Picking a DEQ-licensed contractor in a small Eugene market

Lane County has a relatively small pool of DEQ-licensed providers, which works in your favor: the strong ones are known, and a couple of local questions tell you quickly whether you are talking to one.

Updated 2026-06-01 8 min readDecommissioning

The Eugene-area licensed-provider community is small enough that DEQ Western Region staff know the regulars by name. That is an advantage when you are hiring, because reputation and track record are legible here in a way they are not in a bigger market. The job is to confirm the license and then ask the two or three questions that separate a busy local specialist from an occasional operator.

The license is the gate; the local-volume questions are the tie-breaker. For the rules behind the license, see the Eugene DEQ rules guide; for the work, the removal pillar.

Start with the DEQ license

Oregon requires a DEQ Heating Oil Tank Service Provider license for this work. It is distinct from a CCB contractor license and from any excavation or hauling credential. A licensed provider is the only party who can file the Decommissioning Report that closes your file with the state.

  • 01.License number in writing on the proposal. Then verify it against DEQ's public provider list.
  • 02.Active and current. Confirm standing, not just that a number exists.
  • 03.No license means no Report, which means no DEQ record and trouble at resale.

The local-community questions that tell you the most

In a small market, two questions cut through quickly because they are hard to fake:

  • 01.How many HOTIP claims have you filed in the last year? A provider with current HOTIP volume has carried contamination cases through reimbursement recently, which is exactly the experience you want if your dig turns up a release. In Lane County the providers who handle this smoothly are a known short list.
  • 02.Have you worked with DEQ Western Region recently? A provider whose Reports clear the local office on first read, rather than bouncing for revision, is one the staff trust. Ask for recent Lane County jobs.
  • 03.UO-rental experience, if you are a landlord. Multi-unit and rooming-house configurations near campus carry eligibility quirks; a provider who works rentals knows them.

Note

Because the licensed pool is small, a provider who cannot point to recent Lane County work or any HOTIP filings is telling you something. The local specialists do this constantly; an operator who treats Eugene as an occasional out-of-area job is a different proposition.

Insurance and a quote that is actually fixed

The same fundamentals apply here as anywhere, written clearly:

  • 01.Insurance certificate. General liability as the floor, pollution liability where a release is plausible. Lenders often look for a million in each.
  • 02.Fixed price, not "starting from." A local specialist knows the cost of a standard Eugene tank. Open-ended pricing tends to climb.
  • 03.Written sampling plan. Sample count, the (Portland-area) lab, the analyte panel, and turnaround, in writing.

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Common Questions

Hiring: Common Questions

How do I verify a Eugene oil tank contractor is DEQ-licensed?+

Ask for the DEQ Heating Oil Tank Service Provider license number in writing and check it against DEQ's public provider list, confirming it is active. A CCB contractor license is not the same and does not authorise filing your Decommissioning Report. In a small market like Lane County, the licensed specialists are easy to confirm.

Why ask about HOTIP filings when hiring?+

Because it is a quick proxy for real experience. A provider with recent HOTIP claims has carried contamination cases through state reimbursement, which is the hard part if your decommissioning uncovers a release. In Lane County the providers who do this routinely are a known short list, and the question surfaces them fast.

Does it matter that Eugene has few licensed providers?+

It works in your favor. A small pool means track records are legible, DEQ Western Region staff know the regulars, and a provider's standing is easy to check. The flip side is to be wary of out-of-area operators treating Eugene as an occasional job, since local familiarity with the offices and labs genuinely speeds things up.

I own a UO-area rental. Does that change who I should hire?+

Prefer a provider with rental and multi-unit experience. Converted homes and rooming-house setups near campus carry HOTIP eligibility quirks and tenant-coordination needs that a landlord-experienced provider already knows how to handle.

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