Emergency Planning & Community Right-to-Know Act, United States

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Introduction The Emergency Planning & Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) provides a national framework for emergency planning related to the release of hazardous chemicals. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency provides the national leadership. However, most of the actual work is carried out through State Emergy Response Commissions (SERCs) and local emergy planning committees (LEPCs) The Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA,codified at 42 U.S.C. 11001-11050) was enacted in 1986 as Title III of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (P.L. 99-499). EPCRA established state commissions and local committees to develop and implement procedures for coping with releases of hazardous chemicals, and mandated annual reporting to government officials on environmental releases of such chemicals by the facilities that manufacture or use them in significant amounts. EPA facilitates planning, enforces compliance when necessary, and provides public access to information about environmental releases of toxic chemicals. (Emergency Planning & Community Right-to-Know Act, United States)

Subtitle A — Emergency Planning and Notification

EPCRA established a national framework for EPA to mobilize local government officials, businesses, and other citizens to plan ahead for possible chemical accidents in their communities. Subtitle A requires local planning to respond to sudden releases of chemicals that might occur in the event of a spill, explosion, or fire. It ensures that responsible officials will know what hazardous chemicals are used or stored by local businesses and will be notified quickly in the event of an accident.

Under Section 301, each state is required to create a State Emergency Response Commission (SERC), to designate emergency planning districts, and to establish local emergency planning committees (LEPCs) for each district. Section 302 requires EPA to list extremely hazardous substances and to establish threshold planning quantities for each substance. Originally, Congress defined chemicals as “extremely hazardous substances” if they appeared on a list EPA published in November 1985 as Appendix A in “Chemical Emergency Preparedness Program Interim Guidance.” However, EPA has authority to revise the list, and the threshold quantities of chemicals. Based on listing criteria, the intent appears to be to include only chemicals in quantities that could harm people exposed to them for only a short period of time. The law directs each facility to notify the LEPC for its district if it stores or uses any “extremely hazardous substance” in excess of its threshold planning quantity.

Section 303 directs LEPCs to work with facilities handling specified “extremely hazardous substances” to develop response procedures, evacuation plans, and training programs for people who will be the first to respond in the event of an accident. Upon request, facility owners and operators are required to provide an LEPC any additional information that it finds necessary to develop or implement an emergency plan.

Section 304 requires that facilities immediately report a sudden release of any “extremely hazardous substance” or any “hazardous substance” (a much broader category of chemicals defined under CERCLA Section 102(a)) that exceeds the reportable quantity to appropriate state, local, and federal officials. (Note 1) Releases of a reportable quantity of a “hazardous substance” also must be reported to the National Response Center under CERCLA Section 103(a).

Subtitle B — Reporting Requirements

Subtitle B establishes various reporting requirements for facilities. The information collected may be used to develop and implement emergency plans, as well as to provide the public with general information about chemicals to which they may be exposed.

The Occupational Health and Safety Act of 1970 (OSHAct) requires most employers to provide employees with access to a material safety data sheet (MSDS) for any “hazardous chemical”. This “right-to-know” law for workers aims to ensure that people potentially exposed to such chemicals have access to information about the potential health effects of exposure and how to avoid them. EPCRA, Section 311 requires facilities covered by OSHAct to submit an MSDS for each “hazardous chemical” or a list of such chemicals to the LEPC, the SERC, and the local fire department. EPA has authority to establish categories of health and physical hazards and to require facilities to list hazardous chemicals grouped by such categories in their reports. An MSDS need only be submitted once, unless there is a significant change in the information it contains. An MSDS must be provided in response to a request by an LEPC or a member of the public. “Hazardous chemicals” are defined by the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 29, at Section 1910.1200(c). (Note 2)

EPCRA, Section 312 requires the same employers to submit annually an emergency and hazardous chemical inventory form to the LEPC, SERC, and local fire department. These forms must provide estimates of the maximum amount of the chemicals present at the facility at any time during the preceding year; estimates of the average daily amount of chemicals present; and the general location of the chemicals in the facility.(see Note 3 below) Information must be provided to the public in response to a written request. EPA is authorized to establish threshold quantities for chemicals below which facilities are not required to report.

Section 313 mandates development of the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI), a computerized EPA database of “toxic chemical” releases to the environment by manufacturing facilities. It requires manufacturing facilities that manufacture, use, or process “toxic chemicals” to report annually to EPA on the amounts of each chemical released to each environmental medium (air, land, or water) or transferred off-site. EPA makes TRI data available in “raw” and summarized form to the general public. The public may obtain specific information (e.g., about a particular manufacturing facility) by submitting a request in writing to EPA. EPA distributes written and electronic, nationwide and state-by-state summaries of annual data. Raw data and summaries also are available over the Internet. (Note 4).

EPCRA Section 313 generally requires a report to EPA and the state from each manufacturer with 10 or more employees who either uses 10,000 pounds or manufactures or processes 25,000 pounds of any “toxic chemical” during the reporting year. However, EPA may adjust these thresholds for classes of chemicals or categories of facilities. On November 30, 1994, EPA exempted from standard reporting requirements facilities that manufacture, process, or otherwise use up to 1 million pounds of a toxic chemical per year, if they have less than 500 pounds of reportable quantities of chemical per year (59 Federal Register 61488-61502, Nov. 30, 1994). The agency reduced the threshold that triggers reporting requirements for releases of certain persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic chemicals in a rule issued October 29, 1999 (64 Federal Register 58665-58753). A rule reducing the threshold for reporting releases of lead compounds was issued January 17, 2001 (66 Federal Register 4500-4547).

