Cleanups: What You Should Know
Get Informed
How Concerned Citizens Can Get Involved
Hazardous waste cleanups always benefit when communities and individuals get involved. These links provide more information on what you can do to help the cleanup effort.
- Community Engagement improves dialogue between EPA and local communities and stakeholders, including ways individuals can participate in cleanup decisions.
- Community Engagement and the Underground Storage Tanks Program
- Community Involvement at Engagement at Federal Facilities
- Community Involvement During Emergency Responses
- Superfund Community Involvement
- Brownfields Technical Assistance and Research
- Sustainable Materials Management - Learn about how to reduce food waste, donating and recycling electronic products, guidelines for federal agencies, and generally about reducing, reusing and recycling waste that would otherwise go into landfills
- Open Government Community Involvement Initiative
- Public Participation in the Hazardous Waste Permitting and Corrective Action Processes
- Environmental Justice offers strategies and tools to help combat the disproportionate amount of adverse health and environmental effects of pollution in minority and/or low-income communities.
What You Can Do to Clean the Air
- Ways to Protect the Air in Your Home
- Creating Healthy Indoor Air Quality in Schools
- Green Vehicle Guide - Information to minimize your vehicle's impact on the environment
- Clean Air Act Plain English Guide (with a section on Ways to Reduce Air Pollution)
What You Can Do to Clean Water
- How You Can Help Keep Urban Waters Clean
- What You Can Do about Water Quality and Quantity - this Water page includes a section on What You Can Do