Tap any paragraph to write a margin note. Your notes collect in the Desk below the text and file under cases with @. The side-by-side margin rail opens on a larger screen.

Code · Wisconsin · Chapter 323 — Emergency management

323.60 Hazardous substances information and emergency planning.

1,536 words·~7 min read·/wi/chapter-323/323-60-6

A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

323.60 Hazardous substances information and emergency planning.
(1)Definitions. In this subchapter:
(b)“Committee” means a local emergency planning committee created under s. 59.54
(a).
(c)“Facility” means the buildings and contiguous area of a single location which is owned, operated or controlled by the same person and used for conducting the activities of a public or private agency, or as defined in 42 USC 11049 (4).
(d)“Facility plan” means a plan for response to the release of hazardous substances from a specific facility, prepared as a component of a local emergency response plan under sub.
(a)and under 42 USC 11003 .
(e)“Federal act” means 42 USC 11000 to 11050 .
(f)“Hazardous chemical” means a hazardous chemical covered under 42 USC 11021 and 11022 as defined under 29 CFR 1910.1200
(c).
(g)“Hazardous substance” means an extremely hazardous substance included in the list published by the administrator of the U.S. environmental protection agency under 42 USC 11002
(2)or a hazardous substance as defined under 42 USC 9601
(14)or designated by the administrator of the U.S. environmental protection agency under 42 USC 9602 (a).
(gm)“Minerals” mean unbeneficiated metallic ore but does not include mineral aggregates such as stone, sand, and gravel.
(h)“Private agency” means a privately owned and operated research facility or educational institution.
(i)“Public agency” means a state or local office, agency, board, commission, committee, council, department, research facility, educational institution or public body corporate or politic created by constitution, law, ordinance, rule or order, or a governmental or quasi-governmental corporation.
(j)“Threshold quantity” means a designated quantity of any of the following:
1. A hazardous chemical which, if used by or present at a facility, makes the facility subject to the requirements of sub.
(c).
2. A toxic chemical which, if used by or present at a facility, makes the facility subject to the requirements of sub.
(d).
(k)“Toxic chemical” means a toxic chemical covered under 42 USC 11023 (c).
(2)Duties of the division. The division shall do all of the following:
(a)Serve as the state emergency response commission under the federal act.
(b)Promulgate rules necessary for the implementation of the federal act.
(bg)Promulgate rules establishing an amount not to exceed $6,000 that may be an eligible cost for computers in an emergency planning grant under s. 323.61
(br).
(c)Oversee the implementation of local emergency response plans by committees and provide assistance to committees in executing their duties under sub.
(b)to the greatest extent possible.
(d)Administer the grant program under s. 323.61 .
(e)At least annually, submit a report to the governor indicating whether each county has a committee and whether the composition of each committee conforms to 42 USC 11001 (c).
(f)If the composition of a county’s committee does not conform to 42 USC 11001 (c), inform the county board of that fact and of the county board’s duty, under s. 59.54
(a)1. , to create a committee with members as specified in 42 USC 11001 (c).
(3)Duties of committees. A committee shall do all of the following:
(a)Carry out all requirements of a committee under the federal act.
(b)Upon receipt by the committee or the committee’s designated community emergency coordinator of a notification under sub.
(b)of the release of a hazardous substance, take all actions necessary to ensure the implementation of the local emergency response plan.
(c)Consult and coordinate with the county board, the county and local heads of emergency management designated under s. 323.14
(a)2. or
(b)2. and the county emergency management committee designated under s. 323.14
(a)3. in the execution of the local emergency planning committee’s duties under this section.
(4)Duties of the department of natural resources. The department of natural resources shall:
(a)Upon receipt of a notification under sub.
(b)or s. 292.11
(2)of the release of a hazardous substance, provide all information contained in the notification to the division.
(b)Have the same powers and duties at the time of a release of a hazardous substance as are given to it under s. 292.11 , including the investigation of releases of hazardous substances, the repair of any environmental damage which results from the release and the recovery of costs from responsible parties. The department of natural resources may also, at the time of a release of a hazardous substance, identify and recommend to the division and the committee measures to lessen or mitigate anticipated environmental damage resulting from the release.
(c)Use the information contained in toxic chemical release forms submitted under sub.
