Abstract: This report summarizes the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-
Know Act (EPCRA) and the major regulatory programs that mandate reporting by
industrial facilities of releases of hazardous chemicals to the environment, as well as
local planning to respond in the event of significant, accidental releases. The text is
excerpted, with minor modifications, from the corresponding chapter of CRS Report
RL30798, Environmental Laws: Summaries of Statutes Administered by the
Environmental Protection Agency, which summarizes 12 major environmental
statutes. This report will be updated at the beginning of the first session of each new
Congress, or sooner if Congress enacts a law that substantively changes the statute.
The Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (42 U.S.C.
11001-11050) was enacted in 1986 as Title III of the Superfund Amendments and
Reauthorization Act (P.L. 99-499). In Subtitle A, EPCRA established a national
framework for EPA to mobilize local government officials, businesses, and other
citizens to plan ahead for chemical accidents in their communities. EPCRA required
each state to create a State Emergency Response Commission (SERC), to designate
emergency planning districts, and to establish local emergency planning committees
(LEPCs) for each district. EPA is required to list extremely hazardous substances,
and to establish threshold planning quantities for each substance. The law directs
each facility to notify the LEPC for its district if it stores or uses any “extremely
hazardous substance” in excess of its threshold planning quantity. LEPCs are to
work with such facilities to develop response procedures, evacuation plans, and
training programs for people who will be the first to respond in the event of an
accident. EPCRA requires that facilities immediately report a sudden release of any
hazardous substance that exceeds the reportable quantity to appropriate state, local,
and federal officials.
Subtitle B directs covered facilities annually to submit information about the
chemicals that they have present to the LEPC, SERC, and local fire department. In
addition, manufacturers and other facilities designated by EPA must estimate and
report to EPA annually on releases from their facilities of certain toxic chemicals to
the land, air, or water. EPA must compile that data into a computerized database,
known as the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). Generally, all information about
chemicals that is required to be reported to LEPCs, SERCs, or EPA is made available
to the general public, but EPCRA authorizes reporting facilities to withhold the
identity of a chemical if it is a trade secret. Citizens are given the authority to bring
civil action against a facility, EPA, a governor, or an SERC for failure to implement
EPCRA requirements.
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Topics: General Interest, Government, Risk & Reform