IHMM Today, July 7, 2026

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IHMM Today is an online publication of the Institute of Hazardous Materials Management® (IHMM®).

Other than content specifically provided by IHMM, articles contained in IHMM Today are compiled from

independent sources and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of IHMM.

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Table of Contents

IHMM Global DG Transport Regulatory Update: July 1 to 7, 2026 EPA Aligns EPCRA Hazardous Chemical Inventory Reporting with OSHA’s Revised Hazard Communication Standard | EPA Superfund Program – RPM Bulletin 2025-02 | EPA on minor New Source Review permitting |  California Department of Toxic Substances Control’s Transporters | IHMM’s Mentoring Program | Norfolk Southern Railway Derailment and Hazardous Materials Release |  The Certified Professional for June 25, 2026IHMM Business Leaders Academy

  • Lion
  • DGI
  • Certifications Matter – CHMM
  • The Value of IHMM Credentials
  • ISSM CHMM Prep Course
  • EHS IHMM Safety Credentials
  • Hazmat/Dangerous Goods Credentials
  • Microcredentials/Emeritus/BadgeCert
  • Follow IHMM on Social Media
  • IHMM Credentials Accredited
  • Need Help?
  • IHMM Recent News
  • Inside IHMM
  • IHMM Foundation Insider Friend of the Institute: University of Cincinnati
  • IHMM Nominating Committee Announces Board Positions
  • Celebrating Excellence in EHS Leadership – Nominate a Trailblazer!
  • IHMM Business Leaders Academy – September 9th
  • Lights. Knowledge. Impact
  • IHMM Foundation Seeks to Expand CDGP Professional Development
  • IHMM at Upcoming Conferences 
  • Professional Development – Earning CMPs
  • IHMM Recertification Videos
  • Support the Future of EHS
  • IHMM Foundation Jobs Board – 10 Job Openings
  • Research Resources for You – EPA Superfund  RPM Bulletin 2025-02
  • IHMM’s Unprecedented Outreach – 2,961,438 Messages for Jan-May
  • Advertise with IHMM
  • IHMM 2026 Salaries Survey Reports
  • Connect – Collaborate – Get Hired
  • IHMM Code of Ethics Video – New Code of Ethics One-Pager
  • IHMM Mentors Support You
  • IHMM Government Affairs
  • Regulatory Updates
  • CHEMTREC
  • California DTSC – Hazmat Transportation in California
  • Important Stories for IHMM Certificants
    • Environment News This Week July 1-7, 2026
    • EPA Superfund Program – RPM Bulletin 2025-02
    • EPA Aligns EPCRA Hazardous Chemical Inventory with OSHA’s Revised HazCom Standard
    • NTSB Preliminary Report on the Norfolk Southern Railway Derailment
    • LION
    • Workplace Safety News This Week July 1-7, 2026
    • Be a Safety Champion
    • Safe + Sound Week August 10-16, 2026
    • Global Dangerous Goods Transportation This Week, July 1-7, 2026
  • School Safety – Strategies to Prevent Online Child Exploitation
  • ECHA – News from the European Chemicals Agency
  • IHMM Store
  • News from IHMM Affiliates
    • AHMP
    • AIHA – The Synergist
    • NSC
    • Advertise with IHMM
    • ASSP
  • The Certified Professional for June 25, 2026
  • IHMM Hazardous Materials Textbook
  • NAHMMA

Certified Hazardous Materials Manager® [CHMM®]

Stand out as a top-tier environmental professional with the Certified Hazardous Materials Manager (CHMM®) credential from IHMM. Recognized under EPA regulation 40 CFR §312.10, the CHMM® proves your expertise, professionalism, and dedication to protecting people and the planet.

Corporations, universities, and government agencies rely on credentials like the CHMM® to identify leaders who stay ahead of complex environmental laws and regulations. Earning this credential shows you’re not just qualified—you’re committed to continuous growth and excellence in hazardous materials management.

Add CHMM® to your name and become the expert employers seek, the leader teams trust, and the professional who makes a difference.

