Spill Response. Provide 24/7 on-call spill response for NWSA properties.
Spill Response. Any vehicle leaks or spills shall be cleaned up as soon as possible and no later than 24 hours after occurrence. Contractor shall clean up any spills or litter caused by collection or transportation, regardless of whether it is on public or private property. No driver of a Contractor vehicle operating in furtherance of this Agreement shall use a cell phone when the vehicle is moving.
Spill Response. Except for breaches of MPC’s covenant set forth in Section 9.1, in the event of any Product spills or other environmental releases or discharges from a Terminal or arising from the operations of a Terminal, cleanup and any resulting liability for such spills or discharges shall be the sole responsibility of Terminal Owner. In the event of any Product spills or other environmental releases or discharges caused by MPC or its customer or carrier, Terminal Owner may, and MPC hereby authorizes Terminal Owner to, commence containment, clean-up and disposal operations as deemed appropriate or necessary by Terminal Owner or as required by any Governmental Authorities. The Parties shall cooperate for the purpose of obtaining reimbursement if a third Person is legally responsible for costs or expenses associated with any Product spills initially borne by Terminal Owner or MPC.
Spill Response. Should a spill occur on or from you boat, immediately stop the spill or leakage source and contain the spill. Report spills into the water immediately to the U.S. Coast Guard National response Center at 0(000)-000-0000 and the Department of Ecology at 1(800)-258-5990. Please also notify the Gig Harbor Marina at (000) 000-0000. Boat owners, vendors, contractors, and others at the marina should have a supply of absorbent materials on board the boat or close at hand.
Spill Response. (a) The Director of Emergency Services or designee, or an authorized fire official, shall have the authority to summarily xxxxx, control and contain hazardous materials that are emitted into the environment and endanger the health or safety of the general public or the environment. The Director of Emergency Services or designee, or an authorized fire official, shall have the authority to enter public or private property with or without the owner's consent, to respond to such hazardous materials emergencies. The Director of Emergency Services or designee, or authorized fire official, shall determine the type, amount and quantity of equipment and personnel required to adequately xxxxx, control and contain all hazardous materials emitted into the environment.
(b) The property owner and/or person responsible for the hazardous materials spill or release shall be held financially liable for the response, control, containment, equipment and materials costs, including legal fees, incurred by the county and supporting agencies. The property owner and/or person responsible for the hazardous material spill may provide personnel to assist abatement, removal and remedial measures, provided such personnel have been adequately equipped and trained pursuant to the requirements of local, state and federal laws. The county shall not be liable for the use of outside personnel. Assistance shall consist of any or all of the following:
(1) Informing Emergency Services Department personnel of all matters pertaining to the incident.
(2) Supplying emergency response plan information for the site.
(3) Supplying emergency response equipment, personnel and materials. Charges for hazardous materials emergency response shall be based upon the actual costs of response, control, containment, equipment and materials, including legal fees. All fees collected shall be turned in to the County Treasurer and credited to the county's general fund.
(c) In fire incidents involving hazardous materials or exposure to hazardous materials, no fee will be assessed for resources normally associated with firefighting operations. Fees shall be assessed for those activities and resources associated with abatement, control and containment of the hazardous materials involvement or exposure.
Spill Response. If a spill of oil, hazardous material or sanitary waste occurs, the tenant or operator shall immediately contain and clean up the spill or deploy its service operator or emergency response contractor (ERC) for immediate containment and clean up. Particular care shall be taken to ensure that no spilled materials enter floor or storm drains, or run on to unpaved surfaces or into Boston Harbor. The tenant or its service operator or ERC shall implement immediate containment actions, including berming the leading edge of the spilled material with an absorbent material and plugging threatened drains with suitable cover(s). Spill clean-up shall be initiated immediately. Tenant or airport user shall verify that all parties conducting clean- up operations on their leaseholds are properly trained in:
Spill Response. In the event of a spill, Voltage employees will adhere to the following Spill Response procedure and ensure that all appropriate Manitoba Hydro representatives, landowners and outside authorities have been notified. Spill Response Procedure If a spill/release of fuel, oil, lubricant or other hazardous material occurs, the following steps will be followed:
1. IDENTIFY THE HAZARDS ▪ Identify the product, product hazards and site hazards.
Spill Response. Provide 24-hour a day response capability to ensure responsible parties report and clean up spills; and ensure 100% field response at Priority 1 releases. Status: Provided 24-hour a day response, and provide field responses at 100% of Priority 1 releases.
Spill Response. Provide the following spill response services: Basic Level Emergency Spill Response immediately, Full Scale Emergency Spill Response within 3 hours, and Non-Emergency Spill Response within 24 hours of the Corps’ request for response. Response is required for any substance(s) spilled within the boundaries of the Black Warrior and Tombigbee/Alabama-Coosa Project and/or spills originating from a powerhouse. Response shall be provided for spills caused by a project facility or activity and for spills which impact or may impact Corps of Engineers property or facilities. The actual requirement may vary greatly, but for the cost proposal, the contractor should assume that the supply costs will be $10,000 per contract year. Basic Level Emergency Spill Response: Immediate spill response shall be in a defensive fashion to contain the release from a safe distance, keep it from spreading, and prevent exposures (First Responder Operations Level).
Spill Response. Section 26 of the Lease document is hereby amended to include the following: The lessee is responsible for preventing fuel, hydraulic fluid, and oil spills that could result in contamination of contiguous land and water. Petroleum product spills shall be cleaned up immediately and any contaminated earth or vegetative materials shall be disposed of as required by the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation regulations. To facilitate rapid spill response, adequate sorbent materials (i.e., material that collects or absorbs petroleum products while at the same time repels water) will be kept on site to be used in the event of a spill. Should any unlawful discharge, leakage, spillage, emission, or pollution of any type occur due to lessee activities, the lessee shall, at its expense, be obligated to clean the area to the reasonable satisfaction of the State of Alaska.