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Environmental Management Seminar Legal Issues in Redevelopment

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Title: Environmental Management Seminar Legal Issues in Redevelopment


1
Environmental Management Seminar Legal Issues
in Redevelopment
  • Montclair State University
  • Prepared by Patrick T. Mottola, Esq.
  • April 2005
  • This presentation and materials do not constitute
    and are not legal advice

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
2
Presentation Topics
  • Liability Statutes
  • Brownfields Redevelopment
  • Natural Resource Damages

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
3
Main NJ Remediation Programs
  • New Jersey Spill Compensation and Control Act
    (Spill Act), N.J.S.A. 5810-23.11
  • Industrial Site Recovery Act (ISRA), N.J.S.A.
    131K-6
  • Brownfield and Contaminated Sites Act
    (Brownfields), N.J.S.A. 5810B-1

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
4
Industrial Site Recovery Act
  • Predecessor statute Environmental Cleanup
    Responsibility Act (ECRA) effective December
    31, 1983.
  • ISRA amended and renamed ECRA, June 16, 1993

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
5
ISRA Overview
  • Imposes cleanup pre-conditions upon the sale,
    transfer, or closure of Industrial Establishments
    having certain North American Industrial
    Classification System (NAICS) numbers that are
    involved with hazardous substances or wastes.

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
6
ISRA Compliance
  • Requires Notice and
  • Prohibition on consummating transactions until
    receipt of NJDEP Approval, which ultimately takes
    the form of a No Further Action letter (NFA)

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
7
Obligation to Comply
  • In a sale, it is the obligation of the Seller.
  • Joint and several obligation of the owner and
    operator.
  • Often landlord and tenant.
  • Could involve operators that do not have tenancy
    agreements, such as licensee, easement holder, or
    even trespasser.

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
8
New Jerseys Spill Act
  • The foundation of NJ Environmental Law
  • Enacted in 1976 and substantially amended in 1993
  • Addresses Liability for releases of hazardous
    substances, broadly defined
  • Creates a Spill Fund for innocent parties that
    have been victimized by a discharge

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
9
Spill Act Liability
  • Liability is imposed on a person in any way
    responsible for a discharge of hazardous
    substances to water or land
  • The list of Hazardous Substances is found at
    N.J.A.C. 71E Appendix A
  • A discharge means a release to the lands or
    waters of the state
  • Any quantity is required for reporting obligation

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
10
Who is in any way responsible?
  • The current property owner
  • The current operator
  • Former owners and operators at the time of the
    past discharge
  • Intermediary owners/operators NOT responsible if
    contaminated deemed to be in passive migration
    stage

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
11
What kind of liability?
  • Strict liability (attaches with no fault or
    causation element required)
  • Joint and several (attaches to all found in any
    way responsible)
  • Retroactive (attaches to past actors)

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
12
Contribution and Cost Recovery
  • The State may seek cost recovery for cleanup
    expenditures
  • Private parties may seek contribution from other
    parties for contribution to cleanup costs

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
13
Spill Act Defenses
  • Discharge was the result of
  • Act of God
  • Act of war or sabotage
  • Compliance with permit
  • Innocent Purchaser
  • Reliance on previously issued No Further Action
    Letter

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
14
CERCLA
  • Federal Law
  • Comprehensive Environmental Responsibility
    Cleanup Liability Act, 42 U.S.C.A. 9601 to 9675
  • Enacted primarily in response to the Love Canal
    disaster
  • A tax on the transfer of chemicals is put into a
    special governmentally-managed account called the
    Superfund

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
15
CERCLA
  • Discharges of hazardous substances to water, land
    or air
  • Quantity depends on the nature of the substance
    but may be 1 to 10 pounds or 100 to 1000 pounds

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
16
CERCLA Liable Parties
  • Current owner or operator
  • Former owner or operator
  • Arrangers/Transporters

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
17
CERCLA - Defenses
  • Discharge was the result of
  • Act of God
  • Act of war or sabotage
  • Compliance with permit
  • Act or omission of a third party not in privity
    with the party
  • Bona Fide Purchaser

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
18
Liability Statutes Common Threads
  • Impose liability for cleanup on the parties that
    are best-suited to clean up
  • Put the liability on the property itself (in
    rem)
  • Result many lingering cleanups, abandoned
    sites, and development of green space
  • Creation of upside down properties cleanup
    costs higher than property values

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
19
1993 Amendments ECRA and the Spill Act
  • After 10 years of ECRA, the statute was revised
    and re-named ISRA
  • Spear-headed by State Senator Hank McNamara and
    Assemblyman Jim McGreevey
  • Introduced expedited compliance procedures to
    ISRA
  • Introduced some liability relief by amending the
    Spill Act to include an Innocent Purchaser defense

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
20
Spill Act Innocent Purchaser Defense
  • Purchase the property after September 14, 1993
    (the amendment effective date)
  • Perform due diligence (defined as a Preliminary
    Assessment and Site Investigation)
  • Do not find any evidence of discharges
  • Later found to be WRONG
  • Give notice to NJDEP when the discharge is
    discovered

