EPA Press Release:
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
January 7, 2013
Settlement with New Cingular Wireless to Resolve Violations at Hundreds of
Legacy AT&T Wireless Sites
WASHINGTON
– The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and New Cingular
Wireless (NCW) have reached an administrative settlement requiring the company
to pay a civil penalty of $750,000 and spend $625,000 on environmental projects
to resolve alleged reporting, planning and permitting violations at 332 legacy
AT&T Wireless (AWS) sites now owned by NCW.
The
violations, which occurred at AWS sites in 43 states, such as cellular towers,
transmitter sites, switching stations and warehouses, included failure to comply
with Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) reporting
requirements related to the presence of sulfuric acid and diesel fuel at sites,
inadequate or no Clean Water Act (CWA) Spill Prevention, Control, and
Countermeasure (SPCC) Plans, and Clean Air Act (CAA) minor source permitting
requirements.
The EPCRA requirements help
communities plan for emergencies involving hazardous substances, the
CWA’s SPCC rule requires facilities to have oil spill
prevention, preparedness, and response plans to help prevent oil discharges to
navigable waters and adjoining shorelines, and the minor source permitting
requirements under the CAA ensure that air emissions limits are
met.
Under the settlement, NCW will provide a
certification of EPCRA compliance at 1,356 sites and conduct comprehensive
compliance audits of CAA and CWA/SPCC requirements at 1,361 and 41 legacy-AWS
facilities, respectively. NCW has also agreed to pay stipulated penalties for
all disclosed and corrected violations discovered through these
audits.
NCW has also agreed to conduct environmental projects, which will
provide hazardous materials awareness and health/safety training to building
inspectors and fire fighters. The projects will also support the procurement of
emergency response equipment such as fire-fighting equipment, gas meters, hazmat
identification equipment, satellite phones and other emergency communications
equipment. The seven entities, located in four states that will benefit from the
projects are: Palm Beach County Fire Rescue and Georges Lake Volunteer Fire
Department, Putnam County, Fla., New York City Fire Department, N.Y., Yancey,
Texas Volunteer Fire Department, Texas, and San Diego, County California Office
of Emergency Services, Bodega Bay, California Fire Protection District, and Los
Angeles, California Police Department Calif.
Since 1998, nearly
6,000 telecommunications facilities have been brought into compliance through
more than 30 settlements as part of EPA’s effort to improve compliance in the
telecommunications sector.
More information on
the New Cingular Wireless settlement: http://www.epa.gov/enforcement/waste/cases/att.html
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