Management of Spills & Leaks Two areas of focus: Prevention: Taking steps to minimize the potential for a spill and properly maintaining equipment to eliminate.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
40 CFR 300. Overview of the NCP Roles and Responsibilities National Response Priorities General Pattern of Response Relationship with the Area Contingency.
Advertisements

Bob Babcock Security and Emergency Response Coordinator Contact Info: Part 5 Rules: “Spillage of Oil and Polluting Materials”
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
DEQ Waste and Remediation Division Programs Michael McCurdy Ground Water and Remediation Section Manager Boise Regional Office.
Spill Prevention 2-1 (a) Spill Prevention and Cleanup in the Shop n Avoid spilling hazardous materials -- work carefully and take precautions. n Spills.
Cleanup of Contaminated Areas Aaron D. Green, Project Manager Remediation Branch IDEM’s Office of Land Quality.
COMMITMENT & INTEGRITY DRIVE RESULTS Oil Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasure Training Prepared for Middle Georgia State College.
Preventing Storm Water Pollution: What We Can Do Question and Answer Game PREPARED IN COOPERATION WITH THE Texas Commission on Environmental Quality AND.
4/27/2015 Licking County Engineer’s Office MCM#6 Training MCM#6 – Pollution Prevention/Good Housekeeping for Municipal Operations Licking County & Partners.
 The Federal Clean Water Act specifies the requirements for SPCC Plans  The Code of Federal Regulations 40 CFR 112 details requirements of the SPCC.
Prepare + Prevent + Respond + Recover + Mitigate Louisiana State Police Emergency Services Unit.
Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasures (SPCC) Training.
Used Oil and Oily Wastes 4-1(a) Activities That Produce Used Oil n Routine oil changes or repairs n Oily parts drip when placed on the floor or are carried.
Preventing Storm Water Pollution: What We Can Do ~Employee Training Series~ Fleet Maintenance PREPARED IN COOPERATION WITH THE Texas Commission on Environmental.
ANNUAL SPILL PREVENTION CONTROL AND COUNTERMEASURE TRAINING (SPCC) Presented by: Prepared for: Stephen F. Austin State University February 2, 2012.
Wastewater and Floor Drain Sludge 6-1 (a) Wastewater From Vehicle Maintenance Facilities n Vehicle and Floor Washwater –Wastewater contains soaps, grease,
Slide #1 TSP React to Hazardous Spill. Slide #2 Terminal Learning Objective Action: Action: React to a Hazardous Spill Condition: Condition:
Wastewater P2. Environmental Concerns  Heavy metals from sanding waste  Oil, grease, and coolant from vehicles  Toxic chemicals from cleaners, strippers,
SPCC Training Presented by: George S. Gamble, PE
Spill Prevention and Response Fort Wainwright, Alaska Environmental Officer Course 2011 Name//office/phone/ address UNCLASSIFIED 8/17/
Hazardous Materials Spill/Release Notification Presented by County of Riverside Transportation Department.
Duke University Contingency Plan
CERCLA, Spill Management and Storm Water Pollution Prevention.
 Chemical Spill Procedures Environmental Health and Safety Office.
Storm Water Pollution Prevention Training
Release Reporting. Lesson #17 - Release Reporting How Do I Know If I Have a Leak in My UST System?
ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY – SPILL MANAGEMENT TRAINING August 2009.
Overview of the Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act Southern Plains Area USDA/ARS.
ABsorbents vs. ADsorbents* Imbiber Beads ® are completely different from all other types of materials used for recovery of organic chemicals, (i.e. oil,
WasteSection 3 Section 3: Hazardous Waste Preview Bellringer Objectives Types of Hazardous Waste Resource Conservation and Recovery Act The Superfund Act.
Produced by the Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission Community Partnership Produced by the Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission.
Part 3 - Spill Prevention & Response Preventing Stormwater Pollution at Your Public Works Facility: A 5-Part Workshop Series.
Module 1: Introduction to the Superfund Program. 2 Module Objectives q Explain the legislative history of Superfund q Describe the relationship between.
WasteSection 3 Types of Hazardous Waste Hazardous wastes are wastes that are a risk to the health of humans or other living organisms. They may be solids,
Chapter 16 Waste Generation and Waste Disposal.  Refuse collected by municipalities from households, small businesses, and institutions such as schools,
Superfund Overview John Burchette EPA Remedial Project Manager.
S ESSION 1 C ARLYN W INTER P RISK U.S. EPA R EGION 3.
HANNAH WALKER RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT.
A Small Spill Is a Big Deal Water Quality Division Inspection and Enforcement.
Release Reporting. How Do I Know If I Have a Leak in My UST System? 1. Unusual operating conditions; such as, erratic behavior of the dispensing pump.
Bellringer. Types of Hazardous Waste Hazardous wastes are wastes that are a risk to the health of humans or other living organisms. – They include: solids,
Courtesy of Schools Insurance Authority. Title 8, California Code of Regulations, Section 5194 Hazard Communication determines the dangers of the chemicals.
Emergency Response For the Hazardous Waste Worker.
HAZWOPER stands for Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response. It’s a set of standards developed by OSHA that provides guidelines to protect workers.
Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasures Training (SPCC) Plan
1 |1 | Module 8 Environmental Management including Energy WASH FIT Module 8 Environmental Management including Energy WASH FIT.
Hazardous Waste.
Advanced Environmental Management (AEM) Training Phase I
Spill Prevention Control & Countermeasure (SPCC) Annual Training
Release Reporting Lesson 17 covers the subject of Release Reporting. You will learn how you know when you have a leak and what leaks require reporting.
Preventing Storm Water Pollution: What We Can Do
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
ANNUAL ENVIRONMENTAL RETRAINING
Average person produces 1700 lbs of MSW per year
CERCLA, Spill Management and Storm Water Pollution Prevention
Classroom Catalyst.
Environmental Hazard Awareness:
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980, 1986, 1990 (Superfund) Operated by the EPA The CERCLA provides a Federal.
Cha.16 Waste Management.
Hazardous Waste.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) Purpose To address the hazards to human health and the environment presented.
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Vehicle & Equipment Maintenance/Cleaning
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Waste Generation and Waste Disposal
Presentation transcript:

