Prioritizing Safety: PHMSA’s Commitment to Hazmat Grant Programs
The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) is awarding over $30 million to hazmat safety programs in a move that demonstrates the administration prioritizes safety. PHMSA’s funding opportunities are designed to:
- Foster partnerships with states, local communities, universities, and nonprofits
- Provide resources for emergency preparedness
- Promote pipeline awareness campaigns
- Develop pipeline resources
- Implement best practices for pipeline and hazmat safety, nationwide
- Encourage the development of new technologies
- Help municipality and community-owned utilities improve and maintain safe pipeline infrastructure
Priorities
One of PHMSA’s Fiscal Year 2023 priorities is ensuring that underserved communities are prepared and trained to respond to hazardous materials transportation emergencies. This includes community response planning and training for fire, law-enforcement, and public safety access point personnel. PHMSA has done this by increasing outreach to communities and Local Emergency Planning Committees (LEPCs) and having grantees address working with underserved communities in their grant applications.
Award distribution
PHMSA is awarding grants to states, territories, tribes, and non-profits through six of its grant programs. This includes approximately:
- $22 million for Hazardous Materials Emergency Preparedness grants for states, territories, and tribes to train first responders on hazardous materials response and to support the development, implementation, and improvement of emergency plans for local and tribal communities.
- $4.7 million in Hazardous Materials Instructor Training grants to support the training of hazardous materials instructors that train employees working with hazardous materials.
- $1.3 million in Supplemental Public Sector Training grants to support non-profit organizations that train hazardous materials instructors conducting first responder training.
- $1.2 million in Assistance for Local Emergency Response Training grants to support the training of volunteer or remote emergency responders’ response to incidents involving hazardous materials shipments by rail.
- $1 million in Community Safety grants to enhance the capabilities of communities to respond to hazardous materials emergencies and the training of state and local enforcement personnel responsible for enforcing the safe transport of hazardous materials.
- $290,000 in Hazardous Materials State Inspection grants to cover costs for state-run hazardous materials shipper inspections to include personnel, travel, equipment, supplies, and training for hazardous materials inspectors.
Free training
The grant that should be of interest to most, is the Hazardous Materials Instructor Training (HMIT) Grant, which is the second bullet listed above. The HMIT grant is a train-the-trainer program that facilitates the training of hazmat instructors who then conduct training in Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMR) for hazmat employees. Hazmat employers should be jumping on this opportunity since non-profit organizations offer this training for free.
Want more information on hazmat training? Check out this ezExplanation.
Key to remember: PHMSA awarded over $30 million in grant funding. One of those grants being the HMIT, which provides non-profits funding to conduct Hazmat Instructor Training at no cost.