William K. Reilly, Administrator
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agen
                 Washington, D.C.
                  &EPA
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                       ADMINISTRATOR'S PREFACE
      In the course of Senate hearings held to confirm my appointment as Administrator
of EPA,  I was asked a lot of questions about Superfund.  Members of the Committee
wanted to know about the program's management and progress to date and, in particular,
what I intended to do about improving Superfund's  performance during my tenure as
Administrator. Since I did not then have sufficient first-hand knowledge of the situation,
I promised the Committee that I would immediately undertake as thorough a review of the
program  -as  could be completed in about ninety days. The result is the report in your
hands.

      For me the most important finding of the study is the need to set fair and realistic
expectations for a program of the relative novelty and scope of Superfund.  At the time
of the program's initial enactment in 1980, virtually no one had any practical experience
with the  difficulty and duration  associated with cleaning hazardous waste sites to health-
based levels. The  Agency and the country have spent the first nine years learning what
a big job it really is, and building a base of experience from which to plan more efficient
and effective methods of program management and site cleanup.

      EPA's staff wrote this report, with a lot of help from critics and supporters alike
outside the  Agency.  I have accepted  it and will use it to guide the direction  of the
Superfund  program in the months and  years  ahead.   I think it  provides  a  fair,
dispassionate, and refreshingly  candid assessment of the past, and a  realistic plan for
improving program performance in the future.  I do not expect that everyone will agree
with all  it has to say.  However,  I do  anticipate  that  this  report will create  a  new
atmosphere for a thoughtful and productive reassessment of Superfund, something that has
been hard to achieve in the more emotional context of the recent past.  I look forward to
the challenge of keeping the promise of continuous improvement that I have made by
accepting the recommendations of the report.
                                                             LIBRARY
us.
                                      William K. Reilly
                                      Administrator
                                      U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

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                    TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                                       PAGE
ADMINISTRATOR'S PREFACE

REPORT OVERVIEW

INTRODUCTION

CHAPTERS

I.    A CLEAR STRATEGY FOR SUPERFUND

II.   STRENGTHENING ENFORCEMENT AND MAXIMIZING
     RESPONSIBLE PARTY WORK AT SUPERFUND SITES

III.   ACCELERATING AND IMPROVING REMEDIAL ACTION

IV.   BRINGING INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES TO BEAR ON
     POLLUTION AT SUPERFUND SITES TO STRENGTHEN
     REMEDY SELECTION

V.   AN AGGRESSIVE PROGRAM OF COMMUNITY
     INVOLVEMENT

VI.   MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION: FREEING UP
     THE SKILLS AND TOOLS TO DO THE JOB

VII.  ACCOUNTING FOR ACHIEVEMENT: COMMUNICATING
     PROGRESS TO THE PUBLIC

NEXT STEPS

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REPORT OVERVIEW

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                             REPORT OVERVIEW
      In response to a series of questions about the achievements to date and future
management of the Superfund program, newly confirmed EPA Administrator William K.
Reilly commissioned this report.  Completed in roughly ninety days, it comprises facts,
observations, and interpretations drawn from Agency staff and from a variety of critics and
supporters external to Superfund.  This candid assessment of the program after nine years
of experience suggests a practical strategy for realizing the greatest environmental benefit
possible, given the long-term, incremental nature of the Superfund challenge.

      Superfund has drawn a lot of negative  attention in the years since its passage in
1980.  While much of the criticism is appropriately grounded in a perception of slow
progress and questionable management  early in the program, just as much seems based
on unrealistic expectations of the program. Speedily launched in response to such dramatic
episodes as the Love Canal, Superfund is only now beginning  to benefit from the lessons
of numerous field trials that are essential to public engineering programs of any magnitude.
As slow-moving as it may have been initially, Superfund has now accelerated to meet the
very aggressive targets set in the reauthorization statute of 1986.

      Even  an  efficient, smoothly  managed Superfund  program would continue to
disappoint, however, if the main measure applied were the achievement of final cleanup
at all sites currently listed on the National Priorities List (NPL). Experience  is showing
that final cleanup is a distant goal in most cases, and that EPA would do the public a
disservice by quickly delisting sites to satisfy demand for a "quick fix." Rather, success must
be measured in Superfund's  ability to quickly remove the source  of immediate risk to
public health and safely, and to gradually  minimize long-term risk from any pollutants
remaining on site.

      In this report EPA announces a new long-term strategy for Superfund.  Although
little in the  strategy is literally "new",  since most of the principles have begun to  drive
the program in  recent  years, this is the first time EPA  has presented  them  as  a
comprehensive statement of program philosophy.   The strategy contains the following
elements:
       Control  Acute Threats Immediately.
reduction of near-term risk to public health.
Superfund will  set as its first priority the
       Worst Sites. Worst Problems  First on  the  Road  to Cleanup.  Superfund will
schedule incremental steps to clean up sites over time, expending scarce resources first on
problems posing the most serious risks to public health.

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      Carefully Monitor and Maintain Sites Over the Long Term.  EPA will not walk
away from its obligation to protect human health and the environment at each and every
NPL site ~ no site, where hazardous substances remain, will be deleted from the NPL
following a final cleanup that meets health and environmental goals until at least one five
year review is  conducted.

      Emphasize Enforcement to Induce Private-Party Cleanup. EPA will  use the fact
and threat of enforcement, encompassing a broad range of administrative and legal tools,
to increase the proportion of cleanup undertaken by private parties.

      Seek New Technologies for More Effective Cleanup.  The Agency will expand its
research, and provide more comprehensive field support for the development and use of
treatment technologies to promote permanent solutions.

      Improve Efficiency of  Program Operations.  EPA will apply lessons learned to
abbreviate time-consuming program procedures where possible.

      Encourage Full Participation by Communities.  EPA will involve citizens more fully
in cleanup decisions, including sites in which Potentially Responsible Parties have taken the
lead.

      The major substantive sections  of the report fully  support the  elements  of  this
strategy. Most telling is the need to set public expectations of the program  to recognize
that success must be pursued over many sites for many years. Chapter 1 sets forth EPA's
Superfund strategy.  Removal  and remediation  of  immediate threats  is the first step,
followed by a complex and invariably lengthy series of progressive actions to contain and/or
gradually eliminate remaining on-site pollution. The ultimate step of delisting may follow
by years the completion of final cleanup work on a site. Chapters II  through VII present
findings and recommendations that prescribe the means to Superfund's programmatic ends.

      Chapter II presents the case for more muscular enforcement  to promote private-
party cleanups.  The Superfund  statute and the 1986 amendments (known as SARA)
afford to Superfund a broad array of authorities to compel cleanup by private parties  and
to facilitate cost recovery for direct action under the Fund.  EPA will use all tools available
within the program to advance  cleanup, but will exhibit a clear bias toward private party
cleanup that meets health and environmental goals under enforcement action.  The Agency
will also target realistic amounts for cost recovery and take appropriate steps, including
necessary rulemaking, to recoup outlays from the central Fund.

      Chapter III outlines a number of procedures EPA can take to improve efficiency
and consistency of performance in the remedial program.  Prominent among these are
actions to reduce the workload of hard-pressed Remedial Project Managers, to use the

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quicker device of the removal contract to conduct certain high-priority remedial work, and
to improve Headquarters technical, administrative, and clearinghouse oversight and support
to the field.

       Chapter IV challenges EPA to invest more heavily in the development and use of
treatment  technologies  to  bring  about permanent remedies in the field.  The report
identifies barriers posed by conflicting  statute (i.e., RCRA's land ban requirements) and
rule (e.g., Federal Acquisition Regulations), as well as opportunities for further investment
in research and technical support.

       Chapter V encourages an aggressive program of community involvement  in
Superfund  site decision-making. Acknowledging that careful community consultation takes
time, the report nevertheless places high value on full and deliberate public discussion, and
accepts the consequence of an occasional missed deadline  as the cost.  The report also
encourages EPA to eliminate current barriers to obtaining and using Technical Assistance
Grants to the community, so that citizens can have independent access to technical advice.

       Chapter VI addresses the  key issues affecting EPA's ability to retain and reward
key technical and professional staff on whose backs the program rides.  This section
contains a number of recommendations  to increase pay,  technical and  administrative
support, and other job benefits, while balancing the workload of these key staffers.  The
report also recommends steps to keep technical contractors out of conflicts of interest by
precluding  their participation in regulatory or program policy work.

       Chapter VII proposes new ways  to measure success for Superfund. Accepting that
a long-term program cannot be evaluated early on the basis of ultimate results, this section
recommends action on several fronts to  involve citizens and public officials in the definition
of acceptable  mid-term criteria for evaluating Superfund.  Recognizing  that so much
disappointment with Superfund's record originates with the failure to communicate  both
expectations and results, this section emphasizes broad-scale and continuous communication
about the program, both from EPA to  the public, and vice-versa.
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      In his preface to the report, Administrator Reilly endorses these recommendations,
and calls for a new period of calm,  considered debate  on the progress  and future  of
Superfund. It is only in such an atmosphere of shared, realistic expectations that EPA, the
Congress, and affected citizens and industry can work effectively to continually improve the
public benefit from our enormous national investment in  Superfund.

      The following comprises  a brief listing of the task group's 50 recommendations for
improving Superfund. For a complete discussion of findings and recommendations, please
refer to the appropriate chapter in the report.
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Chapter I.   A CLEAR STRATEGY FOR SUPERFUND

Chapter II.  STRENGTHENING   ENFORCEMENT    AND   MAXIMIZING
            RESPONSIBLE PARTY WORK AT SUPERFUND SITES.

      Increase use of unilateral administrative orders for a more muscular enforcement
      program.

      Take steps to ensure the full use of settlement tools provided for by the SARA
      amendments  to  negotiate  cleanup  agreements   that  do  not  compromise
      environmental goals.

      Establish an integrated enforcement and response program.

      Establish an integrated timeline for managing both enforcement and Fund-financed
      activities and establishing deadlines  for key response actions by PRPs and the
      Agency.

      Encourage the creation  of specialized administrative support units  (with proper
      skill mixes) to enhance the enforcement process in the regions.

      Develop specific goals and timeliness to improve  enforcement of information
      requests.

      Expand Agency efforts to promote closer oversight of private party RI/FS.

      Maximize Regional flexibility in shifting funds among sites to make the threat of
      enforcement more  credible.

      Improve approach to cost recovery  by initiating rulemaking process that targets
      realistic goals and procedures.

      Develop an improved strategy for recovery of costs for removal actions.

      Improve intergovernmental coordination of Superfund enforcement activities.

 Chapter III.  ACCELERATING AND IMPROVING REMEDIAL ACTION

      Communicate  to Superfund Managers, staff, the Attorney General and the heads
      of other Federal agencies involved that -the primary mission of the program is to
      take responsible action at sites as rapidly as possible.
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      Hold EPA line manages accountable for managing the program in accordance with
      this mission.

      Direct the development of formal and informal mechanisms to reward innovation,
      risk-taking,  and decisive action.

      Headquarters and Regional Offices  take actions to promote consistency in remedy
      selection, compliance with statutory mandates, and appropriate consideration of
      available factual and analytical data  about site conditions and potentially applicable
      remedial technologies.

      Take  actions to minimize uncertainty and confusion about Applicable or Relevant
      and Appropriate Requirements of Federal environmental laws.

      Take  actions  to  enable  Remedial  Project  Managers to identify and use EPA's
      technical support services. Within the next several months,  lay the groundwork for
      effective long term coordination and management of technical support services to
      RPMs.

      Resolve the fundamental policy question of what States' long-term  role in the
      Superfund  program will  be,  develop short- and  long-term strategies  to  enhance
      State  program capability.

