) The answering party specifically identifies the individual 
records from

[[Page 17203]]

which the requesting party may obtain the information and where the 
records are located; and
    (4) The answering party provides the requesting party with 
reasonable opportunity to examine the records and make a copy, 
compilation, abstract, or summary.


Sec.  45.44  What are the requirements for depositions?

    (a) Motion and notice. Except upon agreement of the parties, a 
party wishing to take a deposition must file a motion under Sec.  
45.41(c). Any notice of deposition filed with the motion must state:
    (1) The time and place that the deposition is to be taken;
    (2) The name and address of the person before whom the deposition 
is to be taken;
    (3) The name and address of the witness whose deposition is to be 
taken; and
    (4) Any documents or materials that the witness is to produce.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  45.41(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the taking of a 
deposition. The order will:
    (1) Grant the motion and approve the taking of the deposition, 
subject to any conditions or restrictions the ALJ may impose; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Arrangements. If the parties agree to or the ALJ approves the 
taking of the deposition, the party requesting the deposition must make 
appropriate arrangements for necessary facilities and personnel.
    (1) The deposition will be taken at the time and place agreed to by 
the parties or indicated in the ALJ's order.
    (2) The deposition may be taken before any disinterested person 
authorized to administer oaths in the place where the deposition is to 
be taken.
    (3) Any party that objects to the taking of a deposition because of 
the disqualification of the person before whom it is to be taken must 
do so:
    (i) Before the deposition begins; or
    (ii) As soon as the disqualification becomes known or could have 
been discovered with reasonable diligence.
    (4) A deposition may be taken by telephone conference call, if 
agreed to by the parties or approved in the ALJ's order.
    (d) Testimony. Each witness deposed must be placed under oath or 
affirmation, and the other parties must be given an opportunity for 
cross-examination.
    (e) Representation of witness. The witness being deposed may have 
counsel or another representative present during the deposition.
    (f) Recording and transcript. Except as provided in paragraph (g) 
of this section, the deposition must be stenographically recorded and 
transcribed at the expense of the party that requested the deposition.
    (1) Any other party may obtain a copy of the transcript at its own 
expense.
    (2) Unless waived by the deponent, the deponent will have 3 days 
after receiving the transcript to read and sign it.
    (3) The person before whom the deposition was taken must certify 
the transcript following receipt of the signed transcript from the 
deponent or expiration of the 3-day review period, whichever occurs 
first.
    (g) Video recording. The testimony at a deposition may be recorded 
on videotape, subject to any conditions or restrictions that the 
parties may agree to or the ALJ may impose, at the expense of the party 
requesting the recording.
    (1) The video recording may be in conjunction with an oral 
examination by telephone conference held under paragraph (c)(4) of this 
section.
    (2) After the deposition has been taken, the person recording the 
deposition must:
    (i) Provide a copy of the videotape to any party that requests it, 
at the requesting party's expense; and
    (ii) Attach to the videotape a statement identifying the case and 
the deponent and certifying the authenticity of the video recording.
    (h) Use of deposition. A deposition may be used at the hearing as 
provided in Sec.  45.53.


Sec.  45.45  What are the requirements for requests for documents or 
tangible things or entry on land?

    (a) Motion. Except upon agreement of the parties, a party wishing 
to request the production of designated documents or tangible things or 
entry on designated land must file a motion under Sec.  45.41(c). A 
request may include any of the following that are in the possession, 
custody, or control of another party:
    (1) The production of designated documents for inspection and 
copying, other than documents that are already in the license 
proceeding record;
    (2) The production of designated tangible things for inspection, 
copying, testing, or sampling; or
    (3) Entry on designated land or other property for inspection and 
measuring, surveying, photographing, testing, or sampling either the 
property or any designated object or operation on the property.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  45.41(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the production of 
documents or tangible things or entry on land for inspection, copying, 
or other purposes. The order will:
    (1) Grant the motion and approve the use of some or all of the 
proposed requests; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Compliance with order. Except upon agreement of the parties, 
the party to whom any approved request for production is directed must 
permit the approved inspection and other activities within 15 days 
after issuance of the order under paragraph (a) of this section.


Sec.  45.46  What sanctions may the ALJ impose for failure to comply 
with discovery?

    (a) Upon motion of a party, the ALJ may impose sanctions under 
paragraph (b) of this section if any party:
    (1) Fails to comply with an order approving discovery; or
    (2) Fails to supplement or amend a response to discovery under 
Sec.  45.42(a).
    (b) The ALJ may impose one or more of the following sanctions:
    (1) Infer that the information, testimony, document, or other 
evidence withheld would have been adverse to the party;
    (2) Order that, for the purposes of the hearing, designated facts 
are established;
    (3) Order that the party not introduce into evidence, or otherwise 
rely on to support its case, any information, testimony, document, or 
other evidence:
    (i) That the party improperly withheld; or
    (ii) That the party obtained from another party in discovery;
    (4) Allow another party to use secondary evidence to show what the 
information, testimony, document, or other evidence withheld would have 
shown; or
    (5) Take other appropriate action to remedy the party's failure to 
comply.


Sec.  45.47  What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

    (a) Request for subpoena. (1) Except as provided in paragraph 
(a)(2) of this section, any party may request by written motion that 
the ALJ issue a subpoena to the extent authorized by law for the 
attendance of a person, the giving of testimony, or the production of 
documents or other relevant evidence during discovery or for the 
hearing.
    (2) A party may request a subpoena for a senior Department employee 
only if the party shows:
    (i) That the employee's testimony is necessary in order to provide

[[Page 17204]]

significant, unprivileged information that is not available from any 
other source or by less burdensome means; and
    (ii) That the employee's attendance would not significantly 
interfere with the ability to perform his or her government duties.
    (b) Service. (1) A subpoena may be served by any person who is not 
a party and is 18 years of age or older.
    (2) Service must be made by hand delivering a copy of the subpoena 
to the person named therein.
    (3) The person serving the subpoena must:
    (i) Prepare a certificate of service setting forth:
    (A) The date, time, and manner of service; or
    (B) The reason for any failure of service; and
    (ii) Swear to or affirm the certificate, attach it to a copy of the 
subpoena, and return it to the party on whose behalf the subpoena was 
served.
    (c) Witness fees. (1) A party who subpoenas a witness who is not a 
party must pay him or her the same fees and mileage expenses that are 
paid witnesses in the district courts of the United States.
    (2) A witness who is not a party and who attends a deposition or 
hearing at the request of any party without having been subpoenaed is 
entitled to the same fees and mileage expenses as if he or she had been 
subpoenaed. However, this paragraph does not apply to Federal employees 
who are called as witnesses by a bureau or other Department.
    (d) Motion to quash. (1) A person to whom a subpoena is directed 
may request by motion that the ALJ quash or modify the subpoena.
    (2) The motion must be filed:
    (i) Within 5 days after service of the subpoena; or
    (ii) At or before the time specified in the subpoena for 
compliance, if that is less than 5 days after service of the subpoena.
    (3) The ALJ may quash or modify the subpoena if it:
    (i) Is unreasonable;
    (ii) Requires production of information during discovery that is 
not discoverable; or
    (iii) Requires disclosure of irrelevant, privileged, or otherwise 
protected information.
    (e) Enforcement. For good cause shown, the ALJ may apply to the 
appropriate United States District Court for the issuance of an order 
compelling the appearance and testimony of a witness or the production 
of evidence as set forth in a subpoena that has been duly issued and 
served.

Hearing, Briefing, and Decision


Sec.  45.50  When and where will the hearing be held?

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the 
hearing will be held at the time and place set at the initial 
prehearing conference under Sec.  45.40, generally within 25 days after 
the date set for completion of discovery.
    (b) On motion by a party or on the ALJ's initiative, the ALJ may 
change the date, time, or place of the hearing if he or she finds:
    (1) That there is good cause for the change; and
    (2) That the change will not unduly prejudice the parties and 
witnesses.


Sec.  45.51  What are the parties' rights during the hearing?

    Each party has the following rights during the hearing, as 
necessary to assure full and accurate disclosure of the facts:
    (a) To present testimony and exhibits, consistent with the 
requirements in Sec. Sec.  45.21(c), 45.22(c), 45.25(c), 45.42(b), and 
45.52;
    (b) To make objections, motions, and arguments; and
    (c) To cross-examine witnesses and to conduct re-direct and re-
cross examination as permitted by the ALJ.


Sec.  45.52  What are the requirements for presenting testimony?

    (a) Written direct testimony. Unless otherwise ordered by the ALJ, 
all direct hearing testimony for each party's initial case must be 
prepared and submitted in written form. The ALJ will determine whether 
rebuttal testimony, if allowed, must be submitted in written form.
    (1) Prepared written testimony must:
    (i) Have line numbers inserted in the left-hand margin of each 
page;
    (ii) Be authenticated by an affidavit or declaration of the 
witness;
    (iii) Be filed within 10 days after the date set for completion of 
discovery; and
    (iv) Be offered as an exhibit during the hearing.
    (2) Any witness submitting written testimony must be available for 
cross-examination at the hearing.
    (b) Oral testimony. Oral examination of a witness in a hearing, 
including on cross-examination or redirect, must be conducted under 
oath and in the presence of the ALJ, with an opportunity for all 
parties to question the witness.
    (c) Telephonic testimony. The ALJ may by order allow a witness to 
testify by telephonic conference call.
    (1) The arrangements for the call must let each party listen to and 
speak to the witness and each other within the hearing of the ALJ.
    (2) The ALJ will ensure the full identification of each speaker so 
the reporter can create a proper record.
    (3) The ALJ may issue a subpoena under Sec.  45.47 directing a 
witness to testify by telephonic conference call.


Sec.  45.53  How may a party use a deposition in the hearing?

    (a) In general. Subject to the provisions of this section, a party 
may use in the hearing any part or all of a deposition taken under 
Sec.  45.44 against any party who:
    (1) Was present or represented at the taking of the deposition; or
    (2) Had reasonable notice of the taking of the deposition.
    (b) Admissibility. (1) No part of a deposition will be included in 
the hearing record, unless received in evidence by the ALJ.
    (2) The ALJ will exclude from evidence any question and response to 
which an objection:
    (i) Was noted at the taking of the deposition; and
    (ii) Would have been sustained if the witness had been personally 
present and testifying at a hearing.
    (3) If a party offers only part of a deposition in evidence:
    (i) An adverse party may require the party to introduce any other 
part that ought in fairness to be considered with the part introduced; 
and
    (ii) Any other party may introduce any other parts.
    (c) Videotaped deposition. If the deposition was recorded on 
videotape and is admitted into evidence, relevant portions will be 
played during the hearing and transcribed into the record by the 
reporter.


Sec.  45.54  What are the requirements for exhibits, official notice, 
and stipulations?

    (a) General. (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) through (d) 
of this section, any material offered in evidence, other than oral 
testimony, must be offered in the form of an exhibit.
    (2) Each exhibit offered by a party must be marked for 
identification.
    (3) Any party who seeks to have an exhibit admitted into evidence 
must provide:
    (i) The original of the exhibit to the reporter, unless the ALJ 
permits the substitution of a copy; and
    (ii) A copy of the exhibit to the ALJ.
    (b) Material not offered. If a document offered as an exhibit 
contains material not offered as evidence:
    (1) The party offering the exhibit must:
    (i) Designate the matter offered as evidence;

[[Page 17205]]

    (ii) Segregate and exclude the material not offered in evidence, to 
the extent practicable; and
    (iii) Provide copies of the entire document to the other parties 
appearing at the hearing.
    (2) The ALJ must give the other parties an opportunity to inspect 
the entire document and offer in evidence any other portions of the 
document.
    (c) Official notice. (1) At the request of any party at the 
hearing, the ALJ may take official notice of any matter of which the 
courts of the United States may take judicial notice, including the 
public records of any Department party.
    (2) The ALJ must give the other parties appearing at the hearing an 
opportunity to show the contrary of an officially noticed fact.
    (3) Any party requesting official notice of a fact after the 
conclusion of the hearing must show good cause for its failure to 
request official notice during the hearing.
    (d) Stipulations. (1) The parties may stipulate to any relevant 
facts or to the authenticity of any relevant documents.
    (2) If received in evidence at the hearing, a stipulation is 
binding on the stipulating parties.
    (3) A stipulation may be written or made orally at the hearing.


Sec.  45.55  What evidence is admissible at the hearing?

