        Supporting Statement for Renewal of OECA Tips & Complaints 
                      Regarding Environmental Violations 
                                    Part A

1.	Identification of the Information Collection  - 

 		1(a) 		Title of the Information Collection

              Tips and Complaints Regarding Environmental Violations (Renewal)
              EPA ICR Number 2219.07, OMB Control Number 2020-0032

 		1(b) 		Short Characterization/Abstract

              The Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance (OECA) is the component of the Environmental Protection Agency responsible for administrative, civil and criminal enforcement of the environmental laws that EPA administers. EPA's criminal enforcement program, and, to a lesser extent, its civil enforcement program are, like other federal law enforcement programs, dependent on tips and complaints from concerned citizens and members of the regulated community. The OECA Tips & Complaints web page provides a convenient means by which these individuals can voluntarily submit tips and complaints regarding suspected violations of environmental law
              
              Tips or complaints received are used by civil and/or criminal enforcement personnel at EPA to determine whether an investigation is warranted into the suspected or alleged misconduct. In some cases, EPA may decide to refer tips or complaints for investigation to other federal agencies or to State or local authorities within whose jurisdiction the matter may appropriately fall. The OECA Tips and Complaints web page or mobile-friendly versions does not replace or otherwise supplant other means of providing tips or complaints to EPA; it merely provides a convenient means by which to supply these tips or complaints. 

              As with complaints provided by phone, fax, or electronic mail, we expect that tippers or complainants are already in the possession of information that leads them to suspect a violation of environmental law when they contact EPA to report the matter. Accordingly, EPA believes that the burden associated with the reporting is merely that arising from the need to read the instructions and type or select information into the appropriate fields.  
              
            
2.	Need for and Use of the Collection

 		2(a) 		Need/Authority for the Collection

              Under the statutes that EPA is charged to administer, apprehending violators and responding to ongoing environmental violations is central to the Agency's mission.  See, e.g., 33 U.S.C. § 1319 (Clean Water Act), 42 U.S.C. § 7413 (Clean Air Act).  EPA's criminal enforcement program, and, to a lesser extent, its civil enforcement program are, like other federal law enforcement programs, dependent on tips and complaints from concerned citizens and members of the regulated community.  In fact, in some cases, the statute expressly contemplates that EPA will take action on citizen complaints.  See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 2647(d) (citizen complaints regarding asbestos hazards).  These tips and complaints help EPA focus its investigative resources on violations of environmental law that could otherwise escape detection.
            
 		2(b) 		Practical Utility/Users of the Data

              Tips and complaints regarding environmental violations are used principally by civil and criminal law enforcement personnel at EPA to investigate reported accidental violations and intentional misconduct.  When appropriate, the collected information may be shared with other law enforcement agencies that may have jurisdiction over the matter reported.
            
3. 	Non-duplication, Consultations, and Other Collection Criteria

 		3(a) 		Non-duplication

              OECA's tips and complaints webpage or mobile friendly version does not duplicate other EPA web-based information collections.  OECA's Senior Information Resources Management Office (SIRMO) has previously confirmed that the tips and complaints webpage does not duplicate other web-based information collections.
            
              As noted in Section 1, above, the OECA tips and complaints webform does not replace or otherwise supplant other means of providing tips or complaints to EPA; it merely provides a convenient means by which to supply these tips or complaints online.  Accordingly, tippers or complainants remain free to submit their tips or complaints in person or by telephone, fax, or e-mail.
            
 		3(b) 		Public Notice Required Prior to ICR Submission to OMB.

              EPA has published notice of its intent to renew the ICR for the OECA tips and complaints regarding environmental violations.  The Federal Register Notice was published at 87 FR 35763-01 on June 13, 2022. There were no comments received.

 		3(c)		Consultations

              In order to confirm its burden estimates, EPA timed the entries of actual tippers or complainants who have used the OECA tips and complaints webpage.  In order to preserve the confidentiality of these tippers or complainants, EPA did not record the names of these tippers or complainants or otherwise record any identifying information.
            
