A Texas Water Treatment Plant Let a Federal Chemical Safety Deadline Slip. The Fine Was $400.
MMWA Treatment Plant in Silverton, Texas failed to update its federally mandated chemical accident prevention plan on time, leaving regulators and the public in the dark about industrial risks at a facility handling hazardous substances.
MMWA Treatment Plant, a water treatment facility in Silverton, Texas, violated a core Clean Air Act requirement: it failed to submit an updated Risk Management Plan to the EPA by the June 16, 2025 deadline. The federal Risk Management Program exists specifically to protect nearby communities from chemical accidents. MMWA missed the filing, got caught, spent about 60 days fixing the problem after the EPA’s July 2025 warning letter, and settled the violation for a $400 penalty.
Read on to understand what this reporting failure means for communities living near facilities like this one, and what a $400 fine tells us about the limits of corporate accountability in America.
The Violation: A Safety Deadline Quietly Ignored in Silverton, Texas
🏭 At 141 South Mackenzie Road in Silverton, Texas, MMWA Treatment Plant operates under a set of federal rules designed to prevent chemical disasters. One of those rules is straightforward: every five years, the facility must file an updated Risk Management Plan (RMP) with the EPA. This plan documents what hazardous chemicals the facility stores, what could go wrong, and what the facility will do to protect workers and neighbors if something does go wrong.
MMWA missed that deadline. According to the EPA’s enforcement record, the facility’s updated RMP was due on June 16, 2025. That date came and went without a submission. The EPA’s Risk Management Program Reporting Center sent a formal notice to MMWA on July 10, 2025, alerting the facility to its failure. Only after receiving that letter did MMWA begin the process of correcting its records.
The facility’s own General Manager, Jessica Shelton, confirmed in the settlement agreement that MMWA spent approximately 30 days reviewing and updating the plan after the EPA’s warning, then an additional 30 days accessing the federal CDX system to submit it. In total: about two months of remediation work, triggered entirely by a regulatory warning, not by any internal compliance program catching the lapse on its own.
What the Risk Management Program Actually Does for Communities
The federal Risk Management Program is not bureaucratic paperwork. Congress created it under Section 112(r) of the Clean Air Act specifically because industrial facilities handling hazardous chemicals pose real, documented risks to the people who live and work nearby. An RMP forces a facility to publicly disclose what dangerous substances it uses, model what a worst-case accident would look like, and document the steps it takes to prevent one.
When a facility’s RMP goes out of date, that protection degrades. Emergency responders lose access to accurate, current information. Regulators cannot verify that safety procedures reflect actual conditions at the facility. Residents near the plant have no assurance that the plans protecting them match reality. The five-year update cycle exists precisely because facilities change over time: new chemicals, new processes, new risks.
The Risk Management Plan is the public’s window into what industrial neighbors are storing, what could explode or leak, and whether anyone has thought through what happens next.
The function and purpose of EPA’s Risk Management Program under 40 C.F.R. Part 68MMWA’s failure to meet the June 16, 2025 deadline means that, for some period, the facility operated without a current, verified RMP on file with the federal government. Whether conditions at the facility had changed in the intervening five years, whether new risks had emerged, whether safety plans remained adequate: none of that was knowable by regulators until MMWA finally submitted its update.
Corporate Accountability Fails the Public: The $400 Fine Problem
💰 The settlement between the EPA and MMWA Treatment Plant resolves the violation for a total penalty of $400. Four hundred dollars. For a facility operating under federal chemical safety law, charged with protecting one of the most critical and potentially dangerous functions in any community, the entire enforcement action closes for less than the cost of a minor traffic ticket in most American cities.
Federal law allows civil penalties of up to $70,117 per day per violation under the Clean Air Act. The EPA exercised its discretion to settle for $400. The agency’s framework for expedited settlements permits this kind of resolution for cases that meet certain criteria, allowing EPA to close straightforward administrative violations efficiently. On paper, that makes sense. In practice, it raises a pointed question: if the consequence for failing to file a required chemical safety plan is $400, what is the actual incentive to file it on time?
No Admission, No Accountability, No Record of Fault
The settlement terms mirror a pattern common across EPA enforcement actions at this level. MMWA signed the agreement, paid the penalty, and in doing so explicitly waived its right to contest the facts. The document makes clear: MMWA “neither admits nor denies the specific factual allegations.” The violation is resolved. The corporate record carries no formal finding of wrongdoing.
