Appendix B — Environmental Literature
The sources listed below, from which much of the material in
Chapters 2 and 5 of this Roadmap is adapted, provide additional information related
to environmental obligations and AROs.
Section
|
Title
|
Source
|
---|---|---|
Environmental
Regulations — Federal
|
| |
The Clean Air Act
| ||
The Clean Water Act
| ||
Transportation Environmental Resource
Center, “Clean Water Act (CWA): Industrial
Wastewater”
| ||
The Toxic Substances Control Act
| ||
EPA Office of Research and Development
(ORD), Childrenʼs Environmental Health
Research Roadmap
| ||
The Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act
| ||
The Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (Superfund)
| ||
Superfund — A Deeper
Dive
|
| |
Site Assessment
| ||
EPA National Center for Environmental
Economics, Emergency Response and Removal Program,
CERCLA’s Overlooked Cleanup Program:
Emergency Response and Removal,
May 2011
| ||
Placement on the NPL
| ||
Remedial Investigation and Feasibility
Study
| ||
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Hazardous,
Toxic, and Radioactive Waste Center of Expertise and EPA
Office of Emergency and Remedial Response, A Guide to Developing and
Documenting Cost Estimates During the Feasibility
Study, July 2000
| ||
Remediation Decisions
|
EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response (OSWER), Rules of Thumb for Superfund Remedy
Selection, August 1997
| |
FRTR, the Technology Screening
Matrix tool
| ||
Soil Removal
|
EPA, A Citizenʼs Guide to Excavation of
Contaminated Soil, September
2012
| |
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) Technical Manual, TED 01-00-015,
“Excavations: Hazard Recognition in
Trenching and Shoring”
| ||
FRTR, the Technology Screening
Matrix tool
| ||
Soil Treatment and Stabilization
| ||
EPA, Contaminated Site Clean-Up Information,
“In Situ Chemical
Reduction”
| ||
Ex Situ Groundwater Treatment
|
EPA, A Citizenʼs Guide to Pump and
Treat, September 2012
| |
In Situ Groundwater Treatment
| ||
EPA, A Citizenʼs Guide to Pump and
Treat, September 2012
| ||
EPA Office of Land and Emergency Management,
Community Guide to Permeable
Reactive Barriers, 2021
| ||
Interstate Technology & Regulatory
Council (ITRC), Permeable Reactive Barrier:
Technology Update, June 2011
| ||
Monitored Natural Attenuation
|
EPA Office of Land and Emergency Management,
Community Guide to Monitored Natural
Attenuation, 2021
| |
ITRC, Permeable Reactive Barrier:
Technology Update, June 2011
| ||
EPA ORD, Technical Protocol for Evaluating
Natural Attenuation of Chlorinated Solvents in
Ground Water, September 1998
| ||
Groundwater Containment
| ||
Quintal, David and Otero, Margarita,
“Vertical Impermeable Barriers (Cutoff
Walls),” Geoengineer.org
| ||
Indiana Department of Environmental
Management, Engineering Control: Slurry
Walls, updated September 2017
and May 2021
| ||
Controlling Exposure to Contaminated Soil
and Groundwater
|
Committee on Environmental Remediation at
Naval Facilities et al., Environmental Cleanup at Navy
Facilities: Risk-Based Methods,
National Academy Press, 1999
| |
Sediment Remediation
|
EPA OSWER, Contaminated Sediment Remediation
Guidance for Hazardous Waste
Sites, December 2005
| |
Dredging and Excavation
| ||
In Situ Techniques
|
See 2.3.4.3.1 above.
| |
Monitored Natural Recovery
|
See 2.3.4.3.1 above.
| |
Operations, Maintenance, and Monitoring
|
EPA OSWER, Operation and Maintenance in the
Superfund Program, May 2001
| |
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Hazardous,
Toxic, and Radioactive Waste Center of Expertise and EPA
Office of Emergency and Remedial Response, A Guide to Developing and
Documenting Cost Estimates During the Feasibility
Study, July 2000
| ||
Long-Term Response Action
| ||
Five-Year Reviews
|
EPA OSWER, Five-Year Review Process in the
Superfund Program, April
2003
| |
Deletion From the National Priorities
List
| ||
EPA “Notice of Liability” Letters to
PRPs
|
EPA OSWER, “Interim Guidance on Notice Letters,
Negotiations, and Information Exchange,”
October 19, 1987
| |
Superfund Settlement Agreements
|
See 2.3.7 above.
