For those who are going to be removing or working on fuel tanks, or changing out fittings, here's a suggestion: be VERY careful.
The fuel/air mixture inside gas tanks can be explosive, which is why spark arrestors are required. Although the tank is plastic, not metal, it's still capable of providing everything but the spark needed for an explosion. I would be particularly concerned about purging the tanks with air (which can introduce a static discharge to an accidentally grounded fitting), or sucking them out with a shop vac (which can introduce a spark in the vac, and a flame which would travel back to the tank).
I don't know if there is an accepted procedure for making a plastic tank safe to work on, but if you have any reason to believe that the vapors in the tank could possibly be ignited, you might consider filling the tank to overflow with water, and then removing only enough water to allow you to do the work. Once the work is completed, remove the rest of the water. The reason for not removing all the water at once is that plastic absorbs and is itself a source of vapors, and that sometimes you think you’ve purged all the gas out, but have managed to miss a little pocket. If you decide to drain all the water at once, you're still going to be way safer than had you not put the water in the tank to begin with. Draining the water onto an absorbant pad will catch any fuel or "gunk" that the water removes from the tank. If any water remains in the tank afterwards, it can be removed by letting the tank sit in the sun, or via the fuel/water separator.
I once did work for the wife of a poor fellow who managed to ignite what he thought had been purged from a tank. He hasn’t been doing boating, or much of anything, ever since.