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  1. The Superfund program is administered by EPA in cooperation with state and tribal governments. It allows EPA to clean up hazardous waste sites and to force responsible parties to perform …

  2. This law is commonly called Superfund. Working with states and Indian Tribal governments, Superfund requires EPA to deal with abandoned, accidentally spilled, or illegally dumped …

  3. Advancing cooperative federalism, EPA, working in tandem with states, tribes, and local partners, will clean up and return contaminated sites to productive use through the Superfund, …

  4. It was declared a Superfund Site in 1983. Constructed in the early 1900s, this man- made island supports businesses and associated commercial and industrial activities, including ocean and …

  5. The term source control refers to controlling sources of contamination that are entering the Portland Harbor Superfund Site from upriver and lands along the river. The Oregon …

  6. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Contract Laboratory Program (CLP) Statement of Work (SOW) for Inorganic Superfund Methods (Multi-Media, Multi-Concentration) …

  7. The Superfund and RCRA programs use diferent terminology to describe similar activities. See the diagram on the last page for a side by side comparison of the two programs.

  8. This fact sheet is intended as a resource for the public seeking more information on the Superfund enforcement process and highlights the role that communities may play.

  9. Consequently, in 2013, the Tribe negotiated a remedial response cooperative agreement with EPA Region 6 to self-perform the remediation of an historic and culturally significant tribal …

  10. The purpose of this document is to facilitate the evaluation and selection of beneficial use designations for groundwater at Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, …