 		3(d) 		Effects of Less Frequent Collection
      
              Tips and Complaints are provided to EPA on an entirely voluntary basis; accordingly, there is no specified frequency with which tips or complaints should or must be provided.  There is, therefore, no basis to assess the effects of less frequent collection.
              
 		3(e) 		General Guidelines
      
              The information collection requirements covered by this ICR adhere to the guidelines specified by OMB. 

 		3(f)			Confidentiality

              Tippers or complainants are not required to provide contact information in order to submit a tip or complaint.  However, if contact information is provided, EPA may use this information to initiate follow-up communications with the tipper or complainant and may be shared by EPA with appropriate administrative, law enforcement, and judicial entities engaged in investigating or adjudicating the tip or complaint.  The information is otherwise protected from disclosure to third parties to the extent permitted by law.

              Access to the database in which tips and complaints are stored is limited by system administrator to a small, known universe of users.  Before this access is granted, these users are informed that any misuse of the information stored in the database will cause them to lose access to the database and subject them to disciplinary action.  Contractors do not have access to the database. 

              EPA does not maintain hardcopies of the information supplied through the webform.  Tips or complaints not acted upon within 30 days are automatically purged from the database.  Tips or complaints upon which some action is taken are preserved for a period of five years, pursuant to the record schedule for criminal investigations. 

 		3(g)		Sensitive Questions
      
              The tips and complaints regarding environmental violations does not pose any sensitive questions.

4. 	The Respondents and the Information Requested

 		4(a) 		Respondents/SIC Codes

              Respondents are expected to be members of the general public as well as employees of any company subject to federal environmental regulation.  There is no specific industry or group of industries about which EPA expects tips or complaints.  For the foregoing reasons, it is not possible to classify the expected universe of respondents by SIC code.

 		4(b) 		Information Requested

              (i) Data items, including recordkeeping requirements

              The information requested on the tips and complaints regarding environmental violations is listed below.  Items of information that are required in order to submit a tip or complaint are shown in italics.

 If known, the suspected violator's name
 If known, the suspected violator's street address
 If known, the suspected violator's city
 If known, the suspected violator's state and zip code
 If applicable and known, on the lands of which federally recognized tribe did the violation occur? 
 Tipper's name
 Tipper's email address
 Tipper's phone number
 Tipper's street address
 Tippers city
 Tipper's zip code
 Is the violation is ongoing?
 The date of the incident and whether or not it is an emergency
 If known, is the violation accidental or intentional?
 What type of act constitutes the violation? (Release, dumping, spill, spraying, etc.)
 Does the violation affect land, water, air, workers, or documents?
 A description of the incident or hazard.
 Directions to the site of the violation.
 Checkbox attestation of awareness and understanding of the meaning and significance of submitting a tips or complaint.
 Optional photo upload tool. 
                  
              Generally speaking, the items of information requested are not dictated by environmental statute or regulation; instead, the information is intended to make it possible to route the tip or complaint within EPA (or to another, appropriate law enforcement agency) and to provide inspectors and/or investigators the information that they need to follow-up on the tip or complaint.  The sole exception is the checkbox attestation at the end of the web form.  The items of knowledge to which a tipper or complainant attests by checking this box are dictated by the general false statements provision of the U.S. Criminal Code, 18 U.S.C. § 1001.  In the event that EPA prosecutes a tipper of complainant for deliberately supplying false information on this web form, this attestation is intended to frustrate a mistake-of-fact defense that the tipper or complainant did not understand the nature and/or significance of submitting a tip or complaint using this web form.

              (ii) Respondent Activities

              Tippers or complainants are generally expected to review the form and complete the form by answering the questions posed.  Those who choose to do so may also review a general information link on reporting an environmental violation and/or a link that describes the EPA web privacy policy. 
            
