Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 82— - SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IX— - REGULATION OF UNDERGROUND STORAGE TANKS › § 6991c
States may send the EPA a plan for spotting, preventing, and fixing leaks from underground storage tanks starting 30 months after November 8, 1984. The plan must cover nine things, including leak detection, record keeping, reporting and cleanup of releases, tank closures, money set aside to pay for cleanups and third-party injuries, rules for new tanks, notifying the state and filling out required forms, and training. For the first seven items, the State’s rules must be at least as strict as the federal rules under section 6991b(a). However, EPA may approve State plans that are temporarily less strict for certain items (leak detection, records, reporting, and closure) during a one-year transition if only state rule changes are needed, or during a two-year transition (plus one extra year if the State must adopt rules after changing law) if State law changes are needed. EPA must decide within 180 days after getting a State’s plan, after public comment. If EPA approves the plan, the State enforces it. If EPA finds a State is not enforcing its approved program after a hearing, EPA will notify the State and the State has up to 120 days to fix the problem or EPA will take back approval and run the federal program. States can use State-run cleanup or compensation programs to meet the financial responsibility rule. Financial responsibility may be shown by insurance, guarantees, bonds, letters of credit, self-insurance, or other EPA-acceptable methods. If an owner or operator is bankrupt, claims may be made directly against the guarantor, but the guarantor’s total liability is limited to the amount it provided. EPA must give States no less than 80 percent of the Trust Fund money made available under section 6991m(2)(A) each year for certain corrective actions, certain State fund administration costs, and State or local enforcement; EPA may use leftover funds for enforcing federal rules. Those funds cannot be used to give money to owners or operators to meet requirements under subparts B, C, D, H, and G of part 280 of title 40, Code of Federal Regulations (as in effect on August 8, 2005). EPA distributes funds to State agencies with cooperative agreements or to agencies enforcing an approved State program and may change the allocation method after consulting States and considering factors like confirmed releases, number of tanks, State performance, financial needs, and ability to use the funds.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 6991c
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73