(d)in the planning and implementation of programs related to the regulation, monitoring, abatement and mitigation of environmental pollution.
(4m)Cooperation. A state agency, federally recognized American Indian tribe or band, or local governmental unit may assist the division or a committee in the performance of its duties under this section and may enter into an agreement with the division or a committee.
(5)Notification and reporting requirements.
(a)All facilities in this state covered under 42 USC 11002 shall comply with the emergency planning and notification requirements under 42 USC 11002 and 11003 .
(b)All facilities in this state covered under 42 USC 11004 shall comply with the notification requirements of 42 USC 11004 . Notification of the department of natural resources of the discharge of a hazardous substance under s. 292.11
(2)shall constitute the notification of the division required under 42 USC 11004 if the notification contains the information specified in 42 USC 11004
(2)or (c).
(c)All facilities in this state covered under 42 USC 11021 and all public agencies and private agencies in this state at which a hazardous chemical is present at or above an applicable threshold quantity shall comply with the reporting requirements under 42 USC 11021 and 11022 . The division shall implement minimum threshold levels for reporting by retail gas stations that are identical to the minimum threshold levels for reporting under 42 USC 11021 and 11022 .
(d)The following facilities shall comply with the toxic chemical release form requirements under 42 USC 11023 and shall submit copies of all toxic chemical release forms to the department of natural resources:
1. All facilities subject to 42 USC 11023 .
2. All public agencies and private agencies at which a toxic chemical is used at or above an applicable threshold quantity.
3. All facilities with 10 or more employees in major group classifications 10 to 13 in the standard industrial classification manual, 1987 edition, published by the U.S. office of management and budget, at which a toxic chemical is used at or above an applicable threshold quantity, except that compliance with the toxic chemical release form requirements under this subdivision is not required for the placement of a toxic chemical in a storage or disposal site or facility that is located at a facility with a permit under ch. 293 or a mining permit under subch. III of ch. 295 if the toxic chemical consists of or is contained in merchantable by-products, as defined in s. 293.01
(7)or 295.41
(25), minerals, or refuse, as defined in s. 293.01
(25)or 295.41
(41).
(e)The reporting procedures for trade secrets under 42 USC 11042 shall apply to all facilities in this state subject to the requirements under par.
(a),
(c), or
(d). For the purposes of applying this paragraph to public agencies and private agencies, the division shall have the powers and duties granted to the administrator of the U.S. environmental protection agency under 42 USC 11042 .
(f)All facilities in this state subject to the requirements under par.
(c)or
(d)shall comply with the procedures for providing information under 42 USC 11043 .
(5m)Furnishing information. If the division or a committee requests, in writing, information relating to the federal act or to this section, a facility shall furnish the information in the manner requested.
(6)Threshold quantities. Threshold quantities for the facilities of public agencies and private agencies shall be identical to the threshold quantities established by the federal act or by regulations promulgated under the federal act.
(7)Facility fees.
(a)The division shall establish, by rule, the following fees at levels designed to fund the division’s administrative expenses and the grants under s. 323.61 :
1. An emergency planning notification fee to be paid when a facility makes the emergency planning notification required under sub.
(a).
2. An inventory form fee to be paid annually when a facility submits the emergency and hazardous chemical inventory forms required under sub.
(c).
(b)The operator of a facility subject to the requirements of sub.
(a)or
(c)shall pay the fees under par.
(a). The division may establish, by rule, a surcharge to be paid by the operator of a facility if the operator fails to pay the fees under par.
(a)in a timely manner. The surcharge under this paragraph shall not exceed 20 percent of the original fee.
★   the supreme law of the land   ★
Don't Tread on Me
E Pluribus Unum — out of many, one

"If you don't know your rights, you don't have any."

Marginalia · a citizen's law index
A research desk, not legal advice. Always read the cited source before relying on a summary.
Questions or an issue? support@self-law.org
disclaimerMarginalia is a research index, not a law firm. Nothing on this site is legal, tax, or financial advice and no attorney–client relationship is formed by using it. Statutes, regulations, and case law change; summaries, search results, AI output, and member posts may be incomplete, out of date, or wrong. Any interpretation drawn from material on this site should be validated by a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before you act on it.