Be recognized. Be respected. Be a CHMM®.

Learn more about the CHMM here.

The Value of IHMM Credentials

Below you will see the credential badges from BadgeCert that are now in each CHMM, CHMP, CDGT, CDGP, AHMM, Student CHMM, CSHM, CSMP, CSSM, ASHM, and Student ASHM certificant’s MYIHMM account. Every IHMM certificant may use these badges, linked as those below are to their IHMM credential page, for their email signatures, business cards, and other social media applications. You’re justifiably proud of the accomplishment of having earned your credential, and you can show the rest of the world.

100% Money Back Guarantee

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Randomized Quizzes for Each Domain
A Comprehensive Examination with a 93% Passing Rate!
Access your Course Anytime, Anywhere
Even On-the-Go, from your Mobile Device

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EHS / Workplace Safety Credentials

Certified Safety & Health Manager

Certified Safety Management Practitioner

Associate Safety & Health Manager

Student Associate Safety & Health Manager

Certified School Safety Manager

Hazardous Materials / Dangerous Goods Transportation Credentials

Certified Hazardous Materials Manager

Certified Hazardous Materials Practitioner

Certified Dangerous Goods Professional

Associate Hazardous Materials Manager

Certified Dangerous Goods Trainer

Student Certified Hazardous Materials Manager

Microcredentials – Emeritus – BadgeCert

Certified Pandemic Preparedness Specialist

Emeritus

BadgeCert

IHMM Credentials Accredited By

NEED HELP?

Need Help? On the IHMM website, just click on the “NEED HELP?” button
and let us know what you need, and the right person will get back with you.

IHMM RECENT NEWS

INSIDE IHMM

We thank the University of Cincinnati for its ongoing support of the IHMM Foundation and for being a Friend of the Institute.

Generosity is more than a gift; it is a statement of an individual’s commitment and dedication to growing the hazmat and EHS communities of practice.

Thanks to friends like the University of Cincinnati, the Foundation can provide certificants with access to vital educational and training programs, professional development opportunities, academic scholarships, networking, and more.

Together, we’re building a safer, stronger future.

Learn more about becoming a Friend of the Institute.

ABOUT University of Cincinnati

For IHMM certificants, this collaboration delivers a major advancement—OSHA’s recognition of the CSMP, CSHM & ASHM credentials, paired with more than 30 OSHA-endorsed training assets now available on the IHMM Professional Development platform. Together, these resources strengthen professional growth and make recertification more accessible than ever.

With these resources, IHMM certificants can:

  •  Maintain and recertify credentials through OSHA-endorsed pathways
  •  Build deeper knowledge in occupational safety and health
  •  Rely on trusted training aligned with national standards and best practices

Visit the University of Cincinnati here

IHMM Nominating Committee Announces Board Positions for Jan 1, 2027

Heather Waldmann, CHMM, chair of the IHMM Nominating Committee, is pleased to release the Call for Nominations for 2026. IHMM’s Board is filling three seats as follows:

  • One CSHM Board Member for a 4-year term beginning January 1, 2027
  • One CDGP Board Member for a 4-year term beginning January 1, 2027
  • One At-Large Board Member who may come from the ranks of the CHMM, CHMP, CDGP, CSHM, or CSMP,  for a 4-year term beginning January 1, 2027

Celebrating Excellence in EHS Leadership – Nominate a Trailblazer Today!

The Excellence in EHS Management Award is a prestigious honor recognizing an outstanding Environmental, Health, and Safety (EHS) manager who has demonstrated exceptional leadership, innovation, and dedication to the profession. This is your opportunity to spotlight a true champion of workplace safety and environmental responsibility!

Presented by the Institute for Hazardous Materials Management (IHMM), this award will be showcased at the National Safety Council Congress & Expo—one of the most influential safety events of the year.

What the Winner Receives:

🏆 A distinguished commemorative plaque
📣 Recognition in an official press release and IHMM member communications

Nominate an EHS Leader

Nominations are open from March through July each year, and the 2025 award presentation will take place at the National Safety Council Congress & Expo, September 14-16, 2026, in Indianapolis!

