310 CMR, § 50.82 - Requirements for an Environmental Management System
An environmental management system developed in lieu of a toxics use reduction plan shall contain the following elements:
(1) A written
environmental policy that expresses management for, and makes a commitment to:
(a) compliance with environmental legal
requirements;
(b) pollution
prevention through source reduction and toxics use reduction; and
(c) continual improvement of the EMS and
environmental performance.
(2) A process for identifying significant
environmental aspects and impacts from current and future activities at the
facility. All covered toxics shall be identified as significant environmental
aspects.
(3) Identification of
environmental legal requirements, including a system for tracking compliance
and learning about and integrating changes to legal requirements into the
EMS.
(4) A process for establishing
measurable objectives and targets that address significant environmental
aspects and other EMS commitments and that emphasize preventing pollution at
its source.
(5) Environmental
management programs designed to make progress toward achieving objectives,
targets, and commitments in the EMS, including the means and time-frames for
their completion.
(6) Established
roles and responsibilities of the facility's staff and management, on-site
service providers, and contractors for meeting objectives and targets and
complying with legal requirements, including a senior management representative
with authority and responsibility for the EMS.
(7) Environmental and compliance training for
employees and contractors whose jobs and responsibilities involve activities
directly related to significant aspects, achieving objectives and targets and
compliance with legal requirements, and initiation training for new
personnel.
(8) Procedures for
communicating environmental and EMS information throughout the facility,
including EMS awareness programs for all employees.
(9) Operational controls to ensure that
equipment and other operations comply with legal requirements and address
significant environmental aspects.
(10) Documentation of key EMS elements and
procedures for document control and records management.
(11) Emergency preparedness and response
procedures.
(12) Procedures for
monitoring and measuring key operations and activities to assess environmental
performance.
(13) Procedures for
preventing and detecting non-conformance with legal and other requirements of
the EMS, including an established compliance audit program and an EMS audit
program, and procedures for corrective actions to ensure timely compliance and
commitment to continual improvement. The EMS audit program shall require
independent auditing on at least a two-year cycle and senior management review
of audit results.
(14) Documented
management review of performance against objectives and targets and the
effectiveness of the EMS in meeting policy commitments.
Notes
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