UST Permitting Reminders
Compliance Inspections are due 90 days before your operating permit expires. You may have a compliance inspection done early (up to 180 days before your operating permit expires). It’s in your best interest to schedule your inspection early to avoid being issued a violation. Getting your inspection done early also gives you time to correct any deficiencies so you can be issued a full operating permit. Keep in contact with your inspector. A list of compliance inspectors is available HERE.
Remember to keep doing your monthly and annual walkthrough inspections. Forms are available HERE.
Groundwater Monitoring and Vapor Monitoring, as a leak detection method, will no longer be allowed after October 13, 2023.
EPA Updates
The US Environmental Protection Agency has put together a resource page for owners and operators of underground storage tank systems. It has lots of great information about financial responsibility, maintenance, testing and record keeping requirements, and considerations about aging tank equipment.
On that page is a link to federal grant opportunities available to owners and operators of USTs. They cover:
- Adding electric vehicle charging infrastructure
- Upgrading UST equipment to enable the sale of fuel with higher blends of ethanol and/or biodiesel*
- Adding infrastructure specifically to support electric buses
EPA settles with Red Mountain Truck Lines for Butte, Montana fuel spill
Company to pay Clean Water Act penalty for discharge of fuel into Blacktail Creek
BUTTE, MT – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced a Clean Water Act (CWA) settlement with Red Mountain Truck Lines, Inc. (Red Mountain), in which Red Mountain agreed to pay $18,000 for alleged Clean Water Act violations associated with a gas station transfer incident which spilled diesel fuel into Blacktail Creek in Butte, Montana in 2021.
“EPA takes our role of protecting public health and our environmental resources very seriously in all the communities we serve,” said EPA Region 8 Enforcement and Compliance Assurance Division Director Suzanne Bohan. “Companies that handle, store and transport oil must carefully follow safety measures to prevent oil spills from occurring, and Red Mountain failed to take the necessary care.”
On January 30, 2021, a fuel delivery involving a truck owned by Red Mountain released approximately 450 to 485 gallons of diesel fuel into Blacktail Creek. The spill occurred as a result of an overfill of an underground storage tank at a Town Pump Convenience Store in Butte. The diesel fuel traveled down a storm drain into wetlands adjacent to the creek and into the creek itself.
Red Mountain’s environmental consultant reported the spill to the Montana Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) on January 30, 2021, and to the National Response Center on February 3, 2021. Red Mountain worked with the MDEQ Underground Storage Tank Division to contain and clean up the spill. There were no reported impacts to drinking water or downstream users.
The Clean Water Act prohibits discharging oil, including fuel products, into navigable waters of the United States in quantities with the potential to harm public health or the environment. Additional Federal requirements exist to prevent oil spills and to help facilities prepare to for how to respond to an oil spill. These include oil spill prevention, control, and countermeasure rules as well as Federal Facility Response Plans.
Read the Consent Agreement and Final Order.
Learn more about the Clean Water Act’s regulations concerning oil spills and spill prevention.
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