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Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS
24

Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Dec 27, 2015

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Roy Preston
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Page 1: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Overview of the

Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know

Act

Southern Plains Area

USDA/ARS

Page 2: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Background

• Passed into law in 1986 as a result of events that focused attention on chemical accidents and their effect on health and the environment

• Also known as SARA Title III

Page 3: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Purpose

• Establishes requirements for Federal, State, and local governments regarding emergency planning, notification and Community Right to Know reporting on hazardous and toxic chemicals

Page 4: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

EPCRA Components

• Emergency Planning

• Emergency Notification

• Community Right to Know, Hazardous Chemical Reporting

• Community Right to Know, Toxic Chemical Release Inventory

Page 5: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Emergency Planning

• Each State is required to establish:

– State Emergency Response Commission (SERC)

• Establish Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC)

Page 6: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Emergency Planning

• LEPC’s primary function is to develop emergency response plans for potential chemical accidents in the community

Page 7: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Emergency Planning

• A facility having present any listed extremely hazardous substances in a quantity equal to or greater than it’s Threshold Planning Quantity, you are subject to the emergency planning requirements and must be a member of the local LEPC

Page 8: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Emergency Planning

• Extremely hazardous substances and their Threshold Planning Quantities (TPQ) are published in 40 CFR, Part 355

• TPQ is expressed in pounds

Page 9: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Emergency Notification

• Facilities are required to immediately notify SERC’s and LEPC’s likely to be affected when there is a release to the environment of any EHS or a CERCLA hazardous substance at or greater than the reportable quantity

Page 10: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Emergency Notification

• Substances covered under CERCLA must be reported to the National Response Center as well as the SERC, LEPC, and local fire department.

Page 11: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Emergency Notification

• The critical number that determines if a release must be reported is the Reportable Quantity (RQ)

– Expressed in pounds

– If a release is equal to or greater than the listed RQ, it must be reported

Page 12: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Emergency Notification

• Substances subject to this requirement are those listed on the EPCRA EHS list and those listed under CERCLA Section 103 (a), 40 CFR 302.4

Page 13: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Community Right to Know (CRTK), Hazardous Chemical

Reporting

• Facilities are subject to hazardous chemical reporting if they have onsite, for any one day in a calendar year, an amount equal to or greater than:– 10,000 lbs. or greater of OSHA hazardous

chemicals– 500 lbs or the TPQ, which ever is less for

extremely hazardous substances

Page 14: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

CRTK Hazardous Chemical Reporting

• There are two hazardous chemical reporting requirements:

– Material Safety Data Sheet reporting

– Emergency and Hazardous Chemical Inventory

Page 15: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

CRTK Hazardous Chemical Reporting

• Material Safety Data Sheet Reporting:

– Must provide a MSDS to the SERC, LEPC, and local Fire Department for each chemical above the threshold

MSDS

Page 16: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

CRTK Hazardous Chemical Reporting

• Hazardous Chemical Inventory Reporting:– Must submit annual inventory to the SERC,

LEPC, local Fire Department and State Environmental Offices

• Tier I reports on the estimated yearly amount, daily amount and location of chemical

• Tier II report is more detailed and may be requested by regulators in lieu of Tier I

Page 17: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Community Right to Know, Toxic Chemical Release

Inventory• Is to inform the public

and government officials of “Routine Releases” of toxic chemicals to the environment

• Sometimes called TRI or 313 reporting

Page 18: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

CRTK, Toxic Chemical Release Inventory

• “Release” means any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping or disposing of into the environment any toxic chemical

– Includes the abandonment or discarding of barrels, containers, and other closed receptacles

Page 19: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

CRTK, Toxic Chemical Release Inventory

• Any facility that manufactures or processes in excess of 25,000 lbs of a TRI listed chemical or otherwise uses a listed chemical in excess of 10,000 lbs in a calendar year must submit to the EPA and the State a Toxic Chemical Release Inventory

– Certain bioaccumulative and persistent chemicals have lower thresholds

• Requirement is published in 40 CFR 372

Page 20: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

CRTK, Toxic Chemical Release Inventory

• TRI (313) form is submitted annually to the EPA and State– A very detailed report

of chemicals released through out the year to include pollution prevention activity reporting

Page 21: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Accidental Release Prevention

• CAA Section 112, List of Substances for Accidental Release Prevention

• Published in 40 CFR 68

Page 22: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Accidental Release Prevention

• EPA developed threshold quantities (TQs) identifying substances subject to accident prevention regulations

Page 23: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Accidental Release Prevention

• Having substances at or above their TQ requires a risk management program for accidental release

• The TQ applies to the quantity of substance in a process, not at the facility as a whole

Page 24: Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.

Pollution Prevention

• REDUCE chemical inventories below threshold and release reportable quantities through Pollution Prevention