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April 2007 - For the first time, high
risk chemical facilities will have to abide by federal
security regulations to safeguard against terrorist attacks,
according to a rule issued Monday by the Department of
Homeland Security, as required by Congress. The rule meets
with the approval of chemical companies, but critics worry
that rail transport of hazardous chemicals is not covered.
The rule establishes risk-based performance standards and
requires chemical facilities housing quantities of specified
chemicals to complete a screening assessment that determines
their level of risk and identify security vulnerabilities.
About half of U.S. chemical plants, about 7,000 facilities,
are thought to be at high risk of either a terrorist attack or
an accident, the department said.
This summer, the department will begin conducting site
inspections and audits, focusing first on the 300 to 400
facilities considered to be of the highest concern.
If a company has even the smallest amount of some chemicals,
such as carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide and methyl bromide,
on-site, it must do a screening assessment. The list of
"Chemicals of Interest" specified under the rule is online
here.
Rhone-Poulenc AG factory on West Virginia's Kanawha River
High risk facilities must develop and implement Site Security
Plans that meet the risk-based performance standards.
Facilities will be required to achieve specific outcomes, such
as securing the perimeter and critical targets, controlling
access, deterring theft of potentially dangerous chemicals,
and preventing internal sabotage.
The new rule gives the Department of Homeland Security, DHS,
authority to seek compliance through the imposition of civil
penalties of up to $25,000 per day and the ability to shut
noncompliant facilities down.
"The safety and security measures that we take need to be
tough and balanced," said Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff. "We will significantly reduce vulnerability at
high-consequence chemical facilities, taking into account
important efforts in certain states."
Some states have existing laws for regulating chemical
facilities. Only state laws and requirements that conflict or
interfere with the new regulations will be preempted, Chertoff
said. Currently, the department has no reason to conclude that
any existing state laws are applied in a way that would impede
the federal rule, he said.
On March 30, just two days before the new interim final rule
was issued, U.S. Senators Barack Obama and Dick Durbin of
Illinois, and Frank Lautenberg and Bob Menendez of New Jersey,
all Democrats, introduced legislation to improve security at
chemical plants. Their bill, the Chemical Safety and Security
Act of 2006, has many of the same feature as the DHS new
interim final rule.
"There may be no greater failure of our government than the
fact that we have done almost nothing to secure one of
America's most vulnerable targets - the 15,000 chemical plants
in America," said Obama. "These chemical plants represent some
of the most attractive targets for terrorists looking to cause
widespread death and destruction. Despite this, security at
our chemical plants is voluntary - left to the individual
plant owners. While many chemical plant owners have taken
steps to beef up security, too many have not."
Dow Chemical factory on Lake Michigan at Ludington, Michigan
Citing media reports of Chicago chemical plants with
"dilapidated fences, insufficient guard forces, and
unprotected tanks of hazardous chemicals, Obama said "these
plants are basically stationary weapons of mass destruction.
Their security is light, their facilities are easily entered,
and their contents are deadly."
There are 111 facilities in the United States where a
worst-case scenario attack on a chemical plant could threaten
more than one million people, according to the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency. Two of these facilities are
within Chicago's city limits.
Illinois has at least 11 facilities where a large-scale
chemical release could threaten more than a million people.
"Chemical plant security is a serious problem and the
combination of lax security and deadly chemicals is a toxic
mix," said Durbin. "Illinois has more facilities that store
extremely hazardous materials then any other state - with over
100,000 pounds of hazardous substances stored in over 600
facilities. It is unacceptable that we have chemical plant
facilities in our state and in other parts of this country
that anyone can stroll onto. This bill puts a lock on the door
and real fencing in the yard."
Before issuing its interim final rule, the Department of
Homeland Security sought and reviewed comments from state and
local partners, Congress, private industry, and the public to
develop the guidelines.
Covered facilities contacted by the department will have 120
days from the publication of the regulation in the Federal
Register to provide information for the risk assessment
process. Other requirements follow that time period.
Additional facilities will follow a similar timeframe after
future Federal Register publications, the agency said.
The department will provide technical assistance to facility
owners and operators as needed.
Representing chemical companies, the American Chemistry
Council, ACC, supports the new interim rule.