      Take steps to facilitate Regional Offices' use of and access to headquarters  program
      technical and  policy guidance.

Chapter IV.  BRINGING   INNOVATIVE   TECHNOLOGIES  TO   BEAR   ON
            POLLUTION AT SUPERFUND SITES  TO STRENGTHEN REMEDY
            SELECTION

      Review  and revise all Agency policies and guidance to ensure that use of treatment
      technologies is given stronger emphasis in accordance with SARA's directions.

      A senior program manager in the Office of Solid  Waste and Emergency Response
      should serve as 'Technologies Czar" to coordinate the  development and use of
      innovative,  cost effective, treatment technologies in the Superfund and RCRA
      programs.

      Carefully evaluate impact of  RCRA land ban or  other rules on use of alternative
      technologies.

      Develop guidance that balances the goal  of advancing innovative technologies
      against the need to minimize challenges during cost recovery actions

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      Evaluate the provisions of the Federal Procurement Regulations to determine where
      latitude exits to eliminate procurement constraints to utilizing treatment technologies.

      Establish nationwide technology support teams within the Office of Research and
      Development to assist the Regions in Remedy selection decisions.

      Provide policy  guidance  to  the  Regions  to ensure that treatability  tests are
      emphasized, as well as guidance on how to use treatability studies in selection of
      a clean-up technology.

      Establish an information clearinghouse within ORD for information on technology
      performance and make this information easily accessible to the Regions.

      Continue and expand ORD's current technology-transfer activities.

      Expand the Superfund  Innovative Technology Evaluation Program in  ORD and
      support NETAC.

      Expand in-house and university research programs in targeted areas where private
      research is lacking.


Chapter V.   A MORE AGGRESSIVE PROGRAM OF COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT

      Give  citizens a much greater role in the Superfund program,  especially  at PRP
      lead sites.

      Strongly support  increased citizen  involvement in  Superfund  decisions, accept
      occasional delays as a result of greater public involvement.

      Plan for citizen involvement at each stage of the Superfund process.

      Increase EPA staff to allow more frequent communication with the affected public.

      Use "Senior Environmental Employees" (retirees) more extensively in Superfund.

      Citizens' access to information should be comparable to that  of PRP's.

      Release information to the administrative record and to information repositories as
      quickly as possible, and ensure that citizens are notified of the availability of this
      information.
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      Write clear, understandable summaries of complex technical documents, and provide
      copies to citizens.

      Encourage Regions to find ways to bring citizens into technical discussions early in
      the RI/FS process.

      Strongly  support the reform  of the  Technical Assistance Grants  program to
      eliminate barriers to their use.
Chapter VI.  MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION: FREEING UP THE SKILLS
            AND THE TOOLS TO DO THE JOB

      Develop pay, training and incentives programs to attract and retain key field staff.

      Provide field staff with adequate administrative support.

      Reduce Agency dependance on contractors in certain program areas and avoid
      conflict of interest in contracting work.
Chapter VII. ACCOUNTING FOR ACHIEVEMENT: COMMUNICATING PROGRESS
            TO THE PUBLIC

      Identify more effective ways to include interested parties in the policy debate at a
      national level - Start a national dialogue with Superfund's many constituencies on
      important elements of the program.

      Accelerate improvements to  the  existing management measures to support the
      national  program manager's communication of Superfund progress —  include
      "environmental results measures" as better ways to communicate progress.

      Review Superfund's internal management measures with an eye toward eliminating
      unnecessary or redundant  reporting  and  focusing more  directly on measures to
      improve performance.

      Develop and implement a national plan to inform the public about the Superfund
      program and its achievements.

      Provide communications training  to employees to help make public education a
      Superfund priority at basic levels.
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INTRODUCTION

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                                INTRODUCTION

       The Task Group intends this document to be a frank and open report on the state
 of the Superfund program in June 1989. Commissioned by newly confirmed Administrator
 William K. Reilly, the report presents facts, observations,  and  the  best  professional
 judgment of experts within the Agency and from several States who have struggled over
 nearly ten years to make Superfund work well to improve the environment.  The report
 also draws on detailed consultation with citizens, reporters, Congressional staff,  industry and
 governmental representatives, and  communications professionals.

       In preparing the document, The Task Group took the attitude that only through
 honest and objective reappraisal can the Agency recognize problems and opportunities and
 act on them responsibly.   For that reason the report  emphasizes clarity, candor, and
 constructive scrutiny  of the  genuine  state of affairs  in Superfund.   If any hint of
 defensiveness  or posturing has crept into these pages, it has survived our best collective
 efforts to eliminate it.
  THE NATURE OF THE PROBLEM AND PERCEPTIONS OF THE PROGRAM

       The Federal government's  Superfund program has reached  a critical juncture.
Launched in 1980 as a frontal assault on the Nation's hazardous waste sites, the program
began amid high expectations of quick success. This seemed a reasonable premise at the
time. With broad-based public and Congressional support and a growing network of State,
local, and private authorities, EPA had just led the Nation to notable progress against the
most alarming environmental problems of the seventies: foul urban  air,  and choked,
unsightly waterways.  Compared  to the  ubiquity of such air  and water pollution, the
challenge of what was  assumed  to be  a  few hundred discrete, land-based cleanups
appeared relatively easy. Furthermore,  the Congress created a $1.6 billion war chest to
ensure that funding would prove no obstacle.

       Things have not worked out as smoothly as that, however.  Since 1980, the problem
of neglected hazardous waste sites has revealed itself to be far more complex and diffuse
than anyone at first realized.  In the fight to control conventional pollutants in air and
water, EPA was able to apply proven technologies to produce fast results. With Superfund
no such resource was available. Instead, EPA and State technical managers have exercised
considerable ingenuity in devising ad hoc control strategies to deal with literally  hundreds
of field situations  that are unique in the Agency's experience.

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       Measured against public and Congressional expectations, the pace of EPA's actual
 progress has proved frustrating.  Controversy surrounding EPA's early management of the
 program  unquestionably  built a  legacy  of  public  distrust.   Just as  surely,  persistent
 denunciations of the program have turned up the heat but shed little real light on the
 situation.  As a consequence the Nation is only now beginning to confront the real
 dilemma: how to reduce environmental risks from a growing list of sites presenting ever
 new  complexities,  in a  situation characterized  by incomplete  knowledge,  immature
 technology, and relentless pressure on a limited pool of resources.

       In the often contentious debate that has developed over Superfund  policy and
 practice, EPA has operated without its once most valuable asset, the benefit of the doubt.
 Though the  program has picked  up speed,  Superfund continues  to  fall short of public
 expectations.  Whether fairly or not, debate centers around the program's flaws, both real
 and perceived~at  all levels  from national  policy to local  site  management.   Most
 disturbingly,  citizens of communities affected by Superfund sites, sharing the right  of all
 Americans  to a  clean and healthy environment, have  increasingly questioned  the
 commitment of their Government to protect that  right.  Pressed by the concerns of a
 vocally dissatisfied public, an impatient Congress has set tighter and more ambitious targets
 for Superfund.

       In  this charged atmosphere,  the  Superfund program's  competent and  highly
 motivated technical and legal staff have found their workloads rising, while their real-dollar
 earnings, job satisfaction, and public support decline. Understandably,  many are leaving
 public service, some to join private concerns that allow them to continue their work on
 hazardous waste management at considerably  higher salaries, while providing a buffer from
 public criticism.

       It needn't be this way. Both success and failure are relative, the final determination
 being a function of expectations as much as of performance. If Superfund is perceived so
 far to have been a high-cost disappointment, it is largely because program performance has
 not met high, and perhaps unrealistic expectations.  Superfund is succeeding, however, in
 its no less vital obligation to make  steady progress in defining the nature and scope of the
 task, and to discover, test, and carry out the most efficient methods of achieving lasting and
 satisfactory cleanups.

    The number and distribution of hazardous waste sites  we now recognize dwarfs the
 scope of the problem that was originally assumed. More  than 30,000 hazardous waste sites
 have  been identified as possible  candidates for Superfund, with over  27,000 having
 undergone preh'minary field review and classification.  Of these, nearly 1200 have been
 assigned high priority for further action by EPA  Still more are being cleaned up by States
 or private parties.  In fact, because remediation of the most damaged  sites involves many
years of  painstaking ground-water treatment, new sites continue to be placed on the
 National Priorities List faster than  existing sites are removed.

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        In evaluating the program, however, fair-minded critics should consider that the very
 idea of Superfund is new, generated from public debate and legislative action in response
 to such environmental catastrophes as Kentucky's Valley of the Drums and Love Canal *n
 New York State. It was speedily designed, speedily enacted, and speedily put into place.
 In fact,  it may be  no  exaggeration  to  call Superfund  the  most far-reaching  national
 engineering program ever mounted without benefit of  a single field trial.  In such a
 program, the most important early products must necessarily include learning.   In that
 respect,  after nine  years of  experience the  most important  lesson may  be  that the
 Superfund program faces a workload stretching well into the next century, and would  do
 so even if everything had gone right from the very start.  It is time to adjust expectations
 accordingly.

       Based on everything that is known about the situation, the only possible conclusion
 to be made is that the Superfund program will be around for many, many years and it will
 be quite  expensive.   EPA estimates  that the cost of construction at current  National
 Priorities List (NPL) sites is likely to be $30 billion, assuming that half the work will  be
 done directly by the Fund and. half by responsible parties.  It will probably take about  13
 years to begin construction on just the sites that are currently on the list, and the Agency
 expects to add sites to the inventory at the  rate of about 75 to 100 per year.  Based  on
 EPA's current inventory,  the National Priorities List is expected to grow to  2100 sites  by
 the year  2000.  Currently, the average cost of construction per site is approaching $25
 million, and there is  every reason to believe that these costs will grow higher as some  of
 the Agency's more complex sites move into the construction pipeline.

       The problem  is large, complex, and. long-term, the job ahead enormous.   It will
 require technical competence and ingenuity, administrative savvy and creativity, political
 courage and wisdom, and plain, old-fashioned persistence to clean all  the  sites  already
 known to present unacceptable risk. Since it is evident that complete success is a distant
 goal, it is critically important to take time now to review the experience of  the last nine
 years, and to harvest the  learning that will allow the Nation to make the best use of the
 Superfund program in the succeeding decades.  That is what this report is about.
                             THE RECORD TO DATE
      Many have judged the success of Superfund by the number of sites removed from
the National Priorities List. Currently that number is 26, with another ten sites newly clean
and soon to be deleted.  While that number reflects substantial recent progress, it is still
below initial projections.  Evaluating Superfund by. tallying site deletions, however, is not
only discouraging, it is inherently misleading. For one thing, deleting a site from the NPL
is the very last step in a multi-stage process.  Before deletion, EPA monitors sites long
after cleanup standards have been achieved to ensure that those standards remain in effect.

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 Given the long-term nature of the problem, the number of early cleanups may be an
 indicator only of how few sites are physically capable of being cleaned and verified so
 quickly.  The figure may in fact say more about the intractability of pollution at most sites
 than it does about the success of Superfund.

       Success for Superfund is more appropriately measured in terms of the successive,
 interim steps that quickly provide a margin of safely for local residents. By  this standard,
 EPA is slowly gaining momentum.  Although the record still needs substantial improve-
 ment, it  is better than it looks.

       For example, the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of  1986 (SARA)
 set a tough deadline of one year for EPA to complete an additional 4700 preliminary site
 assessments. The Agency met this goal. EPA has conducted emergency removals to attack
 the most immediate source of toxic exposure at more than 1300 sites in communities across
 the nation.   In fact, the removal program  is one of Superfund's biggest unsung success
 stories. Actions taken under this program have cost nearly $400 million and EPA has used
 its enforcement authorities to get responsible parties to take removal action in another 200
 cases. Finally, long term cleanup work  is currently underway to neutralize the source,
 contain the spread and systematically reduce (or eliminate) toxic  pollution at over 400
 sites under Superfund's remedial program.

