Environmental Liability 101

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Environmental Liability 101

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Environmental Liability 101 History lesson In the Good ole days History lesson 1976: RCRA Resource Conservation and Recovery Act Rules for Hazardous ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Liability 101


1
Environmental Liability 101
2
History lesson
  • In the Good ole days

Waste stored and disposed of according to the
best practice of the time.
3
History lesson
Federal Laws
  • 1976 RCRA
  • Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
  • Rules for Hazardous Waste management phased
    in over 10 year period
  • Cradle to Grave concept
  • 1980 CERCLA
  • Comprehensive Environmental Response,
    Compensation, and Liability Act

SUPERFUND
4
CERCLA SUPERFUND
  • Funded by tax on chemicals
  • Set procedures to deal with Uncontrolled Waste
    Sites
  • Defined Hazardous Substances, Pollutants and
    Contaminants
  • Established Liability for releases .
  • Strict, Joint, and Several .
  • SECTION (107) Liability provisions
    incorporated into SC Hazardous Waste Management
    Act

5
Uncontrolled Waste Site
  • Any property where a release of Hazardous
    Substances, Pollutants or Contaminants was not
    permitted by RCRA (or other Federal Laws)
  • Releases before 1980 predate RCRA regs.
  • Releases after 1980 still occurring because small
    quantities / types of waste not regulated
  • Also uncontrolled if federal permit not fulfilled

RCRA regulates large hazardous waste operations
6
Hazardous Substances
  • Hazardous Substance defined as anything listed in
    RCRA or 6 other laws.
  • 800 listed substances
  • Hazardous Substances not the same as Hazardous
    Wastes

All Haz. Waste are Haz. Substances
7
Hazardous Substances
  • RCRA Hazardous Waste requires certain
    concentrations amounts of material.

CERCLA Hazardous Substances can be any amount or
concentration
8
CERCLA also includes Pollutants and Contaminants
  • "Contaminant" includes, but is not limited to,
    any element, substance, compound, or mixture,
    including disease-causing agents, which after
    release into the environment and upon exposure,
    ingestion, inhalation, or assimilation into any
    organism, either directly from the environment or
    indirectly by ingestion through food chains, will
    or may reasonably be anticipated to cause death,
    disease, behavioral abnormalities, cancer,
    genetic mutation, physiological malfunctions,
    including malfunctions in reproduction, or
    physical deformations, in organisms or their
    offspring "contaminant" does not include
    petroleum, including crude oil or any fraction of
    crude oil, which is not otherwise specifically
    listed or designated as a hazardous substance
    under subparagraphs (A) through (F) of paragraph
    (14) of CERCLA, Section 101, 42 U.S.C. Section
    9601, et seq. and does not

9
Petroleum Exclusion
  • Not a Hazardous Substance or Contaminant
  • Automotive, heating, cooking fuels
  • Natural gas , crude oil, etc, unless RCRA-listed

10
Hazardous Substances, Pollutants Contaminants
  • Distinction Hazardous Substance and Pollutant
    Contaminant not important for todays
    discussion
  • Substances of concern Almost everything,
    except petroleum
  • Usually NOT animal septic wastes
  • But, can include toxic byproductsor other
    substances contained in these wastes

11
Releases
  • Spills, drips, leaks, dumping, vapor emissions,
    waste water discharges,etc.

No release as long as everything stays inside
the building or container
12
Releases According to Superfund
  • Not naturally occurring substances
  • unless higher concentrations due to human
    activities
  • Typically not farm chemicals in normal usage
  • But pesticides can be addressed
  • Not discharges to the environment under a
    Federal permit
  • DHEC issues permits for many Federal programs

13
CERCLA
Compensation Liability Act
  • Strict, Joint and Several Liability
  • Codified by reference to other laws
  • Upheld by 25 years of court rulings
  • CERCLA Liability is Highly Contentious
  • Structure encourages suits and countersuits to
    determine who pays what.

14
Strict, Joint Several Liability
Strict The assessment of liability for damages
without requiring proof of negligence.
Responsible Parties are financially liable even
if the release was legal at the time.
15
Strict, Joint Several Liability
  • Joint and Several Parties who contribute to a
    site's pollution are each liable as if they alone
    polluted that site
  • Does not require apportioned costs based on the
    amount of involvement w/ site.
  • If multiple Responsible Parties, Agency can
    recover ALL costs from any of them.
  • Responsible parties can drag in anyother
    responsible party to force payment of share of
    costs.

16
Potentially Responsible Parties
PRP
Regardless of degree of involvement, any PRP can
be held 100 liable for the site.
  • Same as the State VCP Responsible Parties (RP)
  • Anyone (person/ company) connected in any way to
    causing the release of Hazardous Substances,
    Contaminants or Pollutants
  • Generators of the Substance
  • Transported and Arranged for Disposal at the
    Site
  • Owned the property where the release occurred
  • Parent or Subsidiary of any other PRP
  • And

17
You might bea PRP if
  • You acquire property anytime AFTER the release

Pottery Barn Rule You Break It, You Buy
It. CERCLA RP Rule If it was ever Broke, You
Pay.
18
Not an PRP Renters
  • Renting Property Does not make You a PRP Unless
  • Operate Processes that lead to Releases
  • Or
  • Make Management decisions about the Release

Analogy A landlord does not charge you for the
damages done by A previous tenant
19
PRPs Getting caught
  • We probably know about your release or we will
    find out about it
  • Employees, Anonymous sources, etc.
  • State law Must report lab results from
    groundwater samples and borings. (Any hole
    deeper than it is wide.)
  • Environmental testing on Adjacent properties.