              Generally speaking, EPA expects tippers to be either a general member of the public or an employee who believes that their employer has violated an environmental law.  In either case, EPA expects that tippers or complainants will come to the form already in possession of all of the information needed to submit a tip or complaint.  Even where the form calls for information that a general member of the public may not have (say, for example, the address of the suspected violator), the instructions on the form explain that the tipper or complainant may simply enter/select "unknown" in the field provided for their response.

              EPA expects that tippers or complainants who are an employee of the company about which they are filing a tip or complaint will maintain, as a matter of customary business practice, the name and address of the suspected violator.  In all other cases, EPA has no basis to presume that data items would be maintained as a matter of customary business practice.

5.	The Information Collected  -  Agency Activities, Collection Methodology, and Information Management

 		5(a) 		Agency Activities

              Many of the activities associated with this form are either one-time events that have already occurred or are ongoing agency activities that are fully automated (such that they do not constitute an ongoing burden or expense).  The only activities that are ongoing but not automated are as follows:

 Answer respondent questions
 Review and distribute tips or complaints

 		5(b) 		Collection Methodology and Management

              Previously the EPA tips and complaints web form was tested as a "pilot" at a less prominent location on EPA's website for a period of months.  Only after this evaluation period did EPA provide a link to the web form on its internet home page.

              EPA does not check the quality of data entry by tippers or complainants.  Of course, where a tip or complaints appears to warrant further investigation, EPA conducts an investigation into the tip or complaint.  Only in this respect does EPA check data quality.

              EPA does not employ special machines or processing technology in evaluating tips or complaints.  The information supplied by the tipper or complainant automatically populates a database that is regularly reviewed by EPA personnel for matters that warrant investigation.  The information stored in this database cannot be accessed by the public and, within EPA, access to the database is limited by system administrator to a small universe of people who are responsible for reviewing the tips and complaints.

              EPA has not eliminated more traditional means of collecting tips and complaints; the tips and complaints form simply adds an additional, convenient method of providing a tip or complaint for those with internet access.  EPA expects that this method of accepting tips or complaints will reduce burden for many individuals.  As expected, the prominence of the tips and complaint web form on our site, the ease with which the form may be completed, and the relative anonymity that the internet affords tippers or complainants has resulted in a significant increase in the number of tips or complaints received.  The web form also elicits specific items of information that allow EPA to efficiently route tips or complaints within EPA to the appropriate office.  The standardized format of the form also represents an advantage over tips or complaints received by phone, where items of information needed to evaluate a tip or complaints are more likely to be accidentally omitted.

 		5(c) 		Small Entity Flexibility

              The tips and complaints form is an addition to, not a substitution for, other methods of supplying tips or complaints to EPA; accordingly, the form, itself, constitutes an increase in agency flexibility with respect to small entities as well as anyone else who may wish to supply a tip or complaint.

 		5(d)		Collection Schedule

              Individuals may submit a tip or complaint at any time. There is no schedule associated with this collection.
            
 6.	Estimation of the Burden and Cost of the Collection
 
 	6(a)	Estimating Respondent Burden
 
 		6(b)Annual Respondent Burden & Cost
 
 Estimating Labor Costs
   Estimating Capital and Operations and Maintenance Costs
 Capital/Start-up vs. Operating and Maintenance (O&M) Costs
 Annualizing Capital Costs
              EPA receives approximately 1,585 tips or complaints per month through the webpage, for a total of approximately 19,020 responses per year.  Reading instructions and completing the form takes approximately a half hour per response; accordingly, respondents collectively spend approximately 9,510 hours per year providing tips or complaints through the tips and complaints form.  Assuming an average annual wage of $51.28 [$32.05 (Bureau of Labor Statistics average hourly wage) x 1.6 (benefits multiplier)], the opportunity cost of these burden hours is approximately $487,673 per year.  
 
