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April 30, 2009 Trident Seafoods fined over $112,000 for poor hazardous chemical storageCompany agrees to spend over $51,000 in emergency response equipment for responders in Kodiak and Akutan, AlaskaTrident Seafoods Corporation (Trident) has settled with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and agreed to pay a $61,354 penalty for violating the federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) by failing to properly report the storage of ammonia at four facilities. ![]() Specifically, Trident failed to file Emergency and Hazardous Chemical Inventory Forms with local emergency response entities in Alaska and Washington. In addition to paying the penalty, Trident agreed to perform a Supplemental Environmental Project, providing over $23,000 in emergency response equipment to first responders in Kodiak, Alaska and over $28,000 in response equipment to responders in Akutan, Alaska. "People's safety and preventing chemical accidents are a top priority for EPA," said Edward Kowalski, Director of EPA's Office of Compliance & Enforcement in Seattle. "We're committed to reducing the likelihood and severity of accidental chemical releases by enforcing the law, protecting people and the environment and creating a level playing field for industry." Today's settlement addresses violations related to Trident facilities in the Alaskan towns of Kodiak, Akutan and Petersburg, as well as a Trident facility in Seattle, Washington, all which store ammonia in amounts above the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act reportable quantities. The four Trident facilities process seafood. From an EPA press release © AlaskaReport.com All Rights Reserved. |
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