Certified Unified Program Agency

Certified Unified Program Agencies, or CUPAs, are local agencies that are certified by the Secretary of the California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal/EPA) to implement the Cal/EPA Unified Program elements in the CUPA's jurisdiction. The Cal/EPA Unified Program consolidates, coordinates, and makes consistent the administrative requirements, permits, inspections, and enforcement activities of six environmental and emergency response programs in California.[1] These six programs (and their corresponding state oversight agencies) are:

The purpose of the Unified Program is to ensure that facilities with large quantities of toxic gases have release prevention plans; that hazardous wastes are properly managed; that hazardous materials in facilities throughout California are accurately reported, cataloged, and disseminated to emergency responders and the public; and that above and underground tanks storing hazardous materials have adequate leak detection and containment equipment to protect the waters of the state.

CUPAs have statutory authority to require permits, inspect facilities, issue violations, and perform enforcement actions - including the authority to photograph any hazardous material or hazardous waste, container, container label, vehicle, waste treatment process, waste disposal site, or condition constituting a violation of law found during an inspection (California Health and Safety Code, Chapter 6.95, Section 25511(a) and Chapter 6.5, Section 25185(a)(5)).

The Unified Program was established by California Senate Bill 1082 in 1993. Regulations were written to implement and enforce this law and the first CUPAs were certified in 1996. There are now 83 CUPAs in California and Cal/EPA regularly evaluates them for compliance with established statutory and regulatory standards.[3] DTSC was also certified, effective January 1, 2005, to be the CUPA for Imperial and Trinity Counties.[4]

The mission of the Unified Program is to protect public health and safety, to restore and enhance environmental quality, and to sustain economic vitality through effective and efficient implementation of the Unified Program.

External links

References

  1. "Cal/EPA Unified Program". California Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2014-09-03.
  2. "Cal/EPA Unified Program Fact Sheet (March 2012)". California Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2014-09-03.
  3. "More about Cal/EPA Unified Program". California Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2014-09-03.
  4. "DTSC CUPA Home Page". Department of Toxic Substances Control. Retrieved 2014-09-03.