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Let the 鈥榁oice and Choice鈥 of the Construction Industry Meet Your Environmental Training Needs With stormwater runoff rules, water and wetlands jurisdiction, and energy and climate change policies making national headlines daily, most construction firms have put environmental issues on their agenda.聽 If you are unsure of what it is you should be doing to identify, analyze, and manage your environmental risks 鈥 as well as the opportunities 鈥 then you鈥檒l want to attend the 2014 蜜桃导航 Contractors Environmental Conference in Arlington, Va., on June 12-13, 2014.
As 2014 gets into gear, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is expected to make some significant regulatory decisions.聽 The latest EPA agenda includes items from revisions to the construction stormwater management rules for active and completed sites and expanded federal jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act to new rules governing the management and disposal of fly ash. 聽Read on to identify and evaluate U.S. EPA activities so you can stay one step ahead of new requirements.聽
Transparent Electronic Reporting, Fewer EPA Resources May Ramp Up Citizen Involvement The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) plans to considerably scale back its enforcement presence over the next five years. While the agency still believes there is widespread non-compliance, budget cuts mean fewer dollars for compliance inspections and enforcement actions brought by the government. EPA is now looking to technology and citizen involvement to close this gap. EPA鈥檚 鈥淣ext Generation Compliance鈥 initiative aims to shift the regulated community from paper to electronic reporting and to the use of advanced emissions monitoring. The apparent end goal is to empower the public to identify violations and enforce regulations.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has scheduled two free webinars on integrating green infrastructure techniques into community and project stormwater programs.聽 The first, on March 4, will highlight how two communities have used green infrastructure to help meet Clean Water Act requirements.聽 The second, on March 6, will look at the use of green infrastructure to manage stormwater runoff from road surfaces.
On Feb. 11, the deadline for public comments for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration鈥檚 (OSHA) rule on respirable crystalline silica closed. The proposed rule would lower the current permissible exposure limit (PEL) from 100 micrograms per cubic meter to 50 micrograms per cubic meter. It would also require the establishment of regulated areas or access control plans where exposures will or may be expected to exceed the PEL, such as conducting medical surveillance and the training of workers about silica related hazards. AGC and other industry stakeholders formed a coalition of two dozen construction trade associations to formulate a comprehensive, unified response to industry concerns with the proposed rule. The next step in the rule making process is an informal public hearing scheduled to begin March 18, 2014.
Just days after signing a consent decree in a federal lawsuit agreeing to take 鈥渇inal action鈥 on coal ash waste disposal rules by Dec. 19, 2014, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) this month released a report presenting its evaluation of the two largest beneficial uses of encapsulated coal combustion residuals (CCRs):聽 use in concrete as a substitute for portland cement, and as a substitute for mined gypsum in wallboard.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is developing an electronic system for tracking hazardous waste shipments. EPA recently finalized a rule to authorize the use of electronic manifests (e-Manifests); a subsequent rule will establish fees. The agency is up against an October 2015 statutory deadline to have the system operational, per the 2012 Hazardous Waste Electronic Manifest Establishment Act. The electronic system will apply in lieu of inconsistent state programs.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) plans to survey general contractors regarding their recent renovation, repair and painting (RRP) activities in public- and private-sector commercial buildings. 聽AGC worked with the 鈥淐ommercial Properties Coalition鈥 to provide comments on the scope and clarity of the questions included in EPA鈥檚 draft Information Collection Request (ICR), as well as its underlying assumptions and burden/cost estimates. EPA admittedly needs more data on whether or not RRP activities in buildings expose the public to lead-based paint (LBP) dust. EPA must first determine that such activities create lead paint 鈥渉azards,鈥 before the agency has the legal authority to write additional rules that would apply to building contractors.
June 12-13, 2014 | Arlington, Va. Leadership and management strategies are essential items for any environmental professional鈥檚 toolbox.聽 This year鈥檚 蜜桃导航 Contractors Environmental Conference (CEC) will focus on developing and honing these strategies, based on the feedback received from past attendees and your responses to last month鈥檚 survey.聽 The conference will provide invaluable resources for contractors in the building, highway and transportation, federal and heavy, and municipal and utility markets. 聽
AGC would like to recognize its members that excelled in the association鈥檚 first annual 鈥淯sed Hard Hat Recycling Challenge鈥 and welcomes others to follow their example.聽 For America Recycles Day, celebrated on Nov. 15, 2013, AGC debuted a new challenge for members to retire old and unsafe hard hats.聽 If you missed the 2013 event, put it on your 2014 calendar so you鈥檙e ready next time around.