[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 40, Volume 31]

[Revised as of July 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 40CFR1068.5]



[Page 817]

 

                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT

 

         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)

 

PART 1068_GENERAL COMPLIANCE PROVISIONS FOR NONROAD PROGRAMS--Table of 

Contents

 

          Subpart A_Applicability and Miscellaneous Provisions

 

Sec.  1068.5  How must manufacturers apply good engineering judgment?



    (a) You must use good engineering judgment for decisions related to 

any requirements under this chapter. This includes your applications for 

certification, any testing you do to show that your certification, 

production-line, and in-use engines comply with requirements that apply 

to them, and how you select, categorize, determine, and apply these 

requirements.

    (b) If we send you a written request, you must give us a written 

description of the engineering judgment in question. Respond within 15 

working days of receiving our request unless we allow more time.

    (c) We may reject your decision if it is not based on good 

engineering judgment or is otherwise inconsistent with the requirements 

that apply, based on the following provisions:

    (1) We may suspend, revoke, or void a certificate of conformity if 

we determine you deliberately used incorrect information or overlooked 

important information, that you did not decide in good faith, or that 

your decision was not rational.

    (2) If we believe a different decision would better reflect good 

engineering judgment, but none of the provisions of paragraph (c)(1) of 

this section apply, we will tell you of our concern (and its basis). You 

will have 30 days to respond to our concerns, or more time if we agree 

that you need it to generate more information. After considering your 

information, we will give you a final ruling. If we conclude that you 

did not use good engineering judgment, we may reject your decision and 

apply the new ruling to similar situations as soon as possible.

    (d) We will tell you in writing of the conclusions we reach under 

paragraph (c) of this section and explain our reasons for them.

    (e) If you disagree with our conclusions, you may file a request for 

a hearing with the Designated Officer as described in subpart G of this 

part. In your request, specify your objections, include data or 

supporting analysis, and get your authorized representative's signature. 

If we agree that your request raises a substantial factual issue, we 

will hold the hearing according to subpart F of this part.



[69 FR 39263, June 29, 2004]