Facility Inspections
EPA Regional personnel periodically go on-site to inspect facilities subject
to the Oil
Pollution Prevention regulation. The inspections have two purposes.
First, inspections help to ensure that oil storage facilities comply with
the regulation. Second, on-site inspections give EPA personnel the opportunity
to educate owners and operators about the regulation and methods for ensuring
compliance. In many cases, EPA notifies the facility owner or operator
of the inspection prior to arriving at the facility. Announced inspections
ensure the availability of appropriate facility personnel and build a
working relationship between the Agency and the facility. However, EPA
occasionally conducts unannounced facility inspections in order to gauge
a facility's preparedness to prevent or respond to an oil spill.
Once at the facility, EPA inspectors may ask to review the SPCC
Plan and the Facility
Response Plan and conduct a walk-through inspection of the facility
to ensure that the facility has implemented spill prevention and response
measures. In addition, EPA may interview facility personnel on the SPCC
and Facility Response Plans and their role in implementing them.
In most cases, EPA finds that facilities are in compliance; however,
when the Agency encounters a facility that violates the oil spill prevention
regulations, EPA has the authority under the Clean
Water Act to assess an administrative penalty. In dealing with out-of-compliance
facilities, however, EPA strives to work with facility owners and operators
to remedy any problems identified.
Related Information
Spill
Prevention Control and Countermeasure Plan Reviews
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