Vol. 70, No. 12, December
1997
At Issue
Closing out cleanups for good
Breaking free from environmental liability
By Brian Burke
A chain of title need no longer link property owners to unlimited liability
for environmental contamination. That connection now can be broken.
With the new environmental liability limits,
the state is taking bold steps to encourage remediation and break the economic
paralysis caused by environmental contamination. |
Effective July 1, 1998, any business, individual or government entity
that did not "intentionally or recklessly" cause the release of
a hazardous substance can close the book for good on the state's spill law1 - after cleanup occurs and the Wisconsin Department
of Natural Resources (DNR) issues a certificate of completion.2
Once a certificate of completion is secured, the owner of the property
where cleanup occurred no longer is responsible for taking subsequent action
to restore the environment or minimize harmful effects of past discharges.
Moreover, the property owner is not responsible for any expenses incurred
if additional steps are needed later to clean up a site or remedy an emergency
situation.3
This liberation from future liability applies even if environmental standards
change, the cleanup action fails or additional contamination associated
with the original discharge is found at some future time.4
Further, the liability protection is transferable and runs with the land.
Who can you call?
For more information, readers can call
these offices.
Land Recycling
Hotline: (800) 367-6076 for in-state calls, (608) 264-6020 for out-of-state
calls.
Liability
questions: (608) 266-7019.
Financing
and tax questions:
(608) 261-6422.
General information:
(608) 267-6713.
DNR cleanup
publications:
(608) 264-6009.
To order
regulations: (800) 362-7253.
DNR bulletin
board system:
(608) 261-6455.
DNR
web site |
Built on the footings of 1993 Wisconsin Act 453 (the Land Recycling Act)
and associated administrative rules, which limited liability only for purchasers
and certain "innocent" landowners, the new and more sweeping liability
limits are not evidence of forgiveness for past environmental sins, but
rather a circumspect reprieve to encourage remediation and recapture the
economic potential of contaminated land.
Tucked away in the biennial budget act,5
this momentous shift in state policy is designed to end the fear of open-ended
environmental liability that strangles the urban marketplace.
The choice is now clear: Do nothing, wait for a responsible party letter
from DNR and face an uncertain future; or voluntarily enter the contaminated
land recycling program, clean up the property and be done with it.
Grant and loan programs established
No matter how significant, however, liability changes alone will not
move everyone's mountain. So, $10 million in grant funding now is available
for businesses, government entities and individuals to redevelop "brownfields"
and conduct associated environmental remediation activities.6
If grant funding runs out or eligibility is denied, municipalities can
turn to the newly created land recycling loan program for surface water
and groundwater cleanups. DNR will make $20 million available with interest
at 55 percent of current market rates.7
For purposes of the grant and loan programs, and in general parlance,
the term "brownfields" is considered to mean abandoned or underused
commercial and industrial facilities or sites that are not being expanded
or redeveloped due to actual or perceived environmental contamination.8
Other financial components of the new law include $4 million to support
principal guarantees of private bank loans up to $500,000,9 $44.3 million for state-funded cleanups,10
$750,000 for DNR to provide municipalities with environmental assessment
services for tax delinquent or bankrupt properties, and preference for brownfield
projects in various local community block grant and state stewardship program
categories.11
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Sen. Brian Burke, Georgetown 1981, is cochair of the Joint Committee
on Finance. He authored the Land Recycling Act of 1993 and helped draft
related revisions in the 1997 biennial budget act.