    (a) General. (1) Subject to the provisions of Sec.  45.42(b), the 
ALJ may admit any written, oral, documentary, or demonstrative evidence 
that is:
    (i) Relevant, reliable, and probative; and
    (ii) Not privileged or unduly repetitious or cumulative.
    (2) The ALJ may exclude evidence if its probative value is 
substantially outweighed by the risk of undue prejudice, confusion of 
the issues, or delay.
    (3) Hearsay evidence is admissible. The ALJ may consider the fact 
that evidence is hearsay when determining its probative value.
    (4) The Federal Rules of Evidence do not directly apply to the 
hearing, but may be used as guidance by the ALJ and the parties in 
interpreting and applying the provisions of this section.
    (b) Objections. Any party objecting to the admission or exclusion 
of evidence must concisely state the grounds. A ruling on every 
objection must appear in the record.


Sec.  45.56  What are the requirements for transcription of the 
hearing?

    (a) Transcript and reporter's fees. The hearing will be transcribed 
verbatim.
    (1) The Hearings Division will secure the services of a reporter 
and pay the reporter's fees to provide an original transcript to the 
Hearings Division on an expedited basis.
    (2) Each party must pay the reporter for any copies of the 
transcript obtained by that party.
    (b) Transcript Corrections. (1) Any party may file a motion 
proposing corrections to the transcript. The motion must be filed 
within 5 days after receipt of the transcript, unless the ALJ sets a 
different deadline.
    (2) Unless a party files a timely motion under paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section, the transcript will be presumed to be correct and 
complete, except for obvious typographical errors.
    (3) As soon as practicable after the close of the hearing and after 
consideration of any motions filed under paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section, the ALJ will issue an order making any corrections to the 
transcript that the ALJ finds are warranted.


Sec.  45.57  Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of 
proof applies?

    (a) Any party who has filed a request for a hearing has the burden 
of persuasion with respect to the issues of material fact raised by 
that party.
    (b) The standard of proof is a preponderance of the evidence.


Sec.  45.58  When will the hearing record close?

    (a) The hearing record will close when the ALJ closes the hearing, 
unless he or she directs otherwise.
    (b) Evidence may not be added after the hearing record is closed, 
but the transcript may be corrected under Sec.  45.56(b).


Sec.  45.59  What are the requirements for post-hearing briefs?

    (a) General. (1) Each party may file a post-hearing brief within 15 
days after the close of the hearing.
    (2) A party may file a reply brief only if requested by the ALJ. 
The deadline for filing a reply brief, if any, will be set by the ALJ.
    (3) The ALJ may limit the length of the briefs to be filed under 
this section.
    (b) Content. (1) An initial brief must include:
    (i) A concise statement of the case;
    (ii) A separate section containing proposed findings regarding the 
issues of material fact, with supporting citations to the hearing 
record;
    (iii) Arguments in support of the party's position; and
    (iv) Any other matter required by the ALJ.
    (2) A reply brief, if requested by the ALJ, must be limited to any 
issues identified by the ALJ.
    (c) Form. (1) An exhibit admitted in evidence or marked for 
identification in the record may not be reproduced in the brief.
    (i) Such an exhibit may be reproduced, within reasonable limits, in 
an appendix to the brief.
    (ii) Any pertinent analysis of an exhibit may be included in a 
brief.
    (2) If a brief exceeds 20 pages, it must contain:
    (i) A table of contents and of points made, with page references; 
and
    (ii) An alphabetical list of citations to legal authority, with 
page references.


Sec.  45.60  What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?

    (a) Timing. The ALJ must issue a decision within the shorter of the 
following time periods:
    (1) 30 days after the close of the hearing under Sec.  45.58; or
    (2) 120 days after the effective date stated in the referral notice 
under Sec.  45.26(c)(4), 7 CFR 1.626(c)(4), or 50 CFR 221.26(c)(4).
    (b) Content. (1) The decision must contain:
    (i) Findings of fact on all disputed issues of material fact;
    (ii) Conclusions of law necessary to make the findings of fact 
(such as rulings on materiality and on the admissibility of evidence); 
and
    (iii) Reasons for the findings and conclusions.
    (2) The ALJ may adopt any of the findings of fact proposed by one 
or more of the parties.
    (3) The decision will not contain conclusions as to whether any 
preliminary condition or prescription should be adopted, modified, or 
rejected, or whether any proposed alternative should be accepted or 
rejected.
    (c) Service. Promptly after issuing his or her decision, the ALJ 
must:
    (1) Serve the decision on each party to the hearing;
    (2) Prepare a list of all documents that constitute the complete 
record for the hearing process (including the decision) and certify 
that the list is complete; and
    (3) Forward to FERC the complete record for the hearing process, 
along with the certified list prepared under paragraph (c)(2) of this 
section, for inclusion in the record for the license proceeding. 
Materials received in electronic form, e.g., as attachments to 
electronic mail, should be transmitted to FERC in electronic form. 
However, for cases in which a settlement was reached prior to a 
decision, the entire record need not be transmitted to FERC. In such 
situations, only the initial pleadings (hearing requests with 
attachments, any notices of intervention and response, answers, and 
referral

[[Page 17206]]

notice) and any dismissal order of the ALJ need be transmitted.
    (d) Finality. The ALJ's decision under this section with respect to 
the disputed issues of material fact will not be subject to further 
administrative review. To the extent the ALJ's decision forms the basis 
for any condition or prescription subsequently included in the license, 
it may be subject to judicial review under 16 U.S.C. 825l(b).

Subpart C--Alternatives Process


Sec.  45.70  How must documents be filed and served under this subpart?

    (a) Filing. (1) A document under this subpart must be filed using 
one of the methods set forth in Sec.  45.12(b).
    (2) A document is considered filed on the date it is received. 
However, any document received after 5 p.m. at the place where the 
filing is due is considered filed on the next regular business day.
    (b) Service. (1) Any document filed under this subpart must be 
served at the same time the document is delivered or sent for filing. A 
complete copy of the document must be delivered or sent to each license 
party and FERC, using:
    (i) One of the methods of service in Sec.  45.13(c); or
    (ii) Regular mail.
    (2) The provisions of Sec.  45.13(d) regarding a certificate of 
service apply to service under this subpart.


Sec.  45.71  How do I propose an alternative?

    (a) General. To propose an alternative condition or prescription, 
you must:
    (1) Be a license party; and
    (2) File a written proposal with OEPC:
    (i) For a case under Sec.  45.1(d)(1), within 30 days after DOI 
files a preliminary condition or prescription with FERC; or
    (ii) For a case under Sec.  45.1(d)(2), within 60 days after DOI 
files a proposed condition or prescription with FERC.
    (b) Content. Your proposal must include:
    (1) A description of the alternative, in an equivalent level of 
detail to DOI's preliminary condition or prescription;
    (2) An explanation of how the alternative:
    (i) If a condition, will provide for the adequate protection and 
utilization of the reservation; or
    (ii) If a prescription, will be no less protective than the fishway 
prescribed by DOI;
    (3) An explanation of how the alternative, as compared to the 
preliminary condition or prescription, will:
    (i) Cost significantly less to implement; or
    (ii) Result in improved operation of the project works for 
electricity production;
    (4) An explanation of how the alternative will affect:
    (i) Energy supply, distribution, cost, and use;
    (ii) Flood control;
    (iii) Navigation;
    (iv) Water supply;
    (v) Air quality; and
    (vi) Other aspects of environmental quality; and
    (5) Specific citations to any scientific studies, literature, and 
other documented information relied on to support your proposal, 
including any assumptions you are making (e.g., regarding the cost of 
energy or the rate of inflation). If any such document is not already 
in the license proceeding record, you must provide a copy with the 
proposal.


Sec.  45.72  May I file a revised proposed alternative?

    (a) Within 20 days after issuance of the ALJ's decision under Sec.  
45.60, you may file with OEPC a revised proposed alternative condition 
or prescription if:
    (1) You previously filed a proposed alternative that met the 
requirements of Sec.  45.71; and
    (2) Your revised proposed alternative is designed to respond to one 
or more findings of fact by the ALJ.
    (b) Your revised proposed alternative must:
    (1) Satisfy the content requirements for a proposed alternative 
under Sec.  45.71(b); and
    (2) Identify the specific ALJ finding(s) to which the revised 
proposed alternative is designed to respond and how the revised 
proposed alternative differs from the original alternative.
    (c) Filing a revised proposed alternative will constitute a 
withdrawal of the previously filed proposed alternative.


Sec.  45.73  When will DOI file its modified condition or prescription?

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, if any 
license party proposes an alternative to a preliminary condition or 
prescription under Sec.  45.71, DOI will do the following within 60 
days after the deadline for filing comments on FERC's draft NEPA 
document under 18 CFR 5.25(c):
    (1) Analyze under Sec.  45.74 any alternative condition or 
prescription proposed under Sec.  45.71 or 45.72; and
    (2) File with FERC:
    (i) Any condition or prescription that DOI adopts as its modified 
condition or prescription; and
    (ii) DOI's analysis of the modified condition or prescription and 
any proposed alternative.
    (b) If DOI needs additional time to complete the steps set forth in 
paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section, it will so inform FERC 
within 60 days after the deadline for filing comments on FERC's draft 
NEPA document under 18 CFR 5.25(c).


Sec.  45.74  How will DOI analyze a proposed alternative and formulate 
its modified condition or prescription?

    (a) In deciding whether to accept an alternative proposed under 
Sec.  45.71 or 45.72, DOI must consider evidence and supporting 
material provided by any license party or otherwise reasonably 
available to DOI, including:
    (1) Any evidence on the implementation costs or operational impacts 
for electricity production of the proposed alternative;
    (2) Any comments received on DOI's preliminary condition or 
prescription;
    (3) Any ALJ decision on disputed issues of material fact issued 
under Sec.  45.60 with respect to the preliminary condition or 
prescription;
    (4) Comments received on any draft or final NEPA documents; and
    (5) The license party's proposal under Sec.  45.71 or 45.72.
    (b) DOI must accept a proposed alternative if it determines, based 
on substantial evidence provided by any license party or otherwise 
reasonably available to DOI, that the alternative:
    (1) Will, as compared to DOI's preliminary condition or 
prescription:
    (i) Cost significantly less to implement; or
    (ii) Result in improved operation of the project works for 
electricity production; and
    (2) Will:
    (i) If a condition, provide for the adequate protection and 
utilization of the reservation; or
    (ii) If a prescription, be no less protective than DOI's 
preliminary prescription.
    (c) For purposes of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, DOI 
will consider evidence and supporting material provided by any license 
party by the deadline for filing comments on FERC's NEPA document under 
18 CFR 5.25(c).
    (d) When DOI files with FERC the condition or prescription that DOI 
adopts as its modified condition or prescription under Sec.  
45.73(a)(2), it must also file:
    (1) A written statement explaining:
    (i) The basis for the adopted condition or prescription;
    (ii) If DOI is not accepting any pending alternative, its reasons 
for not doing so; and

[[Page 17207]]

    (iii) If any alternative submitted under Sec.  45.71 was 
subsequently withdrawn by the license party, that the alternative was 
withdrawn; and
    (2) Any study, data, and other factual information relied on that 
is not already part of the licensing proceeding record.
    (e) The written statement under paragraph (d)(1) of this section 
must demonstrate that DOI gave equal consideration to the effects of 
the condition or prescription adopted and any alternative not accepted 
on:
    (1) Energy supply, distribution, cost, and use;
    (2) Flood control;
    (3) Navigation;
    (4) Water supply;
    (5) Air quality; and
    (6) Preservation of other aspects of environmental quality.


Sec.  45.75  Has OMB approved the information collection provisions of 
this subpart?

    Yes. This rule contains provisions that would collect information 
from the public. It therefore requires approval by the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 
44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. (PRA). According to the PRA, a Federal agency 
may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, 
a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number that indicates OMB approval. OMB has reviewed the 
information collection in this rule and approved it under OMB control 
number 1094-0001.

Department of Commerce

50 CFR Chapter II

0
4. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration revises part 
221, title 50, to read as follows:

PART 221--CONDITIONS AND PRESCRIPTIONS IN FERC HYDROPOWER LICENSES

Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec.
221.1 What is the purpose of this part, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?
221.2 What terms are used in this part?
221.3 How are time periods computed?
221.4 What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes?
Subpart B--Hearing Process

Representatives

221.10 Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to a 
representative?

