Emergency funding halts Superfund shutdown - C&EN Global

Mar 31, 1986 - The Environmental Protection Agency was prepared to shut down its Superfund hazardous waste dump cleanup program on April 1...
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now for a negotiated settlement that would satisfy all parties to the case, however, it is thought by many that he will try to bring India back into talks with Carbide and the U.S. at­ torneys. That might lead, observers say, to a higher compensation offer from the company. India has been widely believed in the past to have demanded as much as $1 billion. Last week, all three parties met in the judge's chambers after the ten­ tative agreement was disclosed. Carbide says that the proposed $350 million settlement, well be­ low what had been generally ex­ pected, would produce a fund for victims over an unspecified payment period of between $500 million and $600 million. The company states

that, in light of what it considers strong defenses in the litigation, the amount is "very substantial." The settlement was condemned as an "outrage" by the Citizens Commis­ sion on Bhopal, a U.S. group, which has calculated compensation needs at $4 billion over the next 30 years. Another problem facing the pro­ posed settlement is a determination of precisely which victims are cov­ ered by it. Carbide says it will not conclude the settlement unless it is certain that all claims arising from the Bhopal disaster can be resolved with finality. Judge Keenan would have to rule on a motion to group the victims into a class, something the parties to the settlement are expected to file for soon. D

Emergency funding halts Superfund shutdown The Environmental Protection Agen­ cy was prepared to shut down its Superfund hazardous waste dump cleanup program on April 1. But Congress has come to its rescue with a $150 million stopgap funding measure that is expected to carry the agency through May 31. Money for the fund stopped com­ ing in last Sept. 30, when Superfund's taxing authority expired. And although both the House and Sen­ ate have passed reauthorization bills for the program, conferees aren't even close to resolving some 730 pages worth of differences between the two bills. The Superfund rescue effort was spearheaded by Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg (D.-N.J.), who said it was nec­ essary to prevent the program from suffering "serious and, perhaps, ir­ reversible harm." Without the bill, Lautenberg pointed out during de­ bate, EPA, on April 1, would have to begin to dismantle Superfund by terminating contracts with compa­ nies currently involved in cleanup actions. Enforcement actions would be reduced by half. Emergency re­ movals would be curtailed 80%. And EPA would be able to handle only three or four major emergencies a month. The agency began the pro­ cess of furloughing its own employ­ ees in February. "We cannot," Lautenberg main­ tained, "permit this dismantling of

the program to occur. It is not pos­ sible to start and stop a program the size and complexity of Superfund without irreparable damage." Apparently his colleagues in the House and Senate agree with him. The rescue effort was introduced on March 20 and enacted on March 21, proving that Congress can act with remarkable speed when neces­ sary. EPA issued a statement saying that it was "pleased that Congress has given EPA a few more days to pre­ vent the total shutdown of Super-

La u ten berg: pre ven t serio us harm

fund." However, it added, shortterm funding is no substitute for a full, five-year reauthorization. Su­ perfund cannot be rebuilt in 60 days. Congress must continue to treat Superfund as a top priority to pre­ vent further disruption of the pro­ gram. Π

Justice curbs agency use of consent decrees The Justice Department has decid­ ed that it's time to curb the use of consent decrees to settle suits brought against the government. Consent de­ crees are negotiated agreements be­ tween defendant and plaintiff that have the force of law w h e n ap­ proved by the presiding judge. In a memorandum setting forth the new policy, Attorney General Edwin Meese III says that in the past, executive departments and agencies have, on occasion, misused consent decrees and forfeited the prerogatives of the executive branch in order to pre-empt the exercise of those prerogatives by a subsequent Administration. The new policy is particularly aimed at decrees that contain "an elaborate recipe on how the executive branch is going to act thereafter," according to assistant attorney general Charles J. Cooper, head of the Office of Legal Counsel. Henceforth, Meese says, executive departments and agencies, in most instances, may not enter into de­ crees that would require an execu­ tive officer to revise, amend, or promulgate regulations or to expend funds that have not been appropri­ ated or budgeted. One of the agencies directly af­ fected by the new policy is the En­ v i r o n m e n t a l Protection Agency, which has operated under a num­ ber of consent decrees over the years because it is frequently sued for fail­ ing to meet nondiscretionary re­ sponsibilities, such as specific dead­ lines, written into the various envi­ ronmental laws. Those decrees, according to Gene Lucero, director of EPA's Office of Waste Programs Enforcement, don't simply say that the agency will promulgate a rule following a spe­ cific timetable. Rather, they include March 31, 1986 C&EN

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