Gov. Christie Killed Ecological Cleanup Standards At Heart Of Exxon Deal

Ecological Standards Are Far Stricter Than Human Health Standards

[Update below provides example]

Back in 2010, Governor Christie quietly signed legislation – portrayed at the time as eliminating defunct government advisory boards – but that also eliminated DEP’s legislative authority to adopt ecologically based cleanup standards in NJ’s toxic site cleanup program (scroll to page 3 to see the new section 35.a language, which deleted the ecological standards and link to recommendations of the Environmental Advisory Task Force – see below for the specific original language that was deleted by this law. If you want the actual fingerprints, you have to go back and read the bill, A2851 [1R] the Gov. signed – look who sponsored it! Mr. Red Tape himself, Burzichelli, (D-Oil))

That one stealth move by Gov. Christie reduced the cleanup liability of polluters at hundreds of sites in NJ by billions of dollars and assured that NJ’s natural resources would not be protected from toxic sites. Here’s how.

Previously, we explained the huge difference between the extent and cost of a site cleanup to meet ecologically based standards for “restoration” of natural resources under DEP’s Natural Resource Damage (NRD) program (i.e. “permanent remedy” excavation of contamination to original conditions), versus the far lower cost of a “remediation” under DEP’s Site Remediation program (i.e. “engineering controls” to merely cap contamination on site).

The Exxon deal shines a very bright light on that distinction, but it also shows how ecologically based cleanups are far stricter, better,  and more costly than cleanups based on protection of human health.

The Exxon economic analysis highlights that critical point (on page 8):

ecological

The DEP’s ability to compel ecologically based cleanups has long been a controversial issue in NJ. Polluters have strongly opposed DEP’s efforts to base cleanups on far more costly ecological protections that require far more complete cleanups.

In 1993, the legislature sided with the polluters and passed a law that said that DEP could not adopt ecologically based cleanup standards until an expert Environmental Advisory Task Force (EATF)  met and provided scientific recommendations (see: Section 35 .a. of P.L.1993, c.139 (C.58:10B-12):

The department shall not propose or adopt remediation standards protective of the environment pursuant to this section, except standards for groundwater or surface water, until recommendations are made by the Environment Advisory Task Force created pursuant to section 37 of P.L.1993, c.139. Until the Environment Advisory Task Force issues its recommendations and the department adopts remediation standards protective of the environment as required by this section, the department shall continue to determine the need for and the application of remediation standards protective of the environment on a case-by-case basis in accordance with the guidance and regulations of the United States Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to the “Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980,” 42 U.S.C. s.9601 et seq. and other statutory authorities as applicable.

Members of the EATF were supposed to be appointed by the Governor.

The polluters used their political muscle to block those appointments. As a result, there were no appointments and the EATF never met and never made recommendations to DEP pursuant to Section 35.a.

As a result, the DEP never adopted State ecological standards and therefore could not force polluters to cleanup toxic sites to protect natural resources. There was a defacto moratorium that held ecological standards in limbo for many years.

We confronted this lack of DEP ecological cleanup standard in out battle with Dupont in Pompton Lakes – here’s how Dupont themselves note this lack of DEP standards:

NJDEP has promulgated soil remediation standards for residential and nonresidential exposure. However, no promulgated soil standards are available for ecological receptors.

NJDEP does not have any promulgated sediment criteria for evaluating potential human exposure or for ecological receptors. For ecological receptors, NJDEP’s 1998 sediment guidance is available to evaluate sediment quality within Baseline Ecological Evaluations as part of implementing the Technical Requirements (N.J.A.C. 7:26E). However, in accordance with the sediment guidance (NJDEP, 1998), these values are not cleanup standards.

Lack of ecological standards severely weakens DEP’s hand in negotiating with polluters on cleanups, because – as Dupont clearly notes – the Guidance values are not standards and are thus not legally enforceable.

Then, 17 years later, Gov. Christie used the failure of the EATF to be formed, meet, and make recommendations to DEP as an excuse to kill it as a defunct advisory board.

The law that Christie signed in 2010 abolished the EATF.

And in the law killing the EATF, Christie also stripped the above cited Section 35.a. provisions from NJ’s cleanup laws that give DEP the legal authority to develop ecologically based cleanup standards, thereby prevention any future Governor or DEP Commissioner from strengthening NJ’s cleanup program.

That move permanently  absolved NJ’s corporate polluters from the costly cleanups we are now seeing exposed by the Exxon $8.9 billion deal.

Specifically, a $1.53 billion cost component of the DEP’s Exxon on-site natural resource restoration plan was for excavation and off-site disposal of 9 million tons of contaminated sludge, soils, and sediments to meet ecological protection standards.

DEP could not compel such a costly excavation under DEP’s site remediation program, which lacks ecological cleanup standards.

So, long before Gov. Christie cut the dirty deal with Exxon, he gutted NJ’s cleanup laws to prevent DEP from ever adopting the kind of ecological cleanup standards that would have cost Exxon $1.53 billion at just one site.

[Update – as an illustration of how controversial ecological standard is:

In 2002, DEP Commissioner Campbell attempted an end run around the legal bar in remediation law to cleanup standards. DEP relied on its Clean Water Act authority and proposed ecologically based surface water quality standards known as “wildlife criteria” for toxics PCB, DDT, and mercury.

The polluters waged a strong political campaign opposing that proposal, met secretly with Campbell  – see letter to DEP by the Chemistry Council – which forced DEP to withdraw that proposal.]

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

197 Responses to Gov. Christie Killed Ecological Cleanup Standards At Heart Of Exxon Deal

  1. Pingback: spanien trikot hose

  2. Pingback: camisetas de los equipos de italia

  3. Pingback: todas las camisetas para brasil 2014

  4. Pingback: benfica lissabon trikot 14 15

  5. Pingback: nouveau maillot foot italie 2014

  6. Pingback: aaron rodgers blue jerseys

  7. Pingback: camiseta argentina copa america 2011

  8. Pingback: wayfarer ray ban

  9. Pingback: trikot fc bayern wiesn

  10. Pingback: fitflop buy online

  11. Pingback: qwejkfdbvsdmgnscdnsgfg

  12. Pingback: camiseta del mundial chile 2014

  13. Pingback: liverpool kit 2012 13 brand

  14. Pingback: camiseta seleccion chilena almacenes paris

  15. Pingback: bayern trikot 2013 billig

  16. Pingback: jag

  17. Pingback: ブランドコピー

  18. Pingback: impresion camisetas en valencia

  19. Pingback: camisetas de colombia es pasion

  20. Pingback: comprar una camiseta del real madrid

  21. Pingback: maillot psg exterieur 13 14 pas cher

  22. Pingback: fonte da camisa do milan

  23. Pingback: trikot fc bayern m锟斤拷nchen mandzukic

  24. Pingback: us fussball nationalmannschaft trikot

  25. Pingback: bayern munich kits pes 2012

  26. Pingback: personalised nike football boots

  27. Pingback: maillots allemagne 2014

  28. Pingback: new england patriots hernandez jerseys exchange

  29. Pingback: bayern trikot shaqiri kaufen

  30. Pingback: cheap soccer jersey real madrid

  31. Pingback: maillot de foot coupe du monde 2014 italie

  32. Pingback: nueva camiseta de espa?a euro 2012

  33. Pingback: camisas de real madrid manga larga

  34. Pingback: verkooppunten ajax shirts

  35. Pingback: christian louboutin on sale

  36. Pingback: nike blazers

  37. Pingback: la nueva camiseta de barcelona 2015

  38. Pingback: barcelona polo t shirt

  39. Pingback: camisa do brasil zico

  40. Pingback: wann kommen neue bayern trikots

  41. Pingback: camisa azul brasil 2014 mercadolivre

  42. Pingback: real madrid new blue jersey

  43. Pingback: camisa nike inter iii stripe

  44. Pingback: aaron rodgers jerseys kohl's

  45. Pingback: maillot france foot

  46. Pingback: camiseta de la seleccion de belgica 2012

  47. Pingback: camiseta real madrid rosa aliexpress

  48. Pingback: camiseta de futbol de croacia 2014

  49. Pingback: como saber si la camiseta de espa?a es original

  50. Pingback: red bottom shoes

Leave a Reply