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       EPA Region 10 Office of Air, Waste and Toxics
                     Annual Report FY2008

                                                    Rick Albright, Director
                                            Jan Hastings, Associate Director

Vision:
The Office of Air, Waste and Toxics (OAWT) is a recognized leader in working
with other governments, the regulated community and the public to promote
clean air,  control toxics and manage waste for a healthy environment.

Priority  Areas:
• Supporting OAWT Core Programs
• Enhancing Tribal  Environments
• Reducing Greenhouse Gases & Reaching for Sustainability.
                     Highlights for FY2008:

OAWT Plays Role in EPA Climate Change Efforts:
                      In 2008, OAWT researched and helped to produce the
                         Region's Climate Change Strategy. We developed
                         survey tools and provided expertise on air rules,
                           voluntary programs, energy production/use,
                           mitigation opportunities,  integration options and
                           measurement. OAWT served as national
                           sublead for Climate Change and sponsored
                           monthly presentations on such topics as: the
                           Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the
                         ' Heat Island Effect  Initiative, the life cycle
                         analyses of biofuels, the Energy Independence
           ^^^_     r  Security Act, and the  Greenhouse Gas Mandatory
                      Reporting rule development. In addition, OAWT
assisted on the GHG Mandatory reporting Rule workgroup, and coordinated
with the other Regions to ensure that regional perspectives were included.
OAWT Provides Forum for Info-Exchange on Climate Work:
In May 2008, OAWT brought together State Air Directors from throughout the
Region to exchange information on recent State and Federal climate activities.
In addition, participants identified a collaborative project to examine the
lifecycle carbon emissions from wood waste use/disposal options.  At that
meeting, OAWT also announced plans for a Winter 08709' workshop that will
bring together state and tribal air staff to review the latest science on how
climate change will impact air quality (wildfires, PM2.5 levels, etc) and will also
provide participants an opportunity to discuss plans and needs for adapting
their air programs to climate change.

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EPA Launches Project on Alaska Climate Change, Solid Waste, and the
Yukon River:
                                            EPA Region  10 OAWT has
                                            funded a TV documentary on
                                            the impacts of solid waste
                                            and global climate change on
                                            the Yukon  River and efforts
                                            by the Alaska Tribes on the
                                            river to meet these
                                            challenges. The documentary
                                            is targeted for completion in
                                            2009 and is being produced
                                            by an award-winning
                                            indigenous film maker and
                                            crew.
                                       ^^
Aerial view of Charley River at Yukon. Photo by USGS.

OAWT Hosts Webinar Series on Climate Change and Waste:
The Waste Reduction Resource Conservation and
Stewardship Team hosted the West Coast Webinar Series
on Climate Change, Waste  Prevention, Recovery and
Disposal, providing three free 2.5 hour web-based
educational opportunities on the connections between
climate change, materials management, and waste issues.
The three sessions covered: an introduction to climate
change and materials management; compost and landfill
issues; and accounting systems, modeling, and economic incentives.
The Unit also created a website as an ongoing resource - all of the materials
from the webinar series will be posted for download at any time. In fall 2008,
the Unit will be convening key western federal, state and local  government
leaders to participate in an EPA Region 9 and 10 facilitated forum to discuss
how the Regions can work together to address climate change and resource
management opportunities more strategically.
Website: http://www.epa.gov/region10/westcoastclimate.htm

                                            Energy Efficiency and
                                            Renewables -
                                            Prevention  Technologies
                                            for Climate Protection:
                                            During 2008, the OAWT
                                            Pollution Prevention (P2)
                                            Team continued to re-focus
                                            their tools to  address the
                                          H prevention  of greenhouse
                                            gasses through energy
efficiency and the promotion of renewable energy technologies. The Team
named greenhouse gas reduction as their only 2008 priority for P2 grants to
states, hired a Senior Environmental Enrollee to introduce the  Energy Star
benchmarking tool to the Region's wastewater treatment plant  managers and
delivered training to state and local technical assistance providers to be able to
identify,  calculate and recommend greenhouse gas reduction opportunities to
their business clients. Efforts to assist the Region in walking  the talk, included:
purchasing the Region's Renewable Energy Credits, investigating the efficacy
of using ZipCar in lieu of government vehicles, and benchmarking region-wide
employee air travel, to develop reduction goals and offset resulting greenhouse
gas emissions.
                                            Agriculture Burning in
                                            Idaho -
                                            Federal Rule Change
                                            Announced:
                                            In August 2008 OAWT
                                            published a rule that modifies
                                            Idaho's State  Implementation
                                            Plan and allows for a
                                            resumption of agricultural
                                            field burning in Idaho. This
                                            approval marks  an important
milestone in Idaho's collaborative efforts to include  stakeholders throughout the
development of a new burn program for the state. In 2007, the 9th Circuit Court
of Appeals determined that air quality Rules initially approved by EPA did not
allow crop residue burning in  Idaho and that EPA's subsequent rule clarification
was legally erroneous. The Court vacated our approval and remanded the
matter to EPA. Idaho made a  new submission, which we approved because it
meets the requirements of the Clean Air Act. Our approval allows agricultural
burning, but only with advance permission from IDEQ, who must consider
existing air quality and other factors in any burn decision.

