Title: Citizens Guide to Pennsylvanias Land Recycling Program
1Citizens Guide to Pennsylvanias Land Recycling
Program
2Overview
- The Land Recycling Program encourages the
recycling and redevelopment of old industrial
sites. It sets standards, by law for the first
time, that are protective of human health and the
environment, but which consider future use. It
provides developers with clear cleanup standards
based on risk, not a moving target in a
negotiated agreement, and provides an end to
liability when that cleanup standard is
achieved. -
- PA Department of Environmental Protection
3What is a brownfield?
- Historically, brownfield meant polluted real
estate with no responsible party from which to
require cleanup cost and other uncertainties led
potential users to choose green space over reuse
of these sites - Under Federal law, brownfield means real
property, the expansion, redevelopment or reuse
of which is complicated by pollution - PA law does not define brownfield, but the term
is generally used in a manner consistent with
Federal law - The definition is synonymous with polluted site,
and is no longer limited by whether persons
responsible for the pollution exist
4Background
- Historically, the DEPs focus on cleaning up
polluted sites depended on whether there was a
responsible party - Responsible parties could be required to cleanup
pollution under an order or consent order using
CSL, SWMA and HSCA - Sites with no responsible parties could be
cleaned up using HSCA - Abandoned sites were rarely cleaned up by
prospective purchasers or developers
5Background
- DEP negotiated Consent Orders to address
pollution in soil and groundwater - COAs are agreements negotiated between the DEP
and a responsible party that contains commitments
that are enforceable in a court of law
6Background
- COAs contained the following
- DEP approval of soil and groundwater assessment
plans required - Use of Best Available Technology to cleanup
contamination - Set cleanup goals that required the responsible
party to use best efforts and BAT until
significant quantities of contaminants could no
longer be removed
7Background
- Prior approach required DEP to
- Make professional and technical judgments about
how best to assess the extent of contamination - Research and negotiate what technology would best
remove the contaminants, and - Determine when removal of contaminants was no
longer feasible
8Background
- In short, the pre-Act 2 approach required that
DEP employees think and act rationally in
safeguarding public health and the environment - Critics lodged several complaints at this process
9Background
- The agencys ad hoc decisions established a
moving target for cleanups - Technology-based cleanups were too costly
- Cleanup goals were unnecessary to protect public
health - The touch and pay approach discouraged reuse of
old industrial sites - Non-use of old industrial sites lead to
consumption of green space - The cleanup policy was not evenly applied
- The agency was too heavy handed
10Background
- Act 2 was, among other things, a rebuke of how
the DEP was interpreting and using its authority
to regulate industry that caused pollution - The complaints concerned sites with responsible
parties, and not just abandoned industrial sites - Act 2 represented a substantial withdrawal of
decisionmaking authority from the agency that
resulted in a paradigm shift in how we approach
pollution in our environment
11Act 2 of 1995
- Governor Tom Ridge signed the PA Land Recycling
and Environmental Remediation and Standards Act
into effect on May 19, 1995 - DEP promulgated regulations implementing Act 2 on
August 15, 1997
12The Changed Landscape
- Cleanup standards shifted from technology to
risk-based limits - Applied the same cleanup numbers throughout
state - Severely restricted DEP involvement in
decision-making process - Provided liability release for meeting standards
13The Changed Landscape
- Move from technology to risk-based limits
- Addresses the cost and overkill complaints
- No technology-driven component
- Not what technology will best remove pollution
from environment, but whether necessary to remove
any - Focus on risk of harm to humans not on
feasibility of removing pollution - Plain policy judgments made by General Assembly
14The Changed Landscape
- Uniform Cleanup Standards
- Addresses the moving ball complaint
- Three sets of standards each of which may be
applied to the same site for different pollutants - The site-specific option allows development of
site-specific cleanup numbers - Practical Effect substantive standard changed
but arguably did not achieve uniformity
15The Changed Landscape
- Severely limited DEP involvement
- Addresses the perceived heavy-handedness with
which DEP entered COA negotiations - Only authorized DEP to get involved in approving
the Final Report, unless operator chooses the
site-specific standard - General Assembly reigned in executive agency
- Effect public cannot rely on DEP to oversee
cleanups
16The Changed Landscape
- Certainty for innocent purchasers (and
