IB97025: Superfund Reauthorization
Issues in the 105th Congress
Mark Reisch
Environment and Natural Resources Policy Division
November 23, 1998
CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Action in the 105th Congress
Comprehensive Bills
S. 2180
Hearings
Appropriations
A Brief Summary of the Cleanup Program
Superfund Reform Issues
Relieving the Burden of
Retroactive Liability
Comprehensive Bills in
the 105th Congress
Cleanup Standards and
Remedy Selection -- Concerns Over Expense and Delay
Should Natural Resources
Damages Be Narrowed?
Giving States More Control of
the Program
Accompanying Issues Related to
Lower Priority Sites
Expanding the Brownfields
Program
Aiding Voluntary Cleanup
Programs for Lower Risk Sites
LEGISLATION
CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS, REPORTS,
AND DOCUMENTS
FOR ADDITIONAL READING
SUMMARY
For the third Congress in a row, there was a major effort to
reauthorize Superfund. Chairmen of the three committees of
jurisdiction introduced comprehensive reauthorization bills -- S. 8,
H.R.
2727, and H.R.
3000; hearings were held on all three, S. 8
was ordered reported, and H.R.
2727 was approved by subcommittee. None of these bills was
enacted.
The law's title is the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA, P.L.
96-510). As of September 1998, 18 years after the law's
enactment, 535 sites (39%) placed on the Superfund's National
Priorities List (NPL) had been removed to the Construction
Completed List. The program has been accused of being slow,
ineffective, and expensive. Many feel its liability system is
unfair; the lack of agreement on new liability provisions has
impeded congressional action.
CERCLA's broad liability scheme has been the most difficult
reauthorization issue. The average cost of cleanup is about $30
million, a large enough amount to make it worthwhile for parties
to pursue legal means to spread the costs rather than to settle.
So at large sites, where it is not unusual for there to be over a
hundred potentially responsible parties, there can be a
commensurate amount of expensive negotiation and litigation. This
has been especially burdensome on small businesses and other
minor parties.
The law's cleanup standards and remedy selection procedures
are also controversial. Requirements for treatment, permanence,
and the application of both federal and state regulations have
led to what some critics characterize as overly strict risk
assessment, and increased costs and delay at many sites. Business
interests want to limit the scope of natural resource damages
that can be assessed against them by putting a cap on the amount
of such awards.
A number of states want to have full delegation of the
authorities in CERCLA, including remedy selection, control over
CERCLA's monies, and the determination of what sites go on and
off the NPL. The popular brownfields program, aimed at low-level
contaminated sites with economic development potential, received
increased funding for FY1998 and FY1999. Also state voluntary
cleanup programs are popular.
EPA's FY1999 budget request (H.R.
4194), including $1.5 billion for Superfund, was signed by
the President on October 21, 1998. The Superfund FY1998
appropriation was also $1.5 billion (P.L.
105-65). The authority to collect the taxes that support the
trust fund ended in 1995; a General Accounting Office study said
the outlook for the Superfund Trust Fund after FY 1999 is
uncertain. In Superfund actions in the 105th Congress,
the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 (P.L.
105-34) included a $417 million tax break for cleaning up
brownfields, permitting same-year deduction of cleanup costs.
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
The Superfund program's FY1999 appropriation of $1.5
billion, including $91.3 million for EPA's brownfields program,
was signed by the President on October 21, 1998; the
Administration had requested $2.1 billion.
The Superfund trust fund contained a sufficient balance
for the program's FY1999 appropriation, but its future beyond
that is uncertain, GAO said in an April 1998 report.
S.
8 was reported with amendments from the Committee on
Environment and Public Works on May 19, 1998 (S.Rept.
105-192). H.R.
2727 was approved by the Subcommittee on Water
Resources and Environment on March 11, 1998, and forwarded to the
full Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure. The Commerce
Committee held hearings on the other Superfund chairman's bill, H.R.
3000.
In the first session of the 105th
Congress, tax breaks for brownfields cleanup worth $417 million
through December 31, 2000, were passed as part of the Taxpayer
Relief Act of 1997 (H.R.