       SARA also set a deadline of October  1989 for EPA to  undertake  the major
 technical planning work (known as remedial investigation/feasibility studies) at 275  new
 sites, a formidable target.  As this report is issued, EPA can announce that this  ambitious
 goal has also been met, three months early. Since SARA, too, EPA has begun the major
 construction  and  reconstruction necessary  to complete the  job of cleanup (known as
 remedial action) at over 100 locations, and is on schedule to meet the extremely aggressive
 goal of 175 new starts by mid-October.

       As for enforcement,  since the passage of SARA, the Agency has seen  the initiation
 of approximately $1 billion  worth of site work under enforcement action and settlements.
 In fact, at this time  roughly half of Superfund's on-site work  is  being conducted by
 responsible parties under some  form of enforcement action by EPA, and this proportion
 is expected to increase over time.

       When all is said and done, few realize that the environmental benefits of Superfund
 go well beyond Superfund cleanups.  Since the passage of CERCLA, many States have
 enacted their own hazardous waste site cleanup laws. The  Superfund liability  standard has
 also provided a powerful incentive for businesses, Federal facilities, and local  governments
 to properly manage their wastes. Additionally, the threat of potential Superfund liability
has spurred businesses, particularly during property transfers, to  conduct environmental
audits  and remediate environmental  problems, not only for hazardous wastes but for
environmental problems in general.

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       Though this  is an impressive record, the question remains, is it enough?   The
 answer, obviously, is no.  Even given the necessity for steady, incremental progress as
 opposed to "miracle" cures within the Superfund program, few believe EPA is doing as
 much as it can, as well as it can, or as fast as it can to move that progress along.  EPA
 acknowledges the validity of that assessment.
              THE CHALLENGE OF CONFLICTING EXPECTATIONS
       It is one thing to state the Agency must do better, quite another to carry out the
 necessary  improvements.  This report makes a  strong case that any single  action the
 Agency  takes  to pursue a significant  goal  of Superfund may conflict  directly with a
 competing, and often equally important goal.  For example, the expectation  of prompt
 cleanup  often presses up against the need for full and responsive public participation in
 the cleanup process.  Quick cleanup may also argue  for a generous degree of Regional
 autonomy, which implies variability of decisions across Regions, at the expense of consistent
 national program direction.

       The direction of SARA to attain at each site the highly protective health-based
 standards  set under other  statutes  creates time and cost demands  that often can be
 satisfied  only at the sacrifice of another statutory objective, prompt and effective action at
 ajl sites  listed  on the  NPL.  Current estimates  (extrapolated  from early, and  perhaps
 relatively inexpensive cleanups) suggest that, despite the magnitude of the Fund at $8.5
 billion, it contains only a fraction of what will eventually be needed to achieve final cleanup
 at all currently listed sites.  Even if more funds were available, however, the Agency lacks
 sufficient expert staff, and the Nation enough qualified engineers to take  on a full-scale
 effort at all sites  simultaneously.   For the moment, the program  can pursue  either
 complete cleanup at some sites,  or incremental cleanup at many sites, but cannot fully
 accommodate both goals simultaneously.

      Of course, aggressive enforcement will induce responsible parties to bear more of
 the load, but only if the Fund itself remains sufficiently robust to pose a credible resource
 for direct Federal action.  Used in this manner, the Fund is actually a better threat than
 a weapon.  For this reason, the use of enforcement to multiply Superfund's impact argues
 against pouring out the Fund to attack too  many sites simultaneously.

      The challenge to the Agency,  then, is to balance such competing goals to achieve
necessary cleanup at the most dangerous sites as quickly as possible. EPA must employ
novel administrative and technological methods to  accelerate the pace, expand the
coverage, and improve the quality of the program over time.  This will demand patience
and wisdom not only from EPA's  management and staff, but also from the public.

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        Americans  are learning to view Superfund as a long-term, incremental program
  exploring new frontiers in the evaluation and mitigation of complex soups of pollutants
  many of which lie  underground.  If EPA is to succeed, it must be confident that Congress
  and the public will support the Agency's discretionary efforts to administer the law without
  fear of losing its authority to apply learning from one site to  the next  Since EPA is
  formally entrusted with public stewardship of the program, the  Agency depends entirely
  on the American people's genuine trust and support  to carry out that mission.
                     A CLEAR STRATEGY FOR SUPERFTJND
           earn the trust necessary for success, EPA must clarify, communicate, and gain
 broad acceptance for its fundamental strategy in carrying out the program. This strategy
 makes it possible to attack the riskiest problems first, removing the sources of immediate
 threat in a logical and systematic manner, and then turning to sources of remaining long-
 term risk on a priority basis. The strategy squarely confronts the need to set a deliberate
 pace toward final remediation of residual problems posing less immediate risks than those
 commanding nearer-term action. In this way the strategy articulates a clear direction for
 management of  Fund  resources in  order   to  achieve  the  greatest  environmental
 improvement possible from a combination of public and private resources  over the lone-
 term.                                                                            6

       While the body of the report provides necessary detail, in  brief the Task Group's
 proposed strategy embodies this vision:

 Make Sites Safer-Control Acute Threats Immediately

       EPA's first priority under Superfund is to render hazardous waste sites stable and
 eliminate any immediate endangerment  to citizens.  Under this "safety first" dictum, sites
 presenting the most acute risk to human health will receive the earnest and most aggressive
 action.                                                                    &&

       Effective immediately, the Administrator will direct each Regional Office to do a
 removal assessment at each site on the National Priority List.  This assessment will look
 at the environmental and public health impacts of each site, and will be used to determine
what action~to include immediate removal action or enforcement action where viable and
liable responsible parties have been identified-must be taken to render each site safe from
immediate  hazards to public health and the environment.  EPA will be in  the field fast
sizing up the  scope of the problem and taking the necessary action to assure that the site
is  made safe in  the short-term.  Information gathered from the site  assessment will be
added  to establish priorities for longer-term remediation action necessary to complete
cleanup.                                                                      r

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 Make Sites Cleaner-Worst Sites. Worst Problems First

       After abating immediate threats, EPA will conduct the earliest remedial work for
 those problems at sites that retain high priority when compared with competing problems
 across the Nation.  EPA will typically plan action toward  final cleanup at each site in
 deliberate stages to provide additional or longer-term improvements toward final cleanup.

 Carefully Monitor and Maintain Sites Over the Long-Term

       EPA will not walk away from its obligation to protect human health  and the
 environment at each and every NPL site.  The Agency will carefully monitor and maintain
 sites over the long-term to ensure that sites remain safe. If EPA selects a remedy where
 hazardous substances remain on-site, EPA will conduct a review at least every five years
 after the initiation of the remedial action.  Based on that review, EPA will take action at
 the site if necessary to protect human health and the environment.  EPA will report
 annually the results of all five year  reviews that were conducted during the preceding
 twelve month period and  will modify current policy so that no site, where hazardous
 substances remain, will  be deleted from the  NPL  following a final cleanup that meets
 health and environmental goals until at least  one five year  review is conducted and the
 review indicates that the remedy remains protective of human health and the environment.

 Emphasize Enforcement to Induce Private-Party Cleanup

       EPA will emphasize enforcement to induce potentially responsible parties (PRPs)
 to carry out more cleanups under EPA direction. Our objective will be to either rapidly
 achieve enforceable agreements by PRPs to carry out cleanups or, where such agreements
 are not reached, to order PRPs to carry out cleanups at every NPL site where responsible
 parties can  be  found.  In doing  so,  the Agency will expand both  its use of coercive
 enforcement measures and its use  of more flexible settlement procedures provided by the
 1986 amendments.  PRPs choosing to undertake cleanup, even under threat of enforcement
 action, can expect close cooperation from EPA to move from  planning to field remediation
 as quickly as possible.
Develop and Use New Technologies For More Effective Cleanup

      To ensure  cleanups  provide  long-term protection  of human  health  and the
environment,  EPA will use  permanent remedies where possible and  aggressively seek
innovative treatment technologies that reduce the toxicity, mobility, and volume of wastes
at Superfund  sites. To accelerate the use of promising experimental treatment methods,
EPA will initiate a more far-reaching  and comprehensive program of technical assistance
and support to those evaluating and selecting site remedies.

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  Improve Efficiency of Program Operations

        While the nature of the program militates against short-cuts, EPA will simplify some
  costly and time-consuming procedures at many sites without loss of programmatic quality
  or completeness.  In addition, EPA's site managers will seek greater procedural efficiency
  and programmatic effect by employing a "One Program" concept.  This means EPA will
  match the most appropriate tools available to the environmental problems to be corrected,
  regardless of whether the project  is being managed through the Fund or under aii
  enforcement settlement.
 Encourage Full Participation bv Communities

     EPA will re-energize its  outreach to encourage broad-scale public information  and
 involvement in program decisions.  The Agency will pay more attention than in the past
 to involving the community  in selecting remedies in the growing number  of projects
 conducted by PRPs under enforcement settlements.  The Agency needs people directly
 affected by the program to share in realistic expectations,  and to assist the Agency in
 reaching   appropriate,  cost-effective  cleanup   decisions   that  do   not  compromise
 environmental goals.
 Foster Cooperation with State Agencies and with the Natural Resource Trusfa
 Agency for Toxic Substance and Disease Registry (ATSDR)
idth
       EPA recognizes that others have a significant role to play in the Superfund process
 primarily the States and  the Natural  Resource Damage Trustees.   In  addition  to
 implementing the recommendations in this  report, one of the Agency's principal goals
 should be to build a solid relationship with the States, Trustees and ATSDR to ensure that
 the Superfund process is working as efficiently and cooperatively as possible.
                           THE CHALLENGE AHEAD
        Superfund's problems are tough and will not be soon or easily solved. Balancing
competing statutory goals, getting the most from an apparently huge but actually limited
resource pool, rewarding and retaining a top-notch Federal technical staff, and ensuring
first-rate work in the public interest by teams of contractors with divided interests, while
only parts of the  challenge,  nevertheless make up a formidable agenda.   For EPA's
management and staff, however, this report confirms that with a shared understanding of
the true nature  and scope of the  problem, all parties to  the  program can  work more
effectively and harmoniously to achieve Superfund's essential national goals.

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I. A CLEAR STRATEGY FOR SUPERFUND

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                                  CHAPTER I

                MEETING THE PUBLIC'S EXPECTATIONS:
                  A CLEAR STRATEGY FOR SUPERFUND
       Congress and the American people have had high expectations for Superfund but
are  generally  disappointed by the results of the program.   There  have been many
accomplishments  in  Superfund   in  recent  years  through  the  often  unrecognized
accomplishments of competent, dedicated Superfund  managers and staff.  But there has
also been limited public knowledge or acceptance of  the program's success at a national
level.  This not only suggests that EPA needs to more effectively communicate program
achievements but also that EPA needs to resolve the lack of congruence between what the
public expects from Superfund and what EPA believes can be delivered.  The  lack of
public trust and EPA's inability to establish and maintain credibility led the task group to
examine the public's expectations for  the Superfund program and the factors that affect
EPA's ability to meet these expectations.

      As the task group set out to identify what the "public" expects from Superfund, we
targeted our efforts on those who have  a  stake in the success of the program.  This
includes:

      *     the affected public -- people who reside near Superfund sites.

      *     frontline EPA employees -  EPA employees in the field such as the
            remedial  project managers,  on-scene coordinators, and  enforcement
            attorneys.

      *     progressive potentially responsible parties (PRPs) - those parties who
            are potentially  liable for cleanup that are willing to meet their
            obligations under the law.

