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Superfund

Technical Assistance Grant (TAG) Program

Overview

A Technical Assistance Grant (TAG) helps communities participate in Superfund cleanup decision-making. It provides funding to community groups to contract their own technical advisor to interpret and explain technical reports, site condi­tions, and EPA’s proposed cleanup proposals and decisions. An initial grant up to $50,000 is available to qualified community groups.

Congress made public involvement in decision-making an important part of the Superfund process when the program was established by the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) of 1980. Congress wanted to ensure that the people whose lives were affected by abandoned hazardous wastes would have a say in the actions taken to clean up sites. The role of community members in the Superfund process was further strengthened in the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (SARA). With SARA, Congress created EPA's TAG program. TAGs are available at Superfund sites on EPA's National Priorities List (NPL) or proposed for listing on the NPL, and for which a response action has begun. The NPL is a list of the most hazardous waste sites nationwide.

The documents below provide an overview of the TAG program:

Federal Regulations Concerning the TAG Program

  • Final Rule on Technical Assistance Grant Program (PDF) (Hyperlink is currently unavailable)
  • 40 CFR 35, Subpart M - Grants for Technical Assistance (PDF) (Hyperlink is currently unavailable)
    Note: Office of Management and Budget Circulars cited in the CFR may be viewed on the Office of Management and Budget Home Page
  • 40 CFR 30, Grants and Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and Other Non-Profit Organizations (Hyperlink is currently unavailable)
    Note: Office of Management and Budget Circulars cited in the CFR may be viewed on the Office of Management and Budget Home Page