EPA Extends Emergency Chemical Spill Notice Forms
Published Date: 6/26/2026
Notice
Summary
The EPA wants to keep collecting info about emergency chemical spills and notifications to keep communities safe. This affects businesses and local agencies that report emergencies, and the EPA is asking for public feedback by August 25, 2026. No new costs or big changes are planned—just a smooth extension of current rules through 2027.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 2 costs, 0 mixed.
Businesses: Mandatory EPCRA Reporting Continues
If your business has a threshold planning quantity of an extremely hazardous substance (EHS) or has a release above a reportable quantity, you must continue mandatory reporting under EPCRA sections 302 and 304. The EPA estimates 108,556 total respondents, a total burden of 222,856 hours per year, and total estimated costs of $11.67 million per year (with $8,470 annualized O&M costs and no capital costs). Section 302 reporting is one-time unless information changes; section 304 notifications occur only when a release happens.
LEPCs and SERCs: Continued Planning & Notification Burden
Local Emergency Planning Committees (LEPCs) and State Emergency Response Commissions (SERCs) — including 3,556 LEPCs/SERCs counted by EPA — remain part of the mandatory EPCRA reporting and planning system. The ICR covers notifications and written follow-ups under section 304 and supports LEPC obligations to prepare and review emergency response plans (at least annually); the EPA estimates the collective respondent burden at 222,856 hours and $11.67 million per year.
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