Document Filing and Service

221.11 What are the form and content requirements for documents 
under this subpart?
221.12 Where and how must documents be filed?
221.13 What are the requirements for service of documents?

Initiation of Hearing Process

221.20 What supporting information must NOAA provide with its 
preliminary conditions or prescriptions?
221.21 How do I request a hearing?
221.22 How do I file a notice of intervention and response?
221.23 Will hearing requests be consolidated?
221.24 Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?
221.25 How will NOAA respond to any hearing requests?
221.26 What will the Office of Habitat Conservation do with any 
hearing requests?
221.27 What regulations apply to a case referred for a hearing?

General Provisions Related to Hearings

221.30 What will the Department of Commerce's designated ALJ office 
do with a case referral?
221.31 What are the powers of the ALJ?
221.32 What happens if the ALJ becomes unavailable?
221.33 Under what circumstances may the ALJ be disqualified?
221.34 What is the law governing ex parte communications?
221.35 What are the requirements for motions?

Prehearing Conferences and Discovery

221.40 What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?
221.41 How may parties obtain discovery of information needed for 
the case?
221.42 When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?
221.43 What are the requirements for written interrogatories?
221.44 What are the requirements for depositions?
221.45 What are the requirements for requests for documents or 
tangible things or entry on land?
221.46 What sanctions may the ALJ impose for failure to comply with 
discovery?
221.47 What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

Hearing, Briefing, and Decision

221.50 When and where will the hearing be held?
221.51 What are the parties' rights during the hearing?
221.52 What are the requirements for presenting testimony?
221.53 How may a party use a deposition in the hearing?
221.54 What are the requirements for exhibits, official notice, and 
stipulations?
221.55 What evidence is admissible at the hearing?
221.56 What are the requirements for transcription of the hearing?
221.57 Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of proof 
applies?
221.58 When will the hearing record close?
221.59 What are the requirements for posthearing briefs?
221.60 What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?
Subpart C--Alternatives Process
221.70 How must documents be filed and served under this subpart?
221.71 How do I propose an alternative?
221.72 May I file a revised proposed alternative?
221.73 When will NOAA file its modified condition or prescription?
221.74 How will NOAA analyze a proposed alternative and formulate 
its modified condition or prescription?
221.75 Has OMB approved the information collection provisions of 
this subpart?

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 811, 823d.

Subpart A--General Provisions


Sec.  221.1  What is the purpose of this part, and to what license 
proceedings does it apply?

    (a) Hearing process. (1) The regulations in subparts A and B of 
this part contain rules of practice and procedure applicable to 
hearings on disputed issues of material fact with respect to mandatory 
conditions and prescriptions that the Department of Commerce (acting 
through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA's) 
National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and other NOAA entities) may 
develop for inclusion in a hydropower license issued under subchapter I 
of the Federal Power Act (FPA), 16 U.S.C. 791 et seq. The authority to 
develop these conditions and prescriptions is granted by FPA sections 
4(e) and 18, 16 U.S.C. 797(e) and 811, which authorize the Secretary of 
Commerce to condition hydropower licenses issued by the Federal Energy 
Regulatory Commission (FERC) and to prescribe fishways.
    (2) The hearing process under this part does not apply to 
provisions that the Department of Commerce may submit to FERC under any 
authority other than FPA section 4(e) and 18, including recommendations 
under FPA section 10(a) or (j), 16 U.S.C. 803(a), (j), or terms and 
conditions under FPA section 30(c), 16 U.S.C. 823a(c).
    (3) The FPA also grants the Department of Agriculture and the 
Department of the Interior the authority to develop mandatory 
conditions, and the Department of the Interior the authority to develop 
mandatory prescriptions, for inclusion in a hydropower license. Where 
the Department of Commerce and either or both of these other 
Departments develop conditions or prescriptions to be included in the 
same hydropower license and where the Departments

[[Page 17208]]

agree to consolidate the hearings under Sec.  221.23:
    (i) A hearing conducted under this part will also address disputed 
issues of material fact with respect to any condition or prescription 
developed by one of the other Departments; or
    (ii) A hearing requested under this part will be conducted by one 
of the other Departments, pursuant to 7 CFR 1.601 et seq. or 43 CFR 
45.1 et seq., as applicable.
    (4) The regulations in subparts A and B of this part will be 
construed and applied to each hearing process to achieve a just and 
speedy determination, consistent with adequate consideration of the 
issues involved and the provisions of Sec.  221.60(a).
    (b) Alternatives process. The regulations in subparts A and C of 
this part contain rules of procedure applicable to the submission and 
consideration of alternative conditions and prescriptions under FPA 
section 33, 16 U.S.C. 823d. That section allows any party to the 
license proceeding to propose an alternative to a condition deemed 
necessary by NOAA under section 4(e) or a fishway prescribed by NMFS 
under section 18.
    (c) Reserved authority. Where NOAA has notified or notifies FERC 
that it is reserving its authority to develop one or more conditions or 
prescriptions at a later time, the hearing and alternatives processes 
under this part for such conditions or prescriptions will be available 
if and when NOAA exercises its reserved authority.
    (d) Applicability. (1) This part applies to any hydropower license 
proceeding for which the license had not been issued as of November 17, 
2005, and for which one or more preliminary conditions or prescriptions 
have been or are filed with FERC before FERC issues the license.
    (2) This part also applies to any exercise of NOAA's reserved 
authority under paragraph (c) of this section with respect to a 
hydropower license issued before or after November 17, 2005.


Sec.  221.2  What terms are used in this part?

    As used in this part:
    ALJ means an administrative law judge appointed under 5 U.S.C. 3105 
and assigned to preside over the hearing process under subpart B of 
this part.
    Alternative means a condition or prescription that a license party 
other than NOAA or another Department develops as an alternative to a 
preliminary condition or prescription from NOAA or another Department, 
under FPA sec. 33, 16 U.S.C. 823d.
    Condition means a condition under FPA sec. 4(e), 16 U.S.C. 797(e), 
for the adequate protection and utilization of a reservation.
    Day means a calendar day.
    Department means the Department of Agriculture, Department of 
Commerce, or Department of the Interior.
    Department of Commerce's designated ALJ office means the ALJ office 
that is assigned to preside over the hearing process for NOAA.
    Discovery means a prehearing process for obtaining facts or 
information to assist a party in preparing or presenting its case.
    Ex parte communication means an oral or written communication to 
the ALJ that is made without providing all parties reasonable notice 
and an opportunity to participate.
    FERC means the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
    FPA means the Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. 791 et seq.
    Intervention means a process by which a person who did not request 
a hearing under Sec.  221.21 can participate as a party to the hearing 
under Sec.  221.22.
    License party means a party to the license proceeding, as that term 
is defined at 18 CFR 385.102(c).
    License proceeding means a proceeding before FERC for issuance of a 
license for a hydroelectric facility under 18 CFR part 4 or 5.
    Material fact means a fact that, if proved, may affect a 
Department's decision whether to affirm, modify, or withdraw any 
condition or prescription.
    Modified condition or prescription means any modified condition or 
prescription filed by a Department with FERC for inclusion in a 
hydropower license.
    NEPA document means an environmental document as defined at 40 CFR 
1508.10 to include an environmental assessment, environmental impact 
statement (EIS), finding of no significant impact, and notice of intent 
to prepare an EIS. Such documents are issued to comply with the 
requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 
U.S.C. 4321 et seq., and the CEQ Regulations Implementing the 
Procedural Requirements of NEPA (40 CFR parts 21500-1508).
    NMFS means the National Marine Fisheries Service, a constituent 
agency of the Department of Commerce, acting by and through the 
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries or one of NMFS's six Regional 
Administrators, as appropriate.
    NOAA means the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, a 
constituent agency of the Department of Commerce, acting by and through 
its Administrator, the Undersecretary of Commerce for Oceans and 
Atmosphere or one of its line offices.
    Office of Habitat Conservation means the NMFS Office of Habitat 
Conservation. Address: Chief, Habitat Protection Division, Office of 
Habitat Conservation, National Marine Fisheries Service, 1315 East-West 
Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910. Telephone 301-427-8601. Facsimile 
number 301-713-4305.
    Party means, with respect to NOAA's hearing process under subpart B 
of this part:
    (1) A license party that has filed a timely request for a hearing 
under:
    (i) Section 221.21; or
    (ii) Either 7 CFR 1.621 or 43 CFR 45.21, with respect to a hearing 
process consolidated under Sec.  221.23;
    (2) A license party that has filed a timely notice of intervention 
and response under:
    (i) Section 221.22; or
    (ii) Either 7 CFR 1.622 or 43 CFR 45.22, with respect to a hearing 
process consolidated under Sec.  221.23;
    (3) NOAA; and
    (4) Any other Department that has filed a preliminary condition or 
prescription, with respect to a hearing process consolidated under 
Sec.  221.23.
    Person means an individual; a partnership, corporation, 
association, or other legal entity; an unincorporated organization; and 
any Federal, State, Tribal, county, district, territorial, or local 
government or agency.
    Preliminary condition or prescription means any preliminary 
condition or prescription filed by a Department with FERC for potential 
inclusion in a hydropower license.
    Prescription means a fishway prescribed under FPA sec. 18, 16 
U.S.C. 811, to provide for the safe, timely, and effective passage of 
fish.
    Representative means a person who:
    (1) Is authorized by a party to represent the party in a hearing 
process under this subpart; and
    (2) Has filed an appearance under Sec.  221.10.
    Reservation has the same meaning as the term ``reservations'' in 
FPA sec. 3(2), 16 U.S.C. 796(2).
    Secretary means the Secretary of Commerce or his or her designee.
    Senior Department employee has the same meaning as the term 
``senior employee'' in 5 CFR 2637.211(a).
    You refers to a party other than a Department.


Sec.  221.3  How are time periods computed?

    (a) General. Time periods are computed as follows:
    (1) The day of the act or event from which the period begins to run 
is not included.

[[Page 17209]]

    (2) The last day of the period is included.
    (i) If that day is a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday, the 
period is extended to the next business day.
    (ii) The last day of the period ends at 5 p.m. at the place where 
the filing or other action is due.
    (3) If the period is less than 7 days, any Saturday, Sunday, or 
Federal holiday that falls within the period is not included.
    (b) Extensions of time. (1) No extension of time can be granted to 
file a request for a hearing under Sec.  221.21, a notice of 
intervention and response under Sec.  221.22, an answer under Sec.  
221.25, or any document under subpart C of this part.
    (2) An extension of time to file any other document under subpart B 
of this part may be granted only upon a showing of good cause.
    (i) To request an extension of time, a party must file a motion 
under Sec.  221.35 stating how much additional time is needed and the 
reasons for the request.
    (ii) The party must file the motion before the applicable time 
period expires, unless the party demonstrates extraordinary 
circumstances that justify a delay in filing.
    (iii) The ALJ may grant the extension only if:
    (A) It would not unduly prejudice other parties; and
    (B) It would not delay the decision under Sec.  221.60.


Sec.  221.4  What deadlines apply to the trial-type hearing and 
alternatives processes?