Help us honor the best in the field—nominate a deserving EHS leader today!

For more information and the Excellence in EHS Management Award Nomination Form Go Here

IHMM Business Leaders Academy Starts September 9th

Lights. Knowledge. Impact. 

The IHMM Foundation is launching an exciting new initiative—a dynamic series of professional training videos designed to power your growth and advance your career.

These one-hour, high-impact learning modules will allow IHMM certificants to earn valuable CMPs—and that’s just the beginning.

Here’s where it gets even more exciting:
We’re inviting YOU to help create them.

If you have expertise to share, you can partner with us to develop these training videos—and earn CMPs for your contributions as a content creator. This is your opportunity to showcase your knowledge, build your professional reputation, and directly shape the future of education across the IHMM community.

Each course will include:

  • A focused, one-hour training session
  • A follow-on quiz to reinforce learning
  • Direct alignment with IHMM certification blueprints

Whether you’re looking to earn CMPs, build your brand, or give back to the profession, this initiative puts you front and center.

Ready to lead, teach, and inspire?
Join us today and start the process of aligning your video topic with IHMM certifications.

👉 Sign up now and be part of something transformative.

IHMM Foundation Seeks to Expand CDGP Professional Development Programs

As part of the IHMM Foundation’s continuing commitment to building a stronger, deeper, and more valuable professional development ecosystem for IHMM credential holders, the Foundation is now turning its attention to the Certified Dangerous Goods Professional (CDGP®) credential.

Following the recent work comparing the CHMM and CSHM blueprints against the education and training programs currently available through the IHMM Foundation, we are now undertaking the same focused review for the CDGP. This effort will compare the CDGP blueprint domains and subdomains against existing professional development offerings to identify where new or expanded courses can strengthen the knowledge base, practical skills, and career value of the CDGP credential.

This is an important opportunity. Dangerous goods transportation is a highly regulated, technically demanding, and globally significant field. CDGP credential holders operate at the intersection of safety, compliance, logistics, emergency preparedness, and international regulatory systems. Expanding CDGP-aligned training will help professionals stay current, employers build stronger compliance programs, and the Foundation deliver greater value to the hazardous materials and dangerous goods community.

The IHMM Foundation Professional Development Committee will begin by working with the 29 education and training vendors with whom we have existing relationships, giving preference to vendors who are Friends of the Institute, to identify priority programs that will strengthen and expand our CDGP course offerings.

FMI: Jelian Larbi at [email protected]

IHMM 2026 Trade Shows and Conferences

Visit IHMM at Booth #5431
Indiana Convention Center
Indianapolis, IN

AHMP EHS Hazmat Summit
September 29-October 1, 2026
New Orleans, Louisiana

FET Annual Conference
October 20-22, 2026
Marriott Oshkosh Waterfront Conference Center

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Professional Development

The IHMM Foundation is your partner in growing your expertise and advancing your career. We’re committed to making professional development not only high quality—but easy, accessible, and directly aligned with your IHMM certification.

Simply click the button for your credential below, and you’ll be taken straight to the IHMM Foundation’s curated collection of training and education already approved for Certification Maintenance Points (CMPs).

No searching. No guesswork. Just the right courses to keep you sharp, confident, and ahead of the curve.

Invest in yourself. Advance your profession. Accelerate your success—starting today.

#1 – Recertification Video
#2 Recertification Video

IHMM Recertification Videos

Congratulations. After hard work and dedication, you earned your professional credential. Now, every 5 years, you will need to recertify your valuable credential. Over 5 years, you need to earn 200 certification maintenance points or CMPs. You receive 100 CMPs for the job you perform, and then need to earn a minimum of another 100 CMPs in a variety of ways, demonstrating your commitment to continuous improvement and remaining current with the demands of your profession and our communities of practice.

Considering everything you did to achieve certification, don’t let it go to waste by failing to recertify.

The two, four-minute videos at left walk a certificant through every step of a simple process to recertify.