responsible parties) - Addresses multiple complaints
- Provided certainty to risk not previously offered
by touch and pay perception - Extended this certainty to future generations of
owners - Effect lock in todays policy judgments for
generations to come
17Process Overview
- Notice of Intent to Remediate (NIR) submitted
- Public Notice
- Site Evaluation
- Remediation
- Final Plan submitted and approved
- Public Notice
18Site Evaluation
- Because persons choose remediation standard in
NIR, site evaluation will likely preceed the NIR - Purpose of site evaluation is to determine site
conditions contaminants, extent of
contamination, and media impacted - DEP review recommended but not required
- Important decisions made without review by agency
sampling methodology, analysis and
interpretation of results - Should encompass historical records review
initial soil and groundwater screening detailed
sampling and assessment of remediation choices
and pathway elimination - Site-specific Standard requires submission and
approval of Site Assessment report before
remediation is implemented
19NIR
- Describes site
- Identifies contaminants for which cleanup will be
conducted - Chooses cleanup standard
- Identifies future use of property
- Publication in PA Bulletin and local newspaper
20Cleanup Standards
- Background
- Statewide Health
- Site-Specific
- Special Industrial Area
21Cleanup StandardsBackground
- Based on concentration of regulated substance
present in environment assuming that has been no
release by humans
22Cleanup Standards Statewide Health Standard
- Numerical numbers designed to protect public
health - Media specific meaning different numbers for
groundwater and soil - Based only on direct contact through ingestion by
humans - Soil numbers developed based on direct ingestion
or via leaching to groundwater - Differ depending on whether use is residential or
non-residential
23Cleanup Standards Site-specific Standard
- Standard developed by applicant using site
specific information and risk assessment (fate
and transport modeling) to achieve certain risk
factors (e.g. 1 in 10,000 for suspected
carcinogens where cancer risk has been
defined)(1X10-4)
24Cleanup StandardsSpecial Industrial Areas
- Responsibility limited to removal of immediate,
direct or imminent threats to public health
based on proposed use - Department responsible for remediation of other
contamination
25ReportsBackground and Statewide Health Standard
- Only Final Report submitted for approval
- Must demonstrate compliance with chosen
remediation standard - Should include assessment, description of
exposure factors (residential or nonresidential),
remediation conducted, sampling that confirms
compliance, and rationale for concluding the site
meets the remediation standard - Department has 60 days to review and respond, or
it is deemed approved - Published in PA Bulletin, municipality and local
newspaper
26ReportsSite Specific Standard
- Remedial Investigation, Risk Assessment Report,
Cleanup Plan and Final Report - Must demonstrate compliance with chosen
remediation standard - Department has 90 days to review and respond, or
it is deemed approved - Published in PA Bulletin, municipality and local
newspaper
27ReportsSpecial Industrial Area
- Baseline Remedial Investigation Work Plan
- Evaluate existing contamination and assess any
immediate, direct or imminent threats to public
health or the environment that would prevent
occupation of the property for its intended use - Department has 90 days to review and respond, or
it is deemed approved - Published in PA Bulletin, municipality and local
newspaper
28Liability Protection
- Any person demonstrating compliance obtains
protection from having to do any future cleanup,
unless it can be demonstrated that the
contamination resulted from later actions. - The liability protection extends to successors
and assigns, and users or developers - The liability protection includes third party
contribution actions and citizens suits
29Re-openers
- Persons can be required to do further work if the
cleanup involved fraud in demonstrating
attainment - New information shows contamination that exceeds
the standard in an area not previously known - Remediation fails to meet the standard chosen
level of risk changes (e.g. property use changes) - A post-act release can now be remediated and only
institutional controls were used to meet standard - Institutional controls were used and failed
30Civil and Criminal Liability
- Act 2 does not protect persons that engaged in
wrongdoing from civil penalty and criminal
liability under the environmental protection
statutes - However, DEP need not exercise the authority to
penalize wrongdoers if they voluntarily remediate
under Act 2
31Permit Exemption
- No remediation work conducted under Act 2
requires a state or local permit - Act 2 does not exempt persons from obtaining
permits required by Federal law - So state permits that are required because of
underlying federal requirements cannot be waived
e.g. NPDES Permits.