This framing matters because the language of accountability is stripped from the transaction. A facility that missed a federal chemical safety deadline walks away from federal enforcement with a $400 check and no admission of fault. The community near that facility has no formal acknowledgment that anything went wrong.
When corporations (even though MMWA technically isn’t one, but it still operates under the same organizational logic) pay to resolve violations without admitting wrongdoing, the settlement becomes a cost of doing business, not a deterrent against future neglect.
Pattern observed across EPA administrative enforcement settlementsEnvironmental and Public Health Risks: What Lapses Like This Cost Communities
🌿 Silverton, Texas sits in Briscoe County, a rural West Texas community with limited institutional resources and a population that depends on public infrastructure, including water treatment, for survival in an arid region. When a facility like MMWA Treatment Plant operates without a current Risk Management Plan on file, the gap does not announce itself. It is invisible: invisible to neighbors, invisible to first responders who would need accurate data in an emergency, invisible to local officials who assume federal oversight is functioning.
The Risk Management Program regulations at 40 C.F.R. Part 68 exist because Congress and the EPA determined that without mandatory disclosure and planning, communities near industrial facilities face preventable risks. Chemical accidents at water treatment plants can release toxic substances including chlorine gas, which water treatment facilities commonly use for disinfection. Emergency response to such incidents requires current, accurate information about what chemicals a facility stores and in what quantities.
A missed RMP update may seem minor in isolation. Considered as a pattern across the many facilities that handle similar compliance obligations, however, it represents a structural erosion of the safety net that protects American communities from industrial accidents.
Regulatory Architecture and Its Limits: How the System Allowed This
The EPA’s expedited settlement process is designed for efficiency. The agency receives thousands of enforcement referrals annually and must triage them. For administrative violations like a missed RMP update, where no accident occurred and the facility ultimately complied, the expedited framework allows quick resolution without formal hearings or litigation. The $400 penalty reflects this streamlined approach.
The problem is structural. The same system that makes enforcement manageable for the EPA also makes noncompliance manageable for facilities. MMWA did not catch its own missed deadline. Its internal compliance function failed silently. The EPA’s notification system caught the lapse. Then MMWA spent 60 days correcting a problem it should have anticipated and prevented years in advance.
Legal Minimalism: Complying With the Form, Not the Spirit
MMWA’s response after receiving the EPA’s July 10, 2025 warning letter demonstrates something common in corporate compliance culture: reactive rather than proactive engagement with regulatory obligations. The facility had five years to prepare for the June 16, 2025 deadline. It did not meet that deadline. It then needed two months of remediation work after a government prompt to correct the situation.
This is legal minimalism in practice: treating regulatory compliance as a floor to be reached after a warning, rather than a standard to maintain continuously. The $400 penalty reinforces that calculation. The cost of noncompliance, when caught at this level, is trivial.
Community Impact: Rural Texas and the Invisible Infrastructure of Safety
🏘️ Briscoe County, where Silverton sits, is a rural Texas county with a small population and limited access to the kind of advocacy infrastructure that exists in larger urban areas. Residents near MMWA’s facility are not in a position to monitor federal regulatory filings, audit RMP submission records, or independently verify that the facility managing their water treatment is meeting its legal obligations.
They rely on the regulatory system to do that for them. And the regulatory system, in this case, caught the violation, issued a warning, accepted a remediated submission, and settled for $400. The community’s window into what actually happens at the facility they depend on remained partially shuttered for the duration of the compliance gap, which stretched from the missed June 16, 2025 deadline through at least mid-September 2025 while MMWA worked through its 60-day corrective process.
Pathways for Reform: What Stronger Corporate Accountability Looks Like
📋 The MMWA case is small by scale but clarifying by example. It shows what happens at the lower end of EPA enforcement: modest penalties, no admissions, compliance achieved through reactive correction rather than proactive management. Several reforms would produce meaningfully different outcomes:
First, automatic escalation of penalties for facilities that require government notification to initiate compliance. If a facility cannot maintain its own compliance calendar without an EPA warning letter, the penalty structure should reflect that institutional failure more heavily.