Support the Future of EHS

The IHMM Dr. John H. Frick Memorial Scholarship Program supports Student CHMMs and Student ASHMs—students who work hard, dream big, and are preparing to protect our workplaces, our communities, and our planet. For many, financial barriers stand between them and the credentials that will shape their futures.

Your gift changes that.
Every dollar opens a door, fuels a dream, and invests in a leader who will carry our profession forward.

Give today. Empower their future. Strengthen our field. https://hazmatsociety.org/donate/

Research and Resources For You

The IHMM Foundation/HMS is committed to the continued growth of IHMM’s certificants and to supporting them in every way we can. We achieve this through work that aims to gain insights that align with our mission to educate, develop, inform, and unite the hazardous materials, dangerous goods, and environmental health and safety communities of practice.

IHMM’s certificants will find important resources that most of our certificants use. If you don’t find what you need, use the button below to let us know, and we will get it and post it here for you.

If you are you looking for additional resources not listed on this page? We can help!

IHMM Research is found at https://hazmatsociety.org/research/

Added this week > EPA Superfund RPM Bulletin

IHMM’s Unprecedented Outreach: Elevating Excellence Worldwide

2026 marks another milestone moment for IHMM! IHMM has sent 2.96 million messages in January, February, March, April, and May to thousands of private and public sector entities, amplifying awareness of IHMM, our prestigious credentials, and the dedicated professionals who hold them.

This momentum is more than just numbers; it’s a testament to our unwavering mission. Every day, across 50 states and 85 countries, IHMM champions the critical role of its credentialed professionals, setting standards of excellence in environmental, health, and safety fields. Together, we are shaping the future—one message, one connection, one breakthrough at a time!

IHMM Releases 2026 Certificant Salaries Survey Reports

IHMM is pleased to announce the release of the 2026 IHMM Salary Surveys, presenting powerful new data on the professional value, job-market strength, and economic performance associated with IHMM credentials.

This year’s surveys cover three essential areas of practice: Hazmat and Dangerous Goods professionals holding the CHMM, CHMP, and CDGP credentials; Workplace Safety professionals holding the CSHM, CSMP, and CSSM credentials; and the Certified Pandemic Preparedness Specialist (CPPS) credential.

Across all three reports, the message is clear: IHMM certificants are working in fields that continue to grow in importance, visibility, and opportunity. The 2026 data show strong job growth tied to these credentials, expanding professional responsibilities, and outstanding economic performance for those who have invested in proving their knowledge, competence, and commitment through IHMM certification

As employers confront increasingly complex challenges in hazardous materials management, dangerous goods transportation, workplace safety, emergency readiness, and pandemic preparedness, IHMM certificants stand out as trusted professionals prepared to lead.

The 2026 Salary Surveys confirm what the marketplace already knows: IHMM credentials deliver value, create opportunity, and help professionals advance in critical, high-demand fields.

IHMM launched its “Open to Work” online COLLABORATION community exclusively for IHMM certificants looking to connect, share resumes, and discover job opportunities together in a supportive environment.

You can find this community after logging into COLLABORATION here: https://community.ihmm.org/home

The IHMM Code of Ethics

At IHMM, integrity isn’t just a principle—it’s the foundation of everything we do. Our Code of Ethics is the guiding standard for all IHMM Certificants, ensuring that professionals in hazardous materials, dangerous goods, environment, health, and safety uphold the highest levels of honor, trust, and responsibility in their work.

By committing to this Code, Certificants reinforce their dedication to excellence, ethical conduct, and public safety. Violating these standards isn’t an option—those who do may face disciplinary action from a peer review panel, including credential suspension or revocation.

We’ve recently updated our Code of Ethics to reflect evolving industry standards and best practices. Stay informed, stay accountable, and continue leading with integrity.

📜 Explore the updated IHMM Code of Ethics here: IHMM Code of Ethics

🎥 Watch the latest Code of Ethics video below!

Click on the graphic above to download the IHMM

Code of Ethics One-Page PDF

IHMM Mentors Support

Welcome to the Future of Professional Growth with IHMM’s Mentoring Program!