                                            Regional Smoke
                                            Management Meeting a
                                            Success:
                                            Teaming up with the Forest
                                            Service, the State and Tribal
                                            Air Programs Unit of OAWT
                                            co-sponsored  a  regional
                                            smoke management meeting
                                            in Portland, Oregon in April
                                            2008. Sixty five
                                            representatives from States,
                                            Tribes, Local, and Federal
                                            agencies involved in both the
regulation and conduct of agricultural and silvicultural burning met to discuss
how to  improve communication in planning burn activities. A group of  north
Idaho and eastern Washington State and Tribal smoke managers met in June
2008 for 3 days  of training in improved technical tools and communication.

Air Permits - Tools for Protecting Air Quality:
In FY2008, OAWT issued seven non-Title V permits to sources located on four
Indian Reservations establishing emission limits. The extraordinary effort was
done with a very short lead time, utilizing a regulatory mechanism only
available to Region 10, namely, the Federal Air Rules for Reservations
regulation.  In addition, OAWT drafted a pair of Title V and non-Title V permits
allowing Warm Springs Forest Products Industries to build a new waste to
energy power plant on the Warm Springs Reservation. Using wood waste
generated by forest thinning policies, the  project could prevent thousands of
tons  of uncontrolled pollution that would otherwise be caused by burning the
wood waste in situ. The recent national economic downturn may impact
whether the plant construction ultimately  goes forward.

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Beaufort Sea
OAWT Issues Permit to Regulate Drill Rig Air Emissions:
Ujt—                        (H        x  On June 18,2008, OAWT
                                         „'"•' issued a revised minor air
                                        -|  quality permit to Shell to
                                        jj   regulate air emissions from
                                        |    the Kulluk floating drilling rig
                                            and its support vessels to
                                        ,    conduct exploratory oil and
                                              Bas drilling on the Outer
                                              ontinental Shelf of the
                                            Beaufort Sea, north of
                               N.W. Territories    Alaska. OAWT issued the
                                            permit after considering
numerous public comments opposed to the permitting action. Issuance of the
permit responds to a September 2007 remand from the Environmental Appeals
Board. OAWT coordinated this complex and contentious permitting action with
the Office of Environmental Assessment, Office of Regional  Counsel, and
Alaska Operations Office. In addition, OAWT worked with the Headquarters
Offices of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Air and Radiation, Enforcement
and Compliance Assurance, and General Counsel.

Collision Repair Campaign Trainings Reduce Air  Toxics Emissions:
                 In FY2008, the Air Toxics Team  collaborated with state, local
                  and  tribal governments, non-governmental organizations
                         and industry associations to reduce Hazardous Air
                           Pollutants (HAP), Volatile Organic Compounds
                                    (VOC) and Particulate Matter (PM)
                                         emissions from  auto body shops.
                                          This training, education and
                                            outreach campaign serves as
                                            an opportunity for shops to
                                            work towards early
                                            compliance with the new auto
                                          body rule (40 CFR Part 63
                                         Subpart HHHHHH).

This year the team built Spray Technique Analysis and Research (STAR)
painting training capacity at all of the technical schools  in Washington State,
leveraged training equipment from Washington State Department of Ecology,
and coordinated workshops in Idaho, Oregon, and Alaska.  In addition, the
team is hosting the first workshop of its  kind to certify shops and their
employees for compliance with the training requirements in the auto body rule.
This workshop, held at Lake Washington Technical College, is called the
Collision  Repair Crash Course and  combines training from  Design for the
Environment with painting training to minimize emissions.

