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This press release was originally distributed via the eWire press wire service (2002–2016). It is preserved here as a historical record.
No 'Ramp-Down' Ahead in the Cost of Running Superfund
ARCHIVED 2002–2016: Originally distributed via the eWire press wire service. Preserved as historical record.
No 'Ramp-Down' Ahead in the Cost of Running Superfund
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
No 'Ramp-Down' Ahead in the Cost of Running Superfund
Twenty years spent cleaning up many of the U.S.'s most contaminated areas - and still more work ahead for the EPA, Congress told in new independent study. Costs will not decline for at least five years - and then only marginally
WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, Jul. 10 -/E-Wire/-- After 20 years spent cleaning up old mines, chemical plants, landfills, rivers, and other areas across the country contaminated by toxic waste, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) still has a lot more work to do - enough to ensure the agency's Superfund costs will not decline before 2006 at the very earliest, and then only by a small amount.
The findings of a new Congress-commissioned report by Resources for the Future (RFF) scholars Katherine Probst and David Konisky will disappoint those who were expecting an imminent "ramp down" in the cost to EPA of administering the Superfund program.
"It's just not realistic to think the costs of Superfund are going to decline much in the next 10 years," says Probst, a senior fellow at RFF. "Though our study does not address whether or not the now-expired taxes that stocked the Trust Fund should be re-imposed, it's clear there's not enough money left to pay for 10 more years of EPA work."
Congress asked independent research institute RFF to estimate future Superfund costs, amid continuing debate on whether and how to reauthorize the program. The law was last reauthorized in 1986; only $1.3 billion was left in the Superfund Trust Fund at the end of fiscal year 2000.
The comprehensive RFF study, Superfund's Future: What Will It Cost?, estimates that the total 10-year bill from fiscal years 2000 through 2009 will range between $14 billion and $16.4 billion. In 1999, the cost of cleaning up nonfederal sites on the National Priorities List (NPL) and administering the program was $1.54 billion; it is unlikely to fall below $1.4 billion until FY 2008 and $1.33 billion in FY 2009.
"Congress needs to clarify the role and priorities of the NPL," says Probst, who has been studying Superfund and hazardous waste management issues for the past 20 years. "The EPA and individual states need to do a better job of identifying sites destined for the NPL in the future, especially new 'mega-sites' - which, at an average cost of $140 million, are 10 times more expensive than most other sites," she adds.
Probst, Konisky, and their colleagues also estimate EPA-funded cleanup costs at current NPL sites will be far greater through 2009 than at sites added between now and then. And despite the EPA having designated 57% of all sites on the current NPL "construction complete," there is more work to be done at some of these, and the amount of work at the remaining sites is significant.
They also found that EPA five-year reviews of NPL sites classified many sites as "protective," despite information in these reviews suggesting that the remedies, in fact, are not fully implemented, not functioning as designed, or are unlikely to meet cleanup objectives. This was the case for 48 of 99 sites where the EPA concluded remedies were protective. "Clearly, EPA needs to improve the quality of the five-year review process and clarify just what it means to have a protective remedy," the RFF researchers report.
To help Congress better predict and prioritize funding requirements, Probst and Konisky also recommend a reassessment of the level of management, policy, and administrative support resources needed to implement Superfund, as well as improvements to EPA management and financial systems for tracking Superfund progress and costs. And they suggest that two of EPA's major internal management information systems-the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Information System (CERCLIS) and the Integrated Financial Management System (IFMS)-need to be improved so that Congress can more clearly see how Superfund dollars are being spent. For instance, they found that 75% of EPA regional Superfund payroll account funds (valued at $155 million in 1999) are not charged to specific sites - most likely due to insufficient tracking, accounting, or reporting procedures.
The RFF scholars also call for a review of the governor's concurrence policy, which allows a state to effectively veto the inclusion of a contaminated site on the NPL, either for political, economic, or other reasons - making it difficult to predict which sites will be included on the list.
As of June 14, 2001, there are 1,076 nonfederal "final" sites on the NPL, and 222 "deleted" from the list. Of this total (1,298), some 736 are deemed "construction-complete" by the EPA, leaving 562 sites that are not. A further 61 nonfederal sites are currently proposed for inclusion on the NPL. Among the 36 nonfederal sites listed in FY 2000, two are expected to be "mega-sites" - Leviathan Mine in California and Midnite Mine in Washington. So far this fiscal year, 17 new nonfederal sites have been added, including four expected "mega-sites" - Indian Refinery-Texaco Lawrenceville in Illinois, Malone Service Company, Inc. in Texas, Gilt Edge Mine in South Dakota, and Portland Harbor in Oregon. At the end of FY 1999, there were 112 "mega-sites."
Katherine Probst is a senior fellow at Resources for the Future. She's been studying Superfund and other hazardous waste management programs for the past 20 years. Her widely published research has also focused on the cleanup of nuclear weapons sites, regulatory policy, land use and institutional controls. She is a member of the U.S. Department of Energy's Environmental Management Advisory Board. She holds a master's degree from Harvard University in City and Regional Planning and a B.A. in Government and American Studies from Wesleyan University.
In addition to Probst and Konisky, other contributors to this report include Robert Hersh, Michael B. Batz, and Katherine D. Walker.
Resources for the Future is an independent research institute dedicated since 1952 to improving environmental policy and resource management through objective study. RFF encourages scholars to express their individual opinions, which may differ from those of other RFF scholars, officers, and directors.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Visit the RFF web site at www.rff.org Press Release: http://www.rff.org/news/releases/strictly_embargoedsuperfund.htm For the Record: http://www.rff.org/news/FortheRecord/sf7-5.htm Invitation to briefing: http://www.rff.org/invitetosf.htm Executive Summary of this report: http://www.rff.org/books/chapterpdfs/Executive_summary.pdf Recommendations from this report: http://www.rff.org/sfrecs.htm State site lists: http://www.rff.org/sfsites.htm Flyer: http://www.rff.org/rfflyer.pdf
Resources for the Future
http://http://www.rff.org/invitetosf.htm
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