Are you ready to take your career to the next level? Dive into a world of opportunity and advancement with IHMM’s dynamic mentoring program! Our experienced mentors are here to share their expertise, offer personalized guidance, and help you navigate both credential exams and everyday work challenges.

Unlock Your Potential: Learn from industry leaders and accelerate your professional journey. ✨ Tailored Support: Receive personalized advice and strategies to overcome your unique challenges. ✨ Build Connections: Join a vibrant community of professionals eager to support and inspire each other.

Whether you’re a newcomer in the field or seeking to hone your skills, IHMM’s mentoring program is your gateway to growth and success. Stay tuned for inspiring stories, valuable tips, and exclusive insights from our mentors!

Embark on a journey of discovery and achievement with us. Welcome aboard!

IHMM’s Collaboration platform contains a “Mentor Match” module [see below at right] that allows mentors to signup designating the hours, number of mentees, subject areas, and length of time they wish to mentor – as well as enabling mentees signup requesting assistance in specified areas. The mentor match module does the rest by matching mentors and mentees.

IHMM Government Affairs

California Department of Toxic Substances Control’s Transporters

DTSC’s webpage functions as a compliance portal for persons and companies transporting hazardous waste in California. Its central legal point is that hazardous waste transportation in California is not merely a logistical activity; it is a regulated hazardous waste management function that requires DTSC authorization, documentation, and ongoing compliance.

See> https://dtsc.ca.gov/transporters/

The site explains that persons transporting hazardous waste for hire in California must be registered with DTSC as hazardous waste transporters, and it directs applicants to registration and renewal procedures. DTSC notes that transporter applications must be submitted by mail, that signatures must be less than 90 days old, and that transporter registrations are non-transferable and valid for only one year. Renewals should be filed at least 45 days before expiration.

The page also distinguishes transporter registration from a hazardous waste storage permit. DTSC cautions that a transporter registration does not authorize storage, although hazardous waste may be held temporarily under limited conditions. Related DTSC guidance describes transfer facilities as locations such as loading docks, parking areas, or storage areas where shipments may be held during transportation, and notes that manifested shipments in containers may generally be held at a transfer facility for 10 days or less without a storage permit.

In addition, the site links to DTSC’s registered transporter database, consolidated transporter materials, spill and transfer-facility guidance, FAQs, and forms. Consolidated manifesting is addressed as a specialized procedure under which eligible registered transporters may combine specified wastes from multiple generators on one manifest, subject to DTSC notification and statutory limits.

In practical terms, the site is a regulatory roadmap: it tells transporters how to become and remain authorized, tells generators how to verify transporter status, and warns that hazardous waste transportation implicates manifesting, transfer-facility limits, spill obligations, annual reporting, and enforcement exposure.

Important Stories for IHMM Certificants

Environmental News for This Week: July 1-7, 2026

EPA Aligns EPCRA Hazardous Chemical Inventory Reporting with OSHA’s Revised Hazard Communication Standard

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has finalized amendments to its Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) hazardous chemical inventory reporting regulations to conform with the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA) 2024 Hazard Communication Standard (HazCom) revisions. The rule harmonizes the terminology and hazard classifications used under EPCRA Sections 311 and 312 (40 C.F.R. Part 370) with OSHA’s Globally Harmonized System (GHS)-based hazard communication requirements.

From a compliance perspective, the rule simplifies annual Tier II reporting by allowing facilities to rely directly on hazard classifications contained in Section 2 of OSHA-compliant Safety Data Sheets (SDSs) rather than translating those classifications into separate EPCRA hazard categories. EPA concluded that the revisions will improve consistency among regulated facilities, enhance emergency planning, reduce reporting errors, and provide first responders with more accurate hazard information during emergency response operations. The rule becomes effective August 21, 2026, with the revised hazard categories first applying to calendar year 2027 reporting, due March 1, 2028.

Facilities subject to EPCRA should begin reviewing chemical inventories, SDS libraries, Tier II reporting procedures, and employee training programs now to ensure a smooth transition to the revised reporting framework. Environmental, health, and safety professionals should also coordinate with state emergency response commissions and local emergency planning committees regarding implementation of the updated reporting requirements.

