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43 POTENTIALLY RESPONSIBLE PARTIES AND SUPERFUND-AN ANALYSIS OF ISSUES Michael D. LaGrega, Associate Professor Department of Civil Engineering Bucknell University Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 17837 Allen E. Ertel, Partner Reed Smith Shaw and McClay Williamsport, Pennsylvania 17701 James H. Dougherty, Vice President Roy F. Weston, Inc. West Chester, Pennsylvania 19380 INTRODUCTION The cleanup of abandoned hazardous waste sites under the Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA) [1] has been the subject of much controversy over the past several years. Environmentalists and legislators feel that insufficient progress has been made at cleaning up the nations abandoned sites. Superfund was established as a $1.6 billion fund wherein abandoned hazardous waste sites could be cleaned up by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency using monies from the fund. The original law was intended that EPA would recover costs from potentially responsible parties (PRPs), i.e., industries that generated or handled the waste or owned or operated the site. The process is initiated by a site being evaluated as severe enough to be placed on a National Priorities List (NPL). The site then undergoes a two stage engineering study to produce a remedial investigation/feasibility study (RI/FS) [2]. Based on this information, the Environmental Protection Agency issues a record of decision (ROD) mandating the exact type of cleanup appropriate to the site. A contract is then issued through the U.S. Army Corp. of Engineers for design of the selected alternative and implementation. Section 106(a) of the Act enables the EPA to undertake enforcement actions against PRPs which include: 1. Consent orders (a legal document negotiated between EPA and some or all of the PRPs) 2. Administrative orders enforceable through fines of $5,000 per day 3. Seeking an injunction through the district court 4. Litigation including treble damages for the total cost of cleanup Where PRPs have been identified, EPA attempts to negotiate a consent order wherein a group of PRPs will take over the site and conduct the cleanup. The purpose of this paper is to overview problems and issues associated with the Superfund program as they apply to potentially responsible parties. BRIEF HISTORY OF SUPERFUND CERCLA was enacted to clean up abandoned hazardous waste sites and to pay for damages to natural resources. In enacting this statute, Congress was reacting to public pressure brought on by incidents such as the Love Canal. Additionally Congress wanted to bring order to what was perceived as redundant and inadequate federal laws. CERCLA was passed in the closing hours of the 1980 Congressional Session. Even though the purpose of the law was clear, the Superfund Bills had been revised and changed extensively during House and Senate hearings and markup sessions. The final version, however, was a compromise put together by various Senators. No conference committee reports were filed about this compromise. 370
Object Description
Purdue Identification Number | ETRIWC198643 |
Title | Potentially responsible parties and superfund : an analysis of issues |
Author |
LaGrega, Michael D. Ertel, Allen E. Dougherty, J. H. (James H.) |
Date of Original | 1986 |
Conference Title | Proceedings of the 41st Industrial Waste Conference |
Conference Front Matter (copy and paste) | http://e-archives.lib.purdue.edu/u?/engext,37786 |
Extent of Original | p. 370-376 |
Collection Title | Engineering Technical Reports Collection, Purdue University |
Repository | Purdue University Libraries |
Rights Statement | Digital object copyright Purdue University. All rights reserved. |
Language | eng |
Type (DCMI) | text |
Format | JP2 |
Date Digitized | 2009-07-13 |
Capture Device | Fujitsu fi-5650C |
Capture Details | ScandAll 21 |
Resolution | 300 ppi |
Color Depth | 8 bit |
Description
Title | page 370 |
Collection Title | Engineering Technical Reports Collection, Purdue University |
Repository | Purdue University Libraries |
Rights Statement | Digital copyright Purdue University. All rights reserved. |
Language | eng |
Type (DCMI) | text |
Format | JP2 |
Capture Device | Fujitsu fi-5650C |
Capture Details | ScandAll 21 |
Transcript | 43 POTENTIALLY RESPONSIBLE PARTIES AND SUPERFUND-AN ANALYSIS OF ISSUES Michael D. LaGrega, Associate Professor Department of Civil Engineering Bucknell University Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 17837 Allen E. Ertel, Partner Reed Smith Shaw and McClay Williamsport, Pennsylvania 17701 James H. Dougherty, Vice President Roy F. Weston, Inc. West Chester, Pennsylvania 19380 INTRODUCTION The cleanup of abandoned hazardous waste sites under the Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA) [1] has been the subject of much controversy over the past several years. Environmentalists and legislators feel that insufficient progress has been made at cleaning up the nations abandoned sites. Superfund was established as a $1.6 billion fund wherein abandoned hazardous waste sites could be cleaned up by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency using monies from the fund. The original law was intended that EPA would recover costs from potentially responsible parties (PRPs), i.e., industries that generated or handled the waste or owned or operated the site. The process is initiated by a site being evaluated as severe enough to be placed on a National Priorities List (NPL). The site then undergoes a two stage engineering study to produce a remedial investigation/feasibility study (RI/FS) [2]. Based on this information, the Environmental Protection Agency issues a record of decision (ROD) mandating the exact type of cleanup appropriate to the site. A contract is then issued through the U.S. Army Corp. of Engineers for design of the selected alternative and implementation. Section 106(a) of the Act enables the EPA to undertake enforcement actions against PRPs which include: 1. Consent orders (a legal document negotiated between EPA and some or all of the PRPs) 2. Administrative orders enforceable through fines of $5,000 per day 3. Seeking an injunction through the district court 4. Litigation including treble damages for the total cost of cleanup Where PRPs have been identified, EPA attempts to negotiate a consent order wherein a group of PRPs will take over the site and conduct the cleanup. The purpose of this paper is to overview problems and issues associated with the Superfund program as they apply to potentially responsible parties. BRIEF HISTORY OF SUPERFUND CERCLA was enacted to clean up abandoned hazardous waste sites and to pay for damages to natural resources. In enacting this statute, Congress was reacting to public pressure brought on by incidents such as the Love Canal. Additionally Congress wanted to bring order to what was perceived as redundant and inadequate federal laws. CERCLA was passed in the closing hours of the 1980 Congressional Session. Even though the purpose of the law was clear, the Superfund Bills had been revised and changed extensively during House and Senate hearings and markup sessions. The final version, however, was a compromise put together by various Senators. No conference committee reports were filed about this compromise. 370 |
Resolution | 300 ppi |
Color Depth | 8 bit |
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