Page 6 The Behrend Beacon Kitchen Open Late/Take Out Available Colleges’ audits pioneer an EPA effort to clean up facilities by Jennifer Moroz Knight Ridder Newspapers Michael Quinlan has done something few people would: volunteer to come clean with his mistakes. The director of health and environmental safety for Rutgers University is leading a team of inspectors as the school reviews practices in its laboratories, scrutinizes underground storage tanks and pores over records for air emissions and pesticide use. The goal is to uncover any overlooked viola tions of federal environmental law. Rutgers in November became one of the first universities in the country to commit to a com prehensive self-check under a federal program aimed at making large educational institutions The EPA has been offering industry the oppor- Large 14-i pizza & two more environment-friendly. Temple University in Philadelphia also is auditing its facilities. "This is a big place, and no one’s perfect,” Quinlan said of the Rutgers system, which has more than 900 buildings on its three main campuses in Camden, New Brunswick and Newark, N.J., and at its off-campus facilities. “If there are things we’re doing wrong, we want to find them and fix them.” Becoming a model of environmental steward ship was only part of the school’s incentive to agree to the intense self-examination. Under an Environ mental Protection Agency policy, fines for any vio lations that Rutgers discloses and corrects will be significantly reduced. The alternative is risking a visit by EPA inspec tors, which. Quinlan pointed out, could mean “pay ing lots of money and getting bad publicity.” Behrend bottles of NATIONAL CAMPUS NEWS Friday ; March 1, 2002 Some EPA watchdogs, however, wonder whether such an honor system is the best way to protect the environment. Under the policy, the EPA can waive or reduce penalties for violations disclosed and corrected ac cording to a timetable. A facility does not, how ever, escape paying fines associated with any profit it may have made from breaking the law. Since 1995, more than 1,150 companies have disclosed potential violations at more than 5,400 facilities nationwide, according to EPA records. Last year, more than 215 companies received relief for violations at 435 facilities. Petroleum giant Sunoco Inc. of Philadelphia, for example, did not have to pay $262,600 in fines by reporting and correcting breaches of several laws, including the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts. Realizing that companies were not the only ones College Special! nch 10t " Mon: Molson Monday All Molson Products $1.50 All Day Tues: KARAOKE Wed: DJ European Club Music/Techno No Cover with College I.D. Thurs:Grand Opening PARTY NIGHT Specials & Giveaways DJ Don't Forget Happy Hour 5-7 PM Mon. - Fri. DJ 9:30-2 AM Sunday Specials 2PM - MIDNIGHT PIZZA & PITCHERS!!! Sun: Wed. Night College Night - "College Challenge Quiz" Come Check This Out! "Cash Prizes!" Followed by DJ cheese 20 oz. pop posing a threat to the environment, the EPA in 1999 launched a program to remind colleges and uni versities of their responsibilities under federal en vironmental law. The agency warned that inspec tions were imminent and encouraged the schools to take advantage of the self-audit policy. “These are very large institutions, many of which are the size of small towns,” Habib Spencer said. “We had general information that much of the time they either didn’t think they were subject to cer tain environmental regulations, had forgotten about ! them, or bad complied witb-them butnot all the Problems included the improper handling and disposal of hazardous waste, particularly in labo ratories; boilers and furnaces that did not meet clean-air regulations; and sewage plants and un derground storage plants that were improperly $6.99,- Free Delivery! 897-1818 Guy Reschenthaler, Wire Service Editor March 19th | Junker Center, | Penn State Behrend I College Tickets on sale at RUB DESK for students - $2O. Tickets on sale at RUB DESK and Dig Dios for the public - $24. l_ J monitored and maintained. While other universities, including Temple, have taken advantage of the self-audit policy, Rutgers is the first to sign a formal agreement with the EPA, locking itself into a timetable for reporting and cor recting violations at all of its facilities. Quinlan put the school’s costs for the audit, including labor, in the “hundreds of thousands.” EPA officials “get a lot of regulatory bang for their buck,” he said. “We’ll inspect more than they ever could,” That the EPA does not have the resources to do comprehensive checks of all the facilities it regu- lates is not lost on the agency - or its watchdogs. In EPA Region 2, which covers New Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, the number of full-time inspectors has dropped from 160 in 1991 to 110 this year.