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The Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act

 

 

 The Emergency Planning and Community Right To Know Act,

called EPCRA, is also known as SARA Title III and is commonly referred to as the Community Right to Know law.  EPCRA was passed in 1986 by the U.S. Congress after a chemical disaster in Bhopal, India, which caused widespread death and illness. The Bhopal accident raised concerns about a lack of planning and preparation for a similar accident in America.

 

Text Box: Members of Benton County LEPC witness the test of a decontamination tent at Kadlec Medical Center in Richland.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


EPCRA is designed to inform communities about chemicals and chemical hazards present and transported in a community, involve the community in developing emergency planning and response measures, help identify facilities that might be subject to the law, and assure implementation of the EPCRA law.

 

The EPCRA law provides an infrastructure at state and local levels to plan for chemical emergencies.  Facilities that have spilled hazardous materials, or that store, use or release certain chemicals are subject to various reporting requirements.  This information is available to help the public become better informed about potentially dangerous chemicals in their community.

 

EPCRA gives the public the explicit right to know about chemical hazards in communities.  Anyone has a right to see and get copies of the Tier Two reports (chemical storage reports), facility emergency plans, written follow-up reports, regional emergency plans, and Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS which list chemical properties)with information that a facility has provided to their LEPC and the State Emergency Response Commission (SERC).  Generally, the LEPC or SERC will already have the MSDS if there are sufficient quantities of a chemical on-site to trigger EPCRA reporting requirements.

 

                                                                    

Text Box: Kadlec hazmat team demonstrates the various types of Personal Protective Equipment used in hazardous materials events.
 

 

 

 

 

 


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