    (a) The following table summarizes the steps in the trial-type 
hearing process under subpart B of this part and indicates the 
deadlines generally applicable to each step. If the deadlines in this 
table are in any way inconsistent with the deadlines as set by other 
sections of this part or by the ALJ, the deadlines as set by those 
other sections or by the ALJ control.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Process step                 Process day     Must generally be completed          See section
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) NOAA files preliminary                           0  ..............................  221.20.
 condition(s) or prescription(s) with
 FERC.
(2) License party files request for                 30  Within 30 days after NOAA       221.21(a).
 hearing.                                                files preliminary
                                                         condition(s) or
                                                         prescription(s) with FERC.
(3) Any other license party files                   50  Within 20 days after deadline   221.22(a).
 notice of intervention and response.                    for filing requests for
                                                         hearing.
(4) NOAA may file answer..............              80  Within 50 days after deadline   221.25(a).
                                                         for filing requests for
                                                         hearing.
(5) Office of Habitat Conservation                  85  Within 55 days after deadline   221.26(a).
 refers case to ALJ office for hearing                   for filing requests for
 and issues referral notice to parties.                  hearing.
(6) Parties may meet and agree to                86-91  Before deadline for filing      221.41(a).
 discovery (optional step).                              motions seeking discovery.
(7) ALJ office sends docketing notice,              90  Within 5 days after effective   221.30.
 and ALJ issues notice setting date                      date of referral notice.
 for initial prehearing conference.
(8) Party files motion seeking                      92  Within 7 days after effective   221.41(d).
 discovery from another party.                           date of referral notice.
(9) Other party files objections to                 99  Within 7 days after service of  221.41(e).
 discovery motion or specific portions                   discovery motion.
 of discovery requests.
(10) Parties meet to discuss discovery         100-104  Before date set for initial     221.40(d).
 and hearing schedule.                                   prehearing conference.
(11) ALJ conducts initial prehearing               105  On or about 20th day after      221.40(a).
 conference.                                             effective date of referral
                                                         notice.
(12) ALJ issues order following                    107  Within 2 days after initial     221.40(g).
 initial prehearing conference.                          prehearing conference.
(13) Party responds to interrogatories          120-22  Within 15 days after ALJ's      221.43(c).
 from another party as authorized by                     order authorizing discovery
 ALJ.                                                    during or following initial
                                                         prehearing conference.
(14) Party responds to requests for             120-22  Within 15 days after ALJ's      221.45(c).
 documents, etc., from another party                     order authorizing discovery
 as authorized by ALJ.                                   during or following initial
                                                         prehearing conference.
(15) Parties complete all discovery,               130  Within 25 days after initial    221.41(i).
 including depositions, as authorized                    prehearing conference.
 by ALJ.
(16) Parties file updated lists of                 140  Within 10 days after deadline   221.42(b).
 witnesses and exhibits.                                 for completion of discovery.
(17) Parties file written direct                   140  Within 10 days after deadline   221.52(a).
 testimony.                                              for completion of discovery.
(18) Parties complete prehearing                   155  Within 25 days after deadline   221.50(a).
 preparation and ALJ commences hearing.                  for completion of discovery.
(19) ALJ closes hearing record........             160  When ALJ closes hearing.......  221.58.
(20) Parties file post-hearing briefs.             175  Within 15 days after hearing    221.59(a).
                                                         closes.
(21) ALJ issues decision..............             190  Within 30 days after hearing    221.60(a).
                                                         closes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) The following table summarizes the steps in the alternatives 
process under subpart C of this part and indicates the deadlines 
generally applicable to each step. If the deadlines in this table are 
in any way inconsistent with the deadlines as set by other sections of 
this part, the deadlines as set by those other sections control.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Process step                 Process day     Must generally be completed          See section
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) NOAA files preliminary                           0  ..............................  221.20.
 condition(s) or prescription(s) with
 FERC.
(2) License party files alternative                 30  Within 30 days after NOAA       221.71(a).
 condition(s) or prescription(s).                        files preliminary
                                                         condition(s) or
                                                         prescription(s) with FERC.
(3) ALJ issues decision on any hearing             190  Within 30 days after hearing    221.60(a).
 request.                                                closes (see previous table).

[[Page 17210]]

 
(4) License party files revised                    210  Within 20 days after ALJ        221.72(a).
 alternative condition(s) or                             issues decision.
 prescription(s) if authorized.
(5) NOAA files modified condition(s)               300  Within 60 days after the        221.73(a).
 or prescription(s) with FERC.                           deadline for filing comments
                                                         on FERC's draft NEPA document.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subpart B--Hearing Process

Representatives


Sec.  221.10  Who may represent a party, and what requirements apply to 
a representative?

    (a) Individuals. A party who is an individual may either represent 
himself or herself in the hearing process under this subpart or 
authorize an attorney to represent him or her.
    (b) Organizations. A party that is an organization or other entity 
may authorize one of the following to represent it:
    (1) An attorney;
    (2) A partner, if the entity is a partnership;
    (3) An officer or agent, if the entity is a corporation, 
association, or unincorporated organization;
    (4) A receiver, administrator, executor, or similar fiduciary, if 
the entity is a receivership, trust, or estate; or
    (5) An elected or appointed official or an employee, if the entity 
is a Federal, State, Tribal, county, district, territorial, or local 
government or component.
    (c) Appearance. An individual representing himself or herself and 
any other representative must file a notice of appearance. The notice 
must:
    (1) Meet the form and content requirements for documents under 
Sec.  221.11;
    (2) Include the name and address of the party on whose behalf the 
appearance is made;
    (3) If the representative is an attorney, include a statement that 
he or she is a member in good standing of the bar of the highest court 
of a state, the District of Columbia, or any territory or commonwealth 
of the United States (identifying which one); and
    (4) If the representative is not an attorney, include a statement 
explaining his or her authority to represent the entity.
    (d) Lead representative. If a party has more than one 
representative, the ALJ may require the party to designate a lead 
representative for service of documents under Sec.  221.13.
    (e) Disqualification. The ALJ may disqualify any representative for 
misconduct or other good cause.

Document Filing and Service


Sec.  221.11  What are the form and content requirements for documents 
under this subpart?

    (a) Form. Each document filed in a case under this subpart must:
    (1) Measure 8\1/2\ by 11 inches, except that a table, chart, 
diagram, or other attachment may be larger if folded to 8\1/2\ by 11 
inches and attached to the document;
    (2) Be printed on just one side of the page (except that service 
copies may be printed on both sides of the page);
    (3) Be clearly typewritten, printed, or otherwise reproduced by a 
process that yields legible and permanent copies;
    (4) Use 11 point font size or larger;
    (5) Be double-spaced except for footnotes and long quotations, 
which may be single-spaced;
    (6) Have margins of at least 1 inch; and
    (7) Be bound on the left side, if bound.
    (b) Caption. Each document filed under this subpart must begin with 
a caption that sets forth:
    (1) The name of the case under this subpart and the docket number, 
if one has been assigned;
    (2) The name and docket number of the license proceeding to which 
the case under this subpart relates; and
    (3) A descriptive title for the document, indicating the party for 
whom it is filed and the nature of the document.
    (c) Signature. The original of each document filed under this 
subpart must be signed by the representative of the person for whom the 
document is filed. The signature constitutes a certification by the 
representative that he or she has read the document; that to the best 
of his or her knowledge, information, and belief, the statements made 
in the document are true; and that the document is not being filed for 
the purpose of causing delay.
    (d) Contact information. Below the representative's signature, the 
document must provide the representative's name, mailing address, 
street address (if different), telephone number, facsimile number (if 
any), and electronic mail address (if any).


Sec.  221.12  Where and how must documents be filed?

    (a) Place of filing. Any documents relating to a case under this 
subpart must be filed with the appropriate office, as follows:
    (1) Before NOAA refers a case for docketing under Sec.  221.26, any 
documents must be filed with the Office of Habitat Conservation. The 
Office of Habitat Conservation's address, telephone number, and 
facsimile number are set forth in Sec.  221.2.
    (2) NOAA will notify the parties of the date on which it refers a 
case for docketing under Sec.  221.26. After that date, any documents 
must be filed with:
    (i) The Department of Commerce's designated ALJ office, if the 
Department of Commerce will be conducting the hearing. The name, 
address, telephone number, and facsimile number of the designated ALJ 
office will be provided in the referral notice from NOAA; or
    (ii) The hearings component of or used by another Department, if 
that Department will be conducting the hearing. The name, address, 
telephone number, and facsimile number of the appropriate hearings 
component will be provided in the referral notice from NOAA.
    (b) Method of filing. (1) A document must be filed with the 
appropriate office under paragraph (a) of this section using one of the 
following methods:
    (i) By hand delivery of the original document and two copies;
    (ii) By sending the original document and two copies by express 
mail or courier service; or
    (iii) By sending the document by facsimile if:
    (A) The document is 20 pages or less, including all attachments;
    (B) The sending facsimile machine confirms that the transmission 
was successful; and
    (C) The original of the document and two copies are sent by regular 
mail on the same day.
    (2) Parties are encouraged, and may be required by the ALJ, to 
supplement any filing by providing the appropriate office with an 
electronic copy of the document on compact disc or other suitable 
media. With respect to any supporting material accompanying a request 
for hearing, a notice of intervention and response, or an

[[Page 17211]]

answer, the party may submit in lieu of an original and two hard 
copies:
    (i) An original; and
    (ii) One copy on a compact disc or other suitable media.
    (c) Date of filing. A document under this subpart is considered 
filed on the date it is received. However, any document received after 
5 p.m. at the place where the filing is due is considered filed on the 
next regular business day.
    (d) Nonconforming documents. If any document submitted for filing 
under this subpart does not comply with the requirements of this 
subpart or any applicable order, it may be rejected.


Sec.  221.13  What are the requirements for service of documents?

    (a) Filed documents. Any document related to a case under this 
subpart must be served at the same time the document is delivered or 
sent for filing. Copies must be served as follows:
    (1) A complete copy of any request for a hearing under Sec.  221.21 
must be delivered or sent to FERC and each license party, using one of 
the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section or under 18 CFR 
385.2010(f)(3) for license parties that have agreed to receive 
electronic service.
    (2) A complete copy of any notice of intervention and response 
under Sec.  221.22 must be:
    (i) Delivered or sent to FERC, the license applicant, any person 
who has filed a request for hearing under Sec.  221.21, and NOAA, using 
one of the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section; and
    (ii) Delivered or sent to any other license party using one of the 
methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section or under 18 CFR 
385.2010(f)(3) for license parties that have agreed to receive 
electronic service, or by regular mail.
    (3) A complete copy of any answer or notice under Sec.  221.25 and 
any other document filed by any party to the hearing process must be 
delivered or sent on every other party to the hearing process, using 
one of the methods of service in paragraph (c) of this section.
    (b) Documents issued by the ALJ. A complete copy of any notice, 
order, decision, or other document issued by the ALJ under this subpart 
must be served on each party, using one of the methods of service in 
paragraph (c) of this section.
    (c) Method of service. Unless otherwise agreed to by the parties 
and ordered by the ALJ, service must be accomplished by one of the 
following methods:
    (1) By hand delivery of the document;
    (2) By sending the document by express mail or courier service for 
delivery on the next business day;
    (3) By sending the document by facsimile if:
    (i) The document is 20 pages or less, including all attachments;
    (ii) The sending facsimile machine confirms that the transmission 
was successful; and
    (iii) The document is sent by regular mail on the same day; or
    (4) By sending the document, including all attachments, by 
electronic means if the party to be served has consented to that means 
of service in writing. However, if the serving party learns that the 
document did not reach the party to be served, the serving party must 
re-serve the document by another method set forth in paragraph (c) of 
this section (including another electronic means, if the party to be 
served has consented to that means in writing).
    (d) Certificate of service. A certificate of service must be 
attached to each document filed under this subpart. The certificate 
must be signed by the party's representative and include the following 
information:
    (1) The name, address, and other contact information of each 
party's representative on whom the document was served;
    (2) The means of service, including information indicating 
compliance with paragraph (c)(3) or (c)(4) of this section, if 
applicable; and
    (3) The date of service.

Initiation of Hearing Process


Sec.  221.20  What supporting information must NOAA provide with its 
preliminary conditions or prescriptions?

    (a) Supporting information. (1) When NOAA files a preliminary 
condition or prescription with FERC, it must include a rationale for 
the condition or prescription and an index to NOAA's administrative 
record that identifies all documents relied upon.
    (2) If any of the documents relied upon are not already in the 
license proceeding record, NOAA must:
    (i) File them with FERC at the time it files the preliminary 
condition or prescription;
    (ii) Provide copies to the license applicant; and
    (b) Service. NOAA will serve a copy of its preliminary condition or 
prescription on each license party.


Sec.  221.21  How do I request a hearing?

    (a) General. To request a hearing on disputed issues of material 
fact with respect to any preliminary condition or prescription filed by 
NOAA, you must:
    (1) Be a license party; and
    (2) File with the Office of Habitat Conservation, at the address 
provided in Sec.  221.2, a written request for a hearing:
    (i) For a case under Sec.  221.1(d)(1), within 30 days after NOAA 
files a preliminary condition or prescription with FERC; or
    (ii) For a case under Sec.  221.1(d)(2), within 60 days after NOAA 
files a preliminary condition or prescription with FERC.
    (b) Content. Your hearing request must contain:
    (1) A numbered list of the factual issues that you allege are in 
dispute, each stated in a single, concise sentence;
    (2) The following information with respect to each issue:
    (i) The specific factual statements made or relied upon by NOAA 
under Sec.  221.20(a) that you dispute;
    (ii) The basis for your opinion that those factual statements are 
unfounded or erroneous; and
    (iii) The basis for your opinion that any factual dispute is 
material.
    (3) With respect to any scientific studies, literature, and other 
documented information supporting your opinions under paragraphs 
(b)(2)(ii) and (b)(2)(iii) of this section, specific citations to the 
information relied upon. If any such document is not already in the 
license proceeding record, you must provide a copy with the request; 
and
    (4) A statement indicating whether or not you consent to service by 
electronic means under Sec.  221.13(c)(4) and, if so, by what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. Your hearing request must also list the 
witnesses and exhibits that you intend to present at the hearing, other 
than solely for impeachment purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, you must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony.
    (2) For each exhibit listed, you must specify whether it is in the 
license proceeding record.
    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided under paragraph (b)(2) of this section may not 
exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.