      *     the general  public-- individual  citizens  as well  as  industry and
            environmental groups who are concerned that Superfund is successful
            in carrying out cleanup and that Trust Fund dollars are well spent.

            Congress and State and local governments - parties who play a direct
            role as co-implementors of the program (e.g., who maintain a budget
            or oversight role or who share responsibility for getting sites cleaned
            up).
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      In summary, these are the groups whose expectations are crucial to the success of
the program. To better identify the expectations of these groups, the task group analyzed
more than thirty recent studies and reports on the program.  We also conducted numerous
interviews with citizens near sites, national environmental organizations, Congressional
House and Senate staff, State officials, EPA management and staff, EPA contractors, and
companies who are responsible  parties at Superfund sites.

      Through these analyses  and interviews, the task group identified what  different
people expect from  the  program.   The task group also identified several barriers to
meeting those expectations and developed  a strategy to guide EPA in implementing the
program.  The overriding goal in articulating what people expect from Superfund ~ and
in designing  a strategy for implementing the program - has been to improve EPA's ability
to effectively manage the program and to regain the public's trust in our ability  to do so.
This chapter presents  the findings and makes recommendations which  the task group
believes will help Superfund achieve its statutory goals and become a success in the eyes
of Congress  and the American people.
                         THE PUBLIC'S EXPECTATIONS
      People interested in Superfund vary  in their opinions  on what they consider
important to program success. However, the  task group found that several expectations
are common to most people.  At the most basic level, people want the  site cleaned up
now.  A closer examination shows that they  care about action, timeliness, quality, risk
reduction, enforcement, cost, innovative technologies, and a participatory process.

Action

      The public wants actions taken at many more sites on the National Priorities List
(NPL) that show measurable and visible environmental results.  "Action" refers to removal
or remedial actions that remove or remedy the contamination  resulting in a site cleanup.
The concern for action is expressed in a  number of different ways.  Some people are
concerned  that once a site is listed on the NPL that EPA is not in the field quickly
enough  initiating response actions. Others are concerned that actions must lead to sites
being deleted from the NPL.

Timeliness

      The public is frustrated by the slow pace of site cleanup. Many people encourage
the initiation of actions as early in the process as possible to enhance the responsiveness
and efficiency of the program. Others noted that progress is impeded by a number  of
different elements.  For example, the process of investigating site contamination and

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analyzing alternatives for cleaning up the site  (known  as  the remedial investigation/
'feasibility study or  RI/FS) is cumbersome, lengthy negotiations or litigation can cause
delays in cleanup, and overwhelming workloads  on EPA personnel can slow down site
action.                                                      ;

Quality

       The public wants "quality" work at sites. However,  "quality" means different things
to different people.  Many people believed that "quality" means the selection of remedies
that result in permanent solutions to site problems. Some interpret "quality" to mean use
of treatment and innovative technologies.  Still  others see "quality" as the selection of
actions that are appropriate to meet the site conditions and remedy the problem.  Others
believe consistency in the "quality" of the work is important and were concerned about the
"quality"  of the document which contains EPA's decision on the selection of the remedy.

Risk Reduction

       The public wants to be protected from the risks  associated with living  near a site.
Some people recommended reducing, controlling,  and eliminating risks as soon as possible.
People are particularly concerned about the perceived health effects and view risk in terms
of whether they can drink the water, whether their children play in the yard, and whether
the river  is safe for fishing or swimming. There are disconnects between how people living
near  Superfund sites view  and  talk about  risks and how EPA staff  perceive,, and
communicate, them.

Enforcement

       Many people want more enforcement and endorse an "enforcement-first" approach.
Enforcement-first means that parties who are potentially liable for cleanup (known as
potentially responsible parties  or PRPs) would be doing  more  cleanups  in lieu  of
government-financed actions.  People believe having the PRPs do the work will result in
more site cleanups.  This is important because people believe Trust Fund revenues are not
sufficient  to  take  a public works  approach  to Superfund  cleanup.  EPA was also
admonished for not aggressively using the full  set of enforcement authorities provided by
the Superfund  amendments.   On the  other  hand, some people expressed distrust in
allowing  PRPs to conduct actions at sites.  They noted that the quality of documents
prepared by PRPs and contractors are sometimes  mediocre and that work or studies must
often be  redone.
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  Cost

        Many people are concerned about the escalating costs of the program both for the
  RI/FS and the actual design and implementation of the remedy (known as the remedial
  design/ remedial action or RD/RA). Some people suggested that EPA could benefit from
  years  of  experience  and  obtain  some cost savings  by  streamlining studies, where
  appropriate.   PRPs indicated that their costs should not be greater than if the site is
  cleaned up by  the  Fund.   Others  are concerned  about  EPA's  consideration  of
  cost-effectiveness in remedy selection, asserting that protecting public health rather than
  cost-effectiveness should drive the selection of the remedy.

 Innovative Technologies

        Some people want greater use of innovative technologies and criticize EPA  for
 relying on older, proven, and sometimes less permanent technologies.   There is also
 concern about a  perceived lack of an EPA commitment to encouraging the research and
 development of innovative technologies.  Some suggested that the existing EPA program
 for the development and demonstration of innovative technologies (the SITE program)
 could be more effectively integrated into Superfund. However, others believe that using
 "unproven" technologies at sites could be risky.

 Participatory Process

       The public ~ especially States, communities  affected by  sites, and  PRPs— want
 greater and earlier involvement in   Superfund actions.  Regional  offices indicated that
 their  community relations efforts at sites have been most successful when they initiate
 early citizen involvement well before the formal public comment period.  PRPs want early
 participation in the settlement process and want a  stronger EPA  commitment to  early
 information sharing to nurture effective negotiations and rapid settlements.
           BARRIERS TO MEETING THE PUBLIC'S EXPECTATIONS
      The public's expectations reflect important concerns.  However, several barriers
limit EPA's ability to fully meet all of the public's expectations.  First, barriers to meeting
the public's expectations exist because many of the expectations compete with one another.
While not mutually exclusive, the competing expectations require EPA to strike a balance
among them, in some cases  making difficult choices  or trade-offs based on key program
objectives.  Next,  there are constraints as to what EPA can accomplish given the size of
the problem  and  the resources available for cleanup.  Finally, there are limits to the
availability of technologies that are suitable for cleanup.
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 Competing Expectations

       Timely Cleanup Versus Participatory Decisions

       The public expects sites to be  cleaned up in a timely fashion.  The public also
 expects to have substantial and meaningful involvement in the decision-making process.
 However, the cleanup process is a lengthy one that involves complex problems, uncertainty
 in  data, and different opinions on how to address the problem.  Building a consensus
 among citizens, the PRPs, and the government  is essential but inevitably takes time to
 achieve. The more people involved in the decision, the more time it generally takes to
 reach a consensus.

       Decentralization Versus National Consistency

       Because Superfund is a national program, the public expects consistency in program
 operations (e.g.,  in remedy selection,  in cleanup standards,  and in implementation of
 settlement and enforcement policies). To speed  action, however, EPA has decentralized
 the implementation of the Superfund program by delegating substantial decision-making
 authority to the Regions.  Decentralization removes the encumbrance of additional layers
 of review but provides the potential for inconsistent actions.

       Complete Cleanup Versus Cleanup In Stages

       Deleting a site from the NPL has been used as the only meaningful measure of
 cleanup. The expectation that EPA should be deleting more sites encourages an approach
 that moves sites to final  remediation now and discourages an approach that emphasizes
 addressing  sites in stages. Some regions are cautious about proceeding to clean up sites
 in stages because they are uncertain about how these steps will relate to comprehensive
 solutions at the site.  Because resources are finite, an emphasis that focuses on completely
 cleaning up sites nbw results in cleanup at fewer sites whereas emphasis on cleaning up
 sites in stages results in reducing risks or making progress toward cleanup at many more
 sites.

       Fund Versus Enforcement

       The quickest action taken for any given site may involve using the Trust Fund to
finance government cleanup  action.   But  Congress provided EPA with  a range of
enforcement  and settlement tools to ensure PRP cleanup of sites.   If the goal of the
Superfund program is to clean up sites as quickly as possible, then Fund-financed response
may be the best mechanism. Additional time and effort are typically needed when using
enforcement  or settlement approaches to cleanup.  For example, it is often a lengthy
process to negotiate a settlement or to enforce efforts to compel PRP cleanup through
litigation.

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       Achieving Targets Versus Environmental Results

       Congress and the public expect environmental results  from Superfund cleanups,
 but they also expect the Agency to meet statutory deadlines (or targets) for preliminary
 assessments and site investigations as well as for initiating RI/FSs and remedial actions.
 Achieving targets can mean trade-offs with achieving environmental results.  Targets are
 numerical goals that do not measure quality, timeliness or risk reduction.  Program success
 is frequently measured by reaching targets, such as studies and referrals, rather than actual
 cleanup actions or enforceable commitments  to cleanup actions.

       Permanence Versus Technology Constraints

       Congress and the public expect site remedies to meet the statutory requirement to
 use permanent technologies, to the  maximum  extent practicable.  However, judgments
 differ about what is  practicable and the use of such technologies may riot be compatible
 with legitimate  technological  constraints.    For  example,  cost-effective permanent
 technologies have not been developed for some difficult problems, such as decontaminating
 large areas of contaminated soils or groundwater aquifers.  In addition, some people favor
 the use of new and innovative  technologies while others  are  concerned that such
 technologies, which have either not been previously used or that have had limited practical
 application, will be unsafe and ineffective.               . .   -

 Size of the Problem  and Resource Constraints

       The Problem  Is Big

       The scope and complexity of  Superfund are  far greater than originally imagined.
 When the  program was created in 1980,  Congress and the public viewed Superfund as a
 short-term response  to a short-term  problem of cleaning up abandoned hazardous waste
 sites.  The past nine years have revealed the true  nature and extent of the hazardous
 waste site  problem.   Superfund has become a long-term program in response to our
 growing understanding about the scope of the problem.

       EPA now knows that many thousands of  sites must be evaluated to  determine
which are serious enough to warrant inclusion on the NPL and that many of these sites
will be addressed under Superfund. Currently, sites  are added  to the NPL at a rate that
exceeds the rate of cleanup. We also know that much more time is required to clean up
individual sites than originally expected.  The  task of cleaning up the current NPL alone
will take many more decades.

      Some numbers will put  this  issue into perspective.  EPA's list of sites to evaluate
for possible inclusion on the NPL now contains 31,000 sites  (an average of 2,000 new sites
a year).  EPA has historically listed  on the NPL about five percent of the sites it has

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evaluated.  In 1986, the evaluation list stood at about 25,000 sites; EPA had completed
the decision process on just over 6,200 sites; 703 were on the NPL; and about 5,500 were
eliminated from consideration.  EPA has now identified some 1,200 sites as proposed or
final oh the NPL and has determined that about 16,000 others are not NPL candidates.
EPA has made major strides in addressing the evaluation backlog,  but much remains to
be done.

      The task of cleaning up the current NPL will take many more years, considering
the amount of funding available and  the time it takes  to complete some actions. At the
present rate of funding, EPA can start about 40 construction projects per year.  PRPs
are financing  another 50 or so per year.  With the NPL now standing at nearly 1,200 sites,
over 250 have  been financed to  start  construction.  It will take a number of years to
initiate construction at the remaining NPL sites.  While cleanup action may take four to
five years at some sites, it can take decades at others.  In cases of extensive ground-water
contamination, long-term pump and treat response actions are often projected to take 20
to 30 years, and in some cases up to 50 years.

