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EPA Negotiated Rulemaking on All Appropriate Inquiry

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Title: EPA Negotiated Rulemaking on All Appropriate Inquiry


1
EPA Negotiated Rulemaking on All Appropriate
Inquiry
  • Environmental Bankers Association June 23, 2003

2
Goals of the Session
  • Overview of All Appropriate Inquiry, address the
    market drivers and review the legislative
    framework on AAI
  • Why should lenders care about the proposed
    changes to the due diligence standards?
  • What are the criteria and continuing obligations
    of the standard?
  • Actions Items for EBA membership

3
Overview of the AAI Negotiated Rulemaking
  • Statutory Framework for the Regulation
  • Regulation sets forth Standards and Practices to
    carry out All Appropriate Inquiry
  • Overview of the EPA Negotiated Rulemaking Process
    and 25 stakeholders
  • Mission Statement and Preamble
  • Agenda of Issues

4
Standards and Practices
  • Interim Standards for Due Diligence-ASTM E1527-97
    and E1527-00
  • Defining All Appropriate Inquiry and Landowner
    Requirements
  • Generally Accepted Good Commercial and Customary
    Standards and Practices
  • Exercising Appropriate/Due Care, taking
    Reasonable Steps to-Stop and prevent continuing
    releases and threatened future releases at the
    property
  • Compliance with any land use restrictions/institut
    ional control
  • Criteria in Promulgated Regulation
  • EPAs Common Elements Guidance for landowner
    liability protections

5
Legislative Framework of All Appropriate Inquiry
  • Innocent Landowner Defense
  • Congressional Intent and Statutory Issues
  • Affected Parties to Standards and Practices and
    the Landowner Liability Protections
  • Innocent Landowners
  • Bona Fide Prospective Purchasers
  • Contiguous Landowner
  • Brownfields Site Characterization and Assessment
    Grant Programs

6
Secured Creditor Protections for Lenders
  • Why should banks care about changes to AAI?
  • How is AAI relevant to bankers?
  • Whos protected and where are the potential loss
    exposures?
  • What are the credit and trust potential
    exposures?

7
Real Estate Transactional Marketplace and the
Drivers
  • Size of the Phase I and Transaction Screen
    Marketplace
  • The New AAI Rule may influence
  • Commercial Real Estate and Trust Transactions
  • Facilities and Pre-foreclosure/OREO actions

8
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (I) The results of an inquiry by an environmental
    professional
  • What is the definition of an environment
    professional? Which professionals are best
    equipped to perform an ESA?
  • What type of license or certification is needed,
    if any?
  • What is the liability and the responsibility of
    the environmental professional?

9
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (II) Interviews with past and present owners,
    operators and occupants of the facility for the
    purpose of gathering information regarding the
    potential for contamination at the facility
  • How can we ensure a valid attempt is made to
    identify previous owners and collect available
    information?
  • Who should be interviewed? Should neighbors also
    be included in the process?
  • How do we ensure the standard is rigorous, but is
    conducted in reasonable time with reasonable
    cost?

10
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (III) Reviews of historical sources, such as
    chain of title documents, aerial photographs,
    building department records, and land use
    records, to determine the previous uses and
    occupancies of the properties since the property
    was first developed
  • How many of these documents need to be reviewed?
  • How far back in time should a search extend?
    What is first developed?
  • To what extent can the results of a previous
    assessment be transferred to subsequent property
    owners?
  • Should different levels of of investigation be
    required for different types of land-use?

11
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (IV) Searches for recorded environmental cleanup
    liens against the facility that are filed under
    Federal, State or local law
  • Are environmental liens reasonably available or
    accessible ?
  • What are the limitations to the information
    provided by a lien?

12
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (V) Reviews of Federal, State and local
    government records, waste disposal records,
    underground storage tank records, and hazardous
    waste handling, generation, treatment, disposal,
    and spill records, concerning contamination at or
    near the facility
  • How do we ensure a high level of certainty in
    identifying potential environmental concerns
    without imposing time consuming and unnecessarily
    expensive regulatory requirements?
  • Should the standard require searches for specific
    information such as NPL or regulatory permits?

13
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (VI) Visual inspections of the facility and of
    adjoining properties
  • Should we require that visual inspections be
    conducted by an environmental professional?
  • What information is necessary to determine the
    potential contamination of adjacent and adjoining
    properties, as well as underlying groundwater
    resources?
  • Can visual inspections of very large tracks of
    land be limited to developed areas?

14
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (VII) Specialized knowledge or experience on the
    the part of the defendant. Cannot hide
    information not uncovered by environmental
    professional
  • What types of information may investor,
    developer, or user (new property owner) have that
    could be relevant to the investigation and how
    should this information be documented?

15
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (VIII) The relationship of the purchase price to
    the value of the property, if the property was
    not contaminated
  • Should owners be required to document why
    property was attained below fair market value?

16
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (IX) Commonly known or reasonable ascertainable
    information about the property
  • Must be able to document and defend commonly
    known information?

17
Ten Statutory Criteria
  • (X) The degree of obviousness of the presence of
    or likely presence of contamination at the
    property and the ability to detect the
    contamination by appropriate investigation
  • How do we defineability to detect?
  • Is there a point where it must be determined
    whether a Phase I investigation is good enough to
    detect environmental contamination?
  • When or to what extent should sampling and
    analysis be required to document contamination?

18
Other Issues
  • How do we balance the goals and priorities of
    state regulatory programs, current voluntary
    consensus standards, and the Congressional
    mandate for a federal standard for conducting all
    appropriate inquiry?
  • How do we reduce potential disruptions to the
    real estate development markets as we move from
    the current standard(s) to a new federal standard?

19
Other Issues
  • What information collected during an assessment
    should be disclosed to regulatory agencies and/or
    the public?
  • Should the regulations identify specific
    documentation or record keeping requirements?
  • How can we ensure that the federal AAI standard
    is sufficiently comprehensive without being over
    burdensome?

20
Action Items
  • How do we define the Triggers for bankers
    relative to AAI
  • - regulatory and marketplace
  • What type of Tiered Approach to due diligence
    should we advocate?
  • based on risk categories Flow chart or Risk
    Matrix
  • What role do we want in drafting the regulation
    and providing comment?
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