Sec.  221.22  How do I file a notice of intervention and response?

    (a) General. (1) To intervene as a party to the hearing process, 
you must:
    (i) Be a license party; and
    (ii) File with the Office of Habitat Conservation, at the address 
provided in

[[Page 17212]]

Sec.  221.2, a notice of intervention and a written response to any 
request for a hearing within 20 days after the deadline in Sec.  
221.21(a)(2).
    (2) A notice of intervention and response must be limited to one or 
more of the issues of material fact raised in the hearing request and 
may not raise additional issues.
    (b) Content. In your notice of intervention and response you must 
explain your position with respect to the issues of material fact 
raised in the hearing request under Sec.  221.21(b).
    (1) If you agree with the information provided by NOAA under Sec.  
221.20(a) or by the requester under Sec.  221.21(b), your response may 
refer to NOAA's explanation or the requester's hearing request for 
support.
    (2) If you wish to rely on additional information or analysis, your 
response must provide the same level of detail with respect to the 
additional information or analysis as required under Sec.  221.21(b).
    (3) Your notice of intervention and response must also indicate 
whether or not you consent to service by electronic means under Sec.  
221.13(c)(4) and, if so, by what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. Your response and notice must also list 
the witnesses and exhibits that you intend to present at the hearing, 
other than solely for impeachment purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, you must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony; 
and
    (2) For each exhibit listed, you must specify whether it is in the 
license proceeding record.
    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided under paragraph (b) of this section (excluding 
citations to scientific studies, literature, and other documented 
information supporting your opinions) may not exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.


Sec.  221.23  Will hearing requests be consolidated?

    (a) Initial Department coordination. If NOAA has received a copy of 
a hearing request, it must contact the other Departments and determine:
    (1) Whether any of the other Departments has also filed a 
preliminary condition or prescription relating to the license with 
FERC; and
    (2) If so, whether the other Department has also received a hearing 
request with respect to the preliminary condition or prescription.
    (b) Decision on consolidation. Where more than one Department has 
received a hearing request, the Departments involved must decide 
jointly:
    (1) Whether the cases should be consolidated for hearing under 
paragraphs (c)(3)(ii) through (c)(3)(iv) of this section; and
    (2) If so, which Department will conduct the hearing on their 
behalf.
    (c) Criteria. Cases will or may be consolidated as follows:
    (1) All hearing requests with respect to any conditions from the 
same Department will be consolidated for hearing.
    (2) All hearing requests with respect to any prescriptions from the 
same Department will be consolidated for hearing.
    (3) All or any portion of the following may be consolidated for 
hearing, if the Departments involved determine that there are common 
issues of material fact or that consolidation is otherwise appropriate:
    (i) Two or more hearing requests with respect to any condition and 
any prescription from the same Department;
    (ii) Two or more hearing requests with respect to conditions from 
different Departments;
    (iii) Two or more hearing requests with respect to prescriptions 
from different Departments; or
    (iv) Two or more hearing requests with respect to any condition 
from one Department and any prescription from another Department.


Sec.  221.24  Can a hearing process be stayed to allow for settlement 
discussions?

    (a) Prior to referral to the ALJ, the hearing requester and NOAA 
may by agreement stay the hearing process under this subpart for a 
period not to exceed 120 days to allow for settlement discussions, if 
the stay period and any subsequent hearing process (if required) can be 
accommodated within the time frame established for the license 
proceeding.
    (b) Any stay of the hearing process will not affect the deadline 
for filing a notice of intervention and response, if any, pursuant to 
Sec.  221.22(a)(1)(ii).


Sec.  221.25  How will NOAA respond to any hearing requests?

    (a) General. Within 50 days after the deadline in Sec.  
221.21(a)(2) or 30 days after the expiration of any stay period under 
Sec.  221.24, whichever is later, NOAA may file with the Office of 
Habitat Conservation an answer to any hearing request under Sec.  
221.21.
    (b) Content. If NOAA files an answer:
    (1) For each of the numbered factual issues listed under Sec.  
221.21(b)(1), the answer must explain NOAA's position with respect to 
the issues of material fact raised by the requester, including one or 
more of the following statements as appropriate:
    (i) That NOAA is willing to stipulate to the facts as alleged by 
the requester;
    (ii) That NOAA believes the issue listed by the requester is not a 
factual issue, explaining the basis for such belief;
    (iii) That NOAA believes the issue listed by the requester is not 
material, explaining the basis for such belief; or
    (iv) That NOAA agrees that the issue is factual, material, and in 
dispute.
    (2) The answer must also indicate whether the hearing request will 
be consolidated with one or more other hearing requests under Sec.  
221.23 and, if so:
    (i) Identify any other hearing request that will be consolidated 
with this hearing request; and
    (ii) State which Department will conduct the hearing and provide 
contact information for the appropriate Department hearings component.
    (3) If NOAA plans to rely on any scientific studies, literature, 
and other documented information that are not already in the license 
proceeding record, it must provide a copy with its answer.
    (4) The answer must also indicate whether or not NOAA consents to 
service by electronic means under Sec.  221.13(c)(4) and, if so, by 
what means.
    (c) Witnesses and exhibits. NOAA's answer must also list the 
witnesses and exhibits that it intends to present at the hearing, other 
than solely for impeachment purposes.
    (1) For each witness listed, NOAA must provide:
    (i) His or her name, address, telephone number, and qualifications; 
and
    (ii) A brief narrative summary of his or her expected testimony.
    (2) For each exhibit listed, NOAA must specify whether it is in the 
license proceeding record.
    (d) Page limits. (1) For each disputed factual issue, the 
information provided under paragraph (b)(1) of this section may not 
exceed two pages.
    (2) For each witness, the information provided under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section may not exceed one page.
    (e) Notice in lieu of answer. If NOAA elects not to file an answer 
to a hearing request:
    (1) NOAA is deemed to agree that the issues listed by the requester 
are factual, material, and in dispute;

[[Page 17213]]

    (2) NOAA may file a list of witnesses and exhibits with respect to 
the request only as provided in Sec.  221.42(b); and
    (3) NOAA must file a notice containing the information required by 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, if the hearing request will be 
consolidated with one or more other hearing requests under Sec.  
221.23, and the statement required by paragraph (b)(4) of this section.


Sec.  221.26  What will the Office of Habitat Conservation do with any 
hearing requests?

    (a) Case referral. Within 55 days after the deadline in Sec.  
221.21(a)(2) or 35 days after the expiration of any stay period under 
Sec.  221.24, whichever is later, the Office of Habitat Conservation 
will refer the case for a hearing as follows:
    (1) If the hearing is to be conducted by NOAA, the Office of 
Habitat Conservation will refer the case to the Department of 
Commerce's designated ALJ office.
    (2) If the hearing is to be conducted by another Department, the 
Office of Habitat Conservation will refer the case to the hearings 
component used by that Department.
    (b) Content. The case referral will consist of the following:
    (1) Two copies of any preliminary condition or prescription under 
Sec.  221.20;
    (2) The original and one copy of any hearing request under Sec.  
221.21;
    (3) The original and one copy of any notice of intervention and 
response under Sec.  221.22;
    (4) The original and one copy of any answer under Sec.  221.25; and
    (5) The original and one copy of a referral notice under paragraph 
(c) of this section.
    (c) Notice. At the time the Office of Habitat Conservation refers 
the case for a hearing, it must provide a referral notice that contains 
the following information:
    (1) The name, address, telephone number, and facsimile number of 
the Department hearings component that will conduct the hearing;
    (2) The name, address, and other contact information for the 
representative of each party to the hearing process;
    (3) An identification of any other hearing request that will be 
consolidated with this hearing request; and
    (4) The effective date of the case referral to the appropriate 
Department hearings component.
    (d) Delivery and service. (1) The Office of Habitat Conservation 
must refer the case to the appropriate Department hearings component by 
one of the methods identified in Sec.  221.12(b)(1)(i) and (b)(1)(ii).
    (2) The Office of Habitat Conservation must serve a copy of the 
referral notice on FERC and each party to the hearing by one of the 
methods identified in Sec.  221.13(c)(1) and (c)(2).


Sec.  221.27  What regulations apply to a case referred for a hearing?

    (a) If the Office of Habitat Conservation refers the case to the 
Department of Commerce's designated ALJ office, the regulations in this 
subpart will continue to apply to the hearing process.
    (b) If the Office of Habitat Conservation refers the case to the 
United States Department of Agriculture's Office of Administrative Law 
Judges, the regulations at 7 CFR 1.601 et seq. will apply from that 
point on.
    (c) If the Office of Habitat Conservation refers the case to the 
Department of the Interior's Office of Hearings and Appeals, the 
regulations at 43 CFR 45.1 et seq. will apply from that point on.

General Provisions Related to Hearings


Sec.  221.30  What will the Department of Commerce's designated ALJ 
office do with a case referral?

    Within 5 days after the effective date stated in the referral 
notice under Sec.  221.26(c)(4), 43 CFR 45.26(c)(4), or 7 CFR 
1.626(c)(4):
    (a) The Department of Commerce's designated ALJ office must:
    (1) Docket the case;
    (2) Assign an ALJ to preside over the hearing process and issue a 
decision; and
    (3) Issue a docketing notice that informs the parties of the docket 
number and the ALJ assigned to the case; and
    (b) The ALJ must issue a notice setting the time, place, and method 
for conducting an initial prehearing conference under Sec.  221.40. 
This notice may be combined with the docketing notice under paragraph 
(a)(3) of this section.


Sec.  221.31  What are the powers of the ALJ?

    The ALJ will have all powers necessary to conduct a fair, orderly, 
expeditious, and impartial hearing process relating to NOAA's or any 
other Department's condition or prescription that has been referred to 
the ALJ for hearing, including the powers to:
    (a) Administer oaths and affirmations;
    (b) Issue subpoenas under Sec.  221.47;
    (c) Shorten or enlarge time periods set forth in these regulations, 
except that the deadline in Sec.  221.60(a)(2) can be extended only if 
the ALJ must be replaced under Sec.  221.32 or 221.33;
    (d) Rule on motions;
    (e) Authorize discovery as provided for in this subpart;
    (f) Hold hearings and conferences;
    (g) Regulate the course of hearings;
    (h) Call and question witnesses;
    (i) Exclude any person from a hearing or conference for misconduct 
or other good cause;
    (j) Summarily dispose of any hearing request or issue as to which 
the ALJ determines there is no disputed issue of material fact;
    (k) Issue a decision consistent with Sec.  221.60(b) regarding any 
disputed issue of material fact; and
    (l) Take any other action authorized by law.


Sec.  221.32  What happens if the ALJ becomes unavailable?

    (a) If the ALJ becomes unavailable or otherwise unable to perform 
the duties described in Sec.  221.31, the Department of Commerce's 
designated ALJ office will designate a successor.
    (b) If a hearing has commenced and the ALJ cannot proceed with it, 
a successor ALJ may do so. At the request of a party, the successor ALJ 
may recall any witness whose testimony is material and disputed, and 
who is available to testify again without undue burden. The successor 
ALJ may, within his or her discretion, recall any other witness.


Sec.  221.33  Under what circumstances may the ALJ be disqualified?

    (a) The ALJ may withdraw from a case at any time the ALJ deems 
himself or herself disqualified.
    (b) At any time before issuance of the ALJ's decision, any party 
may move that the ALJ disqualify himself or herself for personal bias 
or other valid cause.
    (1) The party must file the motion promptly after discovering facts 
or other reasons allegedly constituting cause for disqualification.
    (2) The party must file with the motion an affidavit or declaration 
setting forth the facts or other reasons in detail.
    (c) The ALJ must rule upon the motion, stating the grounds for the 
ruling.
    (1) If the ALJ concludes that the motion is timely and meritorious, 
he or she must disqualify himself or herself and withdraw from the 
case.
    (2) If the ALJ does not disqualify himself or herself and withdraw 
from the case, the ALJ must continue with the hearing process and issue 
a decision.

