Stay ahead of EPA’s SARA Reporting (Tier II) deadlines. Protect your facility from enforcement risks.
Vanguard provides complete support for SARA Title III Reporting, also known as EPCRA Reporting or Tier II Reporting, helping facilities across the U.S. meet federal, state, and local hazardous chemical reporting requirements.
What Is SARA Title III (EPCRA)?
The Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA) Title III, also called the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA), requires businesses to report the presence and storage of certain hazardous chemicals to local, state, and federal authorities.
The purpose? To help communities plan for chemical emergencies and ensure transparency (i.e., the community’s right-to-know) about hazardous substances stored at industrial and commercial sites.
Who Must Report Under SARA / EPCRA?
If your facility stores hazardous chemicals at or above the Threshold Planning Quantities (TPQs) for extremely hazardous substances listed under SARA Section 302, and/or at or above thresholds under SARA Sections 311–312 at any time during the calendar year, you are typically required to file a report under EPA’s SARA/EPCRA law — due by March 1 each year.
You most likely need to report if your facility:
- Stores or handles chemicals covered by OSHA’s Hazard Communication Standard and required to have a Safety Data Sheet (SDS)
- Exceeds 10,000 lbs of a hazardous chemical on-site at any one time (Section 311/312 threshold), or
- Exceeds the Threshold Planning Quantity for an Extremely Hazardous Substance (Section 302), or
- Meets the 10-or-more full-time-employee, SIC-code, and usage-threshold criteria for TRI reporting (Section 313)
California note: California requires the Hazardous Materials Business Plan (HMBP) in lieu of standard SARA reporting, but still incorporates SARA Section 302 obligations. If your facility is located in California, contact Vanguard for state-specific guidance.
Which Chemicals Are Covered?
Reporting obligations are triggered by specific chemical lists and thresholds, not by industry alone:
- Extremely Hazardous Substances (EHS): roughly 350 chemicals on EPA’s Section 302 list, each with its own Threshold Planning Quantity
- Hazardous chemicals with an SDS: any chemical covered by OSHA’s Hazard Communication Standard, subject to the 10,000 lb Section 311/312 threshold (lower thresholds apply to listed EHSs)
- Section 313 TRI-listed chemicals: a separate list of roughly 650 chemicals and chemical categories subject to “usage†thresholds (manufacture, process, or otherwise use) rather than storage thresholds
Vanguard cross-checks your facility’s SDS library against all three lists as part of every engagement, so nothing is missed because it “wasn’t obviously hazardous.â€
Industries That Require SARA / EPCRA Reporting
Virtually any facility with a chemical inventory as reflected in its Safety Data Sheets (SDSs) may be subject to reporting requirements, including:
- Manufacturing & Industrial Facilities
- Oil & Gas Operations
- Warehousing & Distribution
- Utilities & Energy Providers
- Agriculture & Chemical Producers
- Food & Beverage Processing
- Medical & Research Facilities
Vanguard Service Areas
Vanguard prepares and files SARA Title III / EPCRA reports for facilities nationwide, with dedicated regional teams and established LEPC/SERC filing relationships in:
- Atlanta, GA
- Chicago, IL and the greater Chicagoland area
- Cincinnati / Dayton, OH
- Dallas / Ft. Worth, TX and Houston, TX
- Kansas City, MO / Wichita, KS
- Minneapolis / St. Paul, MN
- Phoenix, AZ / Los Angeles, CA (see California HMBP note above)
- Tampa / St. Petersburg, FL
- Tulsa / Oklahoma City, OK
Because filing requirements and LEPC/SERC contacts vary by state and county, our regional teams handle local submission logistics directly rather than relying on generic, one-size-fits-all filings.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to report if my facility is small?
Facility size alone doesn’t determine reporting obligations — chemical quantity and type do. Even small facilities can trigger Section 302 or 311/312 reporting if they store a listed substance above its threshold.
What’s the difference between Tier II and TRI reporting?
Tier II (Sections 311/312) reports on-site hazardous chemical inventory and is due March 1. TRI (Section 313) reports the release and management of specific toxic chemicals and is due July 1. A facility can be subject to one, both, or neither depending on its chemicals and thresholds.
What happens if I miss the March 1 or July 1 deadline?
Late or missing reports can trigger EPA or state enforcement action, with penalties that can exceed $69,000 per day of violation.
Does SARA reporting apply if I’m already OSHA HazCom compliant?
HazCom compliance (maintaining SDSs) is actually what often triggers SARA reporting obligations — the two are closely linked, not substitutes for one another.
How is California’s requirement different?
California uses the Hazardous Materials Business Plan (HMBP) instead of standard Tier II reporting, though it still folds in Section 302 obligations. Contact us for state-specific guidance.
Can Vanguard handle reporting for facilities in multiple states?
Yes. We support multi-site and multi-state corporations, including facilities subject to stricter local or state-specific thresholds beyond the federal minimums.
How often do thresholds or requirements change?
Chemical lists, thresholds, and state-specific rules can change from year to year, which is why we treat this as an ongoing compliance relationship rather than a one-time filing.
Avoid last-minute panic – let Vanguard handle it all.
With over 30 years of experience managing SARA / EPCRA compliance, we ensure your reports are complete, accurate, and submitted on time, keeping you inspection-ready year-round.
Need Help With SARA / EPCRA Reporting or Toxic Release Inventory (TRI)?
Call (918) 641-5588 or contact us today to schedule a regulatory review and gain a clear understanding of your facility’s compliance requirements under EPA, OSHA, DOT, and Homeland Security.