January 2008 SPR Alert
On January 22, 2008, Governor Eliot Spitzer submitted a Budget Bill to the New York State Assembly and Senate that included proposed amendments to the 2003 Brownfield Cleanup Program Act ("BCP Act"). In an effort to achieve substantial savings to the State Financial Plan, the proposed bill seeks to "reform" existing law primarily by tightening eligibility standards for tax credits and limiting the amount of those credits available under the program.
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December 2007 SPR Alert
On November 15th, the Ninth Circuit vacated regulations published by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) establishing corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) standards for "light trucks" - sport utility vehicles, minivans, and some pickup trucks - manufactured in 2008 through 2011.
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November 2007 SPR Alert
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation ("DEC") has issued proposed regulations to implement the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative ("RGGI").
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June 2007 SPR Alerts
For the fourth year in a row Sive, Paget and Riesel has been awarded the #1 ranking in the Environmental Law category in New York by Chambers and Partners, an independent law firm and attorney ranking publication.
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On June 11, 2007, the Supreme Court of the United States issued an opinion in United States v. Atlantic Research Corp. decision. whether Section 107(a) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 ("CERCLA," or "Superfund") provides a potentially responsible party ("PRP") such as an owner or operator of a contaminated site with a claim to recover response costs from other PRPs.
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May 2007 SPR Alert
Dan Riesel once again will chair this year's ALI-ABA Course in Environmental Litigation.
This year's course, which will be held on June 27-30 at the University of Colorado School of Law,
is the 32nd Annual Advanced ALI-ABA Summer Course of Study.
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April 2007 SPR Alert
The Citizens’ Environmental Coalition, Sierra Club, and the New York Public Interest
Research Group ("Petitioners") have sued the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation ("DEC")
over the recently promulgated regulations governing the Brownfields Cleanup Program ("BCP") and other
remedial programs.
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Spring 2007 SPR Springboard
Newsletter
The feature article of this edition focuses on the urgent issue of climate
change and recent efforts of the RGGI program to establish rules curbing the
emissions of greenhouse gases in the Northeast. Also featured in the newsletter
is an analysis of the increased importance of LEED certification in the New
York construction sector and greater environmental context. pdf version
January 2007 SPR Alert
The Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA") and Department of Justice ("DOJ")
have recently issued a model agreement, or order on consent (the "Model
Agreement"), for parties purchasing certain contaminated properties eligible
for the "bona fide prospective purchaser" ("BFPP") defense under the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980
("CERCLA"). The Model Agreement gives purchasers of contaminated property an
opportunity to receive protection from a federal lawsuit, and provides an
avenue for resolving cleanup issues at sites not eligible for the New York
State Brownfields Cleanup Program ("BCP").
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October 2006 SPR Alert
The State of New York Department of Environmental Conservation ("DEC") has
adopted the long awaited overhaul to its Part 375 Hazardous Waste Remediation
Regulations including, most significantly, its first ever Brownfields Cleanup
Program Regulations. These final Part 375 Regulations are substantially the
same as the draft regulations issued this past summer with one significant
omission-they do not incorporate the hoped-for informal voluntary cleanup
program that would have served as an alternative to the BCP for sites that
might not readily qualify as "Brownfields".
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2005 SPR Springboard Newsletter
Highlighting the Do's and Dont's for corporate litigants, the feature article
of this edition focuses on the responsibilities and pitfalls involving the
preservation and destruction of email and other electronic data. Other articles
include an analysis of EPA's recently issued regulations governing "all
appropriate inquiry," an element of the innocent purchaser defense under
CERCLA, and an analysis of the recently issued regulations for New York's
Brownfields Cleanup Program.
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Summer 2005 SPR Springboard
Newsletter
SPR's combination of "unbeaten experience and local knowledge" earned
the firm a second consecutive #1 ranking in New York Environmental Practice.
Other articles in this newsletter address workplace safety, municipal law,
hazardous waste site cleanups in New York and residential and park development.
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Winter 2004 SPR Alert
In Cooper Industries, Inc. v. Aviall Services, Inc., The Supreme Court of the
United States changed significantly the legal landscape for certain
contribution claims brought under the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 (“CERCLA” or
“Superfund”).
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Fall 2004 SPR Springboard
Newsletter
This newsletter focuses on managing environmental crises in co-ops and condos.
