Superfund Cleanups Descend Into Uncertainty

US Supreme Court foregoes opportunity to encourage cleanup of contaminated waste sites

Paul Driessen

Urban and industrial centers generate enormous quantities of wastes that can create major health problems unless they’re handled properly.

In 1900, New York City and other big metropolitan areas were plagued with millions of tons of horse urine, manure and carcasses. The carcasses went to rendering plants; the urine evaporated or washed into rivers; and some manure was dumped into the same rivers, along with garbage, industrial chemicals and untreated toilet discharges, creating vast stinking cesspools.

Most manure was left on streets, to be pulverized into dust that children and adults inhaled, with predicable health results.

Automobiles gradually replaced horses, eliminating equine pollution but creating new problems that catalytic converters later helped resolve. Meanwhile, new laws, wastewater treatment plants and industrial processes gradually eliminated effluents, cleaned up rivers, and helped fish and wildlife populations rebound. (I grew up on Wisconsin’s Fox River and watched as its ecosystems were reinvigorated.)

However, a legacy of dangerous chemical wastes remained in many soils and river sediments. Congress enacted the 1980 Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) to implement requirements and incentives for cleaning up these historic hazards.

The legislation is often called the Superfund law, because money collected under it from chemical and other companies is held in a supersized account for cleaning up large hazardous waste sites, when companies actually responsible for the contamination cannot be found or are no longer in business.

In many cases, companies responsible for all or part of the pollution step forward and voluntarily begin remediation. Superfund provisions encourage such behavior. However, other times multiple parties discharged hazardous substances over years or decades, no one initially knows exactly what or how much is there or where it came from, and only one company (or none) begins cleanup efforts.

CERCLA thus also says a company that voluntarily cleans up a Superfund site, instead of being compelled to do so by a legal judgment or settlement, can then seek recovery of costs from other parties, according to their respective shares of overall responsibility. This reflects basic principles:

Sound public policy should encourage companies to step forward, begin the cleanup process and later recoup costs they have incurred beyond their fair share. Government should find ways to save Superfund money for situations where responsible parties cannot be located or no longer exist.

This is what usually happens. But sometimes companies must think they’ve been transported to Alice’s Wonderland, where nothing makes sense and words mean whatever speakers choose them to mean.

That’s certainly the case with Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP. Georgia-Pacific purchased a Michigan papermill in 1990, decades after various mills had polluted 80 miles of the Kalamazoo River, three miles of Portage Creek, and adjacent waters. The extensive area was designated a Superfund site due to PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) that the pre-Georgia-Pacific paper recycling mill and other operations had discharged into the waterways from the mid-1950s to 1971.

G-P nevertheless voluntarily committed to start cleaning up the river bottoms, even though its predecessor had caused some of the pollution, and overall responsibilities had not been definitively established. That’s exactly the behavior Congress wanted to encourage. To date, Georgia-Pacific has spent many years and over $100 million removing the contaminants. But the cleanup still isn’t finished.

G-P could ultimately be compelled to spend millions more, even though later investigations determined that other companies were also responsible for the pollution and thus should share in the costs. So Georgia-Pacific went to court, seeking compensation for past expenditures and equitable sharing of future cleanup costs.

A federal district court found that Georgia-Pacific was actually responsible for only 40% of the contamination (and cleanup costs). Three other companies also shared the blame and therefore should also share in past and future costs: NCR (40%), International Paper (15%) and Weyerhaeuser (5%).

The three defendant companies appealed, claiming G-P had waited too long to petition for redress. Two appellate courts had heard similar appeals – and rendered totally different opinions about when the Superfund statute of limitations begins to run.

The First Circuit Court of Appeals found that the short three-year timeframe for recovering and sharing costs should be triggered only when a court renders a full judgment against a liable party for recovery of specific costs or damages. The Sixth Circuit ruled that the clock begins running the moment a court makes a “bare-bones” declaratory judgment: that someone is liable – even though others could also be, but the evidence is still insufficient to determine and apportion actual damages and cleanup costs.

This divergence of appellate court opinion presented a perfect opportunity for the US Supreme Court to step in, sensibly interpret the Superfund language, and affirm congressional intent to ensure that good corporate citizens aren’t punished for their good deeds and saddled with entire cleanup bills.

In fact, the Court just considered these issues, in Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products v. International Paper Company. G-P petitioned for certiorari, asking the court to hear the case on its merits.

Displaying Alice in Wonderland syndrome, the U.S. Department of Justice agreed that Georgia-Pacific was indeed victimized by an erroneous Sixth Circuit decision – but argued that the Supreme Court shouldn’t take the case, because it was somehow “a poor vehicle” for resolving the issues at bar.

This is upside-down logic. In fact, failure to grant certiorari would mean vital Superfund incentives will be turned upside-down, companies will be disincentivized from taking responsibility for initiating potentially very expensive hazardous waste cleanups, and the federal government (and taxpayers and consumers) will end up paying large sums for ongoing and future cleanups.

