"The number of level 5+ Heroes required to participate in Hero League has been increased from 14 to 16" Third Ban: "a third Hero ban has been added to draft modes", with two bans during the initial ban phase. Volskaya Foundry: "Channelling to enter the Triglav Protector is no longer interrupted by damage"Īrmor changes: "the game will apply only the highest (or lowest) amount of Armor to a Hero at any given time" (i.e. Radius reductions for most heroes "to improve visual clarity when many heroes are on-screen" Mercenaries: Bosses and major camps on Hanamura and Volskaya now flagged as Elite "Elite Mercenary Camps are Unstoppable & Unbribable" XP changes: Passive XP increased 15%, destroying Towers gives 50% less XP, defeating defending Mercenaries gives 100% more XPĬatapults: "when a team destroys a Fort, they'll now gain a Catapult in every 3rd Minion wave" catapult damage, splash size, range, and health will scale over time Please contact our Senior Vice President of Operations, Michael Russo, with any questions.Fort and Keep XP: "removed all Experience earned from destroying a Fort or Keep.now provide your team with a stacking 20% increase in Passively-earned Experience" The Stakeholder Process and various committees function to continue the growth and success of the LSRP Program and address general program issues, rules and guidance. He participated in the Heating Oil Tank System Rules and Guidance committee. Whitman’s own Michael Russo, Senior Vice President of Operations, was an acting stakeholder of the NJDEP Site Remediation Program’s Stakeholder Process.
The number of base samples required from the final excavation of impacted soil from an unregulated tank release is based on the size of the underground storage tank (not the size of the excavation).In certain circumstances, up to 15 cubic yards of soil that exceeds the NJDEP standards can remain below a residential structure under a HOTS deed notice.However, the final rule was amended requiring the testing for TICs. The July 2017 proposed rules eliminated the requirement to test for TICs in ground water. One of the main changes that the regulated community has been monitoring during the rule making has been the elimination of the requirement to test for Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) and Base Neutral Tentatively Identified Compounds (TICs) in ground water. At the end of the process, the NJDEP will continue to issue a “no further action” (NFA) letter to the responsible party.
#TANK BUSTER VALAA HOTS PROFESSIONAL#
The work performed under this rule can be performed by a NJDEP Subsurface Evaluator or a Licensed Site Remediation Professional (LSRP). To support the residential responsible parties, the NJDEP consolidated and has provided prescriptive requirements for ease of use and understanding. The majority of HOTS are associated with residential properties. HOTS is defined as a residential above ground heating oil tank system, small non-residential above ground heating oil tank system (capacity of 2,000 gallons or less) and an unregulated heating oil tank system (underground storage tanks). On August 6, 2018, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) adopted new rules governing the administrative and technical requirements for the remediation of a discharge of heating oil from Heating Oil Tank Systems (HOTS) (N.J.A.C.