It also includes an update on DEC changes to Brownfield eligibility and
discusses recent case law concerning the disclosure of information provided to
expert witnesses. pdf
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Fall 2003 SPR Springboard
Newsletter
This newsletter focuses on the new Super Fund legislation just signed in to law
by New York State and its potenial impact as well as looking at the issues
surrounding challenging a "positive declaration."
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Summer 2003 SPR Springboard
Newsletter
This newsletter focuses on new and effective ways of navigating development
projects through government agencies as well as recent SPR work.
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Please note that one of the cases discussed in "Fighting City Hall,"
Home Depot, U.S.A. v. Dunn, was recently reversed by the Appellate Division,
Second Department. 305 A.D.2d 459 (2d Dept. 2003).
Winter 2003 SPR Springboard
Newsletter
This newsletter explores issues concerning "Toxic Anxiety" and Toxic
Mold litigation as well as recent SPR work.
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October 2005, First Avenue Properties, Changing An Industrial Landscape
The transformation of obsolete and surplus industrial property owned by
Consolidated Edison Company of New York, Inc (“Con Edison”) to
commercial and residential property conforming to surrounding landscape
involved several regulatory and business issues.
more...
October 2005, Responding to Clean Water Act Enforcement
Actions
The maturity of the Clean Water Act (“CWA”), 33 U.S.C. § 1361
et seq., and the ease of enforcement due to the self monitoring and reporting
requirements, has led to a relatively effective pollution abatement scheme
against “conventional” point sources, as opposed to such sources as
animal feed lots and combined sewers.
The mechanisms of this point source enforcement scheme are varied and include
civil administrative and judicial actions for fines and injunctive relief.
more...
July 2005, Preliminary
Injunctions, and Stays, Pending Appeal in Environmental Litigation
Interlocutory injunctive relief is an important and integral aspect of environmental litigation. Historically, injunctive relief has been used primarily in governmental enforcement efforts and by environmental groups. more...
June 2005, Litigating the
Environmental Administrative Law Case
Environmental litigation frequently involves litigation with the Environmental Protection Agency and other federal regulatory agencies and their state counterparts. This form of litigation is seldom “plenary,” and because it most often involves agency decision making, discovery, the device that can level the playing field, is normally unavailable.
more...
June 2005, Federal Regulation of Wetlands
Until the last several decades, wetlands -- bogs and swamps and similar areas -- were generally perceived as impediments to agriculture and development, and most useful when eliminated. Originally, there were an estimated 221 million acres of wetlands in the continental United States; as of 1997 (the latest date for which data is available), approximately 105.5 million acres remained.
more...
June 2005, “Little NEPAs” and their
Environmental Impact Assessment Procedures
Fifteen states and the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have enacted environmental policy acts which, because they are largely modeled on the federal National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (“NEPA”), 42 U.S.C. § 4321
et seq, are collectively referred to as "Little NEPAs." The state statutes are listed in the Appendix to these Materials. more...
May 2005,
Defending Citizen Suits
The major federal environmental statutes enacted between 1970 and 1980 all
contain provisions allowing private citizens to bring suit against alleged
violators of the statutes. Citizen suits against alleged polluters, until
recently, were primarily brought under the Clean Water Act because the
permitting and self-reporting enforcement mechanisms provided easy pickings for
citizen plaintiffs. more...
May 2005, Private-Party Hazardous
Material Litigation
Superfund practice has undergone significant changes since its enactment in
1980. Gone are the large multiparty sites with their endless steering committee
meetings. “Voluntary cleanups” and other alternative methods of
dealing with contaminated sites appear to have largely supplanted the once
ubiquitous government initiated CERCLA actions to recover
“response” costs or to compel cleanup of hazardous materials, which
have both decreased in number and cost.
more...
February 2005, Ethical
Considerations for the Environmental Lawyer
The practice of environmental law requires lawyers to understand and apply
complex legal, technical, political and moral concepts on a daily basis.
Although the ethical problems faced by environmental lawyers are not unique,
the issues posed are often exacerbated by the nature of the practice, with its
technical and scientific aspects, its political overtones, and its significant
implications for public health and safety.
more...
2005, When Regulatory Universes Collide: Environmental
Regulation in the Workplace
On both the federal and state levels, prosecutors increasingly are using environmental laws instead of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act) to prosecute employers causing or threatening to cause the death or serious injury of their employees. Environmental laws are supplanting the OSH Act because, unlike the relatively modest penalties contemplated by tradtional workplace safety law, environmental statutes carry the possibility, not only of substantial pecuniary penalties, but also of felony convictions and lengthy incarceration.
more...
