Title 42The Public Health and WelfareRelease 119-73

§6908 Small town environmental planning

Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 82— - SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 6908

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

The Environmental Protection Agency must set up a program to help very small towns plan and pay for environmental facilities. It will be called the Small Town Environmental Planning Program. The EPA must form a Task Force of small-town representatives from around the country, federal and state agencies, and public interest groups. That Task Force must end within 2 years. The Task Force must find federal rules that are hard for small towns to follow, suggest ways the EPA can work better with small towns, review new rules and suggest changes to make compliance easier, look at ways to share treatment systems regionally, and give other help to the EPA as needed. Within 6 months after October 6, 1992, the EPA must publish a list of federal environmental and public health requirements that apply to small towns and update it at least once a year. The EPA must tell small communities about these rules using newspapers, other media, trade and municipal groups, and direct mail. The EPA must set up an Office of the Small Town Ombudsman with regional contacts who give priority help to small towns. The EPA must study a multi‑media permitting program for small towns and report to Congress within 3 years after October 6, 1992, including what it did under the program. A "small town" means a community with fewer than 2,500 people. Up to $500,000 is authorized to carry out the program.

Full Legal Text

Title 42, §6908

The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (hereafter referred to as the “Administrator”) shall establish a program to assist small communities in planning and financing environmental facilities. The program shall be known as the “Small Town Environmental Planning Program”.
(b)(1)The Administrator shall establish a Small Town Environmental Planning Task Force which shall be composed of representatives of small towns from different areas of the United States, Federal and State governmental agencies, and public interest groups. The Administrator shall terminate the Task Force not later than 2 years after the establishment of the Task Force.
(2)The Task Force shall—
(A)identify regulations developed pursuant to Federal environmental laws which pose significant compliance problems for small towns;
(B)identify means to improve the working relationship between the Environmental Protection Agency (hereafter referred to as the Agency) and small towns;
(C)review proposed regulations for the protection of the environmental and public health and suggest revisions that could improve the ability of small towns to comply with such regulations;
(D)identify means to promote regionalization of environmental treatment systems and infrastructure serving small towns to improve the economic condition of such systems and infrastructure; and
(E)provide such other assistance to the Administrator as the Administrator deems appropriate.
(c)(1)Not later than 6 months after October 6, 1992, the Administrator shall publish a list of requirements under Federal environmental and public health statutes (and the regulations developed pursuant to such statutes) applicable to small towns. Not less than annually, the Administrator shall make such additions and deletions to and from the list as the Administrator deems appropriate.
(2)The Administrator shall, as part of the Small Town Environmental Planning Program under this section, implement a program to notify small communities of the regulations identified under paragraph (1) and of future regulations and requirements through methods that the Administrator determines to be effective to provide information to the greatest number of small communities, including any of the following:
(A)Newspapers and other periodicals.
(B)Other news media.
(C)Trade, municipal, and other associations that the Administrator determines to be appropriate.
(D)Direct mail.
(d)The Administrator shall establish and staff an Office of the Small Town Ombudsman. The Office shall provide assistance to small towns in connection with the Small Town Environmental Planning Program and other business with the Agency. Each regional office shall identify a small town contact. The Small Town Ombudsman and the regional contacts also may assist larger communities, but only if first priority is given to providing assistance to small towns.
(e)(1)The Administrator shall conduct a study of establishing a multi-media permitting program for small towns. Such evaluation shall include an analysis of—
(A)environmental benefits and liabilities of a multi-media permitting program;
(B)the potential of using such a program to coordinate a small town’s environmental and public health activities; and
(C)the legal barriers, if any, to the establishment of such a program.
(2)Within 3 years after October 6, 1992, the Administrator shall report to Congress on the results of the evaluation performed in accordance with paragraph (1). Included in this report shall be a description of the activities conducted pursuant to subsections (a) through (d).
(f)For purposes of this section, the term “small town” means an incorporated or unincorporated community (as defined by the Administrator) with a population of less than 2,500 individuals.
(g)There is authorized to be appropriated the sum of $500,000 to implement this section.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

Codification Section was enacted as part of the Federal Facility Compliance Act of 1992, and not as part of the Solid Waste Disposal Act which comprises this chapter.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

42 U.S.C. § 6908

Title 42The Public Health and Welfare

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73