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The Role of the Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC)

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The Role of the Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC) David Powell EPCRA Program Manager N.C. Division of Emergency Management (919) 825-2277 david.r.powell_at_ncdps.gov – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Role of the Local Emergency Planning Committee (LEPC)


1
The Role of the Local Emergency Planning
Committee(LEPC)
David Powell EPCRA Program Manager N.C. Division
of Emergency Management (919) 825-2277 david.r.po
well_at_ncdps.gov
2
Why do we need LEPCs?
3
Bhopal, India
December 3, 1984 Union Carbide pesticide plant
in Bhopal India 15,000-20,000 dead
4
Bhopal, India
  • Release of 40 tons of methyl isocynate
  • 30 mins health effects notices
  • 2.5 hrs sirens utilized
  • 6 hrs release controlled
  • 3,800 people immediately killed
  • West Virginia release caused 135 residents to
    seek treatment in 1985

Credit Raj Patidar/Reuters Raj Patidar/REUTERS
Sources AlJazeera America, the National
Institutes of Health, and the New York Times
5
The Emergency Planning and Community Right to
Know Act
  • Passed by congress in response to the Bhopal and
    West Virginia incidents
  • Signed by Ronald Regan
  • Also known as title three of the Superfund
    Amendments and Reauthorization Act

6
SERC LEPCs
  • State Emergency Response Commission
  • Coordinates state hazmat preparedness
  • Establishes LEPCs
  • Encompasses all-hazards rather than just hazmat
  • Local Emergency Planning Committee
  • Coordinates local hazmat preparedness
  • Create and maintain hazardous materials emergency
    response plan

7
What is Required of my LEPC?
8
LEPC General Checklist
9 of 12 must be completed for SERC approval
  • Membership must include essential stakeholders
  • Annual submission of membership to SERC
  • Chair must be appointed
  • Establish rules/bylaws
  • Create procedure for handling requests for
    information
  • Appoint a Public Information Coordinator
  • Meet annually to review emergency plan

9
LEPC General Checklist
9 of 12 must be completed for SERC approval
  • Create an emergency response plan containing nine
    elements
  • Designate an authorizing authority in E-Plan
  • Create a process to develop, implement, and
    exercise the emergency plan
  • Submit the emergency plan annually for review to
    SERC
  • Annually publish in local newspapers where the
    response plan, Material Data Safety Sheets
    (MSDS), and inventory forms are available to the
    public

10
Membership Responsibility
  • The membership of your LEPC should include
  • Elected State or Local officials
  • Emergency Services
  • Public Health Services
  • Community Groups
  • Owner/Operators of Extremely Hazardous Substance
    (EHS) facilities
  • Local Media
  • A membership list should be annually submitted to
    the SERC

11
2014 Charleston, W.V. Water Contamination
  • Contaminated the Elk River, Charlestons water
    supply
  • Impacted 300,000
  • Lasted over a week

Source CNN
12
Organizational Rules
  • LEPCs must establish bylaws that cover
  • Appointment of a chairperson
  • Public notification process
  • Public meetings to discuss the emergency plan
  • Process for public comments
  • Distribution of the emergency plan

13
Public Information Responsibilities
  • EPCRA requires LEPCs to
  • Appoint a Public Information Coordinator
  • Establish procedures to handle public information
    requests
  • Publish annual notices in local newspapers
    advertising where emergency response plans,
    MSDSs, and inventory forms can be publicly
    viewed.

14
Public Information Responsibilities
  • How to handle requests
  • Any Risk Management Plan (RMP) offsite
    consequence analysis data cannot be shared
  • Do not honor blanket requests for information
  • Do not honor requests that unduly comprise the
    security of a facility or the public
  • Reports that could be sensitive in nature (most
    Tier II reports) should not be mailed or
    distrusted electronically

15
Approve the FOIA Request?
  • Case 1
  • A member of the public emails a request to view
    the chemicals contained at a facility one mile
    away from her sons school. The Tier II report
    shows the facility has 10,000 lbs. of anhydrous
    ammonia in their refrigerant system.

16
Approve the FOIA Request?
  • Case 2
  • You receive a call from a man who states he is a
    citizen within your jurisdiction. He asks to have
    the chemical report for a nearby concrete plant
    faxed to him.

17
Approve the FOIA Request?
  • Case 3
  • You receive a written letter from a local media
    outlet requesting a list of all facilities in
    your jurisdiction that have reported EPCRA 304
    notifications for chemical spills into a local
    river.

18
Approve the FOIA Request?
  • Case 4
  • A citizen sends you a letter requesting a list of
    all the facilities in your jurisdiction that have
    EHS substances on site.

19
Approve the FOIA Request?
  • Case 5
  • A citizen sends you a letter requesting the
    storage location and container type of the
    chlorine stored at your local waste water
    treatment plant.

20
Approve the FOIA Request?
  • Case 6
  • A citizen writes you a letter requesting to come
    to your office to view the RMP offsite
    consequence analysis date for a facility that
    physically borders his backyard.

21
Planning Responsibility
  • LEPCs are required to create an annually reviewed
    emergency response plan
  • Section 11003 of EPCRA requires
  • Identification of hazmat facilities and
    transportation routes
  • Hazmat response procedures for facilities and
    emergency personnel
  • Designation of a community emergency coordinator
    and facility emergency coordinators
  • Procedures for providing reliable, effective, and
    timely notification by the facility emergency
    coordinators and the community emergency
    coordinator to persons designated in the
    emergency plan, and to the public

22
Planning Responsibility
  • Methods for determining the occurrence of a
    release and the area or population likely to be
    affected
  • A description of emergency equipment and
    facilities in the community and an identification
    of the persons responsible for such equipment and
    facilities
  • Evacuation plans, including provisions for a
    precautionary evacuation and alternative traffic
    routes
  • Training programs, including schedules for
    training of local emergency response and medical
    personnel
  • Methods and schedules for exercising the
    emergency plan
  • LEPC should establish steps to test and implement
    the plan.