[[Page 17214]]

Sec.  221.34  What is the law governing ex parte communications?

    (a) Ex parte communications with the ALJ or his or her staff are 
prohibited in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 554(d).
    (b) This section does not prohibit ex parte inquiries concerning 
case status or procedural requirements, unless the inquiry involves an 
area of controversy in the hearing process.


Sec.  221.35  What are the requirements for motions?

    (a) General. Any party may apply for an order or ruling on any 
matter related to the hearing process by presenting a motion to the 
ALJ. A motion may be presented any time after the Department of 
Commerce's designated ALJ office issues a docketing notice under Sec.  
221.30.
    (1) A motion made at a hearing may be stated orally on the record, 
unless the ALJ directs that it be reduced to writing.
    (2) Any other motion must:
    (i) Be in writing;
    (ii) Comply with the requirements of this subpart with respect to 
form, content, filing, and service; and
    (iii) Not exceed 15 pages, including all supporting arguments.
    (b) Content. (1) Each motion must state clearly and concisely:
    (i) Its purpose and the relief sought;
    (ii) The facts constituting the grounds for the relief sought; and
    (iii) Any applicable statutory or regulatory authority.
    (2) A proposed order must accompany the motion.
    (c) Response. Except as otherwise required by this part, any other 
party may file a response to a written motion within 10 days after 
service of the motion. The response may not exceed 15 pages, including 
all supporting arguments. When a party presents a motion at a hearing, 
any other party may present a response orally on the record.
    (d) Reply. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, no reply to a response 
may be filed.
    (e) Effect of filing. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, the filing 
of a motion does not stay the hearing process.
    (f) Ruling. The ALJ will rule on the motion as soon as practicable, 
either orally on the record or in writing. He or she may summarily deny 
any dilatory, repetitive, or frivolous motion.

Prehearing Conferences and Discovery


Sec.  221.40  What are the requirements for prehearing conferences?

    (a) Initial prehearing conference. The ALJ will conduct an initial 
prehearing conference with the parties at the time specified in the 
notice under Sec.  221.30, on or about the 20th day after the effective 
date stated in the referral notice under Sec.  221.26(c)(4), 7 CFR 
1.626(c)(4), or 43 CFR 45.26(c)(4).
    (1) The initial prehearing conference will be used:
    (i) To identify, narrow, and clarify the disputed issues of 
material fact and exclude issues that do not qualify for review as 
factual, material, and disputed;
    (ii) To consider the parties' motions for discovery under Sec.  
221.41 and to set a deadline for the completion of discovery;
    (iii) To discuss the evidence on which each party intends to rely 
at the hearing;
    (iv) To set deadlines for submission of written testimony under 
Sec.  221.52 and exchange of exhibits to be offered as evidence under 
Sec.  221.54; and
    (v) To set the date, time, and place of the hearing.
    (2) The initial prehearing conference may also be used:
    (i) To discuss limiting and grouping witnesses to avoid 
duplication;
    (ii) To discuss stipulations of fact and of the content and 
authenticity of documents;
    (iii) To consider requests that the ALJ take official notice of 
public records or other matters;
    (iv) To discuss the submission of written testimony, briefs, or 
other documents in electronic form; and
    (v) To consider any other matters that may aid in the disposition 
of the case.
    (b) Other conferences. The ALJ may in his or her discretion direct 
the parties to attend one or more other prehearing conferences, if 
consistent with the need to complete the hearing process within 90 
days. Any party may by motion request a conference.
    (c) Notice. The ALJ must give the parties reasonable notice of the 
time and place of any conference. A conference will ordinarily be held 
by telephone, unless the ALJ orders otherwise.
    (d) Preparation. (1) Each party's representative must be fully 
prepared to discuss all issues pertinent to that party that are 
properly before the conference, both procedural and substantive. The 
representative must be authorized to commit the party that he or she 
represents respecting those issues.
    (2) Before the date set for the initial prehearing conference, the 
parties' representatives must make a good faith effort:
    (i) To meet in person, by telephone, or by other appropriate means; 
and
    (ii) To reach agreement on discovery and the schedule of remaining 
steps in the hearing process.
    (e) Failure to attend. Unless the ALJ orders otherwise, a party 
that fails to attend or participate in a conference, after being served 
with reasonable notice of its time and place, waives all objections to 
any agreements reached in the conference and to any consequent orders 
or rulings.
    (f) Scope. During a conference, the ALJ may dispose of any 
procedural matters related to the case.
    (g) Order. Within 2 days after the conclusion of each conference, 
the ALJ must issue an order that recites any agreements reached at the 
conference and any rulings made by the ALJ during or as a result of the 
conference.


Sec.  221.41  How may parties obtain discovery of information needed 
for the case?

    (a) General. By agreement of the parties or with the permission of 
the ALJ, a party may obtain discovery of information to assist the 
party in preparing or presenting its case. Available methods of 
discovery are:
    (1) Written interrogatories as provided in Sec.  221.43;
    (2) Depositions of witnesses as provided in paragraph (h) of this 
section; and
    (3) Requests for production of designated documents or tangible 
things or for entry on designated land for inspection or other 
purposes.
    (b) Criteria. Discovery may occur only as agreed to by the parties 
or as authorized by the ALJ during a prehearing conference or in a 
written order under Sec.  221.40(g). The ALJ may authorize discovery 
only if the party requesting discovery demonstrates:
    (1) That the discovery will not unreasonably delay the hearing 
process;
    (2) That the information sought:
    (i) Will be admissible at the hearing or appears reasonably 
calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence;
    (ii) Is not already in the license proceeding record or otherwise 
obtainable by the party;
    (iii) Is not cumulative or repetitious; and
    (iv) Is not privileged or protected from disclosure by applicable 
law;
    (3) That the scope of the discovery is not unduly burdensome;
    (4) That the method to be used is the least burdensome method 
available;
    (5) That any trade secrets or proprietary information can be 
adequately safeguarded; and
    (6) That the standards for discovery under paragraphs (f) through 
(h) of this section have been met, if applicable.
    (c) Motions. A party may initiate discovery:
    (1) Pursuant to an agreement of the parties; or
    (2) By filing a motion that:
    (i) Briefly describes the proposed method(s), purpose, and scope of 
the discovery;

[[Page 17215]]

    (ii) Explains how the discovery meets the criteria in paragraphs 
(b)(1) through (b)(6) of this section; and
    (iii) Attaches a copy of any proposed discovery request (written 
interrogatories, notice of deposition, or request for production of 
designated documents or tangible things or for entry on designated 
land).
    (d) Timing of motions. A party must file any discovery motion under 
paragraph (c)(2) of this section within 7 days after the effective date 
stated in the referral notice under Sec.  221.26(c)(4), 7 CFR 
1.626(c)(4), or 43 CFR 45.26(c)(4).
    (e) Objections. (1) A party must file any objections to a discovery 
motion or to specific portions of a proposed discovery request within 7 
days after service of the motion.
    (2) An objection must explain how, in the objecting party's view, 
the discovery sought does not meet the criteria in paragraphs (b)(1) 
through (b)(6) of this section.
    (f) Materials prepared for hearing. A party generally may not 
obtain discovery of documents and tangible things otherwise 
discoverable under paragraph (b) of this section if they were prepared 
in anticipation of or for the hearing by or for another party's 
representative (including the party's attorney, expert, or consultant).
    (1) If a party wants to discover such materials, it must show:
    (i) That it has substantial need of the materials in preparing its 
own case; and
    (ii) That the party is unable without undue hardship to obtain the 
substantial equivalent of the materials by other means.
    (2) In ordering discovery of such materials when the required 
showing has been made, the ALJ must protect against disclosure of the 
mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories of an 
attorney.
    (g) Experts. Unless restricted by the ALJ, a party may discover any 
facts known or opinions held by an expert through the methods set out 
in paragraph (a) of this section concerning any relevant matters that 
are not privileged. Such discovery will be permitted only if:
    (1) The expert is expected to be a witness at the hearing; or
    (2) The expert is relied on by another expert who is expected to be 
a witness at the hearing, and the party shows:
    (i) That it has a compelling need for the information; and
    (ii) That it cannot practicably obtain the information by other 
means.
    (h) Limitations on depositions. (1) A party may depose an expert or 
non-expert witness only if the party shows that the witness:
    (i) Will be unable to attend the hearing because of age, illness, 
or other incapacity; or
    (ii) Is unwilling to attend the hearing voluntarily, and the party 
is unable to compel the witness's attendance at the hearing by 
subpoena.
    (2) Paragraph (h)(1)(ii) of this section does not apply to any 
person employed by or under contract with the party seeking the 
deposition.
    (3) A party may depose a senior Department employee only if the 
party shows:
    (i) That the employee's testimony is necessary in order to provide 
significant, unprivileged information that is not available from any 
other source or by less burdensome means; and
    (ii) That the deposition would not significantly interfere with the 
employee's ability to perform his or her government duties.
    (4) Unless otherwise stipulated to by the parties or authorized by 
the ALJ upon a showing of extraordinary circumstances, a deposition is 
limited to 1 day of 7 hours.
    (i) Completion of discovery. All discovery must be completed within 
25 days after the initial prehearing conference.


Sec.  221.42  When must a party supplement or amend information it has 
previously provided?

    (a) Discovery. A party must promptly supplement or amend any prior 
response to a discovery request if it learns that the response:
    (1) Was incomplete or incorrect when made; or
    (2) Though complete and correct when made, is now incomplete or 
incorrect in any material respect.
    (b) Witnesses and exhibits. (1) Within 10 days after the date set 
for completion of discovery, each party must file an updated version of 
the list of witnesses and exhibits required under Sec. Sec.  221.21(c), 
221.22(c), or 221.25(c).
    (2) If a party wishes to include any new witness or exhibit on its 
updated list, it must provide an explanation of why it was not feasible 
for the party to include the witness or exhibit on its list under 
Sec. Sec.  221.21(c), 221.22(c), or 221.25(c).
    (c) Failure to disclose. (1) A party will not be permitted to 
introduce as evidence at the hearing testimony from a witness or other 
information that it failed to disclose under Sec. Sec.  221.21(c), 
221.22(c), or 221.25(c), or paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section.
    (2) Paragraph (c)(1) of this section does not apply if the failure 
to disclose was substantially justified or is harmless.
    (3) A party may object to the admission of evidence under paragraph 
(c)(1) of this section before or during the hearing.
    (4) The ALJ will consider the following in determining whether to 
exclude evidence under paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this section:
    (i) The prejudice to the objecting party;
    (ii) The ability of the objecting party to cure any prejudice;
    (iii) The extent to which presentation of the evidence would 
disrupt the orderly and efficient hearing of the case;
    (iv) The importance of the evidence; and
    (v) The reason for the failure to disclose, including any bad faith 
or willfulness regarding the failure.


Sec.  221.43  What are the requirements for written interrogatories?

    (a) Motion; limitation. Except upon agreement of the parties:
    (1) A party wishing to propound interrogatories must file a motion 
under Sec.  221.41(c); and
    (2) A party may propound no more than 25 interrogatories, counting 
discrete subparts as separate interrogatories, unless the ALJ approves 
a higher number upon a showing of good cause.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  221.41(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the use of written 
interrogatories. The order will:
    (1) Grant the motion and approve the use of some or all of the 
proposed interrogatories; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Answers to interrogatories. Except upon agreement of the 
parties, the party to whom the proposed interrogatories are directed 
must file its answers to any interrogatories approved by the ALJ within 
15 days after issuance of the order under paragraph (b) of this 
section.
    (1) Each approved interrogatory must be answered separately and 
fully in writing.
    (2) The party or its representative must sign the answers to 
interrogatories under oath or affirmation.
    (d) Access to records. A party's answer to an interrogatory is 
sufficient when:
    (1) The information may be obtained from an examination of records, 
or from a compilation, abstract, or summary based on such records;
    (2) The burden of obtaining the information from the records is 
substantially the same for all parties;
    (3) The answering party specifically identifies the individual 
records from

[[Page 17216]]

which the requesting party may obtain the information and where the 
records are located; and
    (4) The answering party provides the requesting party with 
reasonable opportunity to examine the records and make a copy, 
compilation, abstract, or summary.