Federal Government Resources

Norfolk Southern Railway Derailment and Hazardous Materials Release

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has issued its preliminary report concerning the June 13, 2026, Norfolk Southern freight train derailment and hazardous materials release in St. Bernard, Ohio (Investigation No. RRD26FR016). While the investigation remains ongoing and no probable cause has been determined, the report highlights significant transportation safety and hazardous materials issues with potential regulatory implications.

According to the NTSB, the southbound freight train derailed 29 railcars, including 19 DOT-117 specification tank cars transporting Class 3 flammable liquids, specifically ethanol (UN1170) and alcohols n.o.s. (UN1987). Three tank cars were breached during the derailment, releasing approximately 107,000 gallons of flammable liquids. The released product ignited, resulting in a large fire that spread to additional tank cars. Although no injuries were reported, emergency officials established a one-mile evacuation zone for approximately 6.5 hours, and property damage is estimated at $5.3 million. The train was operating as a federally designated key train due to the volume of hazardous materials transported and was equipped with Positive Train Control (PTC).

The NTSB emphasized that all aspects of the derailment—including track conditions, equipment performance, hazardous materials packaging, and operational factors—remain under investigation. The agency’s findings may ultimately result in additional safety recommendations affecting hazardous materials transportation, tank car performance standards, railroad operating practices, and emergency response planning. The investigation continues with participation from the Federal Railroad Administration, Norfolk Southern, and organized railroad labor representatives.

See> https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/Pages/RRD26FR016.aspx

Workplace Safety News This Week: July 1-7, 2026

For the week of July 1–7, 2026, workplace safety developments in the United States were driven by extreme heat, significant OSHA enforcement actions, and continued congressional scrutiny of federal worker protection programs.

The U.S. Department of Labor and Occupational Safety and Health Administration intensified nationwide Heat Illness Prevention outreach as dangerous temperatures persisted across much of the country. OSHA reminded employers that the General Duty Clause requires reasonable protections—including water, rest, shade, acclimatization, emergency response planning, and employee training—for workers exposed to excessive heat.

OSHA also announced one of its largest recent enforcement actions, proposing more than $16 million in penalties against multiple contractors following investigations into serious workplace safety violations, while continuing inspections involving falls, trenching, lockout/tagout, machine guarding, and chemical process safety.

Congress continued considering the FY 2027 appropriations for OSHA and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, with proposed reductions to OSHA funding and restructuring of NIOSH research remaining central issues in the Labor-HHS appropriations process.

Significant worker safety news included multiple fatalities associated with heat exposure, construction falls, industrial machinery, and roadway work zones, prompting OSHA investigations in several states. In addition, several serious industrial fires and chemical incidents required emergency response and renewed attention to process safety management and emergency preparedness.

Collectively, the week’s developments underscored that heat hazards, construction safety, industrial process safety, and the future of federal worker protection resources remain the nation’s most significant workplace safety priorities.

Significant incident reporting included a confirmed fatal construction accident in West Rockport, Maine, with OSHA expected to assume the investigation, and a July 1 mining fatality at Warrior Met Coal’s Blue Creek Mine No. 1 in Alabama, classified by MSHA as machinery-related.

Chemical-safety concerns also surfaced after reporting that industrial chemical accidents involving injuries or fatalities have risen, with CSB incident-report data showing increased chemical-release events since 2021.

These stories underscore heat exposure, machinery, construction, mining, and chemical-process safety as the week’s central worker-protection concerns.

Safety Champions Program

The Safety Champions Program is a new program for employers to develop and implement an effective safety and health program. The main goal of safety and health programs is to prevent workplace injuries, illnesses, and deaths. The Program incorporates the seven core elements of Recommended Practices for Safety and Health Programs.

The Safety Champion Program has three Steps (Introductory, Intermediate, and Advanced). The Steps are self-guided, and participants may work at their own pace. Safety Champion participants may also request a Safety Champion Special Government Employee (SGE) to assess their safety and health program and Step progress at any time.

