National Environmental  Methods Index for
  Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Methods
                            NEMI-CBR
 Drinking water and wastewater systems face a growing number of serious contamination threats as a
 result of natural disasters, and accidental or intentional contamination. In cases of actual or suspected
 contamination, identification and confirmation of the analytical method for a contaminant is important to
 effectively respond to an emergency. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) Office of
 Ground Water and Drinking Water has overseen the development of two new tools to enhance the water
 sector's ability to quickly and effectively identify and analyze contaminants in public water and
 wastewater systems: the National Environmental Methods Index for Chemical, Biological, and
 Radiological Methods (NEMI-CBR) and a companion expert system, CBR Advisor.

NEMI-CBR - A Compendium of Methods for the Water Sector
NEMI-CBR is an extension of the National Environmental Methods Index (NEMI), a free, searchable
clearinghouse of methods and procedures (located at http://www.nemi.gov) for both regulatory and non-
regulatory monitoring purposes for water, sediments, air, and tissues. NEMI-CBR is a powerful tool that
supports the contamination response capabilities of the water sector. Located at
http://www.epa.gov/nemi-cbr. NEMI-CBR is a Web-based compendium that:

                            •   Contains analytical methods for chemical, biological, and
                                radiological contaminants that could pose a threat to public water
                                or wastewater systems

                            •   Enables users to search, summarize, compare costs and other
                                features, and download (or link to) full analytical methods for:
                                1.   emergency response to an accidental or intentional
                                    contamination incident at a water or wastewater system
                                2.   regular monitoring to confirm target analytes and pathogens

                            •   Includes all the information fields in NEMI, plus three additional
                                fields needed to address emergency response: validation flags,
                                rapidity ratings, and specificity ratings
Key Emergency Response Fields in NEMI-CBR
• Validation Flags
  o Green Flag: Indicates the method is included in EPA's Standardized Analytical Methods (SAM)
   compendium and has been validated
  o Yellow Flag: Indicates the method has been verified but has not been independently validated
  o Green/Yellow Combination Flag: Indicates the method is included in the SAM compendium but
   has not been validated for the specific analyte
  o No Flag: Indicates the method has been independently validated but is not in the SAM compendium


           Office of Water • EPA 817-F-08-002 • www.epa.gov/watersecurity • July 2008

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oEPA
National Environmental Methods Index
for Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Methods
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 • Rapidity Ratings: Estimated time to perform an analysis and obtain data for interpretation after the
   sample has been received at the lab. Ratings range from rapid (<1 hour) to very slow (>8 hours).
 • Specificity Ratings: A method is rated on its usefulness as a screening method (a screening method
   provides qualitative and/or quantitative results in 3 hours or less) or as a confirmatory method (a
   confirmatory method provides quantitative results with low false positive/negative rates with respect to
   the presence of the analyte).

 CBR Advisor - A Companion  to NEMI-CBR
 The CBR Advisor is an expert system companion to NEMI-CBR that
 enables users to obtain advice in response to an incident and to access
 detailed information for planning and training purposes. The system
 quickly provides information on the analytical method to select for a
 particular contaminant.

 Key Features  of the CBR Advisor
 •  Contains modules from EPA's Response Protocol Toolbox
    designed to help the water sector effectively and appropriately
    respond to a contamination incident or threat. The Advisor also has
    direct links to forms, such as chain of custody forms, which are
    useful for responding to an incident.
 •  Provides easy access to the following information via multiple
    entry points:
    o  How to classify threat warnings
    o  Initial threat evaluation and immediate response operations
    o  Initial site characterization, evaluation, and entry
    o  When and why screening methods might be used
    o  How to collect, package, and ship samples of potentially hazardous materials
 •  Includes tabular reports that provide advice on recommended analytical methods for a particular
    contaminant (i.e., response versus confirmation/monitoring needs). From the reports page, there are
    links to analytical method summaries and copies of the full analytical methods.
 •  Uses dual-screen format - the left screen contains Questions and Answers (Q&A), while the right
    screen provides additional information,  definitions, and links associated with each question.

 Access to NEMI-CBR and CBR Advisor
 Access to these password-protected tools will be granted to personnel from drinking water and
 wastewater utilities, State Primacy (primary enforcement) Agencies, Federal officials  (including
 government laboratory personnel), and public health agencies. EPA is granting access to these individuals
 because they represent the  primary organizations that will be involved in water contamination prevention
 and response. In addition, these groups have the necessary expertise to accurately interpret the data in the
 database. EPA may grant access to other types of users  in the future, depending on the need.

 To apply for access to NEMI-CBR, visit: https://cdx.epa.gov/. If you have already been granted access to
 NEMI-CBR, log in at: https://cdx.epa.gov/SSL/cdx/login.asp.

 For  More Information

 For more information, please send an email  to nemi@usgs.gov.
            Office of Water • EPA 817-F-08-002  • www.epa.gov/watersecurity  • July 2008

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