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Five Year Report
1993-1997

  •Table of Contents
  •Acknowledgments
  •Executive Summary
  •Introduction
  •Methods
  •Results
  •Discussion/Recommendations
  •List of Figures / Tables
  •Definitions
  •OERS Council Membership
 
Definitions
Data Collection Definitions

Hazardous substances emergency events are defined as uncontrolled or illegal releases or threatened releases of hazardous substances or the hazardous by-products of those substances. Events involving petroleum products exclusively or sewage are not included (see Appendix I).


Events are included if: (1) the amount of the substance released, or that might have been released, needed (or would have needed) to be removed, cleaned up, or neutralized according to federal, state, or local law; or, (2) there is only a threatened release of a substance, but the threat led to an action such as evacuation that could have affected the health of employees, emergency responders, or the general public.


Fixed-facility events are defined as events occurring inside or outside of buildings or other structures on fixed-facility grounds. Events involving vehicles that are part of the operation of a fixed facility that occur within a fixed facility are coded as fixed-facility events.


Transportation-related events are those that involve hazardous substances that are being transported by ground including roadways and railroads, by air, by water, and by pipelines outside the boundaries of a fixed facility.


Victims are defined as persons who had at least one injury or died as a result of the event.

Data Collection

To collect data on as many hazardous materials events as possible, the Oregon Emergency Response System (OERS) was used as the primary source of data. There are twenty-five state agencies that are members of OERS, ranging from the State Police and Oregon Poison Center to the Department of Parks and Recreation (see Appendix II for a complete list of member agencies). Data were received originally on a weekly basis; later this was changed to monthly reporting. The Office of State Fire Marshal (OSFM) data are received on a quarterly basis; requests for Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) data are made by phone when necessary. The same procedures for case investigation and data retrieval are used on reports from all agencies. In general, the percentage of HSEES events for which OERS provided initial notification has remained relatively constant during the five year period, ranging from 82% in 1994 to 69% in 1996.


Figure 1 shows the flow of information from initial notification of potential events to full documentation of events that meet the HSEES definition. As mentioned above, OERS is the primary notification source for events. Since notification from "Other Sources" usually lags behind OERS, data from these sources are checked for matches with OERS information. Events fall into three categories: those clearly meeting the case definition, those not meeting the definition (excluded from further investigation), and those requiring more information before a determination can be made. In the majority of cases, DEQ has additional information that allows the HSEES coordinator to determine if the event meets the case definition. If an event meets the HSEES definition, information is obtained directly from the responding agencies (fire departments, HazMat teams), responsible parties, and medical facilities in the event of injuries. The Oregon HSEES Coordinator usually needs to make 1 to 7 telephone calls to contact 1 to 4 people. Because fire department and HazMat personnel are usually at the scene of an incident, their incident reports provide the surveillance system with the most complete and accurate incident information. When information from these sources is incomplete or unavailable, other sources such as National Response System reports are utilized and/or private companies are contacted, as appropriate.

Oregon HSEES Flow of Information Because OERS is the primary notification source for potential HSEES events, Figure 2 shows the distribution of total OERS calls for 1993 - 1997. Of the 13,555 OERS calls in the five year period, half (51.4%) involved hazardous materials, followed by search and rescue events (25.0%) and natural hazard events (10.9%). Another 12.7% involved calls for information or emergency preparedness exercises. Of the hazardous materials event reports received by OERS during 1993-1997, a small number (12) involved radiological materials. From 1993 - 1997, 9.8% of the hazardous material and radiological material events reported to OERS met the HSEES case definition. The remaining 90.2% of OERS hazardous material reports were made up by sewage spills, oil spills (not included in the HSEES system) and spills or releases of unknown substances.

distribution of total OERS calls for 1993 - 1997 As seen in Figure 3, OERS provided initial notification for 688 (73.9%) of the 931 HSEES events identified during 1993 - 1997, and initially reported between 69% and 82% of HSEES events during the five year period. The Office of State Fire Marshal reported between 8 and 29 % of HSEES events, with the remainder (2 - 10%) coming from other state agencies, Federal agencies, and private industry.

HSEES events identified during 1993 - 1997
 
Page updated: September 22, 2007

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