Laserfiche WebLink
administered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in cooperation <br />with individual sites throughout the United States. The Comprehensive <br />Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Information System <br />(CERCLIS) is the official repository for site and non -site specific Superfund data in <br />support of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability <br />Act ( CERCLA). It contains information on hazardous waste site assessment and <br />remediation from 1983 to the present. <br />(c) North Carolina maintains its own list of hazardous waste sites. The North Carolina <br />Inactive Hazardous Sites Response Act of 1987 (N.C.G.S. 130A -310 et seq) was enacted <br />to establish a program to manage uncontrolled and unregulated hazardous wastes sites <br />administered by the Inactive Hazardous Sites Branch (IHSB). The IHSB can address any <br />site where hazardous substance and /or hazardous waste contamination exists with the <br />following exceptions: (1) RCRA permitted or interim status facilities; and (2) any site <br />where the Environmental Management Commission, the Commissioner of Agriculture or <br />the Pesticide Board has assumed jurisdiction. IHSB has the authority to do the following: <br />- Provide leadership and approval in voluntary remedial actions. <br />- Enforce assessment and remediation orders at priority sites. <br />- Reducing public health threats. <br />- Administering the Registered Environmental Consultant (REC) Program <br />- Record notices of contamination on property deeds. <br />- Compile, maintain and prioritize sites that require investigation. <br />Just because a hazardous waste site is not listed on the CERCLIS that does not mean that <br />it has been removed from the NC Inactive Hazardous Site list as well. <br />(d) Additional Hazardous Waste data is contained in the Resources Conservation and <br />Recovery Information System (RCRIS) in support of the Resource Conservation and <br />Recovery Act (RCRA). RCRA requires that businesses or individuals that generate, <br />transport, treat, store, and dispose of hazardous waste provide information concerning <br />their activities to state environmental agencies. These agencies then provide the <br />information to regional and national U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) <br />offices. RCRIS is used by the EPA to support its implementation of RCRA, as amended <br />by the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984 (HSWA). The system is <br />primarily used to track handler permit or closure status, compliant with Federal and State <br />regulations, and cleanup activities. Other uses of the data include program management, <br />regulation development, waste handler inventory, corrective action tracking, regulation <br />enforcement, facility management planning, and environmental program progress <br />assessment. <br />(e) Hazard Vulnerability. <br />(1) There are approximately 29.76 miles of railroad in Cabarrus County, mostly <br />used by the Norfolk Southern Railroad for cargo traffic, which includes hazardous <br />substances. <br />(W <br />Annex A Hazard Identification and Analysis A -16 1 December 2A9hment number s <br />F -6 Page 120 <br />