&EPA RCRA Corrective Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery | www.epa.gov/hw/learn-about-corrective-action | September 2020 RCRA Corrective Action Program Vision/Mission/Goals for 2030 The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has developed a new 2030 Vision, Mission, and Goals for the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Corrective Action hazardous waste facility cleanup program. RCRA Corrective Action cleanups support healthy and sustainable communities where people and the environment are protected from hazardous contamination today and into the future. Background RCRA set standards for responsible solid waste management and established safeguards for hazardous wastes, from generation to transportation, treatment, storage and disposal. Corrective action is a requirement under RCRA that applies to facilities that treat, store, or dispose of hazardous wastes, directing them to investigate and clean up contamination on or from the facility. EPA, states, tribal partners, facility owner/operators, communities, and stakeholders work closely together to implement the Corrective Action Program to ensure that cleanups are protective of human health and the environment at almost 4,000 facilities across the country. 2020 RCRA Corrective Action Goals The current corrective action program has been driven by aspirational goals, announced in May 2004, that were focused on meeting certain cleanup measures by the year 2020. These ambitious and farsighted goals in the early years of implementation of RCRA Corrective Action targeted achieving 95% completion of three important milestones, and the results are impressive. Of the 3,779 4,000 3,500 3,000 .2 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 Corrective Action 2020 Goals - Historical and FY20 Projected in III III an 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Fiscal Year I Remedy Construction ¦ Groundwater Environmental Indicator ¦ Human Exposure Environmental Indicator U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ------- Before remediation (left) and after (right). Baseline facilities currently of priority for the program, projections are that the program will meet by the end of 2020: • Human Exposures Under Control - projected to be met by 96% of facilities » Migration of Contaminated Groundwater Under Control - projected to be met by 91% of facilities • Remedy Construction - projected to be met by 79% of facilities Developing New Vision/Mission/ Goals for the RCRA Corrective Action Program In 2020, the Office of Resource Conservation and Recovery (ORCR) initiated a series of discussions to gather input from a wide range of stakeholders into the development of a high-level vision, mission, and goals for the RCRA Corrective Action program over the next 10 years. ORCR hosted discussions with stakeholder groups, including members of the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council (NEJAC), community organizers, federal agencies, local governments through the Revitalizing Communities Workgroup of EPA's Local Government Advisory Committee (LGAC), facility owners and operators, tribal partners, and state partners, including the Association of State and Territorial Solid Waste Management Officials (ASTSWMO). On August 19, 2020, EPA hosted a roundtable at which all groups involved in the initial discussions were invited to share their reactions and suggestions to the revised vision, mission, and goals. Feedback regarding the importance of focusing on protection of human health and the environment, long-term protectiveness of cleanups, and revitalization of contaminated properties to support current and future uses was taken into account in making final revisions. EPA announced the final vision, mission, and goals for the program at the ASTSWMO Virtual Corrective Action Conference on September 1, 2020. New 2030 Vision/Mission/Goals VISION ('WHY') RCRA Corrective Action cleanups support healthy and sustainable communities where people and the environment are protected from hazardous contamination today and into the future. MISSION ( HOW and WHAT) EPA, states, and tribal partners work together to ensure that owners and operators of hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal facilities conduct effective and efficient cleanups to protect human health and the environment, support continued use, and make land ready for reuse including, if necessary, placement of controls to protect communities into the future. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ------- '¦** • ' * yjf , f ?A> *¦¦?*?•':¦ .1 - — ¦" »-v* * t * '- ,t .' . >*-"¦>'*-* - • - ¦ ¦ * ** Remediation underway. 2030 GOALS 1. Through 2030, the RCRA Corrective Action Program will ensure that RCRA cleanups are initiated and completed efficiently and expeditiously. Commitments regarding what work is planned and what progress is made will be visible to the public. An ambitious universe of cleanups will be identified for completion by 2030. For commitments arid tracking, the program will use the relevant Corrective Action Program measures and will use flexible approaches appropriate for each region and state. 2. By 2030, the RCRA Corrective Action Program will eliminate or control adverse impacts beyond facility boundaries at RCRA Corrective Action facilities wherever practicable and the program will focus attention on cleanups that will not meet this target. The program will develop procedures to: • identify and address emerging risk issues (e.g., vapor intrusion, evolving science), and o address timelines for facilities brought into the program post-2020. 3. By 2030, the RCRA Corrective Action Program will ensure or confirm that land within facility boundaries at RCRA Corrective Action facilities will be safe for continued use or reasonably foreseeable new uses wherever practicable and the program will focus attention on cleanups that will not meet this target. The program will develop procedures to address timelines for facilities brought into the program post-2020. 4. By 2025, the RCRA Corrective Action Program will identify the key elements of effective Long Term Stewardship for Corrective Action cleanups, and regions and states will have approaches in place to ensure implementation of the key elements. The program will develop procedures to leverage interest and investment in new or existing commercial and community entities to sustain Long Term Stewardship controls. 5. By 2022, program procedures will be in place to regularly adjust the universe of facilities in the cleanup pipeline to reflect current program priorities. 2 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ------- |