Environmental Compliance Tools for Small Business


Book Description

Explores the topic of environmental compliance tools for small business & what works & what does not for small business owners. Witnesses include: Senators Christopher S. Bond, John F. Kerry, Michael B. Enzi, & Conrad Burns; Benjamin Y. Cooper, Printing Industries of America; Elizabeth Glass Geltman, Prof. of Environmental Law, George Washington Univ.; Jim King, dir., N.Y. Small Business Development Center; David S. Marsh, Marsh Plating Corp.; & Rep. Scott J. Orr, vice chair, Energy, Environment, Natural Resources & Agriculture Task Force, Amer. Legislative Exchange Council, & Pres/Owner, S.J. Orr Services, Inc.




Environmental Law and American Business


Book Description

We are in the second decade of modem environmental law. By some indicators this body of regulation has matured greatly. We can point to statutes and codes at the federal, state, and local levels which address almost every conceivable form of pollution and environmental insult. Yet, despite the existence of this large body of law, despite considerable expenditures on enforcement, and despite the energetic efforts of people sympathetic to environmental objectives, violations are numerous. Serious pollution problems are commonplace. Love Canal, the Valley of the Drums, Times Beach, and Stringfellow Acid Pits epitomize the national environmental quality challenge. Daily, a major illegal disposal of haz ardous waste is recorded; a new mismanaged dump site is discovered; a toxic substance is found in our drinking water; or a failure to meet a water or air quality standard is identified. Many of these violations involve American business. Failures to comply are of several types. A small businessman in Pennsylvania mistakenly allows a spillover of a pollutant into a protected stream. An industrialist in the Midwest adds to his fortune by illegally dumping dangerous chemicals. A series of errors by several firms, some of which no longer exist, combine to create a health threatening conflagration on the West Coast. An automobile company interprets one of the almost innumerable air pollution rules differently from government: It produces a car which the government says fails to comply with the Clean Air Act.




Industry Self-Regulation and Voluntary Environmental Compliance


Book Description

Why self-regulation? With the advent of such concepts as design for the environment, industrial ecology, and the recognized enlightened self-interest that voluntary compliance brings, it is in any company's best interest to avoid fines, liabilities, and bad publicity. Consumer concern and pressure from the marketplace give a competitive advantage t




Green Isn't Always Gold


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Small Manufacturing Industries


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Small Business Sector Study


Book Description

Small Business Sector Study: Impacts of Environmental Regulations on Small Business