23
2005 Graniteville, South Carolina Chorine Release
  • Occurred after an operator neglected to change a
    track
  • The release occurred at 239 AM and emitted 60
    tons of chlorine
  • Nine were killed, 5,400 evacuated, and 554 were
    treated at hospitals

Credit EPA Region 4
Credit Associated Press
Source Transportation Effects and Lessons in
Small-Town Capacity for No-Notice Evacuation
24
2005 Graniteville, South Carolina Chorine Release
  • 1 min 911 notified
  • 2 mins the local fire department was en route
  • 6 mins fire chief on scene
  • 13 mins evacuations were in progress and Reverse
    911 activated

Within 13 min, the chief recognized the need for
a mass evacuation and relocated upwind. Emergency
responders marshaled personnel and equipment,
established incident command, requested mutual
aid, activated Reverse 911 with instructions to
shelter in place, and initiated a major
evacuation However, these actions did not take
place with immediacy and efficiency.
- Transportation Effects and Lessons in
Small-Town Capacity for No-Notice Evacuation by
A.E. Dunning and Jennifer Oswalt
25
LEPCs in Practice
26
North Carolina Data
North Carolina NTSIP-eligible toxic substance
releases
  2010 2011 2012 Total
Toxic substance releases 347 251 256 854
Releases resulting inone or more injuries 54 (16) 34 (14) 20 (8) 108 (13)
Releases that led to anofficial evacuation 42 (12) 39 (16) 28 (11) 109 (13)
North Carolina Facility transportation
NTSIP-eligible toxic substance releases
  2010 2011 2012 Total
Fixed-facility releases 185 143 131 459
Transportation releases 162 108 125 395
27
North Carolina Data
Severity of injuries that resulted from
NTSIP-eligible toxic substance releases
Severity of injury 2010 2011 2012 Total
Death on scene or on arrival at hospital 4 5 5 14
Treated at hospital (admitted) 6 10 15 31
Treated at hospital (not admitted) 16 12 30 58
Treated on scene 26 28 3 57
Observed at hospital (not treated) 2 0 7 9
Unknown 11 1 2 14
Total injured persons 65 56 62 183
28
Rural LEPCs
  • Challenges for jurisdictions with few hazardous
    material facilities
  • What are your hazmat transportation routes?
  • (47 of toxic releases in North Carolina
    occur in transportation)
  • How close is the nearest capable hazmat team?
  • Are local hospitals appropriately equipped?

Credit Main.gov
29
2013 Lac-Megantic, Canada Railcar Explosion
Town of approximately 6,000 people, 47 were
killed
Credit The Canadian Press/ Paul Chiasson
Credit The Canadian Press/ Ryan Remiorz
30
2013 Lac-Megantic, Canada Railcar Explosion
  • Caused by human error and mechanical failure
  • An unattended train moved downhill towards
    Lac-Megantic
  • The train derailed in a track that travels
    through the center of Lac-Megantic
  • Over 1.5 million gallons of oil was released, and
    multiple explosions ensued

Source Transportation Safety Board of Canada
31
All Hazard LEPCs
  • Chemical hazards
  • Natural hazards
  • Hostile actions
  • Cyber threats
  • Public health emergencies
  • Routine response

Credit Jill Helmuth/AP
Credit City of Columbus
32
LEPC Resources
33
E-Plan
  • North Carolinas tool for collecting and
    distributing Tier II information (erplan.net).
  • Every county should have an authorizing authority
    in E-Plan.
  • Authorizing authorities give access to first
    responders.

34
E-Plan
35
E-Plan
36
2013 West, Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion
  • Explosion of ammonium nitrate
  • Death toll of 17, including 10 first responders
  • Responders were largely unaware of the ammonium
    nitrate quantity on site

Credit Reuters/Adrees Latif
37
2013 West, Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion
"The West, Texas, first responders were doing the
best they could under the circumstancesThe
failure was in the community, county, and state
leadership to provide emergency planning and
implementation guidance I don't think it's
appropriate to beat up on what the first
responders did at the time of detonation, but
everything that led up to it - preparedness and
preparation - was lacking,"
  • A fire was reported at 719 PM on April 17,2013.
  • Explosion reported 20 mins. after first
    responders arrived
  • February 2012 Tier II filing did not list
    ammonium nitrate
  • Apartments and nursing homes within a few hundred
    yards of the plant

- Neal Langerman, chemical and health safety
officer at the American Chemical Society
Source Reuters
38
Transportation Risk Assessments
  • Trucking routes for key chemicals
  • Pipelines for Highly Volatile Liquids
  • Hazmat rail lines
  • Hazmat shipping lines
  • Access granted upon request

39
HMEP Grant
  • The state annually awards subgrants to LEPCs to
    conduct training and re-write plans.
  • 10,000 awarded per county
  • 25,000 awarded for regional exercises/plans
  • Applications are accepted every fall.

40
Contact Information
  • David Powell, EPCRA Program Manager
  • 4236 Mail Service Center
  • Raleigh, NC 27699-4236
  • david.r.powell_at_ncdps.gov
  • (919) 825-2277
  • Matt Kemnitz, Technological Hazards Lead
  • 4236 Mail Service Center
  • Raleigh, NC 27699-4236
  • matthew.kemnitz_at_ncdps.gov
  • (919) 825-2287
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