2014, P.L.
105-34).
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Despite great effort by all parties, reauthorization of the
Superfund program in the 105th Congress was not accomplished. The
Senate Environment Committee held hearings on the Chairman's mark
of S.
8 in September 1997, and ordered it reported with amendments
on March 26, 1998; the House Transportation and Infrastructure
Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment held hearings on H.R.
2727 in October 1997, and forwarded the amended bill to full
committee on March 11, 1998; and H.R.
3000 was the subject of a House Commerce subcommittee hearing
on March 5, 1998.
Superfund is the principal federal program for cleaning up
inactive hazardous waste sites and protecting public health and
the environment from releases of hazardous substances. The
establishing law's formal title is the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980
(CERCLA); comprehensive changes were made by the Superfund
Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (SARA). The Superfund
trust fund, created primarily from excise taxes on petroleum and
specified chemical feedstocks and a corporate environmental
income tax, raised about $1.5 billion per year before the
collection of taxes expired on December 31, 1995. The law
requires responsible parties to pay for cleanups, and the fund is
used where a financially viable party cannot be found. The fund
also is used for the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's)
enforcement, management activities, and research and development.
Since the taxes that support the fund expired on December 31,
1995, the only revenues now coming into the fund are amounts
recovered from responsible parties, interest on the fund's
investments, fines, and penalties. An April 1998 study from the
General Accounting Office (GAO) states that while there is
sufficient money in the trust fund for the FY1999 appropriation,
the fund's subsequent status is uncertain. This lack of taxes
creates pressure to reauthorize the law, since Ways and Means
Chairman Bill Archer has said that the taxes will not be restored
until there have been fundamental changes in the act,
particularly its liability regime. GAO also said that there is
nothing in CERCLA or the congressional budget resolution to
prevent the appropriation from being funded completely from
general revenues.
EPA does not have unfettered access to the Superfund trust
fund. Congress annually appropriates monies from the fund to EPA,
and in most years adds a contribution from the general fund of
the Treasury, usually $250 million, the maximum authorized in
CERCLA.
On May 6, 1998, the Senate defeated Amendment No. 2340
proposed by Senator Robert Kerrey that would have reinstated the
Superfund taxes and used them as part of a package of offsets to
fund the Internal Revenue Service reform bill, H.R.
2676. The IRS reforms are expected to result in reduced tax
revenues of $18.5 billion over 10 years, and the bill therefor
needed an equivalent funding component under the budget pay-go
rules. But if the Superfund taxes were dedicated to that purpose,
they would be unavailable later to pay for Superfund
reauthorization.
Stakeholders have criticized the Superfund program over the
years. Citizens are dissatisfied with the slow rate of cleanup,
12 years on average. The polluting companies and their insurers
complain that they are required to pay for "gold plated
cleanups." Further, they say the law's retroactive nature is
unfair in reaching back to activities that were legal before
enactment. And thousands of small businesses, social
organizations, school districts, municipalities, and others have
been drawn into Superfund's liability web for disposing of small
amounts of waste -- and have regularly paid their attorneys as
the Superfund cleanup process dragged on. States desire an
expanded role in making decisions about sites within their
boundaries. Environmental groups are especially concerned about
changes to natural resource damage provisions.
While many parties have desired Superfund reform for several
years, the lack of agreement on reforming the liability
provisions appears to be the key reason impeding congressional
action. Three other major Superfund reform issues are whether
cleanup standards need modification, natural resource damage
coverage should be narrowed, and state roles expanded. In
addition, there are two ancillary issues related to lower level,
low priority sites. Many seek expansion of both the popular
brownfields program, which encourages cleaning up mostly urban,
lower risk sites that have economic development potential, and
voluntary cooperative programs in which owners and states address
low to medium risk sites.
Action in the 105th
Congress
Comprehensive Bills. The
chairmen of the three subcommittees with jurisdiction each
introduced comprehensive Superfund reauthorization bills. Senator
Bob Smith (Environment and Public Works Subcommittee on
Superfund, Waste Control, and Risk Assessment) introduced S. 8
on January 21, 1997. Representative Sherwood Boehlert
(Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Water
Resources and Environment) introduced H.R.
2727 on October 23, 1997; the subcommittee forwarded the
amended bill to full committee on March 11. Representative
Michael Oxley (Commerce Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and
Hazardous Materials) introduced H.R.
3000 on November 9, 1997. In addition, Democratic members
have offered three comprehensive bills: Representatives James
Barcia and Calvin Dooley introduced H.R.
2750 on October 28, 1997, Representative Frank Pallone
introduced H.R.
3262 on February 25, 1998, and Representative Thomas Manton
introduced H.R.
3595 on March 30, 1998.
The Administration did not submit a reform bill to Congress,
but Assistant Attorney General Lois Schiffer said that the Manton
bill was very close to what the Administration wanted. She also
said that the Administration opposed the reported version of S. 8.
On May 7, 1997, EPA released its Superfund legislative reform
principles, saying that amendments must be narrowly targeted and
that polluters must pay their fair share. The principles call for
liability limits for very small volume waste contributors,
generators and transporters of municipal solid waste, and
prospective purchasers. Regarding remedies, groundwater should be
restored where practicable, the law's preference for treatment
should be retained for highly toxic and mobile wastes, and the
preference for permanence should be modified to emphasize
long-term reliability. Cleanups should continue to comply with
the applicable requirements of other federal and state
environmental laws, but CERCLA's mandate to comply with relevant
and appropriate requirements should be eliminated. The role of
states should be increased, but EPA's authority to respond to
environmental or health threats should not be limited.
The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 contained a tax break for
brownfield cleanups. It is discussed in the Brownfields Program
section. Also, the Omnibus Appropriation bill (H.R.
4328, P.L.
105-277) contains a provision having to do with the tax
treatment of a company's environmental remediation costs (10-year
net operating loss carryback rules).
S. 2180. Senate Majority
and Minority Leaders Trent Lott and Tom Daschle introduced S.
2180 on June 16, 1998, a bill to protect legitimate recyclers
of certain materials from Superfund liability. The leaders'
sponsorship fueled speculation that the bill, if it moved, would
attract a number of amendments, becoming the vehicle for a narrow
reauthorization measure. Ultimately, Senator John Chaffee,
chairman of the Environment and Public Works Committee refused to
take up the bill because it would only move the liability burden
from one set of responsible parties to another, an amount that
could reach $700 million over 10 years, according to an
"informal" CBO estimate. There was an effort to include
it in the Omnibus Appropriations bill, H.R.
4328, in the closing days of the 105th Congress, but the
effort was unsuccessful.
Hearings. On April 15 and
16, 1997, the House Appropriations Subcommittee on
Appropriations' Subcommittee on VA-HUD-Independent Agencies held
hearings on Superfund. The House Commerce Committee held hearings
on February 14, March 7, and September 4, 1997, on federal
barriers to cleanup and views of Members of Congress; another
hearing was held March 5, 1998, on H.R.
3000. Two subcommittees of the House Government Reform and
Oversight Committee held hearings on February 13, 1997, focusing
on the General Accounting Office's findings on the Superfund
program. The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee
held hearings on March 5 and 12, and April 10, 1997, on lessons
from the states, and views of EPA and stakeholders; on October
29, 1997, the Water Resources and Environment subcommittee
focused on H.R.
2727. The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee held
hearings on March 4-5, 1997, that focused on the federal-state
Superfund relationship, brownfields, and cleanup standards; and
on September 4, 1997, on the revised "chairman's draft"
version of S. 8.
Appropriations
The FY1999 appropriation for the Superfund program is $1.5
billion, the same as the FY1998 appropriation; EPA's budget
request was $2.1 billion. The bill, H.R.
4194 (P.L.
