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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Shady Scrap Yard
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<blockquote data-quote="kevinatfms" data-source="post: 16050102" data-attributes="member: 39344"><p>Id only be worried if you sold them hazardous waste. The RCRA Act allows the EPA to come after the yard owner, the generator and the trucking company who hauled it. From the "cradle to the grave" per say for hazardous waste generators.</p><p></p><p>I was at a project in the Baltimore area building a rail yard for a berth in the port of Baltimore. The area was a huge parking lot for new cars fresh off the boat from a few large manufacturers. The area before being owned by the port administration was owned by a company that was in the ship breaking industry and had a scrapyard on site.</p><p></p><p>Long story short, the guy was shady as hell. Would take in hazardous materials, store them on site or dump them into the Baltimore harbor. He got a huge contract with the Navy over breaking up an aircraft carrier and decided it was a good time to dump asbestos, PCB's and large quatities of lead over the side of the ship instead of disposing of them correctly. The EPA busted his ass and everyone they could find who illegally dumped on his land. He ended up in prison(and died in prison too) and the other defendants got large fines. His family sold the property to the port who is still dealing with the guys hazardous waste problem 20 years later.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="kevinatfms, post: 16050102, member: 39344"] Id only be worried if you sold them hazardous waste. The RCRA Act allows the EPA to come after the yard owner, the generator and the trucking company who hauled it. From the "cradle to the grave" per say for hazardous waste generators. I was at a project in the Baltimore area building a rail yard for a berth in the port of Baltimore. The area was a huge parking lot for new cars fresh off the boat from a few large manufacturers. The area before being owned by the port administration was owned by a company that was in the ship breaking industry and had a scrapyard on site. Long story short, the guy was shady as hell. Would take in hazardous materials, store them on site or dump them into the Baltimore harbor. He got a huge contract with the Navy over breaking up an aircraft carrier and decided it was a good time to dump asbestos, PCB's and large quatities of lead over the side of the ship instead of disposing of them correctly. The EPA busted his ass and everyone they could find who illegally dumped on his land. He ended up in prison(and died in prison too) and the other defendants got large fines. His family sold the property to the port who is still dealing with the guys hazardous waste problem 20 years later. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Shady Scrap Yard
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