 	
 		6(c) Estimating Agency Burden And Cost
 	6(d)Estimating the Respondent Universe and Total Burden and Costs
 
 
 Approximately $15,000 is spent each year for contractor operation of the website, bug fixes, and data storage.
 EPA technical staff spends approximately 7 hours per month directing contractor hours, for a total of 84 hours of technical work on the system per year.  At an hourly wage of $ 62.27 [$38.92 (Bureau of Labor Statistics average hourly wage for GS-12 analysis) x 1.6 (benefits multiplier)], system maintenance costs EPA approximately $5,231 per year.
 Review of tips and complaints takes place at EPA's headquarters and in the 10 EPA Regional Offices.
 Review for criminal enforcement at EPA's headquarters requires approximately 2 hours each day, for a total of 520 hours per year. At an hourly wage of $87.73 [$54.83 (Bureau of Labor Statistics average hourly wage for federal criminal investigators) x 1.6 (benefits multiplier)], these functions collectively cost EPA approximately $45,620 per year.
 Review for civil enforcement in the 10 EPA Regional Offices requires approximately 1.5 hours each day at each Regional Office, for a total of 3,900 hours each year. At an hourly wage of $51.23 [$32.02 (Bureau of Labor Statistics average hourly wage for mix of GS-11 and GS-13 analysts) x 1.6 (benefits multiplier)], these functions collectively cost EPA approximately $199,979 per year.

                 Total agency cost: $15,000 + $5,231 + 45,620 + 199,979 = $265,830
 
 		6(e)	 	Bottom Line Burden & Cost 
 Respondent Tally
 The Agency Tally
 Variations In The Annual Bottom Line
                        (if applicable)
              
              The bottom-line estimates to respondents are 9,510 annual burden hours, 19,020 responses per year, and $487,673 labor cost per year.  	
 
 		6(f)			Reasons for Burden Change
 
              There is a 924-hour increase in the hours in the total estimated respondent burden compared with the ICR currently approved by OMB. This increase reflects the fact that tips and complaints are being filed at a higher rate as the website becomes more widely known, a strong indication of the success of this program. One question has been added but others have been deleted so that there is expected to be no net effect on the overall time needed to file a tip.  The  more substantial increase in Agency burden and cost reflects more widespread use of the filed tips and complaints within the Agency.
              
 
 		6(g)		Burden Statement
 			
The annual public reporting and recordkeeping burden for this collection of information is estimated to average (1/2) hour per response. 
              
 Burden means the total time, effort, or financial resources expended by persons to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose or provide information to or for a federal agency. This includes the time needed to review instructions; develop, acquire, install, and utilize technology and systems for the purposes of collecting, validating, and verifying information, processing and maintaining information, and disclosing and providing information; adjust the existing ways to comply with any previously applicable instructions and requirements; train personnel to be able to respond to a collection of information; search data sources; complete and review the collection of information; and transmit or otherwise disclose the information. An 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. The OMB control numbers for EPA's regulations are listed in 40 CFR part 9 and 48 CFR chapter 15.
 
To comment on the Agency's need for this information, the accuracy of the provided burden estimates, and any suggested methods for minimizing respondent burden, including the use of automated collection techniques, EPA has established a public docket for this ICR under Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-OECA-2009-0494, which is available for online viewing at www.regulations.gov, or in person viewing at the Enforcement and Compliance Docket and Information Center in the EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C.  The EPA Docket Center Public Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays.  The telephone number for the Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and the telephone number for the Enforcement and Compliance Docket and Information Center is 202-566-1744.  An electronic version of the public docket is available at www.regulations.gov.  This site can be used to submit or view public comments, access the index listing of the contents of the public docket, and to access those documents in the public docket that are available electronically.  When in the system, select "search," then key in the Docket ID Number identified above.  Also, you can send comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20503, Attention: Desk Officer for EPA.  Please include the EPA Docket ID Number EPA-HQ-OECA-2009-0494 and OMB Control Number 2020-0032 in any correspondence.
