
| Title | Is Your Business Using Regulated Chemicals? Watch your profits evaporate | |
| Month-Year Published | March 1998 | |
| Online Availability |
75 kilobytes, requires version 4.0 or later of Adobe Acrobat Reader Software get Acrobat Reader
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| Short Description |
On Nov. 15, 1990, the Clean Air Act Amendments (CAAA) were signed into law. Thousands of small businesses are affected by the amendments' controls on small air pollution sources. The requirements affecting small business owners and operators depends on how badly the local air is polluted, and the kinds and quantities of pollutants their businesses emit. Auto body shops, bakeries, distilleries, dry cleaners, fiberglass fabricators, foundries, furniture manufacturers, gasoline service stations, general contractors, metal finishers and fabricators, photo finishing laboratories, printing shops, and other small businesses may be affected by the air pollution control programs the law may require. Complying with the law's requirements, however, is not the only cost that influences your bottom line. | |
| Publication Number | 97-213j | |
| Print Availability |
Not available as a printed document
Please download and print this document.
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| Number of pages | 2 | |
| Keywords | amendment, automotive, bakery, business, chemical, Chemicals, construction, dry cleaner, fiber, fiberglass, gasoline, law, metal plating, pH, printing | |
| Related Publications | Title | Relationship |
| Chapter 173-400 WAC, General Regulations For Air Pollution Sources | related regulation | |
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