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Isn’t There a Law? Federal Laws and Dumps Kristin Hall U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) [email protected] (206) 553-6357
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Isn’t There a Law?

Feb 25, 2016

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Isn’t There a Law?. Federal Laws and Dumps Kristin Hall U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) [email protected] (206) 553-6357. Federal Agencies. Indian Health Service. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Environmental Protection Agency. Dept of Defense. Laws. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Isn’t There a Law?

Isn’t There a Law?

Federal Laws and Dumps

Kristin HallU.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

[email protected](206) 553-6357

Page 2: Isn’t There a Law?
Page 3: Isn’t There a Law?

Federal Agencies

Indian Health Service

Environmental Protection

Agency

Bureau ofIndian Affairs

Dept ofDefense

Page 4: Isn’t There a Law?

Laws Indian Lands Open Dump Cleanup Act Resource Conservation and Recovery Act Exemption for remote Alaskan village

landfills Superfund Act Brownfields Act Clean Water Act Clean Air Act

Page 5: Isn’t There a Law?

Indian Lands Open Dump Cleanup Act

Public Law 103-399 passed in 1994 Indian Health Service has primary

responsibility Unfunded mandate to inventory and

close open dumps Annual report to Congress

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Indian Lands Open Dump Cleanup Act

The term "open dump" means any facility or site where solid waste is disposed of which is not a sanitary landfill which meets the criteria promulgated under section 6944 of the Solid Waste Disposal Act and which is not a facility for disposal of hazardous waste.

Page 7: Isn’t There a Law?

Resource Conservation & Recovery Act

RCRA Subtitle D – Solid Waste

Amended Solid Waste Disposal Act Addresses non-hazardous solid wastes Prohibits open dumping Provides guidelines on the

management of landfills

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Blue Legs v. US Bureau of Indian Affairs (1989)

Court ruled Indian tribes are subject to citizen suits to enforce the landfill criteria.

Court ruled BIA, IHS and the Tribe shared the responsibility to clean up the dumps

Court ruled that it was the tribe who has the responsibility to regulate, operate and maintain the reservation solid waste disposal sites, and not the BIA, EPA or IHS.

Resource Conservation & Recovery Act

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Backcountry Against Dumps v. EPA (1996)

U.S. Court of Appeals upheld that Tribes are defined as municipalities under RCRA

Court determined that RCRA does not authorize EPA to approve Indian tribes to assume the duties of states

Does not strip the tribe of its sovereign authority to govern its own affairs

Recognized EPA’s authority to issue site-specific flexibility rules under RCRA Subtitle D in Indian country

Resource Conservation & Recovery Act

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RCRA Subtitle D

40 CFR Part 258 – Subpart DMunicipal Solid Waste Landfill Criteria

- location- design- operation- closure- post-closure- financial assurance

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RCRA Subtitle D 40 CFR Part 257 Subpart A

Classification of Solid Waste Disposal Facilities and Practices

applies to construction & demolition debris landfills

- floodplains Safety- endangered species - explosive gases - surface water - fires - groundwater - bird hazard- disease vector controls - access- air (no open burning)

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Establishes a federal program to manage hazardous wastes from cradle to grave.

Regulates the generation; transportation; and treatment, storage or disposal of hazardous wastes.

Conducts compliance evaluation inspections to ensure that hazardous waste is managed in accordance with law, regulations, and safe handling practices.

RCRA Subtitle C

Page 13: Isn’t There a Law?

RCRA Enforcement Authorities

Subtitle C - EPA has federal enforcement and implementation authority for tribal hazardous waste programs

Subtitle D - EPA does not have federal enforcement or implementation authority for tribal solid waste programs Limited federal enforcement options in Indian country:

§7002 Citizen suit§7003 Imminent and substantial endangerment to health or environment§4005(c)(2) Applies to dumps that may contain household hazardous waste or CESQG waste

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RCRA §7002 7002(a)(1)(b) In general any person may

commence a civil action on his own behalf against any person, including the United States and any other governmental agency, who has contributed or who is contributing to the past or present handling, storage, treatment, transportation, or disposal of any solid or hazardous waste which may present an imminent and substantial endangerment to health or the environment.