With the help of a student volunteer, the Air Toxics Team developed a
geographic information system database of over 3500 auto body shops in
Region 10, co-located with schools,  childcare facilities,  and  environmental
justice communities to help target shops posing the greatest risk to our most
vulnerable populations. This tool will help state and local air agencies prioritize
inspections and target outreach.

Through  implementing  best business practices in our training and outreach
materials, which include installing and maintaining control equipment and using
safer paints and solvents, toxics exposures are expected to be reduced by
90%. Small business auto refinishing shops adopting best business practices
                                                                           WEST COAST COLLABORATIVE
                                                                           Public-private partnership to reduce diesel emissions
can reduce toxic paint emissions by roughly 30%,or 2,200 pounds per shop,
while saving as much as $13,000 annually. It is estimated that implementing
best practices in 1,000 shops will reduce HAP and VOC emissions by 3.5
million pounds annually.

Air Planning Efforts for PM 2.5 Non-Attainment Areas:
In FY2008 OAWT air planning staff began preparing Technical Support
Documents that support designating PM2.5  Non-Attainment areas, including
Anchorage, Juneau, Tacoma, Klamath Falls, Oakridge, Franklin County, and
Pinehurst. The documents are the most technically sophisticated yet for
designation under any standard. The sophistication of tools used and the level
of technical analysis ensure that our decisions are based on the best available
science.

West Coast Collaborative - EPA Region 10 Walks the Talk:
                                            The West Coast Collaborative
                                            cosponsored the first  Faster
                                            Freight - Cleaner Air
                                            conference in Puget Sound,
                                            which is aimed at moving
                                            goods more efficiently
                                            through our ports and
                                            reducing associated air
quality impacts. At  this conference, the Ports of Seattle, Tacoma and
Vancouver, B.C. announced a joint strategy to reduce air pollution by 30% by
2010. EPA and other members of our Collaborative aided in the development
of the strategy.

Also this year, the West Coast Collaborative Clean School Bus Program
awarded eight  projects in Regions 9 and 10  totaling $1.4 million in retrofits and
school bus replacement efforts. In addition,  we announced a request for
proposals for diesel emissions reduction projects totaling $5.1 million for
Regions 9 and 10.  We will be making our award decisions this fall.Notably,
EPA Region 10 set  an example  for diesel emission reductions by making in-
house improvements this year.  The region began using biodiesel in its two
emergency response trucks and one of the response trucks  has been
retrofitted with  a diesel filter. Also, the Region has replaced its 28 foot
aluminum dive boat engine with a 2007 Volvo Penta "tier 2" engine, which is
substantially cleaner than the old engine. In  addition, several Superfund
cleanup projects in  Regions 9 and 10 have implemented retrofits or clean fuels
into their effort.

OAWT Works Cross-Border to Protect Air:
In FY2008, OAWT participated in the Georgia Basin Puget Sound International
Airshed Group to exchange information,  cooperate and collaborate on
international airshed issues.  Key topics included developing a Paniculate
Matter Annex on individual Agency/Government efforts to reduce greenhouse
gases and adapt to climate change,  improving air quality in the marine sector,
permitting  new or expanding stationary sources of emissions, and developing
sustainability efforts for the 2010 Olympics.  The information exchanged at
these meetings has, and will continue to help agencies across the border
collaborate on  projects such  as developing educational DVDs on air quality
effects to human health, developing  standards for cleaner marine fuels,
developing a matrix of climate activities and  understanding where there are
gaps in mitigation and adaptation efforts for air quality on both sides of the
border, and developing sampling protocols for visibility for Canada.

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Tribal Air Program Milestones:
                                          ~ In May 2008, OAWT hosted
                                            the first meeting of tribal air
                                            managers to coordinate air
                                            planning, in much the same
                                            way that EPA has been
                                            meeting with state and local
                                            air managers for some years.
                                            Many tribes in Region 10
                                            have been developing
                                            capacity to manage air
                                            pollution impacting their
                                            communities for ten years or
                                            more with OAWT grant and
                                            technical support.

