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Current News is provided so that EPAZ members can post industry, regulatory or scientific current events or breaking news.  Please note that you must be a member of EPAZ to post an article.  All postings are reviewed and approved by an EPAZ board member before appearing on this page.   Please allow 48 hours for this process.  Submit a News Posting
 

ASU/ADEQ Smoke School Schedule

February 8, 2010  Al Brown, Director, Environmental Research Initiatives, ASU at the Polytechnic campus

Another six months have rolled by and we are only four weeks away from starting the first class of the spring 2010 ADEQ/ASU Smoke School classes.  This training service is otherwise known as EPA Method 9 Visible Emissions Evaluator training.
 
ASU in partnership with ADEQ provides this service statewide to ensure that all persons who need this periodic certification have access to the training.  The ADEQ/ASU Smoke School meets EPA and ADEQ standards.  Persons certified will be confident in their ability to judge visible emissions of air pollutants.
 
We are currently registering people for the classes. The link to the on-line registration web site is:  http://www.poly.asu.edu/smokeschool/  .

Spring 2010 Schedule

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 27, 2010

MEDIA CONTACTS
EPA Region 9:  http://www.epa.gov/region09/contact_press.html

Obama Appointee Jared Blumenfeld Upholds, Renews EPA’s Commitment to
Underserved Communities in the Pacific Southwest

 SAN FRANCISCO - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s recently appointed regional administrator, Jared Blumenfeld, held a roundtable discussion Tuesday to unveil his plans to revolutionize the Agency's environmental efforts in the Pacific Southwest. 

Blumenfeld discussed significant environmental challenges and opportunities ahead and his priorities as he works to address these critical issues. 

“I will be a tireless advocate for equity,” stated Blumenfeld. “The quality of your environment cannot be dependent on the color of your skin, the size of your bank account, whether you were born on tribal lands or in a gated community, whether you live on a small island or in a big city.  Environmental justice cannot be an afterthought -- it must be central to how we think and what we do so that we can offer meaningful assistance to communities that have been left behind.” 

Promising to utilize all available legal, regulatory, and enforcement tools, and best available science, to help communities, Blumenfeld highlighted the Central California community of Kettleman City, which has suffered distressing incidents of birth defects and infant deaths.  Blumenfeld confirmed EPA’s commitment to working with state, federal and local partners to assess all of the environmental stressors affecting this rural community.  

“These families are looking for answers, and collectively as public agencies it is our responsibility to help come up with those answers,” said Blumenfeld.  “We are engaging with those agencies and community members in order to understand and address public health and environmental issues in Kettleman City.”

Blumenfeld announced he will take progressive strides forward and place special emphasis on EPA’s environmental efforts in historically underserved and vulnerable communities.  He also vigorously addressed the inequitable distribution of environmental benefits and burdens throughout the region.  The presidential appointee promised to renew environmental efforts in the Pacific Southwest. 

The director of the regional agency affirmed his commitment to serving urban, islands and underserved communities, especially tribes throughout the Pacific Southwest, and small businesses, what he called the backbone of the American economy.

Blumenfeld’s environmental agenda for the Pacific Southwest is echoed throughout the nation.

EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson has made promoting environmental justice and expanding the conversation on environmentalism one of the seven key priorities of her tenure at the Agency.

Since taking office, Jackson has appointed a Senior Advisor for Environmental Justice and a Senior Counsel for External Civil Rights in order to focus the agency’s efforts to address the health and environmental burdens faced by communities disproportionately impacted by pollution.  Most recently, and consistent with this commitment, the agency announced that it would assess the impacts of its hazardous waste rule on disadvantaged communities. This action will also be used to inform EPA’s ongoing effort to strengthen the consideration of environmental justice in rulemakings.

EPA’s Environmental Justice Program: http://www.epa.gov/compliance/environmentaljustice/

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RCRA Container Closure Requirements

January 25, 2010  Barton Day, Bryan Cave LLP

New EPA guidance on RCRA container closure requirements.  It's particularly helpful in acknowledging that different standards appropriately apply in different contexts, something commonly recognized in practice that EPA generally has not previously acknowledged in writing.  The attachment also includes EPA's helpful 2004 guidance on satellite accumulation.  RCRA container closure requirements