Hazardous Waste Fees & Permits - Long Beach
Long Beach, California requires businesses and some residents to follow hazardous waste disposal and permit rules administered locally. This guide explains who enforces Long Beach hazardous materials requirements, where to pay fees, how to apply for permits or submit hazardous materials business plans, and the steps to arrange lawful disposal or appeal a citation.
Penalties & Enforcement
The City of Long Beach Fire Department Hazardous Materials program enforces local hazardous materials storage, reporting and disposal requirements and issues permits for regulated facilities. [1]
- Fines: specific penalty amounts for violations are not specified on the cited page.
- Escalation: first, repeat, and continuing offence ranges are not specified on the cited page.
- Non-monetary sanctions: stop-use or abatement orders, seizure of hazardous materials or equipment, and referral to court may be used; specific remedies are not specified on the cited page.
- Enforcer & complaints: Long Beach Fire Department Hazardous Materials receives complaints and conducts inspections; see the official contact page for reporting procedures and phone numbers.
- Appeals and review: formal appeal or administrative review pathways and time limits are not specified on the cited page; follow the notice on any enforcement letter for deadlines.
Applications & Forms
Long Beach requires hazardous materials business plans, permits, or notifications for regulated facilities; the city accepts submittals and fee payments through the responsible office. Specific form names, form numbers, fee tables, and electronic submission links are not specified on the cited page. For business-plan filing and permit procedures contact the Long Beach Fire Department Hazardous Materials program directly for the current application and fee schedule.[1]
How to comply and pay fees
- Identify: determine whether materials you handle qualify as hazardous under federal, state, or local rules.
- Contact the enforcing office: consult Long Beach Fire Hazardous Materials to confirm permit needs and fee amounts.[1]
- Prepare documentation: assemble safety data sheets, inventories, and a hazardous materials business plan or permit application as required.
- Pay fees: follow the department instructions for electronic or in-person payment; if no schedule is provided on notice, request the current fee table from the department.
- Arrange disposal: use a licensed hazardous waste transporter or the county household hazardous waste program for resident wastes.
FAQ
- Do residents in Long Beach pay hazardous waste disposal fees?
- Residents typically use county household hazardous waste collection events or facilities; municipal fee requirements for resident disposal are not specified on the cited city page.
- Which department issues hazardous materials permits in Long Beach?
- The Long Beach Fire Department Hazardous Materials program issues permits and manages hazardous materials business plans.[1]
- How do I appeal a hazardous waste citation?
- Appeal procedures and time limits are set out in the enforcement notice or municipal code; specifics were not specified on the cited page, so follow the instructions on any citation and contact the enforcing office immediately.
How-To
- Confirm whether the material is hazardous under federal, state, or local definitions.
- Contact Long Beach Fire Department Hazardous Materials to ask whether a permit or a hazardous materials business plan is required and request the fee schedule.[1]
- Complete required forms and assemble safety data sheets and inventories.
- Submit the application and pay required fees according to the department's instructions.
- Use a licensed hazardous waste hauler or county household hazardous waste facility to dispose of hazardous waste and retain manifests/receipts.
Key Takeaways
- Contact Long Beach Fire Hazardous Materials early to confirm permit and fee obligations.
- Fee amounts and escalation details are not listed on the cited city page; request the current fee table from the department.
- Keep disposal manifests and payment records to document compliance.
Help and Support / Resources
- Long Beach Fire Department - Hazardous Materials
- Los Angeles County Household Hazardous Waste (for resident disposal)
- California CERS (Hazardous Materials Business Plan filing guidance)