Nine tribes  have now established their eligibility for Treatment in the Same
Manner as States (TAS) for grant eligibility under Clean Air Act §105, and
several of these tribes  have eligibility under additional  Clean Air Act  sections.
Three tribes, the Nez Perce Tribe, the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla
Reservation, and the Quinault Tribe, are actively participating with EPA in air
pollution regulatory control on their reservations under the FARR through
administrative delegation from EPA; OAWT expects delegation to a fourth tribe,
the Coeur d'Alene, to be final by the end of September 2008. The Swinomish
Tribe is working on  developing a Tribal Implementation Plan for outdoor
burning as a means to assume regulatory responsibility for management of air
pollution generated within reservation boundaries.

OAWT Registers Over 100 Air Pollution Sources to Date Under FARR:
To date, over 100 air pollution sources on  reservations have registered with
OAWT as required under the FARR. OAWT continues to call burn bans in
collaboration with tribes across Washington, Oregon and Idaho, pursuant to the
FARR and now based on the lower trigger levels of the new PM2.5 24-hour
National Ambient Air Quality Standard of 35 ug/m3. Burn bans have  proven to
be effective in improving air quality, particularly when they are issued in
conjunction with burn bans called for adjacent  counties by State and local air
agencies. In March  2008, Region 10 received delegation from the EPA
Administrator for the authority to promulgate revisions to the FARR.

EPA Hosts Alaska Tribal Air Quality Workshop:
In November 2007, Region  10 and OAQPS hosted an air quality  workshop in
Anchorage for Tribes in Alaska.  The workshop focused on building
relationships between Tribes, EPA, and the Alaska Department of
Environmental Conservation through interactive discussions on the different
ways to address air quality problems.

OAWT Gets Feedback on the Value of Tribal Solid Waste Plans:
                   I The OAWT RCRA Tribal  Waste Team funded the Alaska
                   Native Tribal Health  Consortium to get feedback from
                   Alaska tribes on solid waste plans and the value of the
                   planning process. The results showed that plans are
                   useful for most tribes - 90% of tribes with plans or in the
                   process of writing them reported  their plans to  be
                   somewhat or very useful. The results also showed that
                   Villages with a written plan were  8.6 times more likely to
                   have made solid waste improvements than those who
                                   6
Pumphouse Road Tire Pile, Photo by EPA.
were not sure or in still in the process of writing a plan. These findings are
helpful to OAWT and can help inform the national Office of Solid Waste tribal
waste program.

Eight Open Dumps Cleaned Up at Yakama Nation:
                                            This year Yakama Nation,
                                            with technical assistance
                                            from the OAWT RCRA Tribal
                                            Waste Team and funding from
                                            EPA and Washington State
                                            Department of Ecology,
                                            cleaned up and  closed 8
                                            illegal open dumps, including
                                            the tire pile pictured at left.
                                            3625 tons of waste, including
                                            360,000 tires, was removed
                                            for proper disposal. The tire
                                            project at Yakama Nation has
                                            paved the way for other tribes
                                            to partner  with the state to
remove tires. Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation are consolidating
waste tires for removal by the state in the fall of 2008.

OAWT Funds Highly Successful Meth Lab Waste Training:
The OAWT RCRA Tribal Waste Team has helped fund a new training course to
teach tribal staff how to identify abandoned meth labs and properly deal with
the hazardous waste products of this activity. The Tribal Solid Waste Advisory
Network (TSWAN) and the University of Washington teamed up to present the
three day training which included classroom work and hands-on mock mobile
methamphetamine scenes set up by the Washington  State Patrol  Drug Task
Force. This training was extremely successful with  many participants saying it
was the best training course they had ever taken. The success of the training is
attributed to the use of hands-on mock scenes where students visually identify
and actively assess the hazards of the meth lab waste products. Tribes from
across the country are contacting TSWAN seeking  this training and Cherokee
Nation is pursuing a training partnership to expand the effort.

Tribal Solid Waste Circuit Riders Reach Out to Alaskan Villages:
                                            In FY2008, the RCRA Tribal
                                            Waste Team circuit riders
                                            provided in-person technical
                                            assistance to over a dozen
                                            villages and tribes throughout
                                            the region. Circuit riders
                                            traveled over 2600 miles,
                                            visited 11 dump  sites and
                                            landfills, assessed and
                                            inventoried solid waste site
conditions, and met with tribal and village contacts. In addition, circuit riders
teamed up with the  Alaska Chapter of the Solid Waste Association of North
America, Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, and regional
health corporations  in Alaska to deliver Rural Alaska Landfill Operator Training
courses in Bethel and Dillingham. The extensive on-the-ground experience and
knowledge of the circuit riders is a key factor in their success and ability to
build lasting relationships with tribes.