| |
Corrective Action
Process Under the Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act
|
Rogers, C. Gregory, Financial Reporting
of Environmental Liabilities and Risks After
Sarbanes-Oxley, 2005, 48
| |
Environmental
Regulations — State
|
| |
Federal-State Partnerships
|
Paddock, LeRoy, The Federal and State Roles in
Environmental Enforcement: A Proposal for a More
Effective and More Efficient
Relationship, Pace University
DigitalCommons@Pace, January 1, 1990
| |
Environmental Law Institute, “Environmental Law
101”
| ||
42 U.S.C. Section 7410, “State Implementation Plans for
National Primary and Secondary Ambient Air Quality
Standards”
| ||
33 U.S.C. Section 1342(b), “National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System: State Permit
Programs”
| ||
33 U.S.C. Section 1319(a), “Enforcement: State Enforcement;
Compliance Orders”
| ||
State Environmental Cleanup Regulations
|
Texas Administrative Code Title 30,
Section
350.55(e)(1)
| |
Contaminants of Emerging Concern
|
EPA Office of Land and Emergency Management,
Technical Fact Sheet —
Perfluorooctane Sulfonate (PFOS) and
Perfluorooctanoic Acid (PFOA),
November 2017
| |
“Microbial Degradation of
Polyfluoroalkyl Chemicals in the Environment: A
Review,”
Environment International, November 2013
| ||
Environmental Working Group, “EPA Conducting Criminal Investigations
Into Industries’ Handling of PFAS
Chemicals”
| ||
EPAʼs final Fifth Unregulated Contaminant
Monitoring Rule (UCMR 5)
| ||
Transaction-Triggered Environmental Laws
| ||
See 2.4 above.
| ||
Connecticut Department of Energy and
Environmental Protection, “Property Transfer Program: An
Environmental Program Fact Sheet”
| ||
Licensed Environmental Professionals
|
Miller, Kristen, “Connecticut Transfer
Act,” September 17, 2012
| |
Massachusetts Department of Environmental
Protection, 310 CMR 40, “Massachusetts Contingency
Plan”
| ||
Mass.gov, “Hiring a Licensed Site
Professional”
| ||
Farer, David, “Transaction-Triggered
Environmental Laws,” Chapter 3 in Environmental Aspects
of Real Estate and Commercial Transactions, edited
by James Witkin, American Bar Association, 2011
| ||
Connecticut Department of Energy and
Environmental Protection, “Licensed Environmental Professional
Program: An Environmental Program Fact
Sheet”
| ||
Oberer, John, “Licensed Environmental Professionals:
Do These Programs Work?”
New Jersey Business, February 26, 2016
| ||
Risk-Based Cleanup
|
National Academy of Sciences, “Review of Risk-Based
Methodologies,” Chapter 2 in
Environmental Cleanup at Navy Facilities: Risk-Based
Methods, National Academies Press, 1999
| |
Oregon Department of Environmental Quality,
Risk-Based Decision Making for the
Remediation of Contaminated
Sites, September 22, 2003
| ||
Oklahoma Department of Environmental
Quality, “Risk-Based Decision Making for Site
Cleanup,” 2021
| ||
Downey, Douglas et al., “Trends in
Regulatory Acceptance of Risk-Based Cleanup Goals and
Natural Attenuation for Site Closure,” Remediation: The
Journal of Environmental Cleanup Costs, Technologies
& Techniques, December 1997, 71–86
| ||
Environmental
Regulations — International
|
Sands, Philippe and Peel, Jacqueline,
Principles of International Environmental Law,
fourth edition, Cambridge University Press, 2012
| |
Secretariat of the Basel, Rotterdam, and
Stockholm Conventions, Synergies Among the Basel, Rotterdam,
and Stockholm Conventions, “First Intergovernmental Environment
Meetings After UNEA2 Conclude With Concrete Steps Taken
to Manage Waste More Sustainably”
| ||
See 2.4 above.
| ||
European Commission, “Environmental
Liability”
| ||
Kadas, Madeleine and Fraker, Russell,
“Central and South America Overview: Emerging Trends in
Latin America,” International Environmental Law: The
Practitionerʼs Guide to the Laws of the Planet,
edited by Roger Martella, Jr. and J. Brett Grosko, American
Bar Association, 2014, 365, 368–369
| ||
Power and Utilities —
Nuclear
|
| |
High-Level Radioactive Waste
| ||
DOE Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste
Management, Office of Scientific and Technical Information,
Acceptance Priority Ranking &
Annual Capacity Report, 2004
| ||
Power and Utilities —
Non-Nuclear
|
| |
Coal Ash Impoundments
|
EPA Final Rule, Hazardous and Solid Waste Management
System; Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals From
Electric Utilities (CFR Parts
257 and 261)
| |
Recent CCR Developments
| ||
The Final Closure Part A Rule
|
EPA Final Rule, Hazardous and Solid Waste Management
System: Disposal of Coal Combustion Residuals From
Electric Utilities; A Holistic Approach to Closure
Part A: Deadline to Initiate
Closure (the “final Closure Part A
rule”)
| |
The Final Closure Part B Rule |
EPA Final Rule, Hazardous and Solid Waste Management
System: Disposal of CCR; A Holistic Approach to
Closure Part B: Alternate Demonstration for Unlined
Surface Impoundments (the “final
Closure Part B rule”)
| |
Final Rule on Legacy CCR Surface
Impoundments and CCR Management Units
| ||
Renewables
|
American Clean Power Association, “Wind Turbine Disposal and Recycling
Strategies”
| |