      The Trust  Fund Is Finite

      Federal  dollars  alone  cannot  clean up all of the sites on the NPL.  The Trust
Fund's current authorization  of $8.5  billion is not sufficient to address  the problems at
sites on the current NPL, much less those that eventually will be listed.  The cost of
cleanup is escalating and now approaches $25 million  for construction costs at each site.
The current projected total cost of construction for all sites on the current NPL is $30
billion.  PRPs are expected to pay for 50% of such costs. Superfund's success will require
a joint effort  that includes the States as co-implementors, and the responsible parties as
full contributors.

      The Pipeline Is Full

      Activities in all parts of the cleanup process (referred to as the remedial pipeline)
from pre-remedial through remedial action have been conducted at a record rate since the
passage of the Superfund amendments in 1986. The capability of the Federal government
to manage the pipeline of activities that must be conducted to achieve cleanup at sites is
essentially full.  Resource problems are likely to continue to constrain program activities
across the entire  pipeline arid will require EPA to make hard choices among competing
program objectives. This means EPA is now reaching a stage of Superfund development
where we can no longer take a "fire house" approach to site cleanup; that is, deal with
sites on a "first-come, first-served" basis.
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       The fact that the remedial pipeline is full is currently demonstrated by the large
 number of post-1986 remedial projects that are entering the construction phase.  Even
 with high levels of PRP participation  in the program, there are insufficient funds  to
 construct all projects  that are  and will be  ready to move into  construction.   EPA's
 Superfund managers are now grappling with issues such as:  how to decide what projects
 to move to construction and what projects to place on "hold"; and how to move projects
 forward into construction while effectively maximizing PRP involvement.

 Technological Constraints

       There is a need to develop innovative technologies and to remove existing program
 constraints to their use at Superfund sites.  Various studies have stressed the need for
 long-term, reliable, and cost-effective treatment technologies that will permanently clean
 up hazardous waste sites.  However, these same studies point out that the demand for
 treatment often outstrips the availability and capability of existing treatment technologies.
 The fact that demand is far  greater than currently available technologies exacerbates
 EPA's problems in trying to use permanent technologies at some sites in the near term.
 Managing Superfund  as  the  long-term program it  has  become will allow  time for
 innovative technologies to be developed, demonstrated, and made available for commercial
 use.
                           A SUPERFUND STRATEGY
      Because there are competing public expectations for Superfund and because there
are important resource and technological constraints, EPA should adopt a strategy to
manage  its environmental  priorities  and to  establish  an  operating  framework for
implementing the program.  This strategy must take into account the public's concerns
without escalating or  creating expectations  that cannot be met.   An environmental
priorities approach for the Superfund program is important because it will help  EPA
strike a  balance among  competing public expectations and deal with resource  and
technological constraints.

      EPA's overriding goal is to protect human health  and the environment.  EPA is
obligated  and  firmly  committed  to reaching final  cleanup that  meets   health  and
environmental standards at all NPL sites.  EPA will continue to remediate sites until final
cleanup goals are met. However, EPA cannot do everything at once. There are neither
the resources nor the  technologies to achieve  final remediation at every site on the NPL
in the near term. In fact, final cleanup objectives may not be reached at  a particular site
for a long time (e.g.,  especially site conditions that include  large areas of contaminated
soils and contaminated groundwater aquifers).
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      EPA can, however, do a better job in remediating sites toward final cleanup by
fully implementing an environmental priorities approach to cleanup. The basic philosophy
of this approach, which is already under development in the Superfund program office, is
to more effectively and efficiently use both Fund and private party resources to address
the worst sites and the worst problems first.   This  means  EPA will balance priorities
among sites to ensure that the sites with the greatest health or environmental risks are
addressed first. EPA will then continually reduce risks at sites until the final site goals are
met.

      Important factors that help guide this priority-setting scheme include:

      *      human health  and  environmental considerations  that are clearly
             paramount to the program.

      *      pragmatic considerations that are tied to resource and technological
             constraints.  This may include such questions as: Given resource and
             technological constraints, what is the best method for addressing the
             site  and how quickly can cleanup be completed?         .

      *      early action considerations that emphasize the importance of taking
             actions in stages that are fully consistent with the final site  goals as
             early in the cleanup process as possible..

      The strategy consists of eight major elements.  The first three elements are the
environmental goals of the  cleanup process: making sites "safer" and "cleaner" as well as
monitoring and maintaining sites to ensure they remain safe. The additional five elements
are the means EPA will use to achieve "safer" and "cleaner" sites: more enforcement to
get more PRP cleanups,  greater development and  use of permanent  and innovative
technologies, more efficiency in program operations, greater public participation, and
greater cooperation with State agencies and natural resource trustees.

Environmental Goals

      Make Sites Safer — Control Acute Threats Immediately

      EPA will be in the field fast, sizing up the scope of the problem and undertaking
whatever removal or remedial action is needed right  away.  EPA's first priority is to get
into the field early to abate the immediate threat to  human health and the environment
at  all NPL  sites.  Sites  presenting  the most  acute risk  to  human health and the
environment will receive the earliest action to prevent the spread of contamination and to
control or reduce  the risk.  Focusing efforts on mitigating immediate threats ensures that
we are making sites "safer" in the short-term.
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      Effective immediately, the Administrator will direct each Regional office to do an
environmental and public health assessment at each NPL site.  This assessment will look
at the environmental and public health impacts of each site, and will be used to determine
what action, including an immediate removal action or enforcement action where viable
and liable responsible parties have been identified, must be taken to render each site safe
from immediate hazards to the public health and the environment.  EPA will then initiate
the necessary action to assure that the site is made safe in the short-term. Information
gathered from  the assessment will be  added  to established  priorities for longer-term
remedial action necessary to complete cleanup.

      Action may be taken  under  removal or remedial authorities as  appropriate and
must be consistent with the final remedy. Examples of such actions are:  removing drum
and tank waste for treatment or incineration; providing an alternative water supply; and
removing waste for interim storage where this  improves stabilization of a site. Making
sites "safer" could also include implementing rapid remedial solutions to sites where they
are available and that could be taken after appropriate study  but before a full RI/FS is
initiated. This approach would correct the most apparent and immediate site threats very
early in the process.

      Make Sites  Cleaner  — Worst Sites, Worst Problems First

      After abating the immediate threat, EPA will initiate the earliest remedial work to
address those problems that retain high priority when compared with competing problems
at other sites.  In many cases, EPA will  take action in deliberate stages that will result in
continuous improvements until the site is finally cleaned up to health and environmental
standards.  Cleaning up sites in stages often makes sense for tackling the worst problems
first and for doing quickly what can be  done without  delay.  Nevertheless, EPA expects
that some sites will be treated in the traditional way,  with one RI/FS and one remedial
action. At all sites, especially where cleanup occurs in stages,  EPA will remain engaged
in work at the site  until final cleanup is achieved. Cleaning up  sites in stages toward final
cleanup ensures that we are making sites "cleaner" in the long-term.

      Remediating sites  in stages is a concept that means  implementing response actions
in increments to provide additional or  longer-term improvements toward cleanup.  In
practice, cleaning up in stages may include  taking one or more removal actions (short-
term actions  that  typically address emergencies or immediate threats), followed by a
longer-term remedial action.  Another example is the  use  of "operable units" that divide
a site into separate problems with independent response actions.  Still another example is
the use of an "expedited response action" that describes a partial cleanup that may be
done before the final remedy is selected. "Expedited response actions" must, nevertheless,
be fully consistent with the final remedy.
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      Depending on site conditions, EPA will take actions to initially prevent exposure
and/or control risk; further actions will be taken to reduce and/or eliminate risk.  For
example, actions may be taken to prevent the spread of contamination!, such as using caps,
berms, and slurry walls; other actions may be taken to initiate ground-water pump and
treat  systems  for  contaminated  plumes;  still  other actions  may  use incineration or
bio-remediation to treat hot spots and fully clean up the contamination for a portion of
the site.

      EPA will  achieve "safer" and "cleaner" sites while striving to  meet final  site goals
at as many NPL sites as soon as possible.  Achieving "safer" sites and "cleaner" sites are
not mutually exclusive  goals or activities.   A removal  action  taken to mitigate an
immediate threat can often remediate a portion of a site's problem.  All actions to achieve
"safer" and "cleaner" sites are important accomplishments toward final site cleanup.  Our
goal is to reduce risk as quickly as possible throughout the cleanup process.

      Carefully Monitor and Maintain Sites Over the Long-Term

      EPA will  carefully monitor sites over the long-term to ensure that the remedy at
each site is fully protective of human health and the environment.  As part of our effort
to monitor site conditions, EPA will conduct a review of all sites at least every five years
after the initiation of the remedial action where hazardous substances remain on site to
ensure that human health and the environment are being protected as required by the
statute.  EPA will also maintain the effectiveness of the remedy over the long-term by
promptly correcting any additional problems that may arise at sites where  our monitoring
indicates that further response actions are necessary to protect human health and the
environment.

      To assure the public that EPA is carefully monitoring and maintaining  each site,
EPA will  report annually the results of all five year reviews that were conducted during
the preceding twelve month period. EPA will also modify Agency policy so that no site,
where hazardous substances remain, will be deleted from the NPL until at least one five
year review is conducted and the review indicates that the remedy remains protective of
human health and the environment.

Means to Achieve Environmental Goals

      Emphasize Enforcement to Induce Private Party Cleanup

      EPA will encourage or compel PRPs to do more work to increase the total number
of cleanups. Our objective is to either rapidly achieve enforceable agreements by PRPs
to cany out cleanups or, where such agreements are not reached, to order PRPs to carry
out cleanups at every NPL site where responsible parties can be found.  The goal is to
mobilize private  party resources to conduct cleanup up front, rather than using the Fund

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and recovering costs through litigation later.  To obtain more PRP cleanups, EPA will
increase the use of enforcement and settlement authorities, leverage the Fund,  and
improve case support.

       For example, EPA will increase the issuance of administrative orders to compel
PRPs to do the work that meet human health and environmental goals.  EPA will improve
the collection and exchange of information and enforce information requests as well as
increase resources and  provide incentives for the Regions to use settlement tools  that
encourage PRPs to participate in the settlement process. In addition,  EPA will increase
the ability to shift funds among sites to achieve maximum leverage to use the Fund to
establish a credible threat that if negotiations fail the Fund will be used in selected cases
to finance cleanup with  cost-recovery and possible treble damages to follow.  Finally, the
Agency will ensure the proper skill mix and consider organizational adjustments to improve
case support for enforcement actions. (See  Chapter II "Strengthening Enforcement and
Maximizing Responsible Party Work at Superfund Sites").

       Develop and Use New Technologies for More Effective Cleanup

       EPA will use permanent technologies to achieve final site goals, to the maximum
extent practicable.  EPA will protect human  health and the environment from long-term
potential  hazards and will use permanent  technologies where they  are  proven, cost-
effective,  and available  to achieve  final site goals  that protect human health and the
environment.  In many cases, attaining final site goals that involve the  use of permanent
technologies  may  be accomplished in the  near  term (e.g.,  at sites where surface
contamination may be biologically treated or incinerated).  In other cases, attaining final
site goals will take more time.

