Search

EPA Enforcement Roundup: Week of 8/9

Posted on 8/9/2021 by Lauren Scott

Every day, facilities across the US receive Notices of Violation from US EPA for alleged noncompliance with a wide variety of programs like the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts; chemical management and reporting regulations (TSCA, EPCRA, CERCLA, etc.); hazardous waste management and disposal standards (RCRA); and much more.

Below are examples of recent EPA enforcement actions that provide insight into how and why EPA issues civil penalties to facilities for environmental noncompliance. Names of companies and individuals cited by EPA are withheld to protect their privacy.
 

WHO: A copper smelting facility
WHERE: Leetsdale, PA
WHAT: Clean Water Act violations
HOW MUCH: $861,500

A metal manufacturing company has agreed to perform a comprehensive environmental audit, implement an updated environmental management system, and pay a six-figure civil penalty to resolve alleged violations of the Federal Clean Water Act and Pennsylvania’s Clean Streams Law. According to EPA, the facility exceeded its permitted discharge limits of copper, chromium, nickel, oil, grease, lead, and zinc, among other violations.

As part of the settlement, the company has agreed to conduct a comprehensive review of its wastewater treatment system, hire third-party consultants to conduct a compliance audit and implement corrective measures, and conduct annual compliance training of employees and contractors.
 

WHO: An industrial gas company
WHERE: Carson, CA
WHAT: CERCLA and Clean Air Act violations
HOW MUCH: $127,000

After a release of anhydrous ammonia in January 2019 at carbon dioxide liquidation facility, the facility waited several hours to report the incident to the National Response Center, which is a violation of emergency standards. In addition, EPA found that the company allegedly failed to properly label the facility’s emergency equipment, establish proper emergency controls, and protect electrical equipment.

In addition to paying a civil penalty, the company agreed to make safety improvements to its Carson, California facility to protect the public and first responders from dangerous chemicals. 
 

WHO: A wastewater treatment plant
WHERE: Wapato, WA
WHAT: Clean Water Act violations
HOW MUCH: $25,750

EPA announced an agreement with a municipal wastewater treatment center for allegedly exceeding the effluent limits on ammonia, copper, and zinc. EPA also noted the facility allegedly failed to update its Quality Assurance Plan and Operations and Maintenance Plan.

The facility is expected to take specific actions to prevent further unpermitted zinc discharges, which accounted for the majority of violations.
 

Convenient, Effective Online EHS Manager Training

Managing site compliance with the many complex EPA programs that affect your business—from the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts to TSCA, EPCRA, CERLCA, and more—is a major challenge. If you’re new to the field or need an update on changing EPA rules, online training is a convenient way to quickly build in-depth expertise.

Check out the latest EPA compliance training options here:
 
Complete Environmental Regulations
Clean Air Act Regulations Online
TSCA Regulations Online
Clean Water Act & SDWA Regulations Online
Superfund and Right-to-Know Act Regulations Online 
 

Tags: anhydrous ammonia, CERCLA, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, enforcement, EPA, EPA Enforcement Roundup, fines, penalties

Find a Post

Compliance Archives

Lion - Quotes

The instructor was very very informative, helpful, understandable and pleasant. This course answered many questions I had, being new to this industry.

Frances Mona

Shipping Manager

Very well structured, comprehensive, and comparable to live training seminars I've participated in previously. I will recommend the online course to other colleagues with training requirement needs.

Neil Luciano

EHS Manager

I used the IT support number available and my issue was resolved within a few minutes. I don't see anything that could have made it better.

Danny Province

EHS Professional

Lion is at the top of the industry in compliance training. Course content and structure are updated frequently to make annual re-training enjoyable. I like that Lion has experts that I can contact for 1 year after the training.

Caroline Froning

Plant Chemist

The instructor's energy, enthusiasm, and knowledge of the subject make the class a great learning experience!

Brian Martinez

Warehouse Operator

The instructor took a rather drab set of topics and brought them to life with realistic real-life examples.

Tom Berndt

HSE Coordinator

Excellent job. Made what is very dry material interesting. Thoroughly explained all topics in easy-to-understand terms.

David Hertvik

Vice President

Lion's online training is more comprehensive, has better slides, and is a superior training experience than what I would get from other trainers.

Robert Brenner

District Environmental Manager

This is a very informative training compared to others. It covers everything I expect to learn and even a lot of new things.

Quatama Jackson

Waste Management Professional

Energetic/enthusiastic! Made training enjoyable, understandable and fun!

Amanda Walsh

Hazardous Waste Professional

Download Our Latest Whitepaper

Your hazmat paperwork is the first thing a DOT inspector will ask for during an inspection. From hazmat training records to special permits, make sure your hazmat documents are in order.

Latest Whitepaper

By submitting your phone number, you agree to receive recurring marketing and training text messages. Consent to receive text messages is not required for any purchases. Text STOP at any time to cancel. Message and data rates may apply. View our Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.