National Reach. Locally Served. ITAR Compliant
City of Nicasio Law Enforcement Support Services
Environmental Logistics Inc. has a reliable history of supporting Nicasio law enforcement with hazardous waste collection, controlled substance destruction and evidence storage. We provide DEA and other agencies with trained and cleared emergency responders year round in Nicasio and throughout Marin County.
Most trusted Nicasio Emergency Response and Law Enforcement Support Services Provider
Providing Nicasio crime scene cleaning operations, car accident cleanup, meth lab cleanup and drug destruction to law enforcement agencies for over 30 years. Experienced in sensitive scene support such as schools, suicides, shipping containers and illegal drug production laboratories.
ELI’s emergency response professionals are trained at working around flammables, explosive gases, poisons, toxins, acids and bases and have all the identification tools necessary to identify and evaluate hazards on site.
Our } lab packing procedures allow for quick sorting and identification and segregation of waste materials, speeding the procedure of cleanup and evidence segregation and cataloging.
Marin County Law Enforcement Hazmat Service Experience
- Fentanyl, methamphetamine and PCP Labs
- Illegal cannabis grow labs
- Illegal cannabis processing operations
- Highway incidents
- Tank and pipeline spills and overflows
- Leaking drums
- Mercury spills
- Biological and infectious materials
- Ship groundings
- Airplane crash sites
- Train derailments and accidents
- Hydrocarbon, chemical and hazardous
- Material spills
- Confined Space Entry and Rescue
- Natural disasters
- Emergency chemical lab packs
- DEA, Homeland Security, and Customs and Border Protection incidents
- Illegal shipment cleaning and waste
- incineration.
- Fires and spills in warehouses and distribution centers
- Abandoned waste cleanup
- Drug Disposal
- Decontamination of chemical spills
- Homeless encampment cleanup
- Bilge Water Disposal
- Biohazard Disinfection
- Bulk Sanitizer Disposal
- Chemical Disposal
- Clean Harbors
- Emergency Spill Response
- Firefighting Foam Disposal
- Hazardous Waste Management
- Homeless Encampment Clean-out
- Law Enforcement Support Services
- Oily Water Disposal
- Scrap Metal Recycling
- Vacuum Truck Services
- Waste-to-energy (WtE)
Nicasio ( ni-KAH-see-oh; Spanish for “Nicasius”) is a census designated place in Marin County, California. It is located 8 miles (13 km) west-southwest of Novato, at an elevation of 194 feet (59 m).
Within the Nicasio area are about 250 homes located on approximately 350 parcels. Much of the land is still used for agricultural purposes including beef and dairy cattle grazing, small-scale truck farming (including organic farming), and the raising of forage. Several small vineyards have also been recently established. Next to Rancho Nicasio within the town of Nicasio is an organic farm, AllStar Organics, owned and operated by Janet Brown and Marty Jacobson; Janet is the vice-president of Marin Organic, Marin County’s non-profit organic association. Just north of Nicasio Reservoir is Fairlea Ranch, where pedigree longhorn cattle are raised. The most significant non-agricultural business within Nicasio is George Lucas’ Skywalker Ranch, a part of Lucasfilm Ltd. Population estimates for the area range from about 600 to about 900 people. According to a 2004 Forbes magazine real estate survey, Nicasio is the 23rd most expensive zip code in the US. Nicasio has the highest per capita income ($211,993) of any census-designated place in California.
Centrally located in this area is the small village of Nicasio itself. The village is in 415/628. The town center has a post office (zip code 94946), a general store, a tiny real estate office, St. Mary’s Church (established in 1867), Nicasio Volunteer Fire Department, a baseball field located in the town square, Rancho Nicasio, which is a bar/restaurant/live music establishment, a Druid’s Hall, as well as a number of private homes. The town was founded in the early 19th century to support local agricultural, timber, and fishing activities. The town once contained the twenty-two-room Hotel Nicasio, which opened in 1867 but burned down in December 1940. Just north of town on Nicasio Valley Road is a beautiful red-painted one-room schoolhouse that opened in 1871. The building is currently a listed historical landmark. The Nicasio post office opened in 1871, closed in 1899, and re-opened in 1900.
In 2008 Dewey Livingston wrote a detailed history of the region, Nicasio: The Historic Valley at the Center of Marin.
Nicasio Wikipedia Page