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The My Community / My Facility page provides access to the numerous data systems which contain information about issues such as: your compliance record, the permits you have, the wastes generated by your facility and your neighbors, the status of your watersheds, air monitoring data, and population statistics.
Click on any of the links below to find information about your community/facility in the following areas:
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This interactive site provides basic information about smaller Clean Water Act direct dischargers. Information includes: how many permits have been issued; how frequently sampling data is reviewed to determine if violations occurred; and frequency of violations.
A Web-based tool that provides public access to compliance and enforcement information for approximately 800,000 EPA-regulated facilities. ECHO allows users to find permit, inspection, violation, enforcement action, and penalty information covering the past two years. The site includes facilities regulated as Clean Air Act stationary sources, Clean Water Act direct dischargers, and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act hazardous waste generators/handlers. The data in ECHO are updated monthly.
A search on the term “Toxics” and then a zip code will result in a list of facilities in that have reported toxic releases, including air emissions, water surface water discharges, releases to land, underground injections, and transfers to off site locations through the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI).
This map, developed and maintained by EPA, shows the locations of federal air and water enforcement actions in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.
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A sub-system of Aerometric Information Retrieval System (AIRS). AFS contains compliance data on air pollution point sources regulated by the U.S. EPA and/or state and local air regulatory agencies. This data is available in ECHO.
This system presents annual summaries of air pollution data from two EPA databases:
- AQS (Air Quality System) database provides air monitoring data - ambient concentrations of criteria and hazardous air pollutants at monitoring sites, primarily in cities and towns.
- NEI (National Emission Inventory) database provides estimates of annual emissions of criteria and hazardous air pollutants from all types of sources.
The site which is designed to make emissions data for six common pollutants easy to find and understand. Users can look at overall emissions, emissions by type of industry, or emissions by largest polluter.
Search the Air Quality Index and find ozone maps to learn more about air quality and air pollution.
eGRID is a comprehensive air emissions database of electric power plants in the United States, including emissions data on nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide and mercury. The new edition of eGRID now also provides emissions data on two greenhouse gases, methane and nitrous oxide.
EPA's National Emissions Inventory (updated every 3 years) and other information.
RMP*Comp is an electronic tool used to perform the off-site consequence analysis required under the Risk Management Program rule published by the EPA on July 20, 1996, which implements Section 112(r) of the Clean Air Act. Previously, EPA has referred to this tool as RMP Calculator or RMP Assistant.
This is a user friendly online tool that helps consumers see how their individual energy use is impacting air emissions. Using data from eGRID, Power Profiler calculates how much nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide and carbon dioxide are emitted from electricity use.
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Get information about Superfund sites in your community.
A search on the term “Toxics” and then a zip code will result in a list of facilities in that have reported toxic releases, including air emissions, water surface water discharges, releases to land, underground injections, and transfers to off site locations through the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI).
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A search on the term “Toxics” and then a zip code will result in a list of facilities in that have reported toxic releases, including air emissions, water surface water discharges, releases to land, underground injections, and transfers to off site locations through the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI).
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This interactive site provides basic information about smaller Clean Water Act direct dischargers. Information includes: how many permits have been issued; how frequently sampling data is reviewed to determine if violations occurred; and frequency of violations.
A search on the term “Toxics” and then a zip code will result in a list of facilities in that have reported toxic releases, including air emissions, water surface water discharges, releases to land, underground injections, and transfers to off site locations through the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI).
Search EPA's PDF copies of NPDES individual and general permits by state or permit category.
View the status of each State's NPDES programs.
A national computerized management information system that automates entry, updating, and retrieval of National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) data and tracks permit issuance, permit limits and monitoring data, and other data pertaining to facilities regulated under NPDES.
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The ARIP database is a collection of information on accidental releases of hazardous chemicals at fixed facilities. The ARIP questionnaire consists of 23 questions about the facility, the circumstances and causes of the incident, and the accidental release prevention practices and technologies in place prior to, and added or changed as a result of, the event. The questionnaire focuses on several areas of accident prevention including hazard assessments, training, emergency response, public notification procedures, mitigation techniques, and prevention equipment and controls.