Sec.  221.44  What are the requirements for depositions?

    (a) Motion and notice. Except upon agreement of the parties, a 
party wishing to take a deposition must file a motion under Sec.  
221.41(c). Any notice of deposition filed with the motion must state:
    (1) The time and place that the deposition is to be taken;
    (2) The name and address of the person before whom the deposition 
is to be taken;
    (3) The name and address of the witness whose deposition is to be 
taken; and
    (4) Any documents or materials that the witness is to produce.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  221.41(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the taking of a 
deposition. The order will:
    (1) Grant the motion and approve the taking of the deposition, 
subject to any conditions or restrictions the ALJ may impose; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Arrangements. If the parties agree to or the ALJ approves the 
taking of the deposition, the party requesting the deposition must make 
appropriate arrangements for necessary facilities and personnel.
    (1) The deposition will be taken at the time and place agreed to by 
the parties or indicated in the ALJ's order.
    (2) The deposition may be taken before any disinterested person 
authorized to administer oaths in the place where the deposition is to 
be taken.
    (3) Any party that objects to the taking of a deposition because of 
the disqualification of the person before whom it is to be taken must 
do so:
    (i) Before the deposition begins; or
    (ii) As soon as the disqualification becomes known or could have 
been discovered with reasonable diligence.
    (4) A deposition may be taken by telephone conference call, if 
agreed to by the parties or approved in the ALJ's order.
    (d) Testimony. Each witness deposed must be placed under oath or 
affirmation, and the other parties must be given an opportunity for 
cross-examination.
    (e) Representation of witness. The witness being deposed may have 
counsel or another representative present during the deposition.
    (f) Recording and transcript. Except as provided in paragraph (g) 
of this section, the deposition must be stenographically recorded and 
transcribed at the expense of the party that requested the deposition.
    (1) Any other party may obtain a copy of the transcript at its own 
expense.
    (2) Unless waived by the deponent, the deponent will have 3 days 
after receiving the transcript to read and sign it.
    (3) The person before whom the deposition was taken must certify 
the transcript following receipt of the signed transcript from the 
deponent or expiration of the 3-day review period, whichever occurs 
first.
    (g) Video recording. The testimony at a deposition may be recorded 
on videotape, subject to any conditions or restrictions that the 
parties may agree to or the ALJ may impose, at the expense of the party 
requesting the recording.
    (1) The video recording may be in conjunction with an oral 
examination by telephone conference held under paragraph (c)(4) of this 
section.
    (2) After the deposition has been taken, the person recording the 
deposition must:
    (i) Provide a copy of the videotape to any party that requests it, 
at the requesting party's expense; and
    (ii) Attach to the videotape a statement identifying the case and 
the deponent and certifying the authenticity of the video recording.
    (h) Use of deposition. A deposition may be used at the hearing as 
provided in Sec.  221.53.


Sec.  221.45  What are the requirements for requests for documents or 
tangible things or entry on land?

    (a) Motion. Except upon agreement of the parties, a party wishing 
to request the production of designated documents or tangible things or 
entry on designated land must file a motion under Sec.  221.41(c). A 
request may include any of the following that are in the possession, 
custody, or control of another party:
    (1) The production of designated documents for inspection and 
copying, other than documents that are already in the license 
proceeding record;
    (2) The production of designated tangible things for inspection, 
copying, testing, or sampling; or
    (3) Entry on designated land or other property for inspection and 
measuring, surveying, photographing, testing, or sampling either the 
property or any designated object or operation on the property.
    (b) ALJ order. The ALJ will issue an order under Sec.  221.41(b) 
with respect to any discovery motion requesting the production of 
documents or tangible things or entry on land for inspection, copying, 
or other purposes. The order will:
    (1) Grant the motion and approve the use of some or all of the 
proposed requests; or
    (2) Deny the motion.
    (c) Compliance with order. Except upon agreement of the parties, 
the party to whom any approved request for production is directed must 
permit the approved inspection and other activities within 15 days 
after issuance of the order under paragraph (a) of this section.


Sec.  221.46  What sanctions may the ALJ impose for failure to comply 
with discovery?

    (a) Upon motion of a party, the ALJ may impose sanctions under 
paragraph (b) of this section if any party:
    (1) Fails to comply with an order approving discovery; or
    (2) Fails to supplement or amend a response to discovery under 
Sec.  221.42(a).
    (b) The ALJ may impose one or more of the following sanctions:
    (1) Infer that the information, testimony, document, or other 
evidence withheld would have been adverse to the party;
    (2) Order that, for the purposes of the hearing, designated facts 
are established;
    (3) Order that the party not introduce into evidence, or otherwise 
rely on to support its case, any information, testimony, document, or 
other evidence:
    (i) That the party improperly withheld; or
    (ii) That the party obtained from another party in discovery;
    (4) Allow another party to use secondary evidence to show what the 
information, testimony, document, or other evidence withheld would have 
shown; or
    (5) Take other appropriate action to remedy the party's failure to 
comply.


Sec.  221.47  What are the requirements for subpoenas and witness fees?

    (a) Request for subpoena. (1) Except as provided in paragraph 
(a)(2) of this section, any party may request by written motion that 
the ALJ issue a subpoena to the extent authorized by law for the 
attendance of a person, the giving of testimony, or the production of 
documents or other relevant evidence during discovery or for the 
hearing.
    (2) A party may request a subpoena for a senior Department employee 
only if the party shows:

[[Page 17217]]

    (i) That the employee's testimony is necessary in order to provide 
significant, unprivileged information that is not available from any 
other source or by less burdensome means; and
    (ii) That the employee's attendance would not significantly 
interfere with the ability to perform his or her government duties.
    (b) Service. (1) A subpoena may be served by any person who is not 
a party and is 18 years of age or older.
    (2) Service must be made by hand delivering a copy of the subpoena 
to the person named therein.
    (3) The person serving the subpoena must:
    (i) Prepare a certificate of service setting forth:
    (A) The date, time, and manner of service; or
    (B) The reason for any failure of service; and
    (ii) Swear to or affirm the certificate, attach it to a copy of the 
subpoena, and return it to the party on whose behalf the subpoena was 
served.
    (c) Witness fees. (1) A party who subpoenas a witness who is not a 
party must pay him or her the same fees and mileage expenses that are 
paid witnesses in the district courts of the United States.
    (2) A witness who is not a party and who attends a deposition or 
hearing at the request of any party without having been subpoenaed is 
entitled to the same fees and mileage expenses as if he or she had been 
subpoenaed. However, this paragraph does not apply to Federal employees 
who are called as witnesses by a Department.
    (d) Motion to quash. (1) A person to whom a subpoena is directed 
may request by motion that the ALJ quash or modify the subpoena.
    (2) The motion must be filed:
    (i) Within 5 days after service of the subpoena; or
    (ii) At or before the time specified in the subpoena for 
compliance, if that is less than 5 days after service of the subpoena.
    (3) The ALJ may quash or modify the subpoena if it:
    (i) Is unreasonable;
    (ii) Requires production of information during discovery that is 
not discoverable; or
    (iii) Requires disclosure of irrelevant, privileged, or otherwise 
protected information.
    (e) Enforcement. For good cause shown, the ALJ may apply to the 
appropriate United States District Court for the issuance of an order 
compelling the appearance and testimony of a witness or the production 
of evidence as set forth in a subpoena that has been duly issued and 
served.

Hearing, Briefing, and Decision


Sec.  221.50  When and where will the hearing be held?

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, the 
hearing will be held at the time and place set at the initial 
prehearing conference under Sec.  221.40, generally within 25 days 
after the date set for completion of discovery.
    (b) On motion by a party or on the ALJ's initiative, the ALJ may 
change the date, time, or place of the hearing if he or she finds:
    (1) That there is good cause for the change; and
    (2) That the change will not unduly prejudice the parties and 
witnesses.


Sec.  221.51  What are the parties' rights during the hearing?

    Each party has the following rights during the hearing, as 
necessary to assure full and accurate disclosure of the facts:
    (a) To present testimony and exhibits, consistent with the 
requirements in Sec. Sec.  221.21(c), 221.22(c), 221.25(c), 221.42(b), 
and 221.52;
    (b) To make objections, motions, and arguments; and
    (c) To cross-examine witnesses and to conduct re-direct and re-
cross examination as permitted by the ALJ.


Sec.  221.52  What are the requirements for presenting testimony?

    (a) Written direct testimony. Unless otherwise ordered by the ALJ, 
all direct hearing testimony for each party's initial case must be 
prepared and submitted in written form. The ALJ will determine whether 
rebuttal testimony, if allowed, must be submitted in written form.
    (1) Prepared written testimony must:
    (i) Have line numbers inserted in the left-hand margin of each 
page;
    (ii) Be authenticated by an affidavit or declaration of the 
witness;
    (iii) Be filed within 10 days after the date set for completion of 
discovery; and
    (iv) Be offered as an exhibit during the hearing.
    (2) Any witness submitting written testimony must be available for 
cross-examination at the hearing.
    (b) Oral testimony. Oral examination of a witness in a hearing, 
including on cross-examination or redirect, must be conducted under 
oath and in the presence of the ALJ, with an opportunity for all 
parties to question the witness.
    (c) Telephonic testimony. The ALJ may by order allow a witness to 
testify by telephonic conference call.
    (1) The arrangements for the call must let each party listen to and 
speak to the witness and each other within the hearing of the ALJ.
    (2) The ALJ will ensure the full identification of each speaker so 
the reporter can create a proper record.
    (3) The ALJ may issue a subpoena under Sec.  221.47 directing a 
witness to testify by telephonic conference call.


Sec.  221.53  How may a party use a deposition in the hearing?

    (a) In general. Subject to the provisions of this section, a party 
may use in the hearing any part or all of a deposition taken under 
Sec.  221.44 against any party who:
    (1) Was present or represented at the taking of the deposition; or
    (2) Had reasonable notice of the taking of the deposition.
    (b) Admissibility. (1) No part of a deposition will be included in 
the hearing record, unless received in evidence by the ALJ.
    (2) The ALJ will exclude from evidence any question and response to 
which an objection:
    (i) Was noted at the taking of the deposition; and
    (ii) Would have been sustained if the witness had been personally 
present and testifying at a hearing.
    (3) If a party offers only part of a deposition in evidence:
    (i) An adverse party may require the party to introduce any other 
part that ought in fairness to be considered with the part introduced; 
and
    (ii) Any other party may introduce any other parts.
    (c) Videotaped deposition. If the deposition was recorded on 
videotape and is admitted into evidence, relevant portions will be 
played during the hearing and transcribed into the record by the 
reporter.


Sec.  221.54  What are the requirements for exhibits, official notice, 
and stipulations?

    (a) General. (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) through (d) 
of this section, any material offered in evidence, other than oral 
testimony, must be offered in the form of an exhibit.
    (2) Each exhibit offered by a party must be marked for 
identification.
    (3) Any party who seeks to have an exhibit admitted into evidence 
must provide:
    (i) The original of the exhibit to the reporter, unless the ALJ 
permits the substitution of a copy; and
    (ii) A copy of the exhibit to the ALJ.
    (b) Material not offered. If a document offered as an exhibit 
contains material not offered as evidence:

[[Page 17218]]

    (1) The party offering the exhibit must:
    (i) Designate the matter offered as evidence;
    (ii) Segregate and exclude the material not offered in evidence, to 
the extent practicable; and
    (iii) Provide copies of the entire document to the other parties 
appearing at the hearing.
    (2) The ALJ must give the other parties an opportunity to inspect 
the entire document and offer in evidence any other portions of the 
document.
    (c) Official notice. (1) At the request of any party at the 
hearing, the ALJ may take official notice of any matter of which the 
courts of the United States may take judicial notice, including the 
public records of any Department party.
    (2) The ALJ must give the other parties appearing at the hearing an 
opportunity to show the contrary of an officially noticed fact.
    (3) Any party requesting official notice of a fact after the 
conclusion of the hearing must show good cause for its failure to 
request official notice during the hearing.
    (d) Stipulations. (1) The parties may stipulate to any relevant 
facts or to the authenticity of any relevant documents.
    (2) If received in evidence at the hearing, a stipulation is 
binding on the stipulating parties.
    (3) A stipulation may be written or made orally at the hearing.


Sec.  221.55  What evidence is admissible at the hearing?