32Institutional Controls
- Institutional controls play an important role in
maintaining compliance under Act 2 - Examples include pavement, fencing, restricted
use of groundwater, and restricting future land
use
33Institutional Controls
- Background Standard may not be used to attain
standard, but may be used to maintain the
standard after remediation - Statewide Health may not be used to attain
standard, but may be used to maintain the
standard after remediation - Site-specific Standard may be used to attain
standard controls used to eliminate exposure
pathways to meet standard
34Deed Restrictions
- No deed restrictions are required if meet
Background or residential Statewide Health
Standards - Notices that had been required under the SWMA and
HSCA may be removed if meet Background or
residential Statewide Health Standard - Deed restrictions critical to pathway elimination
option under Site-Specific Standard, and to
ensuring no change in property use under
Statewide Health Standard - The DEP has no express authority under Act 2 to
enforce deed restrictions
35Public Notice
- Basically, notice must be made when report must
be submitted NIR, Final Report, Interim Reports
for Site-Specific Standard - Provided to municipality and published in local
paper - Exception no notice required if responsible
party complies with Background or Statewide
Health standard if Final Report submitted in
response to and within 90 days of release
36Formal Comment Period
- A formal 30-day public comment period is required
only for use of Site Specific Standard and in
Special Industrial Area
37Public Involvement Plan
- For Site Specific Standard or in case of Special
Industrial Area, person must develop a public
involvement plan, but only if municipal official
requests - No express standards for what constitutes an
appropriate plan
38Public Notice
- Liability protection dependent on compliance with
public notice provisions
39Obtaining Information
- Personal contacts with DEP officials
- Formal Written Requests under
- Right to Know Law
- Clean Streams Law
40Challenges to DEP approval
- Have 30 days to challenge Department action or
inaction - Must affect your personal or property rights to
have standing - Not adequate to have a generalized interest in
subject or site
41Questions
- What is the trade-off in this statute?
- Who has the burden of challenging judgments made
by persons whose financial interest is in reuse
of the property? - Who suffers the consequences if those judgments
are in error? - What is the check on those judgments?
- Who suffers the risk of an error in judgment or
inaction by the DEP? - What are the opportunities for public involvement
in this process? - What overview is provided for the assessment
process - Who is making sure that institutional controls
are being maintained? - Ask who is inspecting cleaned up sites?
42QuestionsHow is the publics fate tied to DEPs
role?
- The science advisory Board sets the cleanup
standards for DEP (background and statewide
health) - Based on those standards, DEPs role is severely
limited - DEP plays a more significant role where
site-specific standard chosen - Where DEPs role limited, less documentation of
decisions being made by company on cleanup, and
consequently, less chance to review actions that
affect your community - No state agency action means no opportunity for
review by third party, such as a court of law
43QuestionsLand Use Controls
- Future land use traded off for present
redevelopment - Public health and safety tied to restricting uses
of property particularly in site-specific
standard - Enforcement mechanism is deed restriction
- Who is minding the deed restrictions?
44QuestionsInstitutional Controls
- Institutional controls used to maintain, and in
some cases, attain the cleanup standard - DEP has no inspection program
- Who is assuring that institutional controls
remain in tact?
45QuestionsInformation is Power
- Who has the information on site locations,
cleanup standards, and compliance? - What information is being collected?
- Is there a publicly available Act 2 registry?
- Is there a publicly available registry of deed
restricted properties? - Can the public easily determine the location and
condition of Act 2 sites? - How does public assess whether goals of Act 2 are
being achieved, and validity of policy decisions
made by General Assembly?