Cross-Media Electronic Reporting Rule

Lesson 5: Priority vs. Non-Priority Reports

Under § 3.2000(b)(5)(vii), CROMERR requires that more specific conditions be met where the electronically signed documents have been designated as Priority Reports.

Priority Reports are those that EPA has identified as likely to be material to potential enforcement litigation. Given this likelihood, it is important to provide not only for the provability of signature device ownership in principle, but for the practical need to make this proof with the resources typically available to enforcement staff and within the constraints of the judicial process in criminal and civil proceedings. A list of these reports can be found under Appendix 1 to Part 3 of CROMERR.

Access the official version of the final rule "Cross-Media Electronic Reporting" – The official version of this rule (70 FR 59848) was published in the Federal Register on 10/13/2005. Click on the previous hyperlink to access the rule, including Appendix 1 to Part 3.

The CROMERR requirements for determining the identity of someone submitting an electronic report are different for Priority and Non-Priority reports. Select each of the tabs below for information on these requirements.

For Priority Reports, the system must determine identity before the e-signature is received by means of either:

  • Wet-ink-on-paper e-signature agreements (i.e., subscriber agreements) either submitted to the state or maintained by a responsible company official. While some systems with CROMERR approval require that they be notarized, notarization is not a CROMERR requirement. OR
  • Electronic identity-proofing by a disinterested party (such as a public key infrastructure [PKI] certificate authority or an agency official) using objectively verifiable information, including at least one government-issued identifier such as a driver's license number or passport; OR
  • Identity-proofing using an approach no less stringent than electronic identity-proofing as specified above.

Note: Disinterested party refers to an individual who is not connected with the person in whose name the electronic signature device is issued. A disinterested individual is not any of the following:

  • The person's employer or employer's corporate parent, subsidiary, or affiliate;
  • The person's contracting agent;
  • A member of the person's household; or
  • A relative with whom the person has a personal relationship.

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For Non-Priority Reports, the system must determine identity by collecting and maintaining information sufficient to prove the identity of individuals that sign and submit electronic documents.

Note that CROMERR does not specify when or how this goal is to be achieved.

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