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Tax incentives
On the tax front, up to 50 percent of cleanup costs for projects in designated
development zones now can be credited against state income and franchise
taxes.12 At the federal level, environmental
cleanup costs for properties in targeted areas are fully deductible in the
year in which they are incurred, rather than having to be capitalized.13
Counties and the city of Milwaukee are authorized to cancel delinquent
taxes, interest and penalties on contaminated property,14
and the availability of tax incremental financing is broadened to include
single municipal properties in need of environmental remediation.15
Off-site discharges and partial cleanups
Further augmenting an urban developer's arsenal in the battle to rebuild
our cities, any person who owns property that is contaminated by a discharge
originating on another property now is exempt from responsibility to clean
up the contamination, and may obtain a written statement from DNR to that
effect.16
The choice is clear: Do nothing, wait for
a responsible party letter from DNR and face an uncertain future; or voluntarily
enter the contaminated land recycling program, clean up the property and
be done with it. |
In addition to off-site source letters, DNR may issue a variety of other
redevelopment assistance (or deal-closing) correspondence, including prequali-fication
letters for voluntary party status, liability clarification letters, technical
assistance letters, no further action letters and partial cleanup close-out
letters.17
Other less conspicuous but still significant modifications to the state's
land recycling laws include expanded liability protection for municipalities
and nonprofit economic development corporations,18
limited municipal civil immunity for discharges on previously owned property,19 creation of a reimbursement program for investigation
and cleanup costs at dry cleaning facilities,20
more options for lenders who acquire contaminated property,21 and opportunities for flexible cleanup enforcement agreements.22
Conclusion
The state is taking bold steps to encourage remediation and break the
economic paralysis caused by environmental contamination. With infrastructure,
services and a workforce already in place, central city sites could become
the new hotbed of economic growth and opportunity.
Endnotes
1Wis. Stat. § 292.11.
21997 Wis. Act 27, §§ 3662-3669;
Wis. Stat. § 292.15. (Note: A partial veto was used to correct a drafting
error and avoid a contradiction in the definition of voluntary parties that
are eligible for liability exemptions. The veto leaves no definition of
voluntary party in the statutes between the effective date of the budget
act and July 1, 1998. As such, the governor has directed DNR to provide
assurance letters to potential voluntary parties on a case-by-case basis
during this interim period.)
31997 Wis. Act 27, § 3674; Wis. Stat.
§ 292.15(2)(c). (Note: The owner is not exempt from the responsibility
of notifying DNR or other appropriate agencies of belatedly discovered or
future discharges. In addition, any person who possesses, causes or controls
a discharge that occurs after issuance of a certificate of completion is
responsible for all necessary response actions to restore the environment.)
41997 Wis. Act 27, §§ 3672 &
3673; Wis. Stat. § 299.15(2)(b).
51997 Wis. Act 27.
61997 Wis. Act 27, § 4351; Wis. Stat.
§ 560.13.
71997 Wis. Act 27, § 3569; Wis. Stat.
§ 281.60. (Note: The governor vetoed language expanding eligibility
for the land recycling loan program to individuals, corporations, partnerships,
associations and commissions.)
8See 1997 Wis. Act 27, §§
764, 3569, 4351, 4444, 4478; Wis. Stat. §§ 23.09(19)(a)(1), 281.60(2),
560.13(a), 560.41(1), 560.60(1v).
91997 Wis. Act 27, §§ 3377-3386;
Wis. Stat. § 234.88.
10See 1997 Wis. Act 27, § 731;
Wis. Stat. §§ 20.866(2)(tg), 20.370(2)(dv).
11See 1997 Wis. Act 27, §§
765, 768, 1140, 4344; Wis. Stat. §§ 23.09(19)(cm), 23.175(4m),
30.277 (3)(k), 560.045.
121997 Wis. Act 27, § 2262; Wis. Stat.
§ 71.07(2)(dx).
13See Taxpayer Relief Act (HR 2014/PL
105-34), signed Aug. 5, 1997.
141997 Wis. Act 27, § 2373; Wis. Stat.
§ 75.105.
151997 Wis. Act 27, § 2216; Wis. Stat.
§ 66.462.
161997 Wis. Act 27, § 3661; Wis. Stat.
§ 292.13.
17See 1997 Wis. Act 27, §§
3670, 3678m, 3720; Wis. Stat. §§ 292.15(2)(am), 292.15(5m), 292.55.
181997 Wis. Act 27, §§ 3656-3660c;
Wis. Stat. § 292.11(9)(e).
191997 Wis. Act 27, § 3683g; Wis. Stat.
§ 292.26.
201997 Wis. Act 27, § 3721e; Wis. Stat.
§ 292.65.
211997 Wis. Act 27, § 3681; Wis. Stat.
§ 292.21(1)(c)1.d.
221997 Wis. Act 27, § 3651; Wis. Stat.
§ 292.11(7)(d).
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