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Hazardous Waste Incinerators - EPA's and OSHA's Actions to Better Protect Health and Safety Not Complete (Paperback)
Loot Price: R322
Discovery Miles 3 220
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Hazardous Waste Incinerators - EPA's and OSHA's Actions to Better Protect Health and Safety Not Complete (Paperback)
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Loot Price R322
Discovery Miles 3 220
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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GAO/RCED-95-17, Hazardous Waste Incinerators: EPA's and OSHA's
Actions to Better Protect Health and Safety Not Complete. In 1990,
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) became concerned about
workers' safety at hazardous waste incinerators because of the
possibility that waste handling operations could pose a significant
health threat to employees. As a result, EPA requested assistance
from and established a joint task force with the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to evaluate compliance with
relevant health and safety requirements at hazardous waste
incinerators. The task force's 1991 report summarized the results
of inspections at 29 such facilities and made five recommendations
to EPA and four to OSHA.1 These recommendations were intended as
follow-through measures to correct violations detected during the
inspections, educate the combustion industry, improve the coverage
of inspections, educate compliance officials, and prompt EPA to
conduct research and revise incinerators' permits as necessary. In
response to your request for information on whether hazardous waste
incineration facilities are following federal health and safety
requirements, we determined (1) what the status of the task force
report's recommendations is, (2) what the results of subsequent
inspections and enforcement actions at the 29 facilities have been,
and (3) whether EPA or OSHA have taken other actions beyond those
recommended by the task force to better protect health and safety
at hazardous waste incineration facilities. EPA and/or OSHA have
fully implemented three of the task force's recommendations: EPA
and OSHA have followed up on violations found during the task
force's inspections, EPA and OSHA have educated the combustion
industry, and EPA has taken additional steps to educate compliance
officials. EPA has not fully implemented other recommendations to
(1) improve the coverage of EPA's inspections and (2) conduct
research on the use of certain operating equipment and revise
incineration facilities' permits, as necessary, to limit the use of
this equipment. OSHA has not fully implemented the recommendations
that it (1) educate compliance officials and (2) improve the
coverage of its inspections. Subsequent to the task force's
inspections, EPA and the states inspected the facilities but did
not detect the same pattern of violations. OSHA did not schedule
further inspections for these facilities because the agency judges
the relative health and safety risk of working at incineration
facilities to be lower than the risk of working in other types of
industries. Therefore, OSHA has assigned incinerators a low
priority for inspections. EPA and OSHA have taken several actions
beyond those recommended by the task force to protect health and
safety at incineration facilities. However, one of these
actions-OSHA's plan to require facilities to have accredited
training programs for workers who handle hazardous waste-may not
achieve its intended result because OSHA does not have a viable
plan to ensure that all hazardous waste facilities submit their
programs for accreditation.
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