       Although EPA has increased the use of treatment technologies at sites, the current
range of available treatment technologies does not meet the demand for such technologies.
To address this demand, EPA will conduct more research and development of innovative
treatment technologies to enhance its ability to meet the statutory preference for treatment
and  use of permanent technologies.   In particular, EPA will  expand the  research,
development and demonstration  of new technologies;  evaluate  existing and  emerging
technologies; and encourage the use of emerging technologies  through an aggressive
technical assistance program for Regional project managers.  EPA will also make every
effort  to eliminate  internal barriers  to the demonstration and use  of  innovative
technologies. (See Chapter IV  "Bringing Innovative Technology to Bear on Pollution at
Superfund Sites to Strengthen Remedy Selection").
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       Improve Efficiency of Program Operations

       EPA will improve the efficiency of program operations for achieving "safer" and
 "cleaner" sites by integrating the Fund and enforcement aspects of the program. A "One
 Superfund Program" concept means that all sites would be treated the same.  It  means
 using one site manager for both Fund and enforcement activities and using all available
 mechanisms for encouraging PRPs to do the work.  EPA will also better define the rqles
 of the Regional project  managers  and  provide them with  additional  technical and
 administrative  support. (See Chapter II  "Strengthening Enforcement and  Maximizing
 Responsible Party Work at Superfund  Sites" and Chapter III "Accelerating and Improving
 Remedial Action").

       Encourage Full Participation by 'Communities

       All phases of the program y/ill benefit from greater ^public participation.  EPA,will
 increase the role of citizens in Superfund decisions, especially at PRP sites; encourage
 consistent communication with citizens;  and reform the  Technical Assistance Grants
 program to eliminate barriers to its use.  EPA will also advocate an increased national
 effort  to inform the public  on Superfund's progress; involve the public  in policy and
 implementation issues;  and  increase efforts to measure program  progress towards
 environmental  results  (See  Chapter V  "An  Aggressive  Program  of Community
 Involvement" and Chapter VII "Accounting for Achievement: Communicating Progress to
 the Public").                               '.'                 ;

       Foster Cooperation With State Agencies. Natural  Resource Trustees, and ATSDR

       EPA recognizes that State agencies  and  natural  resource trustees,  including the
 Forest Service, the Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Park Service, and the National
 Oceanic  and Atmospheric Administration,have asignificant role in  the Superfund
 program.  EPA will work with State agencies, natural resource trustees and ATSDR to
 ensure an effective and cooperative relationship


     WHAT DOES THE STRATEGY DO FOR THE SUPERFUND PROGRAM
    AND HOW WILL it HELP EPA MEET THE PUBLIC'S EXPECTATIONS?


      the task group believes that the development of a clear strategy for the Superfund
program is essential because it provides the operating context necessary to help guide EPA
in improving our implementation of the program.  The strategy is also equally essential
because it contains EPA's message to  the public on  how  EPA will  attempt  to be
responsive to their concerns and expectations for the program.
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       The strategy does not propose that EPA make major structural changes to the
 existing Superfund program.  The task group believes that making such changes would
 be disruptive, counterproductive, and unnecessary.  The basic structure of the Superfund
 program is sound and should be retained. However, the task group strongly believes that
 EPA has important choices to make about where to place the emphasis of the program
 and that substantial improvements in implementation which reflect the overall goals of the
 program can and should be made now.  For this reason, the strategy has been designed
 to shift the emphasis of the program in the following key respects:

       *     EPA will focus more intently on setting and managing environmental
             priorities, with a special emphasis on taking early actions.  This is
             demonstrated by our commitment to controlling acute problems first
             then initiating high priority longer-term response actions, typically in
             stages of cleanup, until health and environmental standards are met.

       *     EPA will make  greater use of enforcement authorities to compel
             private parties to  conduct  the cleanup  up-front in lieu  of  Fund-
             financed action and cost-recovery through litigation later.

       There are other key advantages to our approach for ensuring better Superfund
 cleanups.  For example, the strategy  renews EPA's commitment  to  monitoring and
 maintaining site remedies to ensure safety over the long-term, and to encouraging  more
 effective public participation.  We also optimize the use of not just one, but a range of
 technologies and allow for the cost-effective use  of different technologies.   Finally,  the
 strategy recognizes that cleanups are multi-year, multi-stage activities.

       The central theme or message of the strategy  is that EPA is attempting to be
 responsive to  the  public's concerns and  to  meet the  public's expectations.   EPA
 acknowledges  this as an  important  challenge,  in light of competing expectations and
 significant resource and technological constraints.  The  task group has made a concerted
 effort  to be candid  about what we believe EPA can  realistically achieve  and how we
 believe EPA should achieve it.

       Although EPA cannot meet  every expectation nor reconcile every competing
 expectation, EPA can do  a better job  of responding to  the  public's  concerns.   For
 example, we believe that  EPA can more fully  meet the public's expectation that  EPA
 conduct work which shows measurable and visible environmental results.   EPA can do
this by taking early actions and by taking actions  in stages.  In  addition, the task group
believes  that EPA  can better  meet  the public's  expectation  for  meaningful public
participation.   EPA can do this by  creating opportunities at every site for early and
continuous citizen involvement throughout the cleanup process, and by removing barriers
to the  use of technical assistance grants.
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      These and other expectations can be addressed more fully even in light of resource
and technological constraints.  EPA can do this by better identifying and addressing our
environmental  priorities,  and by  fostering the  development  and  use  of  innovative
technologies.

      The task group also believes that although competing expectations do add to the
complexity of the program, EPA can do a better job of striking a balance between them.
In fact, the strategy was specifically designed to do this.  For  example, we attempt to
reconcile the competing expectation between the desire to achieve complete cleanup with
the need to conduct cleanup in stages.  The strategy sets complete cleanup as EPA's long-
term goal for each site and uses cleanup in stages as the means to achieve this long-term
goal.

      The strategy also attempts to reconcile the competing expectation that EPA use
the Fund to achieve cleanups faster with the need to mobilize PRP resources through an
"enforcement-first" approach.   We will  orient the  program  toward greater use  of
enforcement  authorities to  mobilize PRP resources but also allow for  Fund-financed
actions  where  emergencies exist,  where there are no viable  PRPs, or  where  it is
appropriate to use the Fund to establish a credible threat that EPA will act if negotiations
fail.

      As a final example, the strategy attempts to reconcile the competing  expectation
that EPA use permanent technologies with the limitation imposed on us by the inadequate
range of good technologies.  EPA will use permanent technologies when they  are proven,
cost-effective, and  available. But we will also improve our ability to make better future
use of such technologies by removing administrative barriers to their use as well as by
renewing  EPA's  commitment to  fostering  'research  and  development  of  innovative
technologies.

      In summary, the strategy is not a magic device that will instantly allow EPA to fully
meet all of the public's expectations. Nor will it automatically result in the implementation
of a perfect Superfund program. Nevertheless, the strategy does take many of the public's
expectations into account,  does strike a balance  among key competing expectations, does
address important resource and technological  constraints, and does  provide a clear
framework to guide the implementation of the program.  Taken together, the task group
believes that by using this  strategy,  EPA and the public will see significant improvements
not only in the implementation of the program but in added benefits to human health and
environment that the program was created to address.  What EPA seeks now is public
acceptance of this  approach and room to operate in a supportive environment.
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II. STRENGTHENING ENFORCEMENT AND MAXIMIZING




  RESPONSIBLE PARTY WORK AT SUPERFUND SITES

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                                  CHAPTER II

STRENGTHENING ENFORCEMENT AND  MAXIMIZING RESPONSIBLE
                   PARTY WORK AT SUPERFUND SITES
       This chapter is the report of the task group on Enforcement and Maximizing PRP
 Work.  This report reflects a review of a variety  of recent studies on the Superfund
 program, as well as ongoing management initiatives involving EPA and the Department of
 Justice, such as the Superfund Settlement Incentives and Disincentives Workgroup and the
 Superfund Enforcement Management Issues Workgroup.  It also reflects discussions with
 individuals and groups involved in the Superfund program, including EPA Regional and
 Headquarters personnel, representatives of the Department of Justice, Congressional staff,
 as well as industry, citizen and environmental groups.

       The conclusions in this chapter are those of the task group and do not necessarily
 reflect the positions of everyone who participated in its development. The task group  did
 not attempt to respond specifically to all of the comments in individual studies, nor to
 attribute particular positions to particular groups,  The chapter has been drafted without
 reference to specific negotiations or cases, because of the confidential nature of much of
 that material.

       This chapter does not attempt to comprehensively  address each aspect of the
 Superfund enforcement program. Certain topics, such as administrative records and State
 relationships, are not covered. Rather, this report is an attempt to describe the overall
 direction of the program,  to make a  few  specific recommendations  for  midcourse
 corrections, and to address issues of particular concern that have been raised in discussions
 and reports.  This report was requested by top Agency management, but it is also intended
 to respond to the recent critiques  of the Superfund enforcement program, to the issues
 raised  by the many constituencies interested in Superfund,  and to the concerns of the
 Federal employees  working in the program.

       This chapter sets out  12 recommendations to strengthen enforcement and increase
 private party response.. These recommendations involve increased use of enforcement and
 settlement authorities, better integration of  enforcement and  Fund-financed  cleanup
 activities, improved case management and case support,  stronger  responsible  party
oversight and cost  recovery, and better  intergovernmental  coordination.  The chapter
consists of an overview of the recommendations,  and  more  detailed  discussions  of
substantive issues.
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                                  SUMMARY
        The basic aim of the Superfund program is to place responsibility for cleanup of
hazardous waste disposal sites on those who generated the wastes, and those who owned
or operated the sites.  If the government conducts the cleanup using money from the Fund,
that  purpose can be accomplished through cost recovery.   The statute  also provides
enforcement tools that the government can use to directly compel responsible parties to
conduct the cleanup.  Where responsible parties are willing to assume that responsibility
on a cooperative basis, settlement agreements provide another means to achieve  cleanups
that  meet human health and environmental goals.  Whichever approach is followed, the
objective of Superfund enforcement is to reach the goal of placing ultimate responsibility
for the costs  of cleaning up Superfund  sites on those who contributed to the  problem.
This objective is consistent with the policy of other Federally administered environmental
statutes that those who are responsible for pollution should bear the burden of cleaning
it up.

      The following discussion summarizes the general approach recommended for the
Superfund  enforcement  program.    This   summary briefly  describes  the  main
recommendations, and refers to the section of the report where the issues are  discussed
in greater detail.
EPA will:
            increase its use of section 106 unilateral administrative orders
            to compel private party response. (See ENFORCEMENT FOR
            REMEDIAL DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION)

            provide resources, remove administrative barriers, and create
            incentives for use of the settlement tools of CERCLA (e.g.,
            mixed funding, de minimis settlements). (See SETTLEMENT
            AUTHORITIES)

            integrate  the  Fund-financed  response  and  enforcement
            approaches under Superfund.  Private party response  is the
            preferred approach  for the majority of Superfund sites.  (See
            FUND  ENFORCEMENT RELATIONSHIP)
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establish an integrated timeline for both enforcement and
response action.   The timeline will  include deadlines  for
completing negotiations and following up with enforcement or
response   action.      (See   FUND   ENFORCEMENT
RELATIONSHIP)

ensure  the  proper  personnel  skill mix  and  consider
organizational  adjustments  to improve  case support  for
enforcement actions. (See CASE SUPPORT)

ensure effective information collection, information exchange,
and  enforcement  of information  requests  to  encourage
Potentially  Responsible  Party  (PRP)  participation in  the
settlement   process.  (See   ENFORCEMENT   OF
INFORMATION   REQUESTS  AND   INFORMATION
EXCHANGE WITH PRPS)

strengthen  its  efforts to effectively oversee private  party
remedial investigations and feasibility studies (RI/FS). (See
OVERSIGHT OF PRIVATE PARTY RI/FS)

retain the maximum amount of leverage to use the Fund where
negotiations   are   unsuccessful.      (See   FUNDING
FLEXIBILITY)

establish realistic expectations for cost recovery, develop a
removal cost recovery strategy, and  conduct a rulemaking to
strengthen  the ability  to  recover  costs.    (See  COST
RECOVERY)

with the Department of Justice, establish a case management
planning process to  expedite enforcement and  settlement
decision   making.   (See   INTERGOVERNMENTAL
COORDINATION)
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        ENFORCEMENT FOR REMEDIAL DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION
FINDING: Unilateral administrative orders under Section 106 of CERCLA are an incentive
for settlement, serve as a useful preliminary to judicial enforcement, and establish a case for
treble damages  when EPA proceeds with Fund-financed response.  They can  be used to
compel response actions if negotiations do not result in settlement.  They are also useful in
situations where EPA has reached a partial settlement with some but not all  of the PRPs at
a site.  Orders can be issued to compel recalcitrants to conduct certain discrete phases of the
work at a site, or to cooperate with the settling parties conducting the cleanup.  Additional
judicial enforcement actions against parties who fail to comply with administrative orders will
also make the threat of enforcement more credible.
DISCUSSION: Section 106 of CERCLA authorizes administrative orders or judicial action
to compel responsible parties to conduct response actions where there is an imminent and,
substantial endangerment to public health, welfare or the environment.  There have been
criticisms in recent years that the Federal government has not made adequate use of these
authorities. This section of the review discusses where and how such enforcement actions
may be useful, actions to take in the event of non-compliance with orders, and steps that
might be taken to  increase the number of section  106 enforcement actions.