The National Response Center (NRC) is the sole federal point of contact for reporting oil and chemical spills. In addition to gathering and distributing spill data for Federal On-Scene Coordinators, the NRC serves as the communications and operations center for the National Response Team, which is chaired by EPA. The NRC has implemented an on-line query system that makes oil and chemical spill data available via the World Wide Web.
A search on the term “Toxics” and then a zip code will result in a list of facilities in that have reported toxic releases, including air emissions, water surface water discharges, releases to land, underground injections, and transfers to off site locations through the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI).
This system provides fast and easy access to the TRI data to help communities identify facilities and chemical releases that warrant further study and analysis.
A free program you can use to find out about the reactivity of substances or mixtures of substances (reactivity is the tendency of substances to undergo chemical change). It includes:
- a database of reactivity information for more than 6,000 common hazardous chemicals,
- a way for you to virtually "mix" chemicals--like the chemicals in a derailed tankcars --to find out what dangers could arise from accidental mixing.
The discharge monitoring report pollutant loading tool brings together millions of records and allows for easy searching and mapping of water pollution by local area, watershed, company, industry sector and pollutant. Searches can show "top 10" lists to help users easily identify facilities and industries that are discharging the most pollution and impacted waterbodies.
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This is EPA's national data base for the Public Water System Supervision Program. It includes inventory, compliance, and enforcement information on the nation's 170,000 public water systems.
A search on the term “Toxics” and then a zip code will result in a list of facilities in that have reported toxic releases, including air emissions, water surface water discharges, releases to land, underground injections, and transfers to off site locations through the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI).
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A free program you can use to find out about the reactivity of substances or mixtures of substances (reactivity is the tendency of substances to undergo chemical change). It includes:
- a database of reactivity information for more than 6,000 common hazardous chemicals,
- a way for you to virtually "mix" chemicals--like the chemicals in a derailed tankcars --to find out what dangers could arise from accidental mixing.
A system of software applications used widely to plan for and respond to chemical emergencies. It is one of the tools developed by EPA's Chemical Emergency Preparedness and Prevention Office (CEPPO) and NOAA, to assist front-line chemical emergency planners and responders. They can use CAMEO to access, store, and evaluate information critical for developing emergency plans. In addition, CAMEO supports regulatory compliance by helping users meet the chemical inventory reporting requirements of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA, also known as SARA Title III). CAMEO also can be used with a separate software application called LandView ® to display EPA environmental databases and demographic/economic information to support analysis of environmental justice issues.
LandView is a DVD and CD-ROM publication of data and maps, jointly issued by the Census Bureau, EPA, USGS, and NOAA.
The National Response Center (NRC) is the sole federal point of contact for reporting oil and chemical spills. In addition to gathering and distributing spill data for Federal On-Scene Coordinators, the NRC serves as the communications and operations center for the National Response Team, which is chaired by EPA. The NRC has implemented an on-line query system that makes oil and chemical spill data available via the World Wide Web.
RMP*Comp is an electronic tool used to perform the off-site consequence analysis required under the Risk Management Program rule published by the EPA on July 20, 1996, which implements Section 112(r) of the Clean Air Act. Previously, EPA has referred to this tool as RMP Calculator or RMP Assistant.
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Click here to find what recycling services are available where you live.
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A comprehensive, and descriptive database of all real property under the custody and control of all executive branch agencies, except when otherwise required for reasons of national security, in accordance with Executive Order 13327. You must be a Federal Government employee to access the website.
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This site omits “similarity of appearance” and experimental populations. Does not map whales and non-nesting seas turtles in State coastal waters.
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Use this tool to locate hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal (TSD) and recycling facilities. The TSD Directory contains over 250 TSD facilities. Searching is done by zip code or by state.
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