5 services found
Integrated Environmental Management, Inc. (IEM) services
Consulting Services
IEM provides radiation-related consulting and services to a broad range of commercial and government clients. With offices in Ohio and Maryland, we stand ready to work with you on any challenge that has either a planned or unexpected radiation-related component.
IEM offers the services of a staff of Certified Health Physicists, Certified Industrial Hygienists, and Registered Radiation Protection Technologists, all of whom can work as an extension of your organization. They will confer with you to understand the issue at hand, provide guidance on how to approach and resolve the problem, and, if so desired, take care of the radiological matter in its entirety, leaving you and your staff to concentrate on your day-to-day business responsibilities.
Nuclear Services
IEM provides services in the highly-focused technical areas of radiation protection and radiological engineering. Because of our track record of successes, we have earned the respect of our clients and both federal and state regulators alike. The services we provide range from simple site investigations, to remedial actions (including waste brokering), to the performance of MARSSIM-based final status surveys, to oversight support services for large decommissioning projects. Within that range we bring skilled project managers with the ability to develop technically sound work plans, respond to regulator comments, and assist with community relations. Our field site managers are equipped with all of the equipment, experience, training, subcontractors and credentials needed to ensure site operations are completed safely, effectively, on schedule and on budget.
Instrument Rental
IEM rents radiation detection instruments out of our own extensive inventory for use by others. Weekly and monthly rates are offered for the following instrument types:
Land Area Survey Program (Final Status & Verification Surveys)
The last time you surveyed five acres of land, it took three people a week to prepare maps, lay out grids, develop procedures, train personnel and make the measurements. Then after the data were acquired, you spent another week re-writing field records and entering data into spreadsheets. After that came the campaign to chase down all of those transcription errors. Only then were you able to scan through the spreadsheet, look to see where measurement results were elevated, try to figure out the dimensions of the impacted area and then try to re-locate that spot for remediation a few weeks later.
Radiation Monitoring & Action Plan
In December of 2000, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PaDEP) promulgated regulations requiring monitoring for radiation and radioactive materials (25 Pa. Code 273, 277, 279, 281, 283, 284, 288, 289, 293, 295 and 297). The State has also prepared a companion guidance document,`Final Guidance Document on Radioactivity Monitoring at Solid Waste Processing and Disposal Facilities` (PaDEP Document Number: 250-3100-001). While your facility may not intentionally receive or treat radioactivity as part of your in-house operations, if you are classified as one of the following, you may nonetheless be required to comply with the new State rules: