Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) and Federal Facilities
CERLA as amended by the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA)
On this page
- Summary
- Basics of CERCLA
- Application of CERCLA to Federal Facilities
- EPA Enforcement
- State Enforcement
- Tribal Enforcement
- Citizen Enforcement
- EPA Regulations
- Policies and Guidance
Summary
Basics of CERCLA
- Enforcement
- Hazardous Substance Superfund (hereinafter known as, “Superfund” or “Fund”).
Response Authorities
There are two basic ways to respond to a release: by a removal or a remedial action.
- CERCLA § 101(23), “removal” is defined to include a broad range of actions
- CERCLA § 101(24), “remedial” means actions consistent with permanent remedy taken instead of, or in addition to, removal actions.
Enforcement
- may conduct the response itself and seek to recover its costs from the Potentially Responsible Parties (PRPs) in a subsequent cost-recovery action;
- can compel PRPs to perform the cleanup themselves through either administrative or judicial proceedings; or
- can enter into a settlement with PRPs to perform all or portions of the work.
The following illustrates the central elements of CERCLA’s enforcement scheme:
- Authority to permit government and private entities to recover their response costs.
- Authority to permit EPA to seek the following:
- A judicial order requiring a PRP to abate an endangerment to public health, public welfare, or the environment
- Administrative actions compelling private parties to undertake actions necessary to abate endangerments
- Negotiated settlements with private parties to undertake actions necessary to abate endangerments
Trust Fund
Application of CERCLA to Federal Facilities
- Preliminary assessment
- Site investigation
- Listing on the National Priorities List (NPL)
- Remedial investigation
- Feasibility study
- Record of decision
- Remedial design
- Remedial action
- Long-term operation
- Maintenance
Statutory authorities and requirements that relate to Federal facilities
§ 120(a): General Application of CERCLA Authority to the Federal Government
§ 120(b): Notice of Contamination That Affects Adjacent Property
§ 120(c): Federal Agency Hazardous Waste Compliance Docket
§ 120(d): Assessment and Evaluation of Federal Facilities on the Docket
§ 120(e): Steps Required for Remedial Actions at Federal Facilities Listed on the NPL
§ 120(f): State and Local Participation
§120(g): Transfer of EPA’s Authority to Federal Agencies
§ 120(h): Property Transferred by Federal Agencies
- A notice of the type and quantity of such hazardous substances
- Notice of the time at which such storage, release or disposal took place
- A description of any remedial action taken
- A covenant warranting that all remedial action necessary to protect human health and the environment with respect to hazardous substances remaining on the property has been taken prior to the date of transfer and any additional remedial action found to be necessary after the date of transfer shall be conducted by the United States. Under § 120(h)(3), a remedial action “has been taken” when the construction and installation of an approved remedial design has been completed, and the remedy has been demonstrated to EPA to be operating properly and successfully. Thus, long-term pumping or treating, or operation and maintenance after a remedy has been demonstrated to be operating properly and successfully, do not preclude the transfer of such property
- A clause granting the United States access to the property in the event that any additional remedial or corrective action is found to be necessary after the date of transfer
- Conduct an investigation to identify property on which there were no known releases or disposal of hazardous substances, petroleum products, or their derivatives.
- Obtain the concurrence of EPA (for property at NPL sites) or the State (for non-NPL sites) that such property is uncontaminated.
- Enter a covenant requiring the United States to conduct any response action or corrective action that may be required on the property subsequent to the sale or transfer
- Retain access rights to the property for purposes of conducting required response action or corrective action.
- Detailed search of Federal government records
- Examination of recorded chain-of-title documents
- Review of aerial photographs
- Visual inspection of the property and of adjacent property
- Physical inspection of adjacent property
- Review of Federal, State, and local government records on adjacent facilities where there has been a release
- Interviews with current or former employees
- Sampling, when appropriate
- Property where hazardous substances or petroleum products or their derivatives have been stored for 1 year or more
- Known to have been released or disposed of, and on which the Federal government plans to terminate operations
- Enter into a lease that will encumber the property beyond the date of termination of operations
- Ownership or control of any facility at a military installation that is closing pursuant to a base closure law
- Release or threatened release of hazardous substances as a result of Department of Defense (DoD) activities
§ 111(e)(3): Uses of the Fund for Federal Facilities
§ 107: Natural Resources Damages
§ 106: Order Authority for Natural Resource Damages, etc.
EPA Enforcement
Interagency Agreement/Criminal Sanctions
- § 103(b)(3) - Any person who fails to notify the appropriate agency of the U.S. government immediately of a hazardous substance release is subject to a fine in accordance with the applicable provisions of Title 18 of the United States Code (U.S.C.) or imprisoned for not more than 3 years, or both. The conditions under which this applies would be a hazardous substance release that exceeds a reportable quantity or any person who submits in such notification any information that the person knows to be false or misleading.
- § 103(c) - Any person who knowingly fails to notify the EPA Administrator of the existence of a hazardous substance treatment, storage, and disposal facility that does not have either a RCRA permit or RCRA interim status shall be fined not more than $10,000 and/or imprisoned for not more than 1 year.
- § 103(d)(2) - Any person who knowingly destroys, mutilates, erases, conceals, or falsifies records shall be fined in accordance with the applicable provisions of Title 18 of the U.S.C. or imprisoned for not more than 3 years (or not more than 5 years in the case of a conviction), or both.
Emergency Authority
State Enforcement
Tribal Enforcement
Citizen Enforcement
EPA CERCLA Regulations
EPA CERCLA Policies and Guidance
- Base Closures
- Munitions / Unexploded Ordnance
- Contaminants of Concern at Federal Facilities
- Uniform Federal Policy for Quality Assurance Project Plans - Training Materials
