Making a Visible Difference in Communities
A pollution prevention guide to improving hazardous material

management procedures

Developing procedures for minimizing hazardous materials releases during extreme weather
events can reduce or even eliminate risks to human life and property and should be an integral
part of a community's emergency management planning. Both residential and business
communities subject to impacts from extreme weather events such as storm surge, sea level
rise, and general flooding should take sustained actions to minimize the risks to people and
property from hazardous materials releases. This includes using all available tools to reduce the
potential for the release of hazardous materials like sludge, contaminated sediments and toxic
chemicals. Having procedures in place is an effective short-term approach for reducing the
immediate risks corresponding to extreme weather events, while a long-term solution (such as
changes to zoning regulations and improving flood defenses) is developed and implemented.

Residential and business communities that are more resilient to hazardous materials releases
can be better prepared for, withstand, and rapidly recover from disruption. These communities
build self-sufficiency into their own planning process, and as such become more sustainable
communities.

There are many benefits to minimizing hazardous materials risks; these include:

~	Preventing loss of life and injury;

~	Reducing hazardous materials contamination of homes and businesses;

~	Reducing land contamination from materials carried by flood waters;

•	Reducing business interruption and revenue loss;

•	Reducing emergency response and disaster recovery costs.1

f1 Emergency response costs can be lowered significantly when emergency services such as fire and police services,
hazardous materials incident response personnel, emergency medical personnel, disaster management personnel,
and other related services and deployments are needed less.)

What can communities do?

•	Develop and integrate mitigation actions that will prevent hazardous materials releases
during extreme weather events into the local, regional and state plans (e.g., local and
state hazard mitigation plans). Failing to take action now may result in preventable
releases of hazardous materials into commercial and residential areas when the next
flood occurs.


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•	Designate personnel to facilitate communication with the business community in flood
vulnerable areas in order to: increase the involvement of business owners and operators
in the development of local, regional, and state plans; and inform the business owners
and operators about cost effective pollution prevention tools that will help facilities
reduce the potential for hazardous releases during flood events.

•	Encourage the use of EPA guidance developed to assist businesses in mitigating these
risks. Collectively these documents provide information on good housekeeping
practices for businesses; proper storage, handling, and disposal of hazardous materials
and other toxics; tips on spill preparedness and prevention; information about
employee training and quality control processes through development of an
environmental management system; and energy and water efficiency
recommendations. These references are available on "EPA for Businesses and Non-
Profits" web page at: http://www2.epa.gov/home/epa-businesses-and-non-profits.

•	Promote safety measures and business process changes, safer product substitutions,
materials reuse, best management practices, and other business specific, sector, supply
chain or cluster tools designed to reduce toxic substance production and potential
exposure.

•	Facilitate technical assistance to the business community, taking advantage of the
unique expertise of community development, emergency management leaders (e.g.,
first responders), technical assistance providers (e.g., local universities, Manufacturing
Extension Service, Non-Governmental Organizations) and other stakeholders with
established networks.

•	As part of the hazard mitigation planning process, engage commercial and industrial
business representatives to participate in plan development and recommend that they
consider potential toxic releases as they develop mitigation actions.

•	Review existing available planning tools (e.g., building codes, zoning, and land-use
plans), and evaluate how they can be used to mitigate hazardous materials risks.

Additional information concerning climate change can be found at:

http://www3.epa.gov/climatechange/. Please contact Joseph Bergstein at 212-637-3890 or
Bergstein.Joseph@epa.gov for further information about EPA's program for greening small
business.


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