ENVIRONMENTAL  JUSTICE
                                                                              EJ in New England
                                                    EPCRA
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    Emergency Planning  Community
    Right-to-Know  Act  (EPCRA)
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      U.S.  EPA  |  ENVIRONMENTAL  JUSTICE  AT EPA  NEW  ENGLAND
EPA    NEW    ENGLAND'S   ENVIRONMENTAL
JUSTICE  PROGRAM   works to protect all people, regardless
of race, color,  national origin  or  income, from environmental harms and
risks,  and to involve  all citizens  in making  decisions that affect their
environment.  The program is designed to achieve environmental and public
health  improvements for communities  disproportionately  burdened  by  the
impacts of pollution.
INTRO:
EPA New England's EPCRA Team,  in partnership with local  community officials, helps to assist and  empower
"the community" in preparing and implementing the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act and the
Pollution Prevention Act. EPCRA is a powerful tool for protecting and alerting communities, and providing citizens access
to information on chemicals within their community. The region's EPCRA team works with a variety of private and public
entities to plan, prepare, and prevent chemical accidents and releases. The team assists industries in their annual chemical
inventory reporting requirements and facilities in their toxic chemical release and waste management reporting. They also
assist state and local agencies in developing and implementing preparedness and emergency response plans, and providing
individuals with "right-to-know" information about toxic and hazardous chemicals in their communities.
OVERVIEW:
The Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know
Act of 1986 establishes requirements for federal, state
and local governments, Indian  Tribes,  and  industry
regarding emergency planning and "Community Right-to-
Know" reporting on hazardous and toxic chemicals. The
Community Right-to-Know provisions help increase the
public's knowledge and access to information to chemical
information found at individual facilities, their uses, and
releases  into the  environment. Information from these
provisions will help states and communities develop a
broad  perspective of chemical hazards  and toxics  for
the entire community, aiding in the protection  of public
health and the environment.

Among the key provisions of EPCRA, Sections 311 and
312 require an annual reporting of chemical inventory
data (known as Tier II  reports) by facilities to the State
Emergency Response  Commission (SERC), the Local
Emergency Planning Committee  (LEPC),  and the local
fire department for any hazardous chemicals stored or
used in the work place. EPCRA Section 313 (known as
the Toxics Release Inventory) requires certain facilities to
submit an annual Form R report for specified chemicals
that are  released  into the environment or managed as
waste. States and communities, working with facilities, can
use this information to improve chemical safety, prevent
pollution, and protect human health and the environ-
ment. Tier II data is available to the public through local
emergency planning committees (LEPC) or the local fire
department; and TRI data can be accessed through EPA's
TRI website at www.epa.gov/tri/. EPA New England's
EPCRA Program also includes Clean Air Act 112r which
regulates chemical accident prevention. A comprehensive
picture of federal and state EPCRA activity can be found
on EPA's Emergency Management Programs website at
www.epa.gov/emergencies/.

Although EPCRA is  a federal  requirement, its output-
development of comprehensive  emergency plans and
availability  of chemical inventory and  release data  is
largely implemented  at the state and local level, notably
those provisions dealing with  emergency planning and
hazardous chemical  reporting. The State Emergency
Response Commission contacts can be found at www.
epa.gov/osweroe1/content/epcra/serc_contacts.htm.
For additional  information,   please  access  the  key
contacts provided, as well as: Len Wallace,  EPA New
England Senior EPCRA Enforcement,  (617) 918-1835,
and Jim Gaffey, EPA New England Preparedness Exercises,
(617) 918-1753, gaffey.jim@epa.gov.
KEY CONTACTS:

MARY JANE O'DONNELL
EPA New England
RCRA, EPCRA, Federal Programs
(617) 918-1371
odonnell.maryjane@epa.gov

DWIGHT PEAVEY
EPA New England
Senior Assistance & Coordinator,
Small Business Advocate,
Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) Program
(617) 918-1829
peavey.dwight@epa.gov


GENERAL INFO:

EPA NEW ENGLAND
5 Post Office Square
Suite 100
Boston,  MA 02109-3912
(617) 918-1111
www.epa.gov/region1/

TOLL-FREE
CUSTOMER  SERVICE
1-888-EPA 7341

LEARN  MORE AT:
www.epa.gov/region1/
enforcement/epcra
L               United States
               Environmental Protection
               Agency
 © printed on 100% recycled paper, with a minimum of 50% post-consumer waste, using vegetable-based inks
                                                              EPA-901-F-11-008
                                                                    April 2011

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