EPCRA enumerates the following data reporting requirements for each covered chemical present at each covered facility:(Note 5).

  • whether it is manufactured, processed, or otherwise used, and the general category of use;
  • the maximum amount present at each location during the previous year;
  • treatment or disposal methods used; and
  • amount released to the environment or transferred off-site for treatment or disposal.

EPCRA requires reporting by manufacturers, which the law defines as facilities in Standard Industrial Classification codes 20 through 39. The law authorized EPA to expand reporting requirements to additional industries. EPA promulgated a rule May 1, 1997, requiring reports on toxic releases from seven additional industrial categories, including some metal mining, coal mining, commercial electric utilities, petroleum bulk terminals, chemical wholesalers, and solvent recovery facilities (62 Federal Register 23834).

The original statute specified 313 “toxic chemicals” or categories of chemicals for which reporting was required, but EPCRA gave EPA authority to add or delete chemicals from the list either on its own initiative or in response to citizen petitions.

EPA has removed more than 15 and added roughly 350 chemicals (or categories) to the original list. The listing criteria specified in Section 313(d)(2) authorize EPA to add a chemical when it is “known to cause or can reasonably be anticipated to cause” —

  • “significant adverse acute human health effects at concentration levels that are reasonably likely to exist beyond facility site boundaries as a result of continuous, or frequently recurring, releases,”
  • in humans cancer, birth defects, or serious or irreversible chronic health effects, or
  • “a significant adverse effect on the environment of sufficient seriousness ...”

Subtitle C — General Provisions

Subtitle C contains various general provisions, definitions, and authorizations.

Trade Secrets. Section 322 authorizes reporting facilities to withhold the identity of a chemical if it is a trade secret and they follow procedures established by EPA.

Information for Health Professionals. Special provisions are made in Section 323 for informing health professionals of a chemical identity that has been withheld to protect confidential business information, if the information is needed to diagnose or treat a person exposed to the chemical.

Right to Know. Section 324 directs EPA, Governors, SERCs, and LEPCs to make emergency response plans, MSDSs, lists of chemicals, inventory forms, toxic chemical release forms, and follow up emergency notices available to the general public.

Enforcement. Section 325 establishes civil, administrative, and criminal penalties for non-compliance with mandatory provisions of the act. Citizens are given the authority to bring civil action against a facility, EPA, a Governor, or a SERC by Section 326.

Chemical Transport. Chemicals being transported or stored incident to transport are not subject to EPCRA requirements, according to Section 327.

Other Provisions. Section 328 authorizes EPA to issue regulations. Definitions are provided in Section 329. Section 330 authorizes to be appropriated “such sums as may be necessary” to carry out this title.

Major U.S. Code Sections

Table 1. Major U.S. Code Sections of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (42 U.S.C. 11001-11050)

42 U.S.C. Section Title Emergency Planning and Community
Right-to-Know Act,
P.L. 99-499, Title III
Subtitle I — Emergency Planning and Notification Subtitle A
11001 Establishment of state commissions, planning districts, and local committees Sec. 301
11002 Substances and facilities covered and notification Sec. 302
11003 Comprehensive emergency response plans Sec. 303
11004 Emergency notification Sec. 304
11005 Emergency training and review of emergency systems Sec. 305
Subchapter II — Reporting Requirements Subtitle B
11021 Material safety data sheets Sec. 311
11022 Emergency and hazardous chemical Inventory forms Sec. 312
11023 Toxic chemical release forms Sec. 313
Subchapter III - General Provisions Subtitle C
11041 Relationship to other law Sec. 321
11042 Trade secrets Sec. 322
11043 Provision of information to health professions, doctors and nurses Sec. 323
11044 Public availability of plans, data sheets, Forms and follow up notices Sec. 324
11045 Enforcement Sec. 325
11046 Civil actions Sec. 326
11047 Exemption Sec. 327
11048 Regulations Sec. 328
11049 Definitions Sec. 329
11050 Authorizations Sec. 330

Further reading:

===Notes Under CERCLA Section 102(a) a “hazardous substance” includes any “elements, compounds, mixtures, solutions, and substances which, when released into the environment may present a substantial danger to the public health or welfare or the environment.” Included in this definition are substances listed under the authority of any of the major environmental statutes (see CERCLA Section 101(14)).EPCRA excepts foods, food additives, and other substances regulated by the Food and Drug Administration; solids in a manufactured item to the extent exposure does not occur; substances used for personal or household purposes; substances used in research or hospitals; and substances used in routine agricultural operations.EPCRA allows facilities to report aggregate amounts of chemicals with similar health and environmental effects. This is called “Tier I” information. However, chemical specific information (“Tier II”) must be provided on request (under certain conditions) to a SERC, LEPC, fire department, or the public.See, for example, EPA’s Envirofacts (Emergency Planning & Community Right-to-Know Act, United States) ; TOXNET, operated by the National Library of Medicine; or Right-to-Know Net, a project of OMB Watch and the Unison Institute * Congress added data submission requirements for manufacturers and processors of toxic substances when it enacted the Pollution Prevention Act of 1990.

Citation

(2006). Emergency Planning & Community Right-to-Know Act, United States. Retrieved from http://editors.eol.org/eoearth/wiki/Emergency_Planning_&_Community_Right-to-Know_Act,_United_States

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