20
PRPs Consequences
  • Once release reported, either
  • enforcement action to force testing and clean-up
    OR
  • Use of State/ Federal Funds to do the work
  • Based on priority of site, but eventually.
  • Followed by COST RECOVERY ACTION

By Law, can recover 3X the amount spent
21
How Not to be a PRP
  • Old way Run away from the property

22
Non Responsible Parties
  • 3 categories of NRP
  • Innocent Landowner
  • Contiguous Landowner
  • Bona Fide Prospective Purchaser
  • Cannot have affiliation with PRPs
  • Direct / Indirect Familial
  • Contractual / Corporate / Financial

NRP
23
Innocent Landowner NRP
  • Someone who acquires property without any
    reason to know it had contamination release
  • Almost impossible defense to establish today

24
Contiguous Landowner NRP
  • Owns property contaminated by the substances
    moving onto or under their property
  • Have to take reasonablesteps to prevent
  • Category does not apply if there is reason to
    know about contamination prior to purchase

25
Bona Fide Potential Purchaser NRP
  • Applies to Property Purchased after January 11,
    2002
  • Must meet criteria set by Law
  • All releases before purchase
  • Appropriate care to stop continuing/ threatened
    releases, human/ environmental exposure
  • Cooperate with RPs or enforcement response
    actions
  • All Appropriate Inquiry

26
All Appropriate Inquiry
  • Demonstrates that the previous ownership, use,
    and environmental conditions were properly
    evaluated before acquisition
  • Standard set by the EPA
  • All Appropriate Inquiries Final Rule
  • Effective November 1, 2006
  • Until then, can use ASTM E1527-05 Phase I
    Environmental Site Assessment Process

27
All Appropriate Inquiry
  • Must do prior to acquiring property
  • Must be conducted or updated within 1 year prior
    to acquisition
  • Some parts must be updated within 6 months
  • Exemption for Non-Commercial/ Non-Government
    buying residential for residential use
  • Site Inspection Title Search
  • Further work if Site Inspection finds something

28
All Appropriate Inquiry
  • Requires an Environmental Professional must
  • Interview past and present owners, operators and
    occupants
  • review historical sources of information
  • review federal, state, tribal and local
    government records
  • visually inspect facility and adjoining
    properties

29
All Appropriate Inquiry (cont.)
  • Environmental Professional must interview
    adjacent landowners if the property is abandoned.
  • Buyer has responsibility to
  • have searches for environmental cleanup liens
  • Find commonly known or reasonably ascertainable
    information.

30
All Appropriate Inquiry (cont.)
  • Must have an assessment of the relationship of
    the purchase price to the fair market value of
    the property,if the property was not
    contaminated

If its too good to be true
31
Windfall liens
  • It is perfectly OK to buy Suspect Property at
    cheap prices
  • IF EPA or State has spent money on the site,
  • May be subject to Windfall Lien
  • Repayment of funds to government
  • Negotiate with EPA or State for discount on the
    lien before buying the site

32
Liability Protection
  • If you are a NRP
  • Innocent Landowner
  • Contiguous Property Owner
  • Bona Fide Prospective Purchaser
  • US EPA No Agreement with the Agency is
    Necessary
  • No CERCLA Liability under Federal Statutes

33
Liability Protection
  • Under SC law, Not Absolved of Liability even if
    meet EPAs definition of NRP
  • Take your chances
  • Purchase Property and hope that the State never
    comes calling

ORApply for a Voluntary Cleanup Contract
34
Brownfields
  • Are real properties, for which the expansion,
    redevelopment, or reuse may be complicated by the
    presence or potential presence of a hazardous
    substance, pollutant, or contaminant.
  • US EPA

Any property with known or suspected
environmental contamination can be considered a
Brownfield under SCs VCP (Except for
Petroleum-Only Sites).
35
Voluntary Cleanup Contracts
VCC
  • Under a VCC, you agree to do some environmental
    work on the property
  • Usually filling in data gaps
  • Sometimes waste removal or capping
  • The State accepts your work for Cost
    Contribution

We reach a settlement accepting your
environmental costs as payment of potential
liability
36
VCC Benefits
  • Liability Protections
  • from State Superfund Actions
  • Third-Party Liability
  • Cost Contribution Protection from RPs lawsuits
  • Benefits transferable to new owner
  • (not an RP)

37
State Superfund Liability Protection
  • If there was a release of Hazardous Substances,
    DHEC will not pursue NRP for
  • Future Response Costs (unless NRP causes it)

38
Cost Contribution Protection
  • DHEC will notify all known PRPs for the property
    that the State is considering a Settlement with
    NRP.
  • PRPs have 30 days to file objection, otherwise
    they forfeit all rights to seek cost
    contributions from the NRP
  • Objection must show that NRP is fraudulent in
    obtaining the contract.

39
Third Party Liability Protection
  • Third Parties Adjacent property owners and
    anyone potentially affected by the release
  • Under State law, NRPs are not liable to third
    party claims effective with 2005 contracts
  • Requires that NRPs conduct environmental work on
    the property

40
Liability Protections
Disclaimers
  • Protections only apply if NRPs complete all terms
    of the contract and are issued a CERTIFICATE OF
    COMPLETION.

The Department has discretion whether to enter
into any VCC.
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