I want to become a Safety Champion to embark on the pathway to safety and health success!  SIGN UP HERE

Safe +Sound Week – August 10-16, 2026

We appreciate your continued hard work and dedication to promoting safety and health programs in workplaces across the country. To keep our communications current, we ask our Safe + Sound Partners to update their profiles by May 8, 2026. Please access the form and complete the fields to ensure your information is accurate.

Some key items to consider:

We are very excited for Safe + Sound Week this year which will focus on celebrating safety and health program successes and recognizing workers’ contributions. The event will be held the second full week of August (8/10/26 – 8/16/26). We expect registration to open the first week of July. We will have new and engaging resources available to help people celebrate with us.

In the meantime, if there is anything we can do to help support you, please feel free to contact Inanje and me at [email protected].

Global DG Transport Regulatory Update: July 1-7, 2026

IHMM Global DG Transport Compliance Matrix (2025–2026)
IHMM Certificant Compliance Checklist
July 1-7, 2026

United States, Canada, and Mexico

For the period of July 1–7, 2026, dangerous goods and hazardous materials transportation regulation throughout North America continued to be driven by international harmonization, digital regulatory modernization, battery transportation safety, fuel transportation oversight, and preparations for the next generation of United Nations dangerous goods standards.

This reporting period is particularly noteworthy because it coincides with the opening of the 68th Session of the United Nations Sub-Committee of Experts on the Transport of Dangerous Goods (UNSCOE TDG) in Geneva. Although the Sub-Committee is an international body, its work ultimately drives amendments adopted by PHMSA in the United States, Transport Canada, Mexico’s Secretaría de Infraestructura, Comunicaciones y Transportes (SICT), the ICAO Technical Instructions, the IMDG Code, ADR, RID, and other international dangerous-goods regulatory systems.

United States

PHMSA Continues International Harmonization

During this reporting period, the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) continued implementing its broader regulatory modernization initiatives while monitoring developments emerging from the UN Sub-Committee meeting in Geneva.

The agency’s pending HM-215R rulemaking remains the principal U.S. harmonization initiative. Once finalized, it will incorporate numerous changes originating from recent editions of the UN Model Regulations affecting:

  • Proper shipping names;
  • Hazard classifications;
  • Special provisions;
  • Packaging authorizations;
  • Limited quantities;
  • Air transport restrictions;
  • Vessel stowage requirements.

For U.S. shippers engaged in international commerce, the practical significance remains substantial because future amendments adopted by UNSCOE frequently become incorporated into PHMSA regulations within subsequent harmonization rulemakings.

Registration and Digital Compliance

PHMSA’s 2026–2027 hazardous materials registration cycle also continued during this reporting period.

The agency continues emphasizing electronic registration, improved data quality, secure online transactions, and modernization of compliance administration. These initiatives reflect PHMSA’s broader movement toward digital oversight and data-driven regulatory enforcement.

Battery Transportation

Lithium battery transportation remains one of PHMSA’s highest regulatory priorities.

Enforcement activity continues emphasizing:

  • UN 38.3 testing;
  • Shipping paper accuracy;
  • Proper packaging;
  • State-of-charge limitations for air transport;
  • Employee training;
  • Emergency response information.

Legal Significance

The modern U.S. hazardous materials compliance program increasingly requires organizations to demonstrate not merely technical compliance with the Hazardous Materials Regulations, but also comprehensive documentation, digital recordkeeping, and defensible internal compliance systems.

Read more here…

Strategies to Prevent Online Child Exploitation

Join the Federal School Safety Clearinghouse on 7/23 from 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM EDT for a virtual training on preventing and responding to online child exploitation in K-12 communities. Featuring experts from the U.S. Department of Justice and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, this session will cover current online threats and how generative AI is shaping them. Participants will gain valuable tools, risk-factor insights, and actionable strategies to safeguard students ahead of the upcoming school year. The Federal School Safety Clearinghouse registration webpage is open to secure your spot and receive the access link.