In passing the Superfund law, Congress understood that early good faith efforts to initiate and pay for cleanups could saddle companies with full removal and remediation costs, unless they: (a) know they will ultimately be able to identify all other responsible parties and compel them to pay their fair share of total cleanup costs; or (b) do the impossible – by finding those parties and bringing legal actions against them within three years.

The scope, extent and causes of environmental contamination – whether from pollution over decades or from a single event – are often not understood until after years of investigation, analysis and litigation. Determining all contributing factors and parties more often than not requires more than three years.

The February 2023 Norfolk Southern train derailment in Ohio is a perfect example. Complicated factors caused the disaster, multiple parties likely share responsibility for it, and its full nature, scope, cleanup requirements and costs will not be ascertained for years.

The contradictory Appeals Court rulings create a much more litigious environment for Superfund events like East Palestine. Years or decades of cleanup delays are the last thing impacted communities need.

The Supreme Court nevertheless denied certiorari. Many Court observers, myself included, believe it should have accepted the case and made these legal and policy principles clear for Georgia-Pacific and future Superfund parties. Now confusion will reign, cleanups will be delayed, and responsible corporations will balk at undertaking costly cleanups.

Let’s hope the Court grabs the next “vehicle” that arrives at its door.

Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org). He received his J.D. from the University of Denver College of Law.

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October 5, 2023 10:55 pm

Superfund Cleanups Descend Into Uncertainty

US Supreme Court foregoes opportunity to encourage cleanup of contaminated waste sites

_____________________________________________________________________________

In other words, the money that should be spent on the continued clean-up of
industrial pollution has been hijacked by billions spent on Climate Change
research and subsidies for wind turbines and solar Panels.

Reply to  Steve Case
October 6, 2023 2:49 am

Yes, but how much of that climate deceit funding has found its way into off shore accounts? That’s the real perversion

Duane
Reply to  Steve Case
October 6, 2023 4:22 am

Superfund dollars have always gone mostly to lawyers and administrators, not to actual cleanups.

Reply to  Duane
October 6, 2023 7:19 am

Thanks for pointing that out. I am reminded of the obscene fees lawyers charged for the national tobacco lawsuits of the 1990s. Here’s a New York Times article on that.

“Second Hand Smoke as an issue is just as false as “Climate Change.”

Editor
October 6, 2023 12:03 am

“The contradictory Appeals Court rulings create a much more litigious environment” – well, that’s in the court’s best interest: more business for lawyers and courts. Not so good for honest people of course.

peteturbo
October 6, 2023 12:44 am

i work in international waste. one of the main things we advice our clients is; never get involved in us waste liability.

its essentially infinite in both cost and time. and it can change and be backdated.

horrible regime.

Reply to  peteturbo
October 6, 2023 2:52 am

If the greenerati were truly bothered by waste, they would control and reduce plastics – they aren’t, they don’t – its all smoke & mirrors, follow the money

Reply to  Energywise
October 6, 2023 7:47 am

Well here in Canuckistan we have to put up with soggy paper straws and almost flat wooden spoons (both more ‘damaging to the environment’ if you look at the big picture instead of a plastic tunnel vision) so be careful what you wish for.

Why hasn’t there been a big push to reduce unnecessary packaging, like over-large boxes, boxes for toothpaste tubes, etc., that no one would mourn losing, and have real benefits. Looks like the current green regime is just a front for paper manufacturers – force everyone off any kind of plastic to paper or wood regardless if it really makes environmental sense or not.

MarkW
Reply to  PCman999
October 6, 2023 10:13 am

You can’t stack tubes of anything. They also protect the tubes during shipping and stacking.
Companies usually make their packaging as small as possible, since excess packaging costs money and means you can’t get as many items on a truck.

MarkW
Reply to  PCman999
October 6, 2023 10:16 am

Shippers on the other hand, usually just have a handful of box sizes. Having too many options increases their costs. They also want their packagers to have everything they need, within reach. The more walking they have to do to get the things they need, slows them down.

John Hultquist
Reply to  Energywise
October 6, 2023 8:45 pm

Medical pills come in hard plastic bottles, at least in the USA.
Vitamin and mineral supplement bottles can be quite large.
pharm2.jpg (650×297) (sks-bottle.com)
Do you throw the empties away with or without the cap in place?

Rich Davis
Reply to  peteturbo
October 6, 2023 3:31 am

i work in international waste.

That’s an outrage! No-one should have to tolerate unsanitary work conditions!

Reply to  Rich Davis
October 6, 2023 11:16 am

When I work in waste, it is generally just local and regional waste.

