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CRS84508ENRpage39
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CRS-17 storage of one of the most common groundwater contaminants--gasoline--is un- regulated because it is not a waste product (and thus not under the authority of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act), and spills of the fuel cannot be cleaned up under the Superfund law because it is a petroleum product. Fewer than a dozen States have underground storage tank laws or regulations
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CRS84508ENRpage33
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storage tanks and to be in a position to respond quickly to spills and leaks. Exxon Company, for example, claims to have spent over $100 million since 1979 to replace steel underground storage tanks, and the company expects to have replaced all of its old tanks by 1986; Chevron is involved in a five-year, $105 million replacement program. §l:§}/ Some companies are experimenting with added protection
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CRS84508ENRpage01
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84-508 ENR <~%< =Cfu Congressional Research Service l T i The Li bra F)’ of Congress l /) 2 I V? \ ) N 0 Washington, D.C. 20540 3L1L“50g'E5\-3E . NP%§gNGER Wmngton Einivemity LEARING UNDERGROUND STORAGE TANKS: A POTENTIAL ENVIRONMENTAL PROfiLEM :53’ Donald V. Feliciano Analyst in Environmental Policy Environment and Natural Resources Policy Division January ll, l984n_ mean-sq
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CRS84508ENRpage35
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CR5-l5 Southern States used the fire prevention codes prescribed by the Building Officials and Code Administrators International (BOCA). Local ordinances in States, including Maryland, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Kansas, and Ohio, require periodic tank testing for leaks. §£/ _.}_l_+_/ Ibid.
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CRS85985EPWpage22
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CRS-19 Corporation study of Alum Rock and other alternative public school programs, "[D]istricts can help the less advantaged families understand the system more quickly by keeping it stable, tailoring their strategies for disseminating infor- mation to fit the habits and preferences of different subpopulations, and lower- ing the costs of information gathering for parents.“ lg], In contrast
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CRS85985EPWpage12
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and typical public school systems, and as such will be further discussed in the final section of this paper. EEE SPECIFIC CONCEPT OF CHAPTER 1 VOUCHERS Chapter 1 of the Education Consolidation and Improvement Act of 1981 is a modification of the Federal program of aid for the education of the disadvantaged children first enacted as title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Under chapter
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CRS85746EPWpage38
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~ «. . . . . ¢ . , \ , . .. _ T u.. _. . ». ., . . O _.. .. . N. . . . n .. ~ V. . 1 V... . . . K . ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ 3‘ “ H ‘ 1 ll Ir ‘ H”! Jn>I\,w;[‘ur$ ‘n‘Jn{x3\xx ‘ “I ‘ “‘ ‘ ix!“ ‘ ‘:1. . FF} ‘ ‘ “ ,. ‘ . . . . . ‘
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CRS85746EPWpage35
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, Daily Edition. p. H11807); the modified amendment was agreed to by the Senate on that same date (Congressional Record, Daily Edition. pp. 514157-14158). 12/ Federal Register, May 22, 1985, pp. 21190-21198. ggf Federal Register, November 23, 1984, pp. 46169-46174. .21] Education-Watchers Speak Out Against Rules on ‘Secular Humanism‘. Education Daily. January 16, 1985; Department Proposes Rule to Curb
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CRS85746EPWpage33
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, and the responses to this article, Phi Delta Kappan, October 1982. For a review of some of the court cases involving "secular humanism" in the schools, see Religious Activities in the Public Schools and the First Amendment: Judicial Decisions and the Congressional Response by David M. Ackerman, Congressional Research Service Report No. 85-17A, Updated December 14, 1984.) II II II OI $2] Congressional
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CRS87233Epage23
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,703,600 1,977,375 1,313,250 -46.72 -33.32 456,750 250,000 161,550 -45.32 -35.42 472,950 250,000 153,700 -47.12 -36.52 200,000 250,000 150,000 25.02 -40.02 200,000 250,000 150,000 25.02 -40.02 1,562,400 352,450 563,300 -45.42 -33.32 345,350 443,200 293,300 -47.02 -33.32 200,000 250,000 150,000 25.02 -40.02 200,000 250,000 150,000 25.02 -40.02, 1,717,200 365,125 576,750 -49.62 -33.32 320,200 412,425 274
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CRS87233Epage16
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and Local Tax Deductibility and Metropolitan Migration. National Tax Journal. June 1986. pp. 189-200; and William F. Fox. Tax Structure and the Location of Economic Activity Along State Borders. National Tax Journal. December 1986. pp. 387-402.
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