Training

Hosted by the U.S. Department of Education

News from IHMM Affiliates

Alliance of Hazardous Materials Professionals

IHMM is affiliated with AHMP and is pleased to bring this important information to all of our certificants.

AHMP News

Join us on July 22, 2026, for Webinar: Combustible Dust Explosions – Awareness and Mitigation, presented by Dr. Ashok Ghose Dastidar. This webinar will explore the causes and trends behind combustible dust incidents using U.S. Chemical Safety Board data and introduce the NFPA 7-point dust explosion hazard schematic to help identify risks and implement effective mitigation strategies. Register Now

2026 EHS HAZMAT Summit Keynote & Plenary Speakers Announced! 

  • Tuesday, September 29 Plenary: Lessons Learned from Katrina; Rich Varuso, Geotechnical Engineer & Senior Program Manager at U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
  • Wednesday, September 30 Keynote: Circular Economy; Charlie Sellars, Director of Sustainability at Microsoft
  • Thursday, October 1 Plenary: Regulatory & Political Changes; Gene Guilford, Executive Director at IHMM

Stay tuned for the full session list to be announced this week! We have a FULL 7 tracks for each session time!

Attendee registration is open, including group rates, so secure your spot and start planning to join us in New Orleans this September!

This premier event brings together environmental, health, safety, and hazardous materials professionals from across the country for three days of learning, networking, and industry insight. Organizations can also expand their visibility through exhibit booths and sponsorships, with new options available for a range of budgets. Exhibitor early bird rate has been extended until July 15 – don’t miss this opportunity!

Registration is open for the Essentials of Hazardous Materials Management (EHMM) Night School, running September 2–November 11, 2026. This live, online 11-week program offers expert-led instruction on Wednesday evenings, providing practical knowledge for professionals preparing for CHMM or CHMP certification, earning CEUs, or expanding their environmental, health, and safety expertise. AHMP members can also apply for the EHMM Scholarship, which helps cover tuition costs and is awarded quarterly to eligible members in good standing. Don’t miss this opportunity to invest in your professional growth—register today.

American Industrial Hygiene Association

IHMM is affiliated with AIHA and is pleased to bring this important information to all of our certificants.

The Synergist

Celebrating 40 Years of ERPGs

By Michele Twilley

At the AIHA Guideline Foundation, emergency response planning for chemical and radiological incidents is undergoing a profound transformation, and Emergency Response Planning Guidelines (ERPGs) are at the center of it.

ERPGs are airborne concentration thresholds developed by the Guideline Foundation to support emergency planning for short term, one time exposures to toxic chemicals. They estimate the concentrations at which nearly all members of the public (excluding the most sensitive) are expected to experience specific tiers of health effects over about one hour of exposure.

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American Society of Safety Professionals

IHMM is a member of the American Society of Safety Professionals and is pleased to bring this important information to all of our certificants.

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ASSP SBUGs – Standards-Based User Groups

Turn safety standards into measurable safety performance with Standards-Based User Groups (SBUGs), a structured forum where environmental health and safety (EHS) professionals, employers, and industry experts come together to share best practices, learn from peers, and translate standards into measurable workplace safety outcomes.

With regular virtual meetings and ongoing engagement through a private online community, SBUGs connect you with professionals, organizations, and solution providers tackling the same high-risk challenges, empowering you to benchmark performance and implement effective strategies.

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IHMM and The IHMM Foundation

Check it out! The graphic to the left brings to life the powerful partnership between IHMM and the IHMM Foundation — a collaboration built to support YOU and every IHMM credential holder!

IHMM created the IHMM Foundation with one goal in mind: to empower and elevate its certificants. While IHMM delivers a wide range of prestigious professional credentials, the IHMM Foundation steps in with game-changing professional development programs designed to support both current certificants and those on the path to certification.

Together, they’re building a stronger, smarter, and more connected community of professionals. 🚀 Ready to take your career to the next level? This is where it all begins!

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Rockville, Maryland, 20850
www.ihmm.org | [email protected]
Phone: 301-984-8969 | Fax: 301-984-1516

2026-07-06T21:20:26+00:00

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