"The nation is safer today, thanks to landmark federal
regulations that will drive enhanced security protections for
America's chemical industry," the Council said in a statement
Monday. "This rule is the culmination of years of hard work by
members of Congress, the Department of Homeland Security and
industry leaders working cooperatively to improve national
security."
"For the first time, a federal agency is authorized to enforce
national risk-based performance standards to environment newsure that
chemical facilities assess security vulnerabilities and
implement security plans to address them," the Council said.
"Equally important, DHS has clear authority to inspect these
facilities and apply strong penalties, including facility
shutdowns, for those that fail to act."
"These new regulations will complement existing state programs
and the significant security enhancements already undertaken
voluntarily by our members to protect the chemical industry
and the nation," the Council said.
The Council says that since the terrorist attacks of 9/11, in
total its members have invested over $3.5 billion upgrading
security.
The ACC has planned a workshop later this month where DHS will
brief members on their regulatory obligations so that they can
hit the ground running when the rule becomes effective in
June.
Greenpeace criticized the measure because it does not require
chemical plants to switch to safer alternatives or to keep
smaller quantities of hazardous chemicals on-site.
The Center for American Progress, CAP, a progressive
think-tank based in Washington, DC, issued a report Monday
faulting the new interim rule for failing to cover rail
shipments of toxic chlorine gas to water and wastewater
utilities across the country.
"These massive railcars traverse some 300,000 miles of freight
railways, passing through almost all major American cities and
towns," the CAP report says. "A rupture of one of these
railcars could release a dense, lethal plume for miles
downwind, potentially killing or injuring thousands of
people."
This chlorine tank railcar is part of the NASA Ames Research
Center's DART Hazardous Materials Response Team's training
facility.
The Department of Homeland Security and other security experts
have warned that terrorists could use industrial chemicals as
improvised weapons of mass destruction. "Terrorists recently
attacked and blew up several trucks carrying chlorine gas in
Iraq," said CAP Monday in a statement.
CAP is urging drinking water and wastewater facilities to
switch to a less hazardous disinfectant, such as liquid bleach
or ultraviolet light, so that rail transport of chlorine gas
will not be necessary.
Only 24 drinking water and 13 wastewater facilities still use
rail shipments of chlorine gas. These facilities endanger more
than 25 million Americans who live nearby, and millions more
near railways that deliver the chlorine gas, said CAP.
At least six drinking water and 19 wastewater facilities have
eliminated rail shipments of chlorine gas since 1999 by
switching to a less hazardous disinfectant, the group said.
The Department of Homeland Security, DHS, responds by saying,
"Regulating chemicals in the railroad system is a complex
issue, and DHS continues to evaluate it."
The DHS says it "presently does not plan to screen railroad
facilities" for inclusion in the regulatory program, and
therefore will not request that railroads complete the
Top-Screen risk assessment methodology.
The DHS says it may re-evaluate the coverage of railroads in
the future and would issue a rulemaking to consider this
matter.
The Transport Safety Administration, an agency within the DHS,
has initiated some recent efforts to address rail security,
including voluntary agreements with the rail industry and a
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Rail Transportation Security
issued last December.
The DHS interim final rule will be published later this week
in the Federal Register, and is online here.
The public is welcome to submit comments, identified by docket
number 2006-0073, online at the federal eRulemaking portal.
Comments are welcome now, but once the rule is in place,
information to the public will be limited. The DHS does not
intend to provide a means of notifying the public about the
status of local chemical facilities.
"We will continue to consider this issue as the program
progresses, however, and issue a subsequent notice if
necessary," the agency said in the interim rule.
Nor has DHS incorporated specific whistleblower protections
into this rule, saying the authorizing legislation did not
provide for protecting whistleblowers.
"The Department does, however, value frank information
concerning security vulnerabilities," the interim rule states,
adding, "Employees with daily involvement at high-risk
facilities can certainly be a valuable source of information."
To allow a channel for public reporting, the DHS intends to
establish a telephone line through which individuals,
including employees of chemical facilities, can submit report
concerns. Callers will have the option of remaining anonymous.
For more information contact Dennis Deziel, Chemical Security
Regulatory Task Force, Department of Homeland Security,
703-235-5263.
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