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TRI Compliance and Enforcement
Section 313 of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) created the TRI Program. Under the requirements of EPCRA, all U.S. facilities that meet TRI reporting criteria must submit TRI data to EPA and the states in which they are located by July 1 of each year.
EPCRA Section 313 compliance resources include inspectors and attorneys in each of EPA's 10 regional offices and at EPA headquarters. EPA investigates cases of EPCRA non-compliance and may issue civil penalties, including monetary fines, and may also require correction of the violation.
For more information on recent TRI enforcement actions:
- 9/22/15 - U.S. EPA requires Cupertino cement company to report toxic chemicals, commit to environmental projects
- 5/14/15 - EPA, U.S. Department of Justice settle with P4 Production LLC, over hazardous chemical reporting requirements
- 5/11/15 - Federal and State Governments Reach Legal Agreement with Tonawanda Coke to Reduce Pollution; Company to Pay $12 million to Address Violations of Environmental Laws
- 12/4/14 - EPA Settlement Requires Biddeford, Maine Company to Buy Emergency Response Equipment for Local Fire Department
- 10/27/14 - Frontier Refining agrees to resolve alleged risk management planning and chemical reporting violations at Cheyenne refinery
Find out about a facility's EPA compliance history
Anyone can examine the compliance records for nearby facilities by going to EPA's Enforcement and Compliance History Online (ECHO) website.
Report a problem at a facility near you
If you believe a facility may not be in compliance with existing environmental regulations, you can report this information to EPA for investigation and follow-up action as appropriate.