    (a) General. (1) Subject to the provisions of Sec.  221.42(b), the 
ALJ may admit any written, oral, documentary, or demonstrative evidence 
that is:
    (i) Relevant, reliable, and probative; and
    (ii) Not privileged or unduly repetitious or cumulative.
    (2) The ALJ may exclude evidence if its probative value is 
substantially outweighed by the risk of undue prejudice, confusion of 
the issues, or delay.
    (3) Hearsay evidence is admissible. The ALJ may consider the fact 
that evidence is hearsay when determining its probative value.
    (4) The Federal Rules of Evidence do not directly apply to the 
hearing, but may be used as guidance by the ALJ and the parties in 
interpreting and applying the provisions of this section.
    (b) Objections. Any party objecting to the admission or exclusion 
of evidence must concisely state the grounds. A ruling on every 
objection must appear in the record.


Sec.  221.56  What are the requirements for transcription of the 
hearing?

    (a) Transcript and reporter's fees. The hearing will be transcribed 
verbatim.
    (1) The Department of Commerce's designated ALJ office will secure 
the services of a reporter and pay the reporter's fees to provide an 
original transcript to the Department of Commerce's designated ALJ 
office on an expedited basis.
    (2) Each party must pay the reporter for any copies of the 
transcript obtained by that party.
    (b) Transcript Corrections. (1) Any party may file a motion 
proposing corrections to the transcript. The motion must be filed 
within 5 days after receipt of the transcript, unless the ALJ sets a 
different deadline.
    (2) Unless a party files a timely motion under paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section, the transcript will be presumed to be correct and 
complete, except for obvious typographical errors.
    (3) As soon as practicable after the close of the hearing and after 
consideration of any motions filed under paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section, the ALJ will issue an order making any corrections to the 
transcript that the ALJ finds are warranted.


Sec.  221.57  Who has the burden of persuasion, and what standard of 
proof applies?

    (a) Any party who has filed a request for a hearing has the burden 
of persuasion with respect to the issues of material fact raised by 
that party.
    (b) The standard of proof is a preponderance of the evidence.


Sec.  221.58  When will the hearing record close?

    (a) The hearing record will close when the ALJ closes the hearing, 
unless he or she directs otherwise.
    (b) Evidence may not be added after the hearing record is closed, 
but the transcript may be corrected under Sec.  221.56(b).


Sec.  221.59  What are the requirements for post-hearing briefs?

    (a) General. (1) Each party may file a post-hearing brief within 15 
days after the close of the hearing.
    (2) A party may file a reply brief only if requested by the ALJ. 
The deadline for filing a reply brief, if any, will be set by the ALJ.
    (3) The ALJ may limit the length of the briefs to be filed under 
this section.
    (b) Content. (1) An initial brief must include:
    (i) A concise statement of the case;
    (ii) A separate section containing proposed findings regarding the 
issues of material fact, with supporting citations to the hearing 
record;
    (iii) Arguments in support of the party's position; and
    (iv) Any other matter required by the ALJ.
    (2) A reply brief, if requested by the ALJ, must be limited to any 
issues identified by the ALJ.
    (c) Form. (1) An exhibit admitted in evidence or marked for 
identification in the record may not be reproduced in the brief.
    (i) Such an exhibit may be reproduced, within reasonable limits, in 
an appendix to the brief.
    (ii) Any pertinent analysis of an exhibit may be included in a 
brief.
    (2) If a brief exceeds 20 pages, it must contain:
    (i) A table of contents and of points made, with page references; 
and
    (ii) An alphabetical list of citations to legal authority, with 
page references.


Sec.  221.60  What are the requirements for the ALJ's decision?

    (a) Timing. The ALJ must issue a decision within the shorter of the 
following time periods:
    (1) 30 days after the close of the hearing under Sec.  221.58; or
    (2) 120 days after the effective date stated in the referral notice 
under Sec.  221.26(c)(4), 7 CFR 1.626(c)(4), or 43 CFR 45.26(c)(4).
    (b) Content. (1) The decision must contain:
    (i) Findings of fact on all disputed issues of material fact;
    (ii) Conclusions of law necessary to make the findings of fact 
(such as rulings on materiality and on the admissibility of evidence); 
and
    (iii) Reasons for the findings and conclusions.
    (2) The ALJ may adopt any of the findings of fact proposed by one 
or more of the parties.
    (3) The decision will not contain conclusions as to whether any 
preliminary condition or prescription should be adopted, modified, or 
rejected, or whether any proposed alternative should be accepted or 
rejected.
    (c) Service. Promptly after issuing his or her decision, the ALJ 
must:
    (1) Serve the decision on each party to the hearing;
    (2) Prepare a list of all documents that constitute the complete 
record for the hearing process (including the decision) and certify 
that the list is complete; and
    (3) Forward to FERC the complete record for the hearing process, 
along with the certified list prepared under paragraph (c)(2) of this 
section, for inclusion in the record for the license proceeding. 
Materials received in electronic form, e.g., as attachments to

[[Page 17219]]

electronic mail, should be transmitted to FERC in electronic form. 
However, for cases in which a settlement was reached prior to a 
decision, the entire record need not be transmitted to FERC. In such 
situations, only the initial pleadings (hearing requests with 
attachments, any notices of intervention and response, answers, and 
referral notice) and any dismissal order of the ALJ need be 
transmitted.
    (d) Finality. The ALJ's decision under this section with respect to 
the disputed issues of material fact will not be subject to further 
administrative review. To the extent the ALJ's decision forms the basis 
for any condition or prescription subsequently included in the license, 
it may be subject to judicial review under 16 U.S.C. 825l(b).

Subpart C--Alternatives Process


Sec.  221.70  How must documents be filed and served under this 
subpart?

    (a) Filing. (1) A document under this subpart must be filed using 
one of the methods set forth in Sec.  221.12(b).
    (2) A document is considered filed on the date it is received. 
However, any document received after 5 p.m. at the place where the 
filing is due is considered filed on the next regular business day.
    (b) Service. (1) Any document filed under this subpart must be 
served at the same time the document is delivered or sent for filing. A 
complete copy of the document must be delivered or sent to each license 
party and FERC, using:
    (i) One of the methods of service in Sec.  221.13(c); or
    (ii) Regular mail.
    (2) The provisions of Sec.  221.13(d) regarding a certificate of 
service apply to service under this subpart.


Sec.  221.71  How do I propose an alternative?

    (a) General. To propose an alternative condition or prescription, 
you must:
    (1) Be a license party; and
    (2) File a written proposal with the Office of Habitat 
Conservation, at the address set forth in Sec.  221.2:
    (i) For a case under Sec.  221.1(d)(1), within 30 days after NOAA 
files a preliminary condition or prescription with FERC; or
    (ii) For a case under Sec.  221.1(d)(2), within 60 days after NOAA 
files a proposed condition or prescription with FERC.
    (b) Content. Your proposal must include:
    (1) A description of the alternative, in an equivalent level of 
detail to NOAA's preliminary condition or prescription;
    (2) An explanation of how the alternative:
    (i) If a condition, will provide for the adequate protection and 
utilization of the reservation; or
    (ii) If a prescription, will be no less protective than the fishway 
prescribed by NMFS;
    (3) An explanation of how the alternative, as compared to the 
preliminary condition or prescription, will:
    (i) Cost significantly less to implement; or
    (ii) Result in improved operation of the project works for 
electricity production;
    (4) An explanation of how the alternative will affect:
    (i) Energy supply, distribution, cost, and use;
    (ii) Flood control;
    (iii) Navigation;
    (iv) Water supply;
    (v) Air quality; and
    (vi) Other aspects of environmental quality; and
    (5) Specific citations to any scientific studies, literature, and 
other documented information relied on to support your proposal, 
including any assumptions you are making (e.g., regarding the cost of 
energy or the rate of inflation). If any such document is not already 
in the license proceeding record, you must provide a copy with the 
proposal.


Sec.  221.72  May I file a revised proposed alternative?

    (a) Within 20 days after issuance of the ALJ's decision under Sec.  
221.60, you may file with the Office of Habitat Conservation, at the 
address set forth in Sec.  221.2, a revised proposed alternative 
condition or prescription if:
    (1) You previously filed a proposed alternative that met the 
requirements of Sec.  221.71; and
    (2) Your revised proposed alternative is designed to respond to one 
or more findings of fact by the ALJ.
    (b) Your revised proposed alternative must:
    (1) Satisfy the content requirements for a proposed alternative 
under Sec.  221.71(b); and
    (2) Identify the specific ALJ finding(s) to which the revised 
proposed alternative is designed to respond and how the revised 
proposed alternative differs from the original alternative.
    (c) Filing a revised proposed alternative will constitute a 
withdrawal of the previously filed proposed alternative.


Sec.  221.73  When will NOAA file its modified condition or 
prescription?

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, if any 
license party proposes an alternative to a preliminary condition or 
prescription under Sec.  221.71, NOAA will do the following within 60 
days after the deadline for filing comments on FERC's draft NEPA 
document under 18 CFR 5.25(c):
    (1) Analyze under Sec.  221.74 any alternative condition or 
prescription proposed under Sec.  221.71 or 221.72; and
    (2) File with FERC:
    (i) Any condition or prescription that NOAA adopts as its modified 
condition or prescription; and
    (ii) Its analysis of the modified condition or prescription and any 
proposed alternative under Sec.  221.74(c).
    (b) If NOAA needs additional time to complete the steps set forth 
in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section, it will so inform FERC 
within 60 days after the deadline for filing comments on FERC's draft 
NEPA document under 18 CFR 5.25(c).


Sec.  221.74  How will NOAA analyze a proposed alternative and 
formulate its modified condition or prescription?

    (a) In deciding whether to accept an alternative proposed under 
Sec.  221.71 or 221.72, NOAA must consider evidence and supporting 
material provided by any license party or otherwise reasonably 
available to NOAA, including:
    (1) Any evidence on the implementation costs or operational impacts 
for electricity production of the proposed alternative;
    (2) Any comments received on NOAA's preliminary condition or 
prescription;
    (3) Any ALJ decision on disputed issues of material fact issued 
under Sec.  221.60 with respect to the preliminary condition or 
prescription;
    (4) Comments received on any draft or final NEPA documents; and
    (5) The license party's proposal under Sec.  221.71 or Sec.  
221.72.
    (b) NOAA must accept a proposed alternative if NOAA determines, 
based on substantial evidence provided by any license party or 
otherwise reasonably available to NOAA, that the alternative:
    (1) Will, as compared to NOAA's preliminary condition or 
prescription:
    (i) Cost significantly less to implement; or
    (ii) Result in improved operation of the project works for 
electricity production; and
    (2) Will:
    (i) If a condition, provide for the adequate protection and 
utilization of the reservation; or
    (ii) If a prescription, be no less protective than NMFS's 
preliminary prescription.
    (c) For purposes of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, NOAA 
will consider

[[Page 17220]]

evidence and supporting material provided by any license party by the 
deadline for filing comments on FERC's NEPA document under 18 CFR 
5.25(c).
    (d) When NOAA files with FERC the condition or prescription that 
NOAA adopts as its modified condition or prescription under Sec.  
221.73(a)(2), it must also file:
    (1) A written statement explaining:
    (i) The basis for the adopted condition or prescription;
    (ii) If NOAA is not accepting any pending alternative, its reasons 
for not doing so; and
    (iii) If any alternative submitted under Sec.  221.71 was 
subsequently withdrawn by the license party, that the alternative was 
withdrawn; and
    (2) Any study, data, and other factual information relied on that 
is not already part of the licensing proceeding record.
    (e) The written statement under paragraph (d)(1) of this section 
must demonstrate that NOAA gave equal consideration to the effects of 
the condition or prescription adopted and any alternative not accepted 
on:
    (1) Energy supply, distribution, cost, and use;
    (2) Flood control;
    (3) Navigation;
    (4) Water supply;
    (5) Air quality; and
    (6) Preservation of other aspects of environmental quality.


Sec.  221.75  Has OMB approved the information collection provisions of 
this subpart?

    Yes. This rule contains provisions that would collect information 
from the public. It therefore requires approval by the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 
44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. (PRA). According to the PRA, a Federal agency 
may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, 
a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number that indicates OMB approval. OMB has reviewed the 
information collection in this rule and approved it under OMB control 
number 1094-0001.

[FR Doc. 2015-06280 Filed 3-30-15; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 3411-15-P; 4310-79-P; 3510-22-P