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RCRA §7003 Section 7003 allows EPA to address

situations where the handling, storage, treatment, transportation, or disposal of any solid or hazardous waste may present such an imminent and substantial endangerment to health or the environment. In these situations, EPA can initiate judicial action or issue an administrative order to any person require the person to refrain from those activities or to take any necessary action.

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RCRA §4005(c)(2)

Authorizes EPA to use tools in Sections 3007 and 3008 of the Act at those open dumps that have certain types of hazardous waste, including household hazardous waste (which is often found in trash).

EPA may inspect for compliance with federal prohibition on open dumps, as well as compliance with federal hazardous waste rules.

Inherently no adequate state program present

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Exemption for remote Alaska Remote Alaskan villages Class III village landfills Permitted by Alaska State Department of

Environmental Conservation Best Management Practices

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Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act - “Superfund” Act

Enforcement Authorities

§104(a) - Respond to hazardous releases from dumps (e) - Gather info; access; seek penalties

§106(a) - Issue orders for PRPs to do cleanup §120 - federal facilities §122 - settlement agreements w/PRP to do

cleanup or pay for EPA to cleanup

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Small Business Liability Relief and Brownfields Revitalization Act of January 11, 2002

Brownfields Definition

“…..real property, the expansion, redevelopment, or reuse of which may be complicated by the

presence or potential presence of a hazardous substance, pollutant or contaminant.”

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Brownfields Funding Programs

Subtitle A. Authorizes grants of up to $350K per site for

assessment. Authorizes grants of up to $200K per site for

eligible entities to clean up brownfields. Authorizes grants for up to $1M for revolving loan

fund (RLF) program

Subtitle C. State and Tribal Response Programs

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Brownfields Federal Enforcement Bar

Section 102 of the Act bars federal enforcement action for sites in eligible State/Tribal cleanup programs in some circumstances.

Municipal Solid Waste - Persons exempt from Superfund response cost liability as generators for MSW disposal if person is: • owner, operator, or lessee of residential property• business w/ <100 employees in the three years prior to

notification of potential liability, and a 'small business concern' • nonprofit organization w/ < 100 employees during preceding

year at location of MSW generation

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Brownfields ActFederal Enforcement Bar

Exceptions to MSW Exemption from Liability

waste contributes or could contribute significantly, either individually or in aggregate, to cost of response action or natural resource restoration

person fails to comply with information request

person impedes or impeded, through action or inaction, response action or natural resource restoration at facility

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Clean Water Act

Enforcement Authorities

§309 - penalties for unlawful discharges to navigable waters

§311 - oil & hazardous substance liability

§405 - sewage sludge use & disposal

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Clean Air Act

Section 303 – EPA may issue “emergency adminstrative” orders to abate a danger to human health or environment, caused by any source of air pollution, without showing a non-compliance with the Act.

Federal Air Rules for Reservations – Prohibits open burning of garbage and other materials

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Summary Indian Lands Open Dump Cleanup Act give IHS

a lead role RCRA prohibits open dumping and establishes

criteria for landfills and other waste facilities Limited enforcement options under RCRA Other enforcement options under Superfund,

CWA, and CAA – Federal Air Rules for Reservations

Brownfields has federal enforcement bar on certain exempted parties and MSW parameters, while providing extensive programs for cleanup and prevention

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Resources

EPA Region 10 Tribal Solid and Hazardous Waste web pagehttp://www.epa.gov/region10 click on tribal programsclick on solid and hazardous waste

EPA Waste Management in Indian Country web pagehttp://www.epa.gov/epawaste/wycd/tribal/index.htm

EPA Region 10 Brownfields web page http://yosemite.epa.gov/R10/CLEANUP.NSF/sites/bf

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Questions?

Kristin [email protected]

(206) 553-6357or

Al [email protected]

(206) 553-8202