October 6, 2023 2:48 am

Human made pollution and inequality are what the so called greenerati should be concentrating on – from plastics, to child slave labour mining cobalt for battery cars, to landfills full of scrap solar panels and wind turbine blades, to destruction of wildlife by wind farms etc etc – all highly visible, factual harms caused by human activity

The mythical climate alarmism has so much attention and spend on it, that we are ignoring the calamities in plain sight

The greenerati blob are guilty of mass deception, corruption and dereliction of duty and natural world harm, all in the name of their self serving new religious greed

First they came for the poor and I did nothing…………….you know the rest

Geoff Sherrington
October 6, 2023 3:46 am

Too much credit is given to authorities who made cleanup laws.
In the 1970s I was involved in cleanups, but they were voluntary and common sense and what an average person would do, could do. It there was enough money to fix a wrong outcome, it was spent.
Alas, came the heavy hand of the regulators. Fear forced many corporations to spend money earmarked for growth. The net result was a slowdown of profitable spending, companies grew slower, goods became more expensive, mainly the bureaucracy grew and prospered by doing little except coerce with threats.
The top guys in industry were more like fans of Ayn Rand than of Karl Marx.
Now we are in a leftist wave.
That can happen when smart people with little to offer except ideological theory threaten high performers who got to lead corporations by demonstrating skill and gaining promotions.
Nothing new. The theory is well known and proven – but getting cancelled by know-nothings.
Never credit the EPA with progress or benefit. Think of them as paralysis ticks on your pet dog.
Geoff S

MarkW
Reply to  Geoff Sherrington
October 6, 2023 10:20 am

The big problem has always been companies that went bankrupt.
Unfortunately the way the law is written, the regulators will go after anyone, no matter how tangentially connected, to fund the full cost of cleanup in those situations.

Bil
October 6, 2023 3:48 am

In the UK we have onerous laws regarding development on ex-industrial brownfield sites such that the developers need to pay for the clean up before they can build (most companies that caused the pollution having gone out of business decades ago). So the government keeps being pressured to release greenbelt land. I almost get then need for the clean-up, who’d want to buy a house on an ex-heavy industry site, but it is hampering inner-city development where housing is needed most.

Reply to  Bil
October 6, 2023 10:00 am

Well considering the government profited from the taxes from the industries and is probably responsible for them going out of business through the regulations they created, then the government should be footing the bill for the clean up.

Duane
October 6, 2023 4:20 am

As a veteran of the Superfund cleanup program back to its beginnings in the 1980s, we involved in actual cleanups immediately saw that this wondrous “vehicle” that Congress created in 1980 with its “pay and then sue everybody else” was nothing but a wondrous “lawyers’ full employment act”. For the first decades of this law, there was a Superfund tax on chemical feedstocks whose production constituted much of the sources of chemical pollution. But nearly all of the billions raised by that tax on industry went not to cleanups, but to litigation and administration costs. Congress finally acted to terminate the Superfund tax in 1996 because it was just a massive boondoggle.

Now the former Democrat led Congress reenacted another Superfund tax, this time on crude oil (every Dem’s favorite whipping boy until there is an oil and gas shortage) taxed by the barrel. It was nothing but another way to fund the Dems’ fantasies of gross hyper Federal spending.l

So ever since 1996, there has been very little reason for any owner of a formerly polluting asset to do the cleanup and try to recover costs from a host of other owners of those assets, or those who sent waste to those former facilities. Why bother when the litigation takes decades to resolve, the lawyers and litigation expenses take most of it, and good luck collecting on any judgments.

The only way to complete the remaining cleanups is for the government to do the work, pay the bills, and then as necessary levy taxes on industry to pay for it.

Forget ever recovering anything. Ain’t gonna happen.

43 years after enacting the Superfund law, to date there are 1,329 sites that made the “National Priorities List” (NPL) of the worst sites (more than 50 thousand contaminated sites have been identified to date – these are only the worst of the worst. And guess how many of those 1,329 sites have actually been cleaned up?

452.

At this rate, it will only take until the year 2149 to finish only the NPL sites.

If Superfund isn’t a boondoggle and a cluster-you-know-what, then nothing is.

October 6, 2023 7:00 am

“…. creating new problems that catalytic converters later helped resolve…”

Uh, yuh, but those dam things are absurdly expensive when they fail.

Mr Ed
October 6, 2023 7:36 am

There are several super fund sites in Montana connected to mining that will be
a health hazard for many years. The original owners sold the operations to a new shell
owner who then declares bankruptcy and walks away. The old lead smelter in
East Helena is one. There is so much lead/arsenic in the groundwater there that if one was
to drink a glass of it they would be dead in a few hours. There seems to be parallels to
the climate change industry with the only difference is that the mine/smelter sites are
real not some make believe racket.

rbcherba
October 6, 2023 11:40 am

This isn’t a comment on the legal case, but a comment on the Kalamazoo River. My wife lived on the river in the late 1940s and early 1950s. It could get stinky in the summer. In the late 1960s and early 1970s we lived just outside Kalamazoo and once drove to the river with our kids and two canoes. The water in the area where we entered the river was so thick with paper mill waste that the carp swimming through it caused the “water” to “bump up.” It was disgusting to say the least.

observa
October 6, 2023 3:21 pm

The scope, extent and causes of environmental contamination – whether from pollution over decades or from a single event – are often not understood until after years of investigation, analysis and litigation. Determining all contributing factors and parties more often than not requires more than three years.

Yep-
‘Turbine graveyards’ sprawled across Texas (msn.com)

October 6, 2023 4:14 pm

The function of the US Supreme Court is to determine if a law is constitutional. It can neither make nor change laws, that is the function of the US Congress. All the Court can do is tell Congress is that “This law is unconstitutional, it is struck down.”