The Environmental Daily Advisor reports that there are 7 RCRA Violations that can send a firing range owner to jail, and the #1 reason is one that should cause major concern, according to MT2 . If the contractor chosen to clean up lead at the range "transports hazardous waste to a non-permitted facility," the range is held responsible. The range manager must ask the contractor how they would be handling the lead waste or if the lead recycling facility they took the lead to, is properly permitted. Range owners must always maintain on-site written records of the lead and contaminated waste disposition.
When these violations come up, there may also be the additional consequence of an enforcement action for costly cleanup and remediation including regulatory fines and penalties. Recent firing range environmental cases and projects have shown that a typical OSHA or EPA regulatory fine is in the range of $250,000 to $500,000. Additionally, when the EPA has to step in, range cleanups with their oversight involved can be in the $5,000,000 to $8,000,000 range.