        It is essential to distinguish administrative enforcement .under  section 106 from
judicial enforcement under section 106, because these enforcement tools have different
impacts on PRPs and different resource implications for the Federal government.  EPA
is authorized to issue administrative orders to PRPs to. compel them to conduct response
actions.  If PRPs fail to comply  with these orders,  EPA may refer  the  case to the
Department of Justice (DOJ) for judicial enforcement of the order, or proceed with Fund-
financed response.  If PRPs fail to comply with  an order, and  EPA proceeds with Fund-
financed response, EPA can pursue  treble damages  under section 107 of CERCLA.
Section 107 authorizes EPA to collect up to three times the cost incurred by the Fund if
responsible parties fail to comply with an order.  Judicial enforcement may involve an
action in court to compel responsible parties to conduct a response action, action in court
to enforce compliance with an administrative order, or action to collect penalties for
failure to comply with an order.
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Role of Section 106 Orders for Remedial Action

      The most important role of section  106 orders is to create an  enforcement
threshold for the program and thereby encourage voluntary private party participation in
the settlement process.  In many cases, because PRPs have not necessarily violated any
statutes, a punitive orientation is not always appropriate for CERCLA enforcement.  The
primary purpose of the liability scheme is to force cleanup, and enforcement measures will
be brought to bear against parties who fail to settle, or who violate administrative orders
or judicial decrees.

      The liability of PRPs under CERCLA is joint and several, except where PRPs can
demonstrate that the harm at the site is divisible.  The potential for joint and several
liability's a valuable impetus for PRPs to reach the agreements among themselves and
with the government that are necessary for successful negotiations.  Unilateral judicial
enforcement under section 106  has not always been the quickest way of  assuring that
cleanup starts for any given site, but a certain threshold number of enforcement actions
is  necessary to  establish this  authority  as  a credible threat against PRPs who fail to
participate in the settlement process.

       Section 106 administrative orders can be a spur to private party cleanup in several
respects. They can be useful to compel response actions if negotiations do not  result in
settlement. They are also useful in situations where EPA has reached  a partial settlement
with some but not all of the PRPs at a site.  Orders can be issued to recalcitrant parties
to compel them to conduct a discrete portion of the work at a site.  These are sometimes
called "carve-out" orders. Orders can also direct the recalcitrant parties to cooperate with
the settling parties who are conducting the cleanup.

      In these  situations,  orders  serve as an incentive for  settlement.  They encourage
recalcitrants to pay or participate with the settlers, and help  to demonstrate the economic
consequences of noncompliance to corporate management.

      In some cases, the government settles with some PRPs, and takes  enforcement
action against others.  In these situations, it is particularly important  that the settlement
terms and enforcement actions encourage participation and discourage recalcitrance.  The
same companies and the same lawyers  are involved in many Superfund  actions and
settlement and enforcement actions are carefully examined for their precedential value for
subsequent  cases.   The  1988 EPA-DOJ  conference on  Superfund Settlements  and
Disincentives included a number of specific and detailed recommendations for structuring
settlements and enforcement actions to encourage settlement and discourage recalcitrance.
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      Some PRPs have objected that issuance of an administrative order is a disruption
to PRPs, rather than an impetus for settlement They argue that PRPs subject to orders,
or the threat of orders, spend their time figuring out how to respond to the statements in
the order, rather than working with the Agency to reach settlement. In other situations,
orders have been sought by PRPs to help convince corporate management and insurers of
the seriousness of the enforcement action.  It  is impossible  to  predict,  in any given
situation, whether PRPs will react by moving more quickly to reach settlement, or react by
moving to defend themselves against the order.

      The task group encountered many differing and strongly held views concerning the
effectiveness of administrative orders in the Superfund enforcement process. Our view is
that routine and predictable issuance   of  administrative  orders in  the CERCLA
enforcement process will  help to  bring negotiations to a successful  conclusion.   The
prospect of treble damages or judicial enforcement for PRPs  who do not comply with
orders is an additional powerful impetus for settlement.
RECOMMENDATION:  EPA will increase its use of unilateral administrative orders,
particularly for remedial design and remedial action.  Our objective will be  to either
rapidly achieve enforceable agreements by PRPs to carry out cleanups or, where such
agreements are not reached, to order PRPs to carry out cleanups at every NPL site where
responsible parties can be found. EPA will routinely issue orders to PRPs who are legally
liable and financially viable if settlement is not reached after completion of negotiations.
Orders will therefore be routinely issued before a case is referred to the Department of
Justice for judicial action, or before the Fund is used for remedial design or construction.
Where the Fund is used, EPA expects to pursue cost recovery action under section 107,
and to seek treble damages where appropriate.

Where the government has reached a partial settlement with cooperating PRPs, it will
take prompt enforcement action against viable and liable recalcitrants who  have  not
participated in settlements.  This action may be an administrative  order under section
106, judicial  action under section  106, or an action under section 107 to recover costs
incurred by the government. Such action should generally be commenced within 90 days
of entering the consent decree before the court. In both the structure of the settlement
terms and in its pursuit of enforcement, the government will clearly establish incentives
to encourage these PRPs who are willing to assume responsibilities and disincentives for
those who will not.
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Response to Non-Compliance with Orders

DISCUSSION:  If PRPs do not settle and do not comply with orders, the government
can  proceed with Fund-financed  response  or  judicial  enforcement.   The task group
considered ways to achieve the best balance between these approaches.   Commenters
generally  agreed that  section 106 judicial enforcement is not generally  the speediest
method for assuring cleanup at any given site, but most commenters also  agreed that a
certain  number of judicial enforcement actions are needed to maintain  the threat of
vigorous enforcement to the PRP community.  Different methods were considered for
increasing the number  of judicial actions.

      Increased numbers of orders may lead to increased numbers of judicial actions to
enforce them.  By routinely issuing administrative orders when settlement is not reached
within a reasonable time, EPA may be able to increase the number of judicial referrals for
section 106 actions.  In addition, there is no guarantee that Fund resources  will always be
available in situations where PRPs do not comply with orders. When Fund resources are
available,  cost recovery with  the  prospect of  treble damages is  also  a legitimate
enforcement approach.

      The discussions during the Management Review uncovered little support for goals,
quotas,  or targets for  the  use of unilateral section 106 judicial enforcement.   Past
"initiatives" to increase the number of section 106  judicial  actions  through review of
candidate sites to identify prospects for referral have  not been very successful.

      There  were also suggestions that Headquarters  increase its control over Fund-
financed remedial action to encourage enforcement action.  According  to this view, Fund
financed response may become the path of least resistance and be used too frequently
instead  of judicial enforcement because of the  desire  to move promptly ahead with
cleanup.  Restrictions on Fund-financed response were suggested to assure that unilateral
enforcement authorities are given proper consideration.  Specific proposals included the
following:

      *     Use of the Fund for remedial action should be contingent on
            prior issuance  of  administrative orders, or justification of a
            decision not to issue administrative orders.

      *     If the order is not complied with, Headquarters must approve
            or be consulted on any decision to proceed with Fund-financed
            response rather than a judicial referral.
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BGECOM1VCENDATION: Before Fund-financed response can proceed at a site, a Region
must issue an administrative order, or provide a justification for its decision not to issue
an order.  If PRPs do not comply with the order, the Regions should have the flexibility
to determine whether to proceed with Fund-financed response or judicial enforcement
action to compel compliance and exact penalties. Regions will consult with Headquarters
where PRPs do not comply with an administrative order.  In determining whether to
enforce the order, EPA will consider the importance of maintaining section 106 judicial
enforcement as a credible threat to PRPs, as well as the availability of funds for Agency
response.

Litigation Support

DISCUSSION:  The task group considered different approaches for improving support of
section 106 litigation.  Judicial actions are time consuming and resource-intensive,  and
courts rather than EPA control the pace of activity.

      In the future, judicial actions may become  somewhat less demanding.  Remedy
decisions and determinations of imminent and substantial endangerment can be defended
on the basis of an administrative record, rather  than by expert witnesses.

      Nonetheless, an increase in the number of unilateral judicial  enforcement actions
will increase demands on Agency staff, who will need to be responsive to schedules and
demands of courts, as well as accountable for  ongoing activities at other sites.  These
multiple  demands  can be extraordinarily  disruptive  to  other activities.    EPA staff
sometimes view themselves as under the control  of the courts or DOJ attorneys. National
contract funds,  and DOJ expert witness funds account for a significant  amount of case
support, but some support activities can be performed only by Agency staff.

      EPA has considered a number of mechanisms for assuring adequate resources to
support judicial action.  Headquarters  could establish  a  litigation  budget set aside of
dollars and staff, over and above the Region's regular budget, to Regions which take on
the additional  litigation workload.   Headquarters Support Teams  and Cost Recovery
Documentation Teams could be established and trained to provide "hands-on" assistance
at critical junctures  in case preparation. Creation of additional case support capability, as
discussed under Case Support, should also help to provide additional qualified staff for
enforcement support.  EPA might also  be  more willing to adjust internal accountability
commitments for other site activities, to the extent that judicial enforcement pulls staff
away from other activities. EPA should be prepared  to experiment with all of these
mechanisms where necessary.
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                          SETTLEMENT AUTHORITIES
 FINDING:  The SARA amendments added several settlement provisions, including special
 notice, non-binding allocations of responsibility (NBARs),  mixed funding,  and de minimis
 settlements.  These provisions were in part a response to complaints that the CERCLA liability
 scheme was unduly harsh.  Today, it has become apparent that EPA has not made widespread
 use of these settlement tools, despite the Agency's good record in  obtaining settlements.
 DISCUSSION:  The task group considered the need for changes to increase the use of
 these  settlement tools  without  compromising  environmental  goals.  The section 122
 settlemgnt authorities are one set of incentives, along with enforcement authorities and the
 threat of Fund-financed response, for obtaining voluntary PRP response.  Whether or not
 they are needed at any given  site, their  use  contributes  to  a national perception of
 efficiency and fairness.  This section will focus in particular on mixed funding under section
 122(b), where the Federal government pays for a share of a  response action primarily
 conducted or paid for by PRPs,  and de minimis settlements under section 122(g), which
 are  separate settlements with  parties who  have contributed only small amounts of
 hazardous substances to  a site.

        The Federal government has had an encouraging record in reaching settlements
 since enactment of SARA, as measured by number of response actions and amount of
 private party resources committed to response action.  As of mid-April  1989, EPA had
 reached 66 settlements for remedial action with an estimated value of almost 900 million
 dollars.