105-276, October 21, 1998), included $1.0 billion for
response actions, $155 million for enforcement, and $91.3 million
for brownfield activities. Similarly to FY1997, an additional
$650 million is made available on October 1, 1999 (FY2000) if
CERCLA is reauthorized before August 1, 1999. The appropriations
bill also deletes the sunset provisions in section 119, in order
to make it possible for cleanup contractors to more easily obtain
surety bonds for new cleanup projects. The bill's report asks EPA
to review other means of funding the brownfields program and to
report to the Appropriations Committees by April 1, 1999. It also
directs EPA to "explore aggressively" the home buyout
option at the Agriculture St. NPL site in New Orleans, and to
report back to the Appropriations Committees by January 15, 1999.
Congress approved $1.5 billion for the Superfund program for
FY1998, $106 million more than FY1997 (P.L.
105-65, H.R.
2158). For FY1997, Congress appropriated $1.394 billion, the
level requested by the Clinton Administration (P.L.
104-204). Recent annual appropriations have been ($ billion):
FY1996 -- $1.313; FY1995 -- $1.431; FY1994 -- $1.497; and FY1993
-- $1.602.
A Brief Summary of the
Cleanup Program
The National Contingency Plan (NCP, codified at 40 CFR 300)
provides a blueprint of how EPA is to respond to hazardous
substance releases. It covers methods for discovering and
investigating hazardous waste sites, the roles of federal and
state agencies, the appropriate level of response activities, and
other subjects. The Hazard Ranking System and the National
Priorities List (described below) are appendices to the NCP.
There are two types of Superfund response: short-term
"removals" to mitigate emergency situations, and
long-term "remedial actions" to clean up sites that
have been placed on the National Priorities List (NPL). The term
"Superfund site" generally means a site on the NPL.
After a potential site has been identified, a preliminary
assessment is conducted to determine if a site inspection and
ranking is warranted.
EPA had 12,657 active sites in its CERCLIS site tracking
database at the end of FY1996. From January 1995 to September 30,
1996, 28,008 CERCLIS sites were archived, and categorized as
"No Further Removal Action Planned" (NFRAP). This
removal from the list has become important because the stigma of
being associated with Superfund has often prevented sale or
development of CERCLIS-listed property -- even if it was never
contaminated in the first place.
Sites receiving a sufficiently high score under the Hazard
Ranking System are placed on the NPL. As of the September 1998
listing, there are 1,194 sites on the NPL, of which 153 are
federal facility sites; another 66 are proposed for listing, of
which 9 are federal facility sites. Proposed and final NPL sites
total 1,260. Through FY1996, EPA and the Coast Guard had also
conducted 4,592 removal actions, 1,423 of them at NPL sites. (The
Coast Guard is the lead agency in coastal areas.) There are or
have been Superfund sites in all 50 states, as well as in
American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Marianas, Puerto Rico, the
Trust Territories of the Pacific, and the Virgin Islands.
After listing, the next step is the remedial investigation, a
detailed examination of the site and the wastes present, which is
followed by a feasibility study that examines alternative cleanup
approaches. (These two steps are frequently referred to together
as the "RI/FS.") EPA decides which alternative to
pursue, and the Agency or its designee -- frequently the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers -- prepares specifications and drawings
for the selected remedy. Cleanup construction may be followed by
a requirement to operate, maintain, or monitor the site for
several years. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that
the average cleanup time for the first 1,249 NPL sites will be at
least 12 years. EPA deletes sites from the NPL when no further
action is appropriate. As of September 1998, 535 sites (39% of
the 1,370 total listed since inception) had been placed on the
Construction Completion List; 176 (13% of the 1370) of those
sites and portions of 11 others have also been deleted from the
NPL. At House Government Reform hearings, the General Accounting
Office (GAO) presented a draft report (released in March 1997,
and updated in February 1998) that said for sites listed in 1996,
it took EPA 9.4 years to go from site discovery to final listing
on the NPL, compared to 5.8 years in the 1986-1990 period. Actual
cleanup times increased from 3.9 years to 10.6 years for those
completed in 1996, and to 11.5 years for those completed in 1997.
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