Proposal for: Amendment of the Soil Pollution Regulation, which would start by simply deleting the last amendment of 2011 and giving effect to the 2008 version of the Regulation. http://www.uradni-list.si/1/objava.jsp?urlid=201161&stevilka=2893. In practice, there are many problems in the management and reuse of excavated material, especially for smaller construction companies, which often resort to illegal dumping due to the complexity involved. Solutions must be found in simplifying the rules and increasing the responsibility of users, i.e. engineers involved in the preparation of the documentation on the management of raw materials and the owners of the surplus material. Because bureaucrats have difficulty controlling on the ground where all excavated material is dumped and/or mixed with other waste, they have come up with an almost total blockade on the use and handling of these materials. Excavated material, which is classified as waste, can be introduced into the ground once environmental consent (ARSO) has been granted. Up to this point, there are hardly any problems, but the worst bureaucratic madness is that for such excavation, the agency's clerks require a chemical analysis carried out by authorised laboratories, and the analysis is valid for 6 months. This analysis of the material costs the investor from 2000 EURO onwards, and only 4 institutions in Slovenia carry this out. http://www.arso.gov.si/varstvo%20okolja/tla/podatki/Emisije_v_tla%20APRIL%202013.pdf To further encourage anarchy in the environment, the officials at the department have come up with a correction to the 2011 regulation, which, as I have already mentioned, considers a chemical analysis valid if it is not more than 6 months old. So a pile of stones and soil changes chemical composition in 6 months, according to the bureaucrats' understanding. The influence of the lobby from the laboratories? http://zakonodaja.gov.si/rpsi/r01/predpis_URED4791.html If we want to use a few truckloads of soil from a heap on a building site for planning in a vineyard, it takes at least 4000 EURO and more than half a year.