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
21
CERCLA Bona Fide Purchaser
  • Applies to parties that knowingly acquire
    contaminated property after 1/11/2002
  • Buyer must undertake all appropriate inquiry
    and appropriate care
  • Perform an ASTM Phase I Environmental Site
    Assessment

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
22
1998 Amendments to the Spill Act and Creation of
the Brownfields Act
  • Introduced incentives for the redevelopment of
    abandoned or underutilized properties
  • Liability protection
  • Reimbursement of remedial costs
  • Introduced the Covenant Not to Sue for No
    Further Action Letters (NFA)

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
23
Brownfields Program
  • A brownfield is an unused or under-utilized
    former industrial property
  • Encourages revitalization of these contaminated
    sites
  • Provides liability protection and financial
    incentives to developers who agree to remediate
    and redevelop
  • NJ and Federal Programs

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
24
New Jersey Brownfields Program
  • Brownfields are any former or current commercial
    or industrial site that is currently vacant or
    underutilized and on which there has been, or
    there is suspected to have been, a discharge of a
    contaminant

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
25
Reasons to favor Brownfields Redevelopment
  • Smart Growth reduce sprawl to greenfields,
    which are limited
  • Preserved space
  • Pinelands Preservation Area
  • Highlands Preservation Area
  • Revitalize urban centers and unused/abandoned
    areas

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
26
Voluntary Cleanup Program
  • Cleanup due to market, rather than government,
    forces
  • Memorandum of Agreement (MOA)
  • Contract between a party and the NJDEP
  • A brownfields developer must enter into an MOA

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
27
Brownfields Liability Protection
  • If the developer enters into an MOA before taking
    title to the property, it is shielded from
    liability from third-party tortfeasors
  • Is it constitutional? Not tested.

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
28
Brownfields Reimbursement Fund
  • Allows reimbursement up to 75 of remedial costs
    once an NFA is issued, so long as the projected
    tax revenue can support the claim
  • Most common forms of taxes
  • Sales tax on building materials
  • Sales tax on retail sales
  • Corporation business tax
  • This changes the polluter-pays game

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
29
Brownfield Development Area (BDA)
  • NJDEP works with selected communities affected by
    multiple brownfield sites to develop
    comprehensive plans to allow for a coordinated
    effort for remediation and reuse
  • Streamlines the state oversight procedures

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
30
Natural Resource Damages (NRD)
  • Compensation for lost use, over and above the
    cost of remediation
  • Public Trust Doctrine and Parens Patriae
  • Spill Act, CERCLA and other environmental
    statutes create statutory rights for trustees to
    recover NRD

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
31
Public Trust Doctrine
  • Found in Roman Civil Law
  • Submerged lands are preserved for public use in
    navigation, fishing and recreation, and the
    state, as the trustee for the people, bears
    responsibility of preserving and protecting these
    public rights

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
32
Parens Patriae
  • Refers to the role of the state as sovereign and
    guardian other those who cannot care for
    themselves
  • A concept of standing to protect interests such
    as health, comfort and welfare of the people,
    interstate water rights, and more recently,
    groundwater

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
33
NRD - Trustees
  • State Government Commissioner of the NJDEP
    (delegated to NJDEPs Office of Natural Resource
    Restoration)
  • Federal Government
  • Secretary of the US Department of the Interior
    (US Fish and Wildlife Service, US National Park
    Service)
  • Secretary of the US Department of Commerce
    (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
  • Secretaries of the US Departments of Defense,
    Energy and Agriculture
  • Native American Tribes

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
34
NRD Typical Media
  • Both the state and feds are trustees for
  • Surface water
  • Sediments
  • Wetlands
  • NJ is the sole trustee for groundwater

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
35
NRD Five Key Terms
  • Natural resources
  • Natural resource services
  • Natural resource injuries
  • NRD
  • Restoration

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
36
NRD Natural Resources
  • Includes all land, biota, fish, shellfish, and
    other wildlife, air, water (including
    groundwater) and other such resources

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
37
NRD Natural Resource Injuries
  • Any adverse change or impact of a discharge into
    or on a natural resource or impairment of natural
    resource services, whether direct or indirect,
    long-term or short-term, and include a partial or
    complete destruction or loss of the natural
    resource

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
38
NRD Natural Resource Services
  • The physical, chemical, and biological functions
    that natural resources perform
  • Examples
  • Purification of air and water
  • Drought/flood mitigation
  • Generation and preservation of soils
  • Erosion protection
  • Cycling and movement of nutrients

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
39
NRD Defined
  • The dollar value of the restoration that is
    necessary to restore the injured resource and to
    compensate the citizens for the injury to the
    natural resources as a result of a discharge

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
40
NRD - Restoration
  • The remedial action that returns the natural
    resources to pre-discharge conditions. It
    includes the rehabilitation of injured resources,
    replacement, or acquisition of natural resources
    and their services which were lost or impaired.

