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Funds dwindling to oversee Utah's hazardous waste - Salt Lake Tribune - The Diigo Meta page

www.sltrib.com/ci_13690246 - Cached

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  • 02 Nov 09
    theenergynet
    Energy Net

    Regulation » Inspections of businesses that handle disposal are becoming less frequent.

    Salt Lake City » Businesses that handle some of Utah's most dangerous materials are being inspected less often because of dwindling funds to pay for the work.

    State monitoring of hazardous and radioactive waste has for years been funded by fees collected from commercial waste companies. That fund -- which reached nearly $6 million in 2006 -- has fallen off with the down economy, dwindling to just $30,000 at the end of the last fiscal year.

    Utah is still adequately regulating hazardous waste operations but is no longer able to inspect them as often as in the past, said Dennis Downs, director of the state's Division of Solid and Hazardous Waste. That includes not only monitoring of large hazardous-waste disposal sites in Utah but also regular checks on hundreds of smaller operations -- from auto body shops and dry cleaners to oil refineries -- that generate and store dangerous materials.

    nuclear n-waste safety economics ut nuke.news