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Work at Hanford, Photo by Dept. of Energy.
Technical Assistance/ Oversight for Hanford Cleanup:
                                            The Hanford Federal Facility
                                            is one of the most complex,
                                           I challenging, and
                                            environmentally-significant
                                            waste sites in the nation, and
                                            perhaps the world. The 586
                                            square mile Hanford
                                            reservation housed the
                                            world's first full-scale nuclear
                                            reactor and  produced the first
                                            plutonium for the nation's
                                            nuclear arsenal. Since shut-
                                            down of production activities
                                            in 1988 and 1989, the sole
mission of Hanford is cleanup of production facilities, infrastructure, waste
disposal units and the resulting contaminated soils and  ground water in the
area.
Washington Department of Ecology (Ecology) oversees the non-Superfund
cleanup and waste management activities at Hanford. The OAWT role includes
program planning and tracking, oversight of the Hanford Dangerous Waste
permit and Ecology's nuclear waste permitting program, technical assistance
for thermal treatment and risk assessment at Hanford's  Waste Treatment Plant,
and support for PCS cleanup.

In FY2008, OAWT focused resources on state program  support and oversight,
including working toward the critical re-issuance of the Hanford Dangerous
Waste permit. OAWT management and staff worked closely throughout the
year with  Ecology to provide technical assistance and to ensure that the
Hanford dangerous waste  program and re-issued permit will effectively regulate
waste management, closure and corrective action.  Ecology has already made
considerable strides toward a successful re-issue of the Hanford Dangerous
Waste permit.

BP Exploration (ALASKA) Inc. Corrective Action Order on Consent:
                                          ~ In FY2008, the RCRA
                                            Corrective Action and Permits
                                            team completed negotiations
                                            and issued a 3008(h) Order
                                          M to BP  Exploration (ALASKA)
                • jjfjl                   1 Inc. (BPXA). The Order
                                            requires investigation and
                                            cleanup of releases at or from
                                            BPXA's Prudhoe Bay facility
                                            on the North Slope of Alaska.
                                            The Order establishes an
                                            innovative process for
                                            effectively managing
thousands of units which are at  different phases of investigation and/or cleanup
and are located throughout the site's 385 square miles.
Work at Prudhoe Bay Facility, Photo by EPA.
Velco Corrective Action Complete:
In FY2008, the RCRA Corrective Action and Permits Team completed
corrective action at the Velco Facility in Eugene, Oregon. The Facility has filed
an Easement and Equitable Servitudes with Lane County to ensure that the
portion of the property where manufacturing occurred will not be used for
residential purposes.  Completion of corrective action enabled  Region 10 and
the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality to terminate the 21-year-old
3008(h) Order.

Federal Green Challenge Launched:
                   On Earth Day 2008, EPA launched the Federal Green
                   Challenge - a project that asks federal facilities in  Region
                   10 to reduce their carbon footprints. Facilities are
                   challenged to set a goal of at least a 5% reduction in the
                   next year in two of the four focus areas: energy,
                   transportation, waste,  and water. The program provides
                   tools to establish a baseline,  work toward reductions, and
                   measure results  at year end.  Challenge-takers will share
                   results with each other and the public, and even get
recognized through the Champions of Green Government Recognition
program.

Reaching Out - Digitally:
                                          ~ This year, the Waste
                                            Reduction, Resource
                                            Conservation  and
                                            Stewardship Team decided to
                                            test reaching out and
                                            educating our customers
                                            without creating the
                                            environmental impacts of a
                                            meeting. To that end, we
                                            have hosted two webinar
                                            series-the RCC Web
                                            Academy and the West Coast
                                            Forum on Climate  Change,
Waste Prevention, Recovery and Disposal. We have reached an average of
350 people per webinar. Total attendance at the  12  webinars has topped  4,000.
If we had tried to reach these people by conventional methods,  we
conservatively estimate  350 people would have  had to travel to at least two
meetings - spending $500 and traveling 500 miles  on each meeting. That
would have created 457,000 pounds of carbon equivalent GHGs and required
participants to spend about $350,000. We actually spent less than 10% of the
total with an  average cost of $8.25 per person per webinar. Not only did we
save the environment and money, our customers loved it.  On average, across
all the webinars, 97% of participants thought it was useful and over 60% said
that they were going to act on something they learned.

