Cleanup at Federal Facilities


Book Description




Federal Facilities


Book Description




Superfund


Book Description




Cleanup at Federal Facilities


Book Description




From Crisis to Commitment


Book Description







Federal Facilities


Book Description




Superfund


Book Description

Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO reviewed the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) and other federal agencies' progress in assessing and evaluating federal facilities with potential hazardous waste contamination. GAO found that: (1) as of December 1992, EPA had evaluated 500 of the 823 potentially contaminated facilities on the docket; (2) the backlog of unevaluated federal facilities could result in an increased risk to public health and the environment or expensive rework if agencies do their own cleanup and are later required by EPA to perform additional cleanup; (3) there is no way to estimate how many federal facilities EPA will include on the National Priorities List (NPL); (4) EPA does not know whether unevaluated facilities are more or less contaminated than those already evaluated; (5) EPA concluded in 1987 that it could not meet the legislative deadlines because of resource limitations; and (6) some federal agencies do not view hazardous waste cleanup programs as a high priority and sometimes provide EPA with late or incomplete assessments.







Federal Facilities


Book Description

Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO determined the status of federal efforts to identify federal facilities requiring hazardous waste cleanup under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA). GAO found that: (1) the Departments of Defense (DOD) and Energy (DOE) and other agencies have mostly completed their efforts to identify hazardous waste sites requiring cleanup and have reported candidate facilities to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA); (2) some Department of Agriculture (USDA) units have nearly completed their inventories, but the Forest Service, some Department of the Interior agencies, the Coast Guard, and the Federal Aviation Administration are continuing to inventory their facilities; (3) Interior and USDA cited the size of their landholdings, resource limitations, and liability issues as reasons why they have not completed site inventories; (4) the latest DOD estimate of long-term cleanup costs totalled $24.5 billion; (5) DOE has estimated that its cleanup costs will total at least $54 billion, and it is now required to update its total cleanup cost estimate annually; (6) USDA and Department of Transportation agencies have also made estimates; (7) Interior and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration have not estimated their cleanup costs; (8) an underlying cause of the slow progress in site inventories and cost estimates is the absence of statutory requirements for inventories and cost estimates, and the lack of EPA oversight over agency activities; and (9) securities laws require private companies to disclose and estimate the cost of their environmental liabilities.