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
41
Signature Chemicals
  • Help to identify a responsible party
  • Lead from a local foundry that discharged to
    Jacksons Run/East Lake in Bridgeton, NJ
  • PCBs from General Electric in the Hudson River

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
42
Passaic River NRD Initiative
  • The lower Passaic River from Dundee Dam in
    Paterson to Newark Bay
  • Receptor of industrial wastewater, domestic
    sewage, and storm water for over 200 years

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
43
Spill Act Statute of Limitations
  • 4,000 Cases in New Jersey
  • In property damage cases, the default statute of
    limitations to bring a claim is 6 years
  • In the 1993 amendments to the Spill Act, the
    legislature added a 10-year statute of
    limitations for it to recover costs under the
    Spill Act
  • In 2001, as the ten-year deadline approached, the
    legislature extended the deadline another 5 years
  • The drop dead date is now Jan 1, 2006

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
44
Passaic River NRD Initiative
  • In September 2003, EPA and NJDEP initiated legal
    action against 66 companies at 18 sites seeking
    funding for a federal investigation and
    feasibility study
  • Also seeks to impose liability for NRD
  • Study is estimated to take 5 to 7 years
  • Estimated river cleanup and potential NRD
    liability is on the order of multi-millions to
    billions of dollars

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
45
Passaic River Initiative - Background
  • During the Vietnam War, Diamond Shamrock produces
    agent orange at its facility on Lister Avenue,
    Newark, on the Passaic River
  • As a result of these operations, dioxin is
    deposited in sediments of the Passaic River

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
46
Passaic River Initiative - Background
  • Diamond Shamrock spends 30 million and years
    studying the river
  • Other contaminants, including volatile and
    base/neutral organic compounds, PCBs, and metals
    all found in river sediments

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
47
Passaic River Initiative - Background
  • In the mid-1990s, EPA, through Diamond Shamrock,
    sends information request letters, 104(e)
    letters, to other potentially responsible
    parties (PRPs)
  • The PRPs are selected based on review of Passaic
    Valley Sewerage Commission (PVSC) files
  • PRPs selected from those where any incident
    reported to PVSC in the 1950s and 1960s

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
48
Passaic River EPA Initiative in 2003
  • EPA wants to continue study of the river, at an
    estimated cost of 35 million
  • EPA, DOT, and Army Corps of Engineers put up 25
    million
  • 10 million shortfall

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
49
Passaic River EPA Initiative in 2003
  • EPA goes back to the PRPs identified in the 1990s
    from the Diamond Shamrock investigation
  • A new round of letters go out to about 100 PRPs

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
50
Passaic River DEP Directive in 2003
  • NJDEP, separately, issues a Directive to 66
    companies
  • Based on 16 ISRA sites in Newark/Kearney and 2
    ISRA sites in Lodi (Napp Chemical and Hexcel)
  • Demands 980 million to cleanup river

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
51
PRPs
  • NJDEP Directive to 66 companies
  • EPA notices to 100 companies
  • Only about 30 get both
  • Memorandum of Understanding between DEP and EPA

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
52
NRD Trade Association Suit
  • A coalition of trade groups filed suit against
    the NJDEP for its NRD program
  • Suit is pending

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
53
Passaic River NRD Is it Justified?
  • River declared dead in 1850
  • Not a navigable river
  • No economic mandate to remediate
  • A societal problem why pin this on selected
    companies, most of which never polluted?

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
54
CERCLA Analogy?
  • Landfill/multiple PRP cases
  • Steering committee formed and multiple PRPs meet
    and agree to divide the costs on a
    mutually-acceptable formula based on contribution
  • Consultant retained to evaluate records and model
    data to arrive at a contribution formula

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
55
Can this work for the Passaic River?
  • PRP Group has retained common counsel (Bill Hyatt
    of Kirkpatrick Lockhart)
  • The group has identified 4,000 to 5,000 other
    PRPs that will be brought in

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
56
New River Initiatives
  • Raritan River in 2004
  • 5 sites along the river, including 3 landfills
  • Additional sites being considered
  • Delaware River expected in 2005

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
57
NRD Settlements
  • 45 million recovered since 1945
  • 25 million under Commissioner Campbell
  • 30 million spent or allocated to specific
    restoration projects
  • Over 2,000 acres protected/restored
  • As of June 2004, of the 4,000 sites
  • 60 RPs/250 cases settled
  • 80 RPs/800 sites in settlement negotiations

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
58
Brownfields NRD Problem in 2004
  • Because of NJDEPs NRD initiative, it refuses to
    issue any No Further Action letters (NFAs)
    until NRD resolved
  • This was inconsistent with NJDEPs Policy
    Directives providing that brownfields developers
    would not be held liable for NRD
  • As a practical matter, NFAs were not being
    issued, which is required in order to receive the
    brownfields reimbursement funding

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
59
Brownfields NRD Solution in 2005
  • On January 19, 2005, A-2444/S-1374 is enacted
  • It provides an NRD exemption, by law, for
    brownfields developers (in theory)
  • Must have acquired property after 1/16/98
  • Must have acquired property after the discharge
  • Must not have assumed NRD liability by contract
  • Person is not in any way responsible for the
    discharge
  • NJDEP is working on a certification for
    developers to prepare and submit when requesting
    NFAs

Norris, McLaughlin Marcus, P.A.
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