Second, public notification requirements when an RMP update lapses. Currently, neighbors of a facility like MMWA have no mechanism to learn that the facility’s chemical safety plan is out of date. Mandatory public notice of compliance gaps would create community-level accountability that administrative penalties alone cannot.
Third, admission of findings as a condition of expedited settlement. The “neither admits nor denies” standard protects corporate interests but obscures accountability. Requiring facilities to acknowledge factual findings, without necessarily expanding civil liability, would create a more honest public record of corporate compliance failures.
Conclusion: The $400 Question
A water treatment plant in a small Texas town missed a federal chemical safety deadline. The government caught it, the plant fixed it after two months of work, and the matter resolved for $400. No one was hurt. No chemical accident occurred. The RMP is now on file.
But the $400 question remains: if this is what corporate accountability looks like at the bottom of the enforcement pyramid, what signal does it send up the chain? Every facility that handles hazardous materials knows what the floor looks like. They know that missing a filing, getting caught, and paying a fine smaller than most speeding tickets closes the matter. That knowledge shapes decisions. It shapes compliance culture. And it shapes the invisible infrastructure of safety that communities like Silverton, Texas depend on without ever knowing it exists.
The system did not fail catastrophically here. It functioned, slowly, minimally, and at the lowest possible cost to the violator. The question for policymakers, regulators, and the public is whether “functional at minimum cost to corporations” is the standard we want for chemical safety oversight in communities that have no ability to protect themselves any other way.
Frivolous or Serious? An Assessment of This Enforcement Action
This enforcement action is legitimate and well-founded. The underlying violation is documented: a specific regulatory deadline (June 16, 2025), a specific facility (MMWA Treatment Plant, 141 South Mackenzie Road, Silverton, Texas), and a specific regulatory requirement (40 C.F.R. § 68.190(b)(1)) all clearly establish the obligation and its breach. The EPA’s factual record is not disputed. MMWA confirmed its own non-compliance by spending 60 days correcting the submission after the EPA’s notice. The action is serious in the legal sense: it involves a statute (the Clean Air Act) with significant public health purposes and clear congressional intent. The penalty amount, however, is so small as to render the deterrent value of the action negligible. The enforcement was correct; the resolution was lenient to a degree that reveals structural limits in how the regulatory system prices corporate noncompliance.
A Risk Management Plan (RMP) is a federally required document that facilities handling hazardous chemicals must file with the EPA. It discloses what dangerous substances the facility uses, models what a worst-case accident would look like, and details the steps taken to prevent one. It is a primary tool that emergency responders, regulators, and communities use to understand industrial chemical risks in their neighborhoods.
Based on the settlement document, MMWA Treatment Plant operates a single facility at 141 South Mackenzie Road in Silverton, Texas (population under 1,000). The facility appears to be a local water treatment operation, not a large industrial corporation. The small penalty reflects in part the scale of the respondent, though the compliance failure and its public health implications are the same regardless of facility size.
Yes. The settlement explicitly states that payment of the $400 penalty resolves only MMWA’s civil liability for this specific violation. The EPA retains full authority to pursue any other past, present, or future violations under the Clean Air Act or any other statute. This settlement does not grant MMWA a general release from federal environmental liability.
The EPA maintains a public database of Risk Management Plans at RMP*Info, accessible through the EPA’s website. Members of the public can search for facilities in their area, review the substances reported, and check submission dates. If a facility’s most recent RMP appears to be more than five years old, that may indicate a compliance gap worth reporting to EPA Region 6 (for Texas and surrounding states).
Community members can take several concrete steps. First, use EPA’s public RMP database to check whether industrial facilities near your home or school have current, up-to-date filings. Second, contact your congressional representatives to advocate for stronger penalty structures that make noncompliance genuinely costly. Third, engage local emergency management agencies and ask whether they have current RMP data for facilities in your area. Fourth, support environmental advocacy organizations that monitor corporate compliance records and push for stronger public notification requirements when facilities miss federal safety deadlines. Transparency and community pressure are among the most effective tools for forcing facilities to maintain the safety obligations the law requires of them.
Please visit this link to see the EPA’s page on this settlement agreement: https://yosemite.epa.gov/OA/RHC/EPAAdmin.nsf/Filings/7ECAC55DD559EBD085258D840041FA70/$File/MMWA2026-3515.pdf
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