OSHA, HEALTH & SAFETY COMPLIANCE 2011 - Hazardous Waste Regulation: 10 Major Differences Between Federal RCRA
View: 813
Website http://complianceonline.com/ecommerce/control/trainingFocus/~product_id=701875?channel=ourglocal |
Edit Freely
Category OSHA, Health & Safety Webinar ,compliance webinar.
Deadline: March 30, 2011 | Date: March 30, 2011
Venue/Country: Palo Alto, U.S.A
Updated: 2011-03-14 17:53:28 (GMT+9)
Call For Papers - CFP
Why Should You Attend:California has unique hazardous waste regulations that include, but substantially exceed requirements of the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) regulations generally in effect in other states. It is also hard to navigate California’s hazardous waste requirements because of the dramatic differences in substantive requirements, enforced by pervasive local city and county agencies deputized as Certified Unified Program Agencies (CUPAs) and result in surprising violations and onerous penalties.These national and international corporations did not know they were doing anything wrong because, under RCRA, most of these offenses would not be violations, and rarely are the relatively modest offenses so harshly enforced. However, due to widely-varying resources and competence, there are large gaps in compliance assurance, which inevitably leads to intervention by the state DTSC or even U.S. EPA Region 9, usually resulting in substantial penalties.Attend the webinar to understand the differences between federal and most other states hazardous waste management requirements and California’s rules to avoiding such harsh consequences by internalizing compliance assurance.NOTE: Use This Promocode ( 117660 ) To Get 10% Discount.
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
Disclaimer: ourGlocal is an open academical resource system, which anyone can edit or update. Usually, journal information updated by us, journal managers or others. So the information is old or wrong now. Specially, impact factor is changing every year. Even it was correct when updated, it may have been changed now. So please go to Thomson Reuters to confirm latest value about Journal impact factor.