2005, Overview of the National Environmental Policy Act:
Environmental Impact Assessments and Alternatives
The National Environmental Policy Act ("NEPA" or the "Act"), requires federal administrative agencies to factor environmental considerations into their discretionary decision making. The Act directs that federal agencies implement, "to the fullest extent possible," methods and procedures designed to accord environmental factors appropriate consideration.
more...
2004, Defense Perspectives on Environmental Citizen Suits
The major federal senvironmental statutes enacted between 1970 and 1980 all contain provisions allowing private citizens to bring suit against alleged violators. As citizen suits enter the 21st Century, a defendant in one of this actions will have access to a relatively well-established body of case law concerning potential defenses.
more...
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June 2002, The Federal
Regulation of Wetlands - The Shifting Concepts of Wetland Values
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Mark A. Chertok with Kate Sinding
Until the last several decades, wetlands - bogs and swamps and similar areas -
were generally perceived as impediments to agriculture and development, and
most useful when eliminated. The historical perspective of wetlands
dramatically shifted in the early 1970's.
more...
June 2002, Private-Party Hazardous Material Litigation
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Daniel Riesel, Michael Bogin and Kate Sinding
Government initiated litigation to recover "response" costs or to
compel cleanup of hazardous materials has long dominated the Federal Reporters.
However, government litigation pursuant to the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability Act ("CERCLA"), 42 U.S.C. §
9601 et seq., has "matured" and is no longer prevalent.
more...
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September 2005
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Daniel Riesel and Dan Chorost
In September 2005, the New York Law Journal published Daniel Riesel and
Dan Chorost’s article entitled, “Initiatives Hit Workplace
Violations With Environmental Laws.” The article describes a major new
federal enforcement initiative aimed at increasing interagency coordination and
prosecuting workplace-safety violations through the use of environmental laws.
This development is significant to the regulated community because
environmental statutes such as RCRA, CERCLA and the Clean Air Act carry
criminal and civil penalties that are considerably more severe than those of
the OSH Act. pdf
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December 17, 2001, Views Vary on
'Environmental Justice' - Communities Try to Use Federal Laws to Keep Out
Polluting Facilities, New York Law Journal
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Steven C. Russo and Elizabeth A. Read
Environmental Justice has become the catch phrase in recent years for parties
seeking to prevent or remedy the correlation between the location of noxious
uses such as industrial facilities and the concentration of low income and
minority residents.
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2002, Environmental Enforcement:
Civil and Criminal, Law Journal Press
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Daniel Riesel
A comprehensive guide to representing clients in civil and criminal
environmental enforcement matters. The book goes through the structure of
environmental enforcement, discusses how to address a governmental
investigation, civil and criminal penalties and penalty policies, environmental
self-auditing and the special issues concerning criminal representation and
defense in environmental crimes prosecutions. Civil enforcement pursuant to all
the major federal environmental statutes is also explored.
2001, Federal and State Brownfield
Initiatives, Contained in Retail Property Development: Current Trends &
Practice
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Mark A. Chertok, Michael Bogin and Dale A. Desnoyers
"Brownfields" is a new label for an old ambition: the redevelopment
of underused or abandoned industrial and commercial sites. Recent Federal and
state initiatives have begun to remove some of the barriers to redevelopment of
brownfields created by CERCLA and state laws, but successful brownfield
development still requires careful attention to site conditions, investment in
site analysis prior to acquisition and the structuring of the transaction.
1998, Administrative Agency Relationships, Contained in Ginsberg & Wienberg, Environmental Law and Regulation in New York West
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David Markell, Daniel Riesel and Pamela Esterman
This chapter in a multi-volume guide to practice in New York provides a review
of constitutional and statutory issues relating to administrative agency
practice before the State Department of Environmental Conservation. Throughout
the chapter, the authors offer practical advice for interacting with the DEC at
various stages of the enforcement process.
1998, Environmental Law, Contained in Ostertag &
Benson, General Practice in New York West
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Steven Russo
This chapter in a multi-volume guide to general practice in New York provides a
broad overview of the major substantive areas of New York environmental
practice, including environmental impact review, clean water, hazardous waste
and state common law doctrines such as nuisance and trespass.
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