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Air & Waste Management Association Transformation at NJDEP’s Compliance & Enforcement Program

Air & Waste Management Association Transformation at NJDEP’s Compliance & Enforcement Program. Wolf Skacel Assistant Commissioner October 14, 2011. Overview. Background to C&E‘s Transformation C&E Transformation Goals Transformation Departmental Goals. 1970 Pollution Levels.

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Air & Waste Management Association Transformation at NJDEP’s Compliance & Enforcement Program

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  1. Air & Waste Management AssociationTransformation at NJDEP’s Compliance & Enforcement Program Wolf Skacel Assistant Commissioner October 14, 2011

  2. Overview • Background to C&E‘s Transformation • C&E Transformation Goals • Transformation • Departmental Goals

  3. 1970 Pollution Levels C&E Transformation Efforts 2011Pollution Impacts Total Pollution Impact on Environment Areas of Non-Compliance

  4. C & E Transformation Goals • High but meaningful compliance • Better behavior from others resulting in better environmental protection or outcomes (whether mandated or not) • Finding and fixing environmental problems • No backsliding on previous gains

  5. Percent of checklist requirements found In Compliance (IC) in 2009for: Air; Hazardous waste; Solid Waste; Water Quality; Water Supply

  6. Key Systems

  7. Prioritized Key Systems Projects Chosen • C&E Strategic Management System • Education over enforcement • SEP rule/policy

  8. Implementation of a Strategic Management System (SMS) Using a Balanced Scorecard (BSC) model developed by Norton and Kaplan The System will be “cascaded” throughout C&E in a tiered manner from top to bottom by management levels. Performance measures are being developed to demonstrate progress towards accomplishment of goals

  9. Creation of an Environmental Intelligence Center (EIC ) Leverages our impressive data collection capabilities & data systems to develop intelligence products, integrates C&E and DEP goals and objectives and collaborates with our internal and external partners. The EIC will consist of three separate and distinct subsidiary elements, with each element having responsibilities and tasks contributing to the overall effectiveness of intelligence-led enforcement. These elements are: Watch Operations Analysis Element Asset Management

  10. Watch Operations Watch Operations will maintain and communicate situational awareness for the entire organization Watch operations will encompass communications across C&E and between C&E and external stakeholders. This would include duty officer responsibilities, OPRA, complaint tracking, and cross-program referrals.

  11. Analysis Element The Analysis element will house analysts who have the capabilities to translate raw data into useable and relevant intelligence products.

  12. Asset Management This element will be charged with the overall development, tracking and constant evaluation of the C&E wide work plan. Medium and long term priorities, outreach coordination, EPA mandates, managing the intelligence produced by the analysis group, are some components of asset management .

  13. Restructuring and Alignment of C&E Staff through an Ecological and Holistic Approach • C&E’s organizational structure be reorganized and aligned to support the new strategic focus dictated by the SMS, its goals and objectives. • appointment of a regional manager to oversee each C&E region under the new alignment paradigm. • Transitioning away from solely doing mandated inspections to empowering C&E inspectors to find and fix environmental problems • Embrace a geographic-based, “enviro-shed” holistic approach with Barnegat Bay watershed being the first enviro-shed. • Gradual transition to multiple enviro-sheds

  14. Barnegat Bay Watershed • Good controls exist at existing NJPDES facilities that are routinely inspected • Plan to target non-traditional sources of water pollution • 5G2 exemption sites claiming permanent non exposure • 5G3 stormwater permits • Inspection of suspected unpermitted discharges • Stream-walking • Using aerial maps and NJEMS data to identify potential environmental problems

  15. Recommendations4. Prioritization of the Key Systems of Work

  16. Training Seminars, Outreach & Education • Facilitate behavior changes through increased education • Create a comprehensive, sustainable education/Training system that adapts training needs based on feedback from stakeholders & metrics for continuous improvement • Seeking increased compliance, stewardship, and promotion of environmentally sound operations and practices to protect and conserve our State’s natural resources

  17. Supplemental Environmental Project • An environmentally beneficial project that an entity voluntarily agrees to perform as a condition of settling an enforcement action. • A SEP is an activity that the violator would not otherwise have been required to perform, and in which the public or the environment is the primary beneficiary. • Draft policy under legal review • External stakeholder reviews to be scheduled • Policy to be used as basis for future rulemaking

  18. Department Goals • Comprehensive regional environmental management • Barnegat Bay restoration as a model for protecting New Jersey surface water bodies • Enhanced protection of environmentally overburdened communities • Sustainable parks • Establishing an overall strategy for renewable energy opportunities in New Jersey

  19. Enhanced protection of environmentally overburdened communities • Inclusive of, but broader than urban or EJ communities focusing on public health related environmental impacts • Develop a new approach that evaluates multi-media impacts on human health and the environment • Actively developing a cumulative impact tool • Informed decision making • Department wide effort, not just C&E • External stakeholder involvement part of process

  20. Questions

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