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Part 3 - Spill Prevention & Response Preventing Stormwater Pollution at Your Public Works Facility: A 5-Part Workshop Series
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Training Modules 1.Why Stormwater Matters 2.What is a SWPPP? 3.Spill Prevention & Response 4.Materials Management 5.Good Housekeeping
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Spill Prevention & Response What might spill? How concerned should we be? Preventing spills Responding to spills
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Petroleum Products –Fuel –Lubricants –Waste products Should we be concerned? YES! Contain hydrocarbons –Toxic to aquatic life at low concentrations Subject to other State & Federal Regulations What might spill?
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Above-ground Storage State Oil Pollution Control Regulations Federal Regulations amended December 2006 –Additional draft amendments under review 12/07
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Underground Storage RI Rules & Regulations for Underground Storage Facilities Used for Petroleum Products and Hazardous Materials (2007)
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What might spill? Other chemicals –Antifreeze –Paints –Paint thinners –Vehicle/equipment fluids –Fertilizers/pesticides Should we be concerned? YES Many are toxic Fertilizers can increase algae blooms Reduced oxygen
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What might spill? Dumpster contentsShould we be concerned? Yes Could have any of above materials, plus litter, food
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What might spill? Bulk Materials –Salt –Sand –Gravel –Patching –Sweepings –Bricks/cinderblocks Should we be concerned? Yes! Chlorides can be toxic to freshwater life Materials can clog gills, smother eggs, etc
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= Fewer Fish
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Preventing spills Reduce use Use safer alternatives
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Preventing spills Confine potential leaks –Keep potentially leaky equipment, materials away from inlets & concentrated flows
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Away from concentrated flows
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Preventing spills Confine potential leaks –Install berms, dikes or dead end sumps
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Confine?
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Preventing spills Confine potential leaks –Use drip pans –Drain idle equipment
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Preventing spills Confine potential leaks –Roofing, covers –Label containers and check often
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Preventing spills Supervise all material transfers with personnel trained in spill response –Follow standard operating procedures to prevent overfilling –Keep away from storm drains, or cover catch basins
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Responding to Spills: Petroleum or Hazardous Products Oil Pollution Control Regulations Rules and Regulations for the Investigation and Remediation of Hazardous Material Releases (2004)
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Responding to Spills Know where your response plan is & what it says about –Who to notify –Evaluating severity/appropriate response –Location/use of spill response kit –reporting
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Responding to Spills Locate spill response equipment at all potential spill areas –Personal protective equipment –Absorbent materials –Brooms & shovels for dry cleanup –Drain covers, sand bags
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Notify supervisor/spill coordinator immediately Contact: Insert Name Here RIDEM Hotline: (401) 222-3070 Responding to Spills
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Contain spill as close to source as possible
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Responding to Spills Use dry cleanup methods
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Responding to Spills Following cleanup, dispose of spill materials properly
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Public Works Facility Operations & Maintenance for Stormwater Management: Employee Training Brought to you by: This program was developed by the Southern Rhode Island Conservation District in partnership with the URI Cooperative Extension RI NEMO Program and the Rhode Island T2 Center. Funding was provided by the RI Department of Environmental Management and the RI Department of Transportation under the Phase II Stormwater Education and Outreach Program.
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Exercise! What activities are of the greatest concern? Can we do a better job at spill prevention? Are we prepared to respond to a spill?
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