United States
                        Environmental Protection
                        Agency
Office of Solid Waste
and Emergency Response
(5104)
EPA 550-F99-013
August 1999
www.epa.gov/ceppo/
                        Chemical  Safety  Information,  Site
                        Security  and  Fuels  Regulatory  Relief  Act
                        Under Section 112(r) of the Clean Air Act (CAA), by June 21,1999, certain facilities
                        were required to have  in place a risk management program and submit a summary
                        of that program - called a Risk Management Plan (RMP) -to the Environmental
                        Protection Agency. On Aug. 5,1999, President Clinton signed legislation that
                        removes from coverage by the RMP program any flammable fuel when used as fuel
                        or held for sale as fuel by a retail facility. The  legislation also limits access to Off-
                        Site Consequence Analysis (OCA) data that are reported in RMPs by covered
                        facilities. For one year beginning Aug. 5,1999, OCA information will not be
                        available to the public except in certain ways. During that one year period, the
                        federal government will conduct an assessment and issue regulations governing
                        future public access to OCA data.
                        What's New?

                        The recently enacted Chemical Safety
                        Information, Site Security and Fuels
                        Regulatory Relief Act establishes new
                        provisions for reporting and disseminating
                        information under Section 112(r) of the
                        Clean Air Act. The law has two distinct
                        parts that pertain to:

                        •  Flammable fuels; and

                        •  Public access to  OCA (also known as
                           "worst-case scenario") data.
            Despite the removal of flammable fuels
            from the RMP program, firefighters and
            other local emergency responders should
            receive information on the potential off-site
            effects of accidents involving flammable
            fuels. EPA and industry are working with
            the National Fire Protection Association
            (NFPA), a group that develops fire
            protection codes and standards, to ensure
            that local responders receive that
            information. The new law directs the
            General Accounting Office (GAO) to
            assess in two years whether this goal has
            been accomplished.
                        Flammable  Fuels

                        Flammable fuels used as fuel or held for
                        sale as fuel at a retail facility are removed
                        from coverage by the RMP program.
                        However, flammable fuels used as a
                        feedstock or held for sale as fuel at a
                        wholesale facility are still covered.  A retail
                        facility is a facility "at which more than
                        one-half of the income is obtained from
                        direct sales to end users or at which more
                        than one-half of the fuel sold, by volume, is
                        sold through a cylinder exchange program."
            Public Access  to OCA Data

            The law exempts OCA data from
            disclosure under the Freedom of
            Information Act (FOIA) and limits its
            public availability for at least one year. By
            August 5, 2000, the federal government is
            to (1) assess the risks of Internet posting
            of OCA data and the benefits of public
            access to that data, and (2) based on that
            assessment, publish regulations governing
            public access to OCA data. In the
            meantime, EPA is to make publicly
Chemical Emergency Preparedness and Prevention Office
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                            available the OCA data without facility
                            identification information, and covered
                            facilities must conduct public meetings to
                            provide summaries of their OCA data (see
                            "Facility Requirements"). If the
                            government fails to issue regulations by
                            August 5, 2000, the FOIA exemption
                            expires.

                            Major  Provisions

                            The law :

                            •  Exempts OCA information from public
                               disclosure under FOIA for at least one
                               year;

                            •  Makes OCA data available to Federal,
                               State and local officials, including
                               members of Local Emergency Planning
                               Committees, for emergency planning and
                               response purposes;

                            •  Provides for a system for making OCA
                               data available to qualified researchers;

                            •  Prohibits Federal, State and local
                               officials and qualified researchers
                               from publicly releasing OCA data except
                               as authorized by the law;

                            •  Calls for an  assessment and regulations
                               regarding public access to OCA data
                               within one year;

                            •  Pre-empts State FOIA laws regarding
                               public access to OCA data unless data
                               are collected under State law; and

                            •  Requires reports be submitted to
                               Congress describing the effectiveness of
                               the RMP regulations in reducing the risk
                               of criminally caused releases, the
                               vulnerability of facilities to criminal and
                               terrorist activity, and the  security of
                               transportation of substances listed under
                               CAA Section 112(r).
Facility   Requirements

The new law requires every covered
facility to:

•  Hold a public meeting to share
   information about the local
   implications of its RMP, including a
   summary of the OCA portion of its
   plan.  Small businesses can meet
   this requirement by publicly posting
   the OCA summary;

•  Notify the FBI by June 5, 2000,
   that it held such a meeting or
   posted such a notice within one
   year before, or six months after,
   Augusts, 1999; and

•  Tell EPA if it distributes its OCA
   data to the public without
   restrictions. EPA is to maintain a
   public list of the facilities that have
   so distributed their OCA data.

Penalties

The law includes criminal penalties of
up to $ 1 million for violating the
prohibition on unauthorized disclosure
of OCA data.

For More  Information

Visit EPA's Chemical Emergency
Preparedness and Prevention Office
homepage at http://www.epa.gov/
ceppo

View RMPs, except for the off-site
consequence analysis data, in
RMP*Info at http://www.epa.gov/
enviro.

Contact the EPCRA hotline: (800)
424-9346 or(703) 412-9810.
Chemical Emergency Preparedness and Prevention Office
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