Illustrative sample only. "Meridian Industries" is a fictional company. All regulatory citations, deadlines, and penalty figures are real and drawn from public EPA records. This format represents a live client brief.

Readout Advisory
Regulatory Intelligence
May 21, 2026
Meridian Industries
Prepared for Meridian Industries • Manufacturing Operations • Monitoring: EPA, OSHA, State Regulatory Agencies
Annual Reporting 41 Days
Toxic Release Inventory Annual Reporting: July 1, 2026 Deadline
EPA • EPCRA Section 313 • 40 CFR Part 372 • Annual reporting requirement
Executive Summary
WHOManufacturers and industrial operators with 10 or more full-time employees who manufactured, processed, or used any TRI-listed substance above threshold quantities in calendar year 2025.
WHATAnnual Form R required for each listed chemical exceeding thresholds: 25,000 lbs manufactured or processed; 10,000 lbs otherwise used. Filed electronically through EPA's Central Data Exchange.
WHENJuly 1, 2026. No extensions. Penalties accrue from the day the report is due, not the day EPA discovers the gap.
HOWPull 2025 chemical records. Cross-reference against the TRI list at 40 CFR Part 372. Complete and certify Form R. Submit through EPA CDX before July 1.
41 days until the July 1, 2026 filing deadline. A facility with three reportable chemicals filing 10 days late faces potential penalty exposure above $750,000.
Enforcement and Penalties
Civil penalty: Up to $25,000 per day per violation under EPCRA Section 325, adjusted annually for inflation. Each unreported chemical is a separate violation.
Public exposure: EPA publishes TRI data publicly. Late filers are visible to state regulators, community groups, and enforcement prioritization systems.
EPA enforcement staff use TRI non-filer data to generate inspection lists. A missed TRI report is frequently the first step in a broader facility audit.
Compliance Checklist
Act Now
Before July 1, 2026
Who Is Affected
Manufacturers and industrial operators in SIC codes 20 through 39 with 10 or more full-time employees are subject to TRI reporting under EPCRA Section 313 if they manufactured, processed, or otherwise used any listed toxic chemical above threshold quantities during calendar year 2025.
Standard thresholds: 25,000 lbs manufactured or processed; 10,000 lbs otherwise used.
Lower thresholds apply to: Persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic (PBT) chemicals (100 lbs); chemicals of special concern including dioxin compounds (0.1 grams); PFAS added to the TRI list under the 2020 NDAA (100 lbs).
Operators with multiple facilities must file separately for each facility that meets the thresholds. Facility ID and parent company information are required for each submission.
What Changed
This is an annual reporting requirement with no structural changes to the 2025 reporting cycle. The July 1, 2026 deadline applies to all calendar year 2025 TRI activity. EPA has not announced an extension and no extension is expected based on current agency posture.
PFAS additions: EPA expanded the TRI chemical list to include PFAS substances under the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act. Manufacturers and processors of PFAS-containing products who have not previously filed TRI reports should confirm whether their 2025 operations triggered reporting obligations under the expanded list.
No de minimis exemption for PFAS: The standard de minimis exemption that applies to other TRI chemicals does not apply to PFAS substances. All PFAS quantities are reportable regardless of concentration.
Political Context
Washington Intelligence The current EPA has paused several new regulatory initiatives but has maintained enforcement of existing annual reporting requirements, including TRI. EPA Administrator nominee statements during confirmation signaled a preference for enforcing existing statutory requirements over writing new rules. TRI reporting falls squarely in that category. EPA's enforcement division has continued programmed inspections of TRI-covered facilities at a pace consistent with prior years. The agency uses TRI non-filer data to generate inspection target lists. A missed TRI report is frequently the first event in a broader facility audit sequence. State regulators and community organizations independently monitor TRI filing compliance using EPA's public database. Late filers are visible within days of the deadline in states with active environmental advocacy groups. This secondary enforcement mechanism operates regardless of federal enforcement priorities and is not affected by changes in EPA leadership.
Key Details and Sources
Statute: Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA), Section 313. 42 U.S.C. § 11023.
Regulation: 40 CFR Part 372.
Penalty authority: EPCRA Section 325. 42 U.S.C. § 11045.
Filing system: EPA Central Data Exchange (CDX). cdx.epa.gov.
Calculation software: TRI-ME. trimelweb.epa.gov.
TRI chemical list: 40 CFR Part 372, Subpart D and Subpart E (PFAS).
Filing deadline: July 1, 2026. No extensions announced.
Priority HIGH 41 days to deadline • Civil penalty exposure • Public filing record

This brief is prepared for Meridian Industries based on publicly available regulatory information and is current as of the date above. It does not constitute legal advice. Readout Advisory is not a law firm. Consult qualified legal counsel before acting on any item in this brief. Regulatory requirements and deadlines are subject to change. Verify all citations against primary sources before submission.

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