Lead Spill Responder/Dangerous Waste Coordinator; Environmental Specialist
Listed on 2026-03-10
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Engineering
Environmental Compliance, Waste Management
Keeping Washington Clean and Evergreen
The Department of Ecology is hiring a Lead Spill Responder/Dangerous Waste Coordinator (Environmental Specialist
4) within the Spill Prevention, Preparedness, and Response program.
- Northwest Region Office in Shoreline, WA.
- The salary listed includes 5% premium pay due to the position location in King County.
- Must live within a 60‑minute commuting distance of the Northwest Region Office.
- This position is eligible for a 10% Spill Response Assignment Pay once all training requirements and certifications are met and maintained. This position also has periods of mandatory overtime. Additionally, this position is required to participate in an after‑hour on‑call duty rotation.
- This position is eligible for telework and flexible schedule options.
- This position requires field work and emergency response, while there is some office work and you may telework most of your office work time with occasional in‑person meetings and activities.
- Schedules are dependent upon position needs and are subject to change.
- Apply by March 16, 2026.
- This position will remain open until filled. The agency reserves the right to make a hire at any time after application review begins. Applications received after the date above may not be considered.
In this role, you will respond to and clean up spills of oil and hazardous materials—including removing chemicals and waste from illegal drug manufacturing facilities. You will recognize tangible environmental results and public safety improvements will be made every day. If you enjoy an ever‑changing dynamic work environment and seeing immediate environmental benefits as a result of the work you and our team perform, we believe you would enjoy this great opportunity.
Preventing spills is always our first goal, but despite our efforts, spills still happen. The goal of our spill preparedness work is to reduce environmental impacts of spills. We require oil handlers in Washington to be ready for a rapid, aggressive, and well‑coordinated response to spills. We also require those responsible for spills to compensate the state for spill damages by restoring natural resources.
WhatYou Will Do
- Emergency Response to Spills & Threats:
Respond to high‑priority and complex environmental and human health emergencies, including oil spills, hazardous substances, abandoned waste, pressurized cylinders, fish kills, and illegal drug labs. - Incident Command & Coordination:
Serve as Initial Incident Commander / State On‑Scene Coordinator, directing spill containment, cleanup, resource deployment, and multi‑agency coordination. - Hazardous Materials Operations:
Perform hands‑on cleanup and field operations: opening containers of unknowns, sample collection, field testing and hazard categorization, over packing, and preparing waste for shipment. - Dangerous Waste & Drug Lab Leadership:
Lead regional coordination with law enforcement for clandestine drug lab responses and oversee dangerous waste management compliance, disposal, and emergency planning. - Enforcement & Cost Recovery:
Initiate enforcement recommendations, issue Short‑Form Penalties up to $5,000, support cost recovery actions, and testify in administrative or legal proceedings as needed. - Team Leadership, Training & Readiness:
Provide training, mentoring, scheduling, equipment readiness oversight, HAZWOPER compliance tracking, and ensure readiness of personnel and response assets. - Equipment, Vehicle & Instrument Management:
Manage operation, calibration, maintenance, and safe use of response equipment, vehicles, boats, and monitoring instrumentation. - Documentation, Reporting & Data Analysis:
Prepare incident reports, regulatory records, waste tracking documents, enforcement documentation, and support regional data analysis and report preparation.
- Incident Command and Emergency Response Leadership:
Ability to serve as an initial Incident Commander or State On‑Scene Coordinator, applying Incident Command System (ICS) principles to manage complex oil and hazardous materials incidents involving multiple agencies and competing priorities. - Advanced Spill Response…
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