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Lead Program Tackles Renovation and Repair Work:
»rk:

CJilfef

M2    ^
            -EAD
            Awareness
            Program
This year, EPA promulgated a major new component of the Lead Program - the
most important effort in the last decade to help fight lead poisoning in children.
The OAWT Lead Program now regulates renovation, repair and painting in
order to reduce lead hazards created from this type of work. This represents a
huge expansion of the program and the OAWT Lead Team is taking an active
role to strategize for success. The Office  of Enforcement and Compliance
Assurance has estimated that there are approximately 7-15 million regulated
renovation, repair and painting events per year nationally.

The OAWT Lead Team has been involved since the very start - participating on
the rule development workgroup that helped write the rule. In addition, the team
worked proactively to create a communications strategy and conduct extensive
outreach and compliance assistance throughout the region with states, tribes
and local governments. Management and staff have met with  representatives
from Idaho, Oregon and Washington state agencies to plan for possible
delegation of the program. Because the program has the potential to generate
annual licensing fees, states are taking a serious look at running the renovation
program.

QAWT Works to Improve TRI Data Quality:
                                            In FY 2008, the Toxics
                                            Release  Inventory (TRI)
                                            Program provided direct
                                            assistance to 98 facilities to
                                            improve TRI data quality
                                            reported to EPA. The validity
                                            of TRI data is crucial because
                                            it is used by the public,  non-
                                            governmental  organizations,
                                            and government agencies to
                                            protect the health of the
                                            public- particularly vulnerable
                                            populations. Importantly,
                                            program  offices throughout
                                            EPA actively use TRI data in
efforts to identify toxic chemical sources to assist with regulatory and other
pollution control activities.
                                  10
Coordinating with Yakama Nation and Yakima County on Asbestos
Waste:
OAWT came to an agreement with Yakama Nation, Yakima County Solid Waste
Department, and the Yakima County Landfill regarding a long standing
asbestos disposal  issues. As a result of the agreement, EPA will act as the
receiver of demolition/renovation notifications and waste shipment records from
activities on tribal lands at Yakama Nation. This information will then be shared
with Yakima County by the Yakama Nation. While this is not required per the
NESHAP, resolving notification and disposal and protecting human health was
paramount to the positive outcome. OAWT is working with Yakama Nation to
develop Standard Operating Procedures that will satisfy all parties, stay within
the regulatory requirements of the NESHAP, and ensure coordination to protect
human health.

Protecting Firefighters from Potential Asbestos Exposure:
                                          ~ In FY2008, OAWT worked
                                            cooperatively with the Oregon
                                            Department of Environment
                                            Quality (ODEQ) to clarify the
                                            residential burning
                                            requirements of the federal
                                            Asbestos National Emission
                                            Standards for  Hazardous Air
                                            Pollutants (NESHAP). Many
                                            home owners  donate
                                            unwanted residential
                                            buildings to local fire
                                            departments for training
                                            purposes, or "Burn to
                                            Learns." While these  are
great training opportunities, there are regulations that apply and must be
followed before the burn training can commence.

The asbestos NESHAP requires an asbestos survey be conducted and
asbestos found to  be removed prior to burning - the temperature of a burning
structure is  normally not hot enough  to destroy asbestos fibers that may be
present, thereby causing potential exposure to the firefighters and others in the
area. Once  this clarification was brought to the attention of the ODEQ, they
immediately took steps to correct their procedures to ensure compliance with
federal regulations and protect citizens.
                                  11

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•Contact Information •
 Rick Albright, Director
 Office of Air, Waste and Toxics
 Ph:  206-553-1847

 Janis Hastings, Associate Director
 Office of Air, Waste and Toxics
 Ph:  206-553-1582

 Laura Castrilli, Contact
 Corrective Action Permits Team
 Ph:  206-553-4323

 Nancy Helm, Unit Manager
 Federal and Delegated Air Programs Unit
 Ph:  206-553-6908

 Lisa McArthur, Unit Manager
 Resource Management and State Programs Unit
 Ph:  206-553-1814

 Christina Colt, Unit Manager
 Solid Waste and Toxics Unit
 Ph:  206-553-0058

 Mahbubul Islam, Unit Manager
 State and Tribal Air Programs Unit
 Ph:  206-553-6985
                     12

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