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NEW EPA CLEANUP STRATEGY FOR CASMALIA TO SAVE
OVER $100 MILLION:SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCED PAYMENTS OFFERED TO 800+ PARTIES
PARTIES HAVE UNTIL DECEMBER 6 TO ACCEPT
SETTLEMENTS
(San Francisco) -- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's
(EPA) new
cleanup strategy for the Casmalia Disposal site will save over
$100 million
compared to its previous estimate, enabling the agency to make
substantially
reduced settlement offers to over 800 potentially responsible
parties. Parties
that receive these offers will be able to settle for 40-50% less
than the
settlement offers they received earlier this year. These savings
result from a
revised cleanup strategy for the site that dropped the estimated
cleanup costs
by 32%.
"We took a hard look at our cleanup strategy and our
settlement terms after
these parties raised some legitimate concerns. We now have
settlement offers
that strike a better balance between EPA's responsibility to care
for this site
and the parties' settlement needs. But these parties still must
pay their
share of the cleanup costs," said Julie Anderson, director of
U.S. EPA's western
regional Waste Management Division. "Up to now, all cleanup
work at the site
has been paid for by the 54 parties which contributed the largest
amounts of
waste, and EPA's Superfund Program."
EPA has lowered its cost estimate for Casmalia cleanup to $271.9
million,
down from $399 million. The savings result from a modified cleanup
strategy
which maximizes near-term capital construction, thus reducing
operation and
maintenance costs in the future.
In letters sent today to the over 800 potentially responsible
parties, U.S.
EPA is offering two settlement options. In both options, the
settlement amounts
are based on the amount of waste a party sent to the Casmalia
Disposal Site.
Parties can choose to settle all of their liability at the site
now, or can pay
less now and retain some liability into the future. Parties that
settle all
their liability now will pay about 40% less than under the earlier
settlement
offers. Parties that choose to retain some liability into the
future can pay
50% less than the original offer.
For the largest party receiving a new settlement offer, this
results in a
reduction in the payment amount from $493,026 to $317,933 if the
party fully
settles its liability and $243,558 if it retains some liability.
All the other
settlement amounts are smaller, with about half in the $10,000 to
$100,000
range. Recipients will have until December 6 to accept the new
offers.
Municipalities, which include cities and sanitation districts, may
see
even further reductions in settlement amounts if they sent only
municipal solid
waste or municipal sewage sludge to Casmalia. Instead of paying 11
cents per
pound to fully settle for the municipal solid waste and municipal
sewage sludge
they sent to Casmalia, municipalities may be eligible to pay only
$5.40 per ton
of such waste -- only 0.27 cents per pound.
The Casmalia Disposal Site, located near Santa Maria, California,
operated
as a hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal facility in
the 1970's and
1980's. The funds that the U.S. EPA collects from settling parties
will pay
for the proper closure and long-term monitoring of the Casmalia
Disposal Site.
For example, the settlements will pay for construction of landfill
caps and
buttresses, ground water monitoring, site maintenance, and
community involvement
efforts.
Between 1992 and 1996, the U.S. EPA worked to stabilize conditions
at the
Casmalia Disposal Site. In 1996, U.S. EPA negotiated a settlement
with 54 waste
generators. These waste generators, called the Casmalia Steering
Committee, are
now completing the construction of a cap for the landfill
containing pesticides
and solvents, and are designing caps for other landfills at the
site. These
future landfill caps will be paid for, in part, by funds from the
more than 800
parties that will receive the new settlement offers within the
next few days.
Later, U.S. EPA will notify many additional parties of their
responsibility to
contribute to the cleanup effort at Casmalia.
During 16 years of operation between 1973 and 1989, the Casmalia
Disposal
Site took in more than four billion pounds of waste. The
facility's
owner/operators accepted a wide variety of industrial wastes
including
pesticides, solvents, acids, metals, cyanide, non-liquid PCBs, and
other
hazardous waste from about 10,000 different parties. In the early
1990s, the
facility's owner/operators abandoned efforts to properly close and
clean up the
site. In addition to seeking funds from those parties that sent
waste to the
Casmalia Disposal Site, the U.S. EPA is vigorously prosecuting its
lawsuit
against the former owner/operators, namely, Kenneth H. Hunter,
Jr., Casmalia
Resources, and Casmalia Disposal. For more information, members of
the public
are invited to call the following toll-free number:
1-800-394-2670.
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