1 / 24

Thomas W. Easterly, P.E., BCEE, QEP Commissioner IN Department of Environmental Management

What’s New and Where is IDEM Heading? IN Chapter Air and Waste Management Association December 9, 2008. Thomas W. Easterly, P.E., BCEE, QEP Commissioner IN Department of Environmental Management. IDEM’s Mission and Environmental Goal.

Télécharger la présentation

Thomas W. Easterly, P.E., BCEE, QEP Commissioner IN Department of Environmental Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What’s New and Where is IDEM Heading?IN Chapter Air and Waste Management Association December 9, 2008 Thomas W. Easterly, P.E., BCEE, QEP Commissioner IN Department of Environmental Management

  2. IDEM’s Mission and Environmental Goal IDEM is responsible for protecting human health and the environment while providing for safe industrial, agricultural, commercial and governmental operation vital to a prosperous economy. Our goal is to increase the personal income of all Hoosiers to the national average while maintaining and improving Indiana’s Environmental Quality.

  3. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Performance Metrics Sept 2008

  4. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Performance Metrics June 2005

  5. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment New Drinking Water Metric • Percent of Hoosiers Drinking Safe Water • Percentage of Indiana population that receives drinking water from facilities that are in full compliance with safe drinking water regulations • Federal (EPA) Goal is 90%

  6. HEA 1001 Property Tax Reform was the Major Issue in the 2008 Legislative Session SEA 45—The Great Lakes Water Compact with implementing legislation HEA 1120—Ban phosphates in residential dishwasher detergent sold after July 1, 2010 New 2008 Laws We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment

  7. SEA 43 addresses many environmental issues Clarifies mercury switch removal program requirements to: Allow payment for removal of mercury containing anti-lock braking switches and other mercury containing devices Exempt wrecked vehicles where the mercury switch is not easily accessible Allows IDEM to accept electronic signatures Clarifies Requirements for Local Land Use Approvals for Solid Waste Landfills that have not yet accepted Waste New 2008 Laws We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment

  8. SEA 43 Continued Removes the requirement that IDEM have a laboratory division Removes the requirement to display operator certificates at a treatment plant Allows a single vehicle ID and land application permit approval for a septage hauler Eliminates the requirement that IDEM obtain social security numbers as part of good character approval process Allows IDEM to use ELTF for tank inspections New 2008 Laws We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment

  9. SEA 43 Continued Requires public notice of rules that are proposed to sunset Protects a community from being required to pay storm water fees to two entities Clarifies Environmental Criminal Language SEA 46 modified the marketable record title for real property to eliminate the need to renew a environmental restrictive covenant every 50 years New 2008 Laws We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment

  10. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Agency Initiatives • Virtual File Cabinet—electronic filing system—over 30,000,000 pages now available electronically. Visits to IDEM file room down over 90% from 445/mo 1Q 2007 to 35/mo 2Q 2008. • TEMPO—Enterprise wide electronic integration of all IDEM information—part of the process to allow us to receive and process electronic permit applications and reports. • Applied for EPA approval for electronic submittals

  11. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Agency Initiatives • Returned enforcement function to the air, water and land programs and eliminated the separate office of enforcement. • Provide consistent Statewide air quality permitting, monitoring and enforcement services by directly managing the air program functions previously contracted to: Anderson, Evansville, Gary, Hammond, Indianapolis, and Vigo County.

  12. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Agency Accomplishments • All 1,269 tons of VX Agent stored at the Newport Chemical Agent Facility since 1969 has been safely destroyed. VX destruction started in May of 2005 and was completed in August 2008 • Digital Inspector Tool is in use for solid waste inspections including CAFOs, Auto Salvage Yards and Landfills.

  13. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Agency Accomplishments • All CSO Communities have entered legal agreements to address their CSO issues. • Increased permit speed and virtually eliminated permit and enforcement backlogs. • Entire State met the 0.08 ppm Ozone air quality standard for the period 2006-2008, all but Lake and Porter Counties designated attainment. PM2.5 Air Quality looks good.

  14. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Antidegradation Status • Stakeholder kickoff Meeting on March 7, 2008 • Discussed concepts and schedule at two large stakeholder meetings on 4/29 and 6/25 • Working group of twelve members from the environmental, business and municipal segments formed to come up with draft rule language and/or identify areas for IDEM to resolve

  15. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Antidegradation Status • Working group has met on 7/15 and 8/12, 9/16 and 10/30—Next Meeting 12/11/08 • Working group agenda items: • Applicability (7/15) & (10/30) • Exemptions (8/12) & (10/30) • DeMinimis (9/16) & (10/30) • Water Quality Improvement Projects • Antidegradation Demonstrations (12/11/08) • Public Notice/Public Comment

  16. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Office of Enforcement *through 2nd quarter **Does not include Program Violation Letters

  17. Criminal Convictions • Wabash Environmental Technologies and Derrik Hagerman—Clean Water Act felonies. Sixty months of imprisonment and $237,000 in restitution (Terre Haute) • Miller Environmental and Anthony MuCullough—Clean Water Act felonies. Four months imprisonment and $510,000 in penalties (Shelbyville and Rushville)

  18. Criminal Convictions • Richard Reece—RCRA felonies. Six months in half way house, six months home detention and $60,000 restitution (Muncie) • Hassan Barrel and Alan Hersh—RCRA felonies. Awaiting sentencing (Fort Wayne)

  19. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment RISC Preference for Clean-up • Only applies if facility cannot meet any of the Risk Based Clean-up Levels (RBCLs) • Perceived by some to be a change in policy—intended to be a clarification of existing policy to be “Clear, Consistent and Speedy” • Concept is to require an evaluation and reasoned justification for leaving high concentrations of pollution on a “closed” site

  20. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment RISC Preference for Clean-up • Factors to be considered include: • Is it infeasible to clean up to Risk Based Levels? • Is it too costly to clean up to Risk Based Levels? • Will the high levels of contamination be properly contained so that human health and the environment are protected? • This is a work in progress and other issues will likely be considered

  21. US Courts Overturning Rules • 2007—Industrial, Commercial and Institutional (ICI) Boiler MACT—directly impacted about 10 sources with coal fired boilers • May 2008—Clean Air Mercury Rule (CAMR) impacted all Power Plants • July 2008—Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) impacted all Power Plants and most Indiana air pollution strategies

  22. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Forbes “America’s Greenest States” Report • “So who’s at the bottom? Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Indiana and, at No. 50, West Virginia. All suffer from a mix of toxic waste, lots of pollution and consumption and no clear plans to do anything about it. Expect them to remain that way.”

  23. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Forbes Report Conclusion • Does not rank States based upon government verified environmental quality data • Appears to be a ranking based upon adherence of States to a group of policies advocated by the NGO’s providing information used in the rankings • The data used in the report is as old as 2003 and goes up to 2005 • We are implementing improvements and have made great progress

  24. We Protect Hoosiers and Our Environment Questions? Tom Easterly Commissioner Indiana Department of Environmental Management 317-232-8611 teasterly@idem.in.gov

More Related