Management of Spills & Leaks Two areas of focus: Prevention: Taking steps to minimize the potential for a spill and properly maintaining equipment to eliminate leaks. Intervention: Reporting and responding properly to a spill once it occurs.

Prevention of Spills and Leaks Inspection and replacement of hydraulic hoses and fittings on a regular basis. Maintenance of equipment at the shop before heading to the job site. Development and documentation of a maintenance program for each piece of equipment. Proper management and design of staging or fueling areas.

Prevention (cont.) Maintaining a readily available spill kit at the job site or with each piece of equipment. Regular training of equipment operators and other personnel as necessary as to proper response actions when a spill occurs. *These last two are included because they will help to limit or control a spill.

Intervention of spills and leaks I’ve had a spill or leak of a polluting material such as hydraulic fluid, diesel fuel, or motor oil. Now what?

TIME OUT! Before we look at how to respond to a spill we need to define what they are and what Michigan law says about them.

NREPA  The Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act, PA 451 of 1994 provides the statutory requirements for addressing a “spill.”  A spill as we know it according to Part 201 of NREPA is defined as a RELEASE.

Definition of a “Release”. “any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing of a hazardous substance into the environment, or the abandonment or discarding of barrels, containers, and or other closed receptacles containing a hazardous substance.”

What is a “Hazardous Substance”? Hazardous substance as defined under Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) Hazardous waste as defined under Part 111 (Hazardous Waste Mgt.) Petroleum as described in Part 213 Any other substances the DEQ demonstrates pose a threat to human health or the environment

Responsibility once a release of a hazardous substance occurs Part 201 of NREPA says in part: (c) Immediately stop or prevent the release at the source. (d) Immediately implement source control or removal measures to remove or contain hazardous substances that are released after the effective date of the 1995 amendments to this section if those measures are technically practical, cost effective, and provide protection to the environment. At a facility where hazardous substances are released after the effective date of the 1995 amendments to this section, and those hazardous substances have not affected groundwater but are likely to, groundwater contamination shall be prevented if it can be prevented by measures that are technically practical, cost effective, and provide protection to the environment. (e) Immediately identify and eliminate any threat of fire or explosion or any direct contact hazards. (f) Immediately initiate removal of a hazardous substance that is in a liquid phase, that is not dissolved in water, and that has been released.

What does this mean to me? In layperson’s terms it means if you have a spill (release) of a hazardous substance (petroleum product such as hydraulic fluid, diesel, motor oil, grease, gasoline, etc.) you are responsible to stop it and then clean it up. Most spills from logging operations are “minor” in nature. Minor spills do not mean that you do not have to respond. There is not a set quantity which requires no further action.

Response Actions to Address a Release These can vary based on situation at hand and severity or sensitivity of release. Example: Ten gallons of hydraulic fluid spraying all over tree limbs and bark on an upland site vs. the same amount flowing into a sensitive wetland area.

Response Actions (cont.) Appropriate response actions include: Utilization of a spill kit to contain, absorb, control a release. Shoveling up stained soils and placing them in a container for disposal at a licensed Type II landfill. Placing absorbents pads on a pond or stream that is contaminated with petroleum.

Response Actions (cont.) Placing drips pans under equipment with leaks that are waiting for repairs or replacement parts. Notifying the DNR forester who is responsible for you job of the release. Notifying the DEQ when the release can not be easily contained and cleaned up.

Response Actions (cont.) Inappropriate response actions include: Pushing soil over top of a release with the blade of the equipment. Pulling tree tops onto an area where a release occurred. Ignoring that the release occurred. Ignoring equipment that is causing an ongoing release (defective equipment).

Some “No Brainers” Do not drain used motor oil directly onto the ground. This is a misdemeanor under Part 167 of NREPA. Do not discard oil containers or other trash into the woods. Do not perform routine maintenance or fueling in sensitive environmental areas or buffer strips.

How to Contact the If a release is large enough or involves sensitive environmental areas you should contact the DEQ. Pollution Emergency Alerting System (PEAS) for after hours and weekends Local DEQ office during normal working hours.