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Preventing Storm Water Pollution: What We Can Do

Learn how fleet maintenance employees can reduce water pollution by following guidelines on leaks, spills, disposal, cleaning, fueling, and more. Protect water quality! Prepared in cooperation with Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

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Preventing Storm Water Pollution: What We Can Do

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  1. Preventing Storm Water Pollution:What We Can Do ~Employee Training Series~ Fleet Maintenance PREPARED IN COOPERATION WITH THE Texas Commission on Environmental Quality AND U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY The preparation of this report was financed through grants from the U.S Environmental Protection Agency through the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

  2. Fleet Maintenance • Employees who service and repair our vehicles and equipment can help reduce water pollution by following precautions in their daily activities. • General Guidelines • Leaks and Spills • Disposal Methods • Parts Cleaning • Shop and Pavement Cleaning • Fueling • Washing

  3. General Guidelines • Conduct all vehicle and equipment maintenance at designated locations, preferably inside the shop or outdoors on a paved, covered surface. • Park damaged, leaking, or dirty vehicles under cover, if possible, to prevent exposure to rainfall.

  4. General Guidelines • Keep maintenance areas clean by promptly disposing of trash, debris, old parts, and absorbents used on spills. • Promptly dispose of fluids that have been collected in drip pans or other open containers.

  5. Leaks and Spills • Regularly inspect for leaks or stains around vehicles and equipment. Use a drip pan or absorbent material to collect dripping fluids. • Locate the source of leakage and stop further spillage by fixing the leak or draining the fluid.

  6. Leaks and Spills • Clean up spills immediately to minimize safety hazards and deter spreading. • Store cracked batteries in a leak proof container. • Refer to the Materials Storage and Spill Cleanup module for more information.

  7. Disposal Methods • Collect all used anti-freeze, motor oil, transmission fluid, and hydraulic fluid and store them in separate containers by type. • Make sure storage containers are properly labeled. • Never mix different types of fluids.

  8. Disposal Methods • Recycle used fluids, oil, transmission, and hydraulic filters, and batteries. • Never dispose of used fluids, filters, or batteries in the trash.

  9. Parts Cleaning • Clean parts indoors and properly dispose of fluids, grease, dirt, and other debris cleaned from parts. • Allow parts to fully drain before removing from cleaning sink to reduce dripping of cleaning fluid to the floor. • Keep lids closed on parts cleaning sinks when not in use.

  10. Shop and Pavement Cleaning • Use dry methods (sweeping, wiping, absorbents) to clean work areas as much as possible. • Dispose of mop water properly, usually by pouring down a sanitary sewer drain.

  11. Shop and Pavement Cleaning • Don’t hose down outside work areas. • In addition to regular, periodic cleaning, clean outside work areas when rain is forecast.

  12. Fueling • Don’t top off fuel tanks to prevent spills due to overfilling. • Be aware of the emergency pump shut-off button location. • Keep absorbent materials on site for use in prompt cleanup of spills.

  13. Fueling • Periodically clean fueling areas using approved methods to remove accumulated fuel and grease. • Transport equipment to a designated fueling area rather than using mobile fueling. • If mobile fueling is used, keep a spill kit on the fuel truck.

  14. Washing • Wash equipment and vehicles ONLY in designated facilities where the wash water drains to the sanitary sewer system or is collected and recycled.

  15. Preventing Storm Water Pollution:What We Can Do Protecting water quality requires that all employees do their part to prevent storm water pollution.

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