       EPA has made substantial progress in reaching settlements, but has made uneven
 use of these settlement tools. Some are frequently used.  For example, special notice and
 negotiation moratoriums are provided in the majority of cases, the number of private party
 RI/FS  has  increased significantly,  and information release  to  PRPs  has  improved.
 Nevertheless, some Agency critics expect more mixed funding, more allocations, or more
 de minimis settlements. The limited use of these settlement tools can be attributed in part
 to both attitudes and bureaucratic obstacles.

       EPA staff and DOJ attorneys are sometimes reluctant to consider the use of these
 authorities.  The CERCLA settlement tools are seen in some quarters as inconsistent with
 the statutory scheme  of joint and  several liability.  The lingering effects of past allegations
 of "sweetheart deals" also discourages consideration of the possibility of compromise.
If EPA is to increase its use of the settlement authorities in the SARA amendments, EPA
must also reaffirm its commitment to achieving the public health and environmental goals
that are set forth in the statute.

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      The attitude that these settlement tools are inconsistent with the liability scheme of
the statute appears to be diminishing, but pragmatic reasons for avoiding mixed funding
and de  minimis settlements remain.  Some believe that these provisions contribute to
delay, are  difficult to implement and are not necessary for reaching settlement or for
cleaning up sites as quickly as possible.  They are also concerned that these settlement
tools are resource-intensive, and divert resources from other sites. At times, decisions on
whether it is appropriate to use mixed  funding or de minimis settlements have been
delayed, particularly where the decision would set an important precedent.

      A number of factors discourage the use  of mixed funding.  Requests for mixed
funding are frequently made by  PRPs, and are often without merit.  Hence, it has been
difficult to  predict  and thus budget for potential mixed funding situations. Some Federal
procurement requirements are generally imposed when Fund  money is expended in a
mixed  funding arrangement.   Headquarters preparation of  preauthorization decision
documents have led to delays.  In some situations, the government is willing to forego past
cost as  an incentive  for settlement, where  PRPs are willing to conduct the complete
remedial action. This is viewed as a form of "surrogate mixed funding" that avoids the
logistical difficulties involved in  actually  authorizing PRPs to make a claim against the
Fund.

      There are similar impediments to de minimis  settlements.  For  example, money
obtained from  de  minimis settlors  may have to be deposited  in the Fund rather than
retained by EPA for site cleanup. Nonetheless, de minimis settlements can be particularly
useful at complex  and difficult sites with dozens or hundreds of PRPs.  Because of the
time and effort that such sites take, however, settlements with de minimis  parties are often
seen as  burdensome and inefficient, even if the settlement might have been impossible to
reach without use of the de minimis tools.

      EPA has decentralized its settlement process in order to streamline  decision-making.
In doing so, EPA has lost some ability to assure that decisions  at the Regional level are
fully consistent with national policy direction. In the minds of PRPs, this reluctance to use
these settlement1 authorities is sometimes seen as an unwillingness to make sufficient effort
to comply with the statute or to facilitate settlement.

      These problems  can be mitigated  by better coordination, and more  resources, as
discussed elsewhere.  In addition, as EPA gets  more experience in working with these
authorities, EPA is displaying a greater willingness to experiment with new approaches to
achieve settlements that do not compromise environmental goals.  Nevertheless, it is
essential to develop  workable incentives for the case  attorney and Regional Project
Manager (RPM) so they will be willing to take on these issues.  EPA should also consider
management reforms  to simplify the use of these authorities.
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       A variety of suggestions have surfaced. They include:

       *     arrangements  for a formal appeal by PRPs to Headquarters
             if they object to Regional decisions;

       *     accountability  commitments for use of these settlement tools;

       *     "circuit  riders" from Headquarters who can  work with  the
             Regions in the use of these authorities;

       *     further education in the need and usefulness of these provisions
             ("jawboning");

       *     resource set asides, or supplemental resources for Regions that
             use these authorities;

       *     Headquarters reviews, to identify appropriate candidate cases;
             and

       *     improved and  expedited procedures for Headquarters review
             of use of these authorities.

       The  task  group's   discussions  uncovered  little   support  for  accountability
commitments, or for a fundamental change in the current arrangements for decentralized
decision making.  There was also a widespread desire to avoid disruptive Headquarters
initiatives.  Improved education and training, increased resources, and simplification of the
review process were generally accepted. Concrete incentives are the best approach for
changing the belief that use of these authorities is unnecessary, inappropriate, or unduly
burdensome.

       There was a general belief that success in the program should not be measured by
the use of  any particular enforcement or settlement tool.  Use of the settlement tools is
essential for demonstrating that the settlement process can proceed fairly, just as use
of the enforcement tools is  essential to demonstrate that recalcitrants cannot avoid the
Superfund process.  Nevertheless, these authorities are means, and not ends in themselves.
Ultimately, the best  measure  of  success  in the enforcement program is the timely
commitment of PRP resources for response action that meets the requirements of
the statute.
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 RECOMMENDATION:  EPA will take the following steps to encourage the use of the
 settlement tools in the Superfund statute without compromising environmental goals:

 First, Headquarters will provide additional assistance and specialized training in the use
 of these authorities.  The assistance should emphasize information transfer among the
 Regions based on their actual experiences in using or attempting to use these tools.

 Second, EPA will develop an incentive system that provides additional support for Regions
 to use these settlement tools.  For example, when a Region indicates that a de minimis
 settlement is appropriate,  additional support in FIE and contract dollars  might be
 provided.  Specific amounts could be based on past experience and workload model data.

 Third, EPA  will establish specific  goals for the use of de minimis and mixed funding
 authorities.  EPA should determine  if it is possible to set  up special accounts in the
 Regions to cover anticipated mixed funding needs and to allow the Regions  to retain de
 minimis cash-out dollars for the site in which the settlement is reached.
                     FUND-ENFORCEMENT RELATIONSHIP
 Integrating Fund and Enforcement Activities

 FINDING:   Over the course of the  Superfund program, EPA  has followed a  variety of
 different approaches for coordinating enforcement activities with Fund-financed cleanup work.
 Sometimes Fund-financed work took precedence ^shovels first, lawyers later").  Other times,
potentially responsible parties were given opportunities to conduct each phase of the response
 action.  At still other times, sites were classified, with some designated for enforcement and
 others  for Fund-financed  response.    This fluctuation  among  approaches  has  been
 extraordinarily disruptive.


 DISCUSSION:  The  task  group  has tried to identify a more consistent approach for
 coordinating site-related work within the program. The intent of the Management review
 is to arrive at midcourse corrections,  and  the task group did not consider proposals
 that would completely ignore major  authorities under the  current law, such as a pure
 enforcement approach that does not  allow for Fund-financed response, or a pure public
works approach.
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       There is strong support among  the Regions  and States for increased Fund-
enforcement integration.  This has been, called the "One Superfund  Program" concept.
The approach is to seek responsible party commitments in the first instance, and spend
money when responsible parties are unwilling or unable to commit to  cleanup.

       Under  this approach,  Superfund sites are not classified into Fund lead and
enforcement lead,  but are instead all managed the same way.  One site manager, familiar
with both response and enforcement activities, would be responsible for the sites all the
way through the process whether the PRPs or EPA conducted the response.  The site
manager would be assisted by support  groups with different skill mixes through the
integrated cleanup/enforcement process.  These groups would be called on as needed to
support the site manager. This integrated response and enforcement approach requires
a strong matrix management  operation.   Such an operation is  discussed later in this
chapter under Case Support.

       EPA's current site classification process is not entirely consistent with an integrated
program approach.  Some  opportunities for  negotiations  with PRPs are provided  at
virtually every site.  However, sites are still frequently classified into Fund or enforcement
lead, and remedial design/remedial action (RD/RA) funding is designated only for certain
sites.   Enforcement lead sites  tend to be those where PRPs will conduct the RI/FS.  In
some situations, the classification process encourages delays  at enforcement lead sites,
because resources  are not available to threaten PRPs with Fund-financed response.  With
the publication of this  report, EPA is moving  to abolish  its current site classification
process and not designate particular sites  for Fund use unless a thorough PRP search
shows  that no financially viable PRPs exist.

       Of course, specific amounts needed for Fund-financed response must be identified
in order to prepare a budget for EPA and  Congress. This process of identifying funding
needs should not have the effect of limiting negotiations or enforcement at particular sites,
nor should  it limit the Agency's ability to threaten Fund-financed response  at other
sites.

       Given the fact that the remedial pipeline is filling up fast and funds are becoming
tight, the "One Superfund Program - Enforcement  First" approach has received strong
support from the Regions.  Several Regions have formally reorganized to implement the
concept and others are moving in that direction.

       For  the "One Superfund Program" approach to work, the Regions must be given
flexibility to shift funds among sites, and to move quickly between enforcement activities
and response activities where necessary. This issue is addressed under Funding Flexibility.
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RECOMMENDATION:   EPA will establish  an integrated enforcement and response
program. EPA will encourage or compel PRPs to conduct the response action at all sites
with viable PRPs before using the Fund, except in emergencies.
Integrated Timeline for Enforcement and Response Action

FINDING: A process involving both enforcement and response activities at the vast majority
of sites is complex and susceptible to delays.  An "enforcement-first" process is particularly
vulnerable to delays if negotiation deadlines are not established, or if they are routinely allowed
to slip. Negotiations tend to be more effective where PRPs understand that EPA  will cut off
negotiations if they fail to settle before the deadline.
DISCUSSION: EPA has established timeframes for accomplishing particular steps of the
enforcement and cleanup process. For example, there are negotiation timeframes derived
from the provisions of section 122 of CERCLA, and cleanup timeframes derived in part
from the statutory goals in section 116.  Some individual Regions have timeframes that
integrate both enforcement and response activities.

      If EPA is to successfully integrate the response and enforcement programs, EPA
should establish a single management system that organizes the work and defines when the
work can realistically be completed.  Routine issuance  of orders may add  time to the
process  and delay Fund-financed response in situations  where orders are not complied
with. An integrated timeline for enforcement and response action will therefore be
valuable for minimizing delays and  uncertainties in predicting and planning  for  Fund
financed activity.  Key  steps include:

      *     Commencing  PRP searches at the  time that a  preliminary
             assessment is  initiated;

      *     Starting  efforts  to  build  liability   cases   and  compile
             administrative records;

      *     Issuing information  requests and  special and general notice
             letters;

      *     Initiating negotiations for RI/FS and for RD/RA, where legally
             liable and financially viable PRPs exist;

      *    Adhering to negotiation deadlines to push PRP settlements and
             to avoid delays in the remedial pipeline;

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             Routinely issuing administrative orders to legally liable and
             financially viable PRPs if settlements are not reached;

             Referring a case to the Department of Justice or using the
             Fund to clean up the site if responsible parties do not comply
             with the order; and

             Lodging and entering a consent decree if settlement is reached.
RECOMMENDATION:   EPA  will  establish a  single  integrated timeline for  both
enforcement and  Fund-financed activities.   The timeline will include deadlines for
completing  negotiations and following up with enforcement  or response action.  The
timeline will also reflect program goals for completing phases of the response action, and
serve as a benchmark for assessing progress at sites. This timeline will also be the basis
of  the case management  planning  process discussed  later  in  this  chapter under
Intergovernmental Coordination.
                                 CASE SUPPORT
FINDING:  Better case management and case support is necessary to implement the "One
Super/and Program - Enforcement First" concept, to assure adequate  PRP searches and
maximum PRP involvement at all Superfund sites, and to support additional enforcement
actions. An approach which has proven effective in several Regions is a matrix management
system based on a single site manager, familiar with both enforcement and response activities,
surrounded by support units that he/she can call on  as necessary at different stages of the
enforcement and response process.  These support units must be held completely accountable
for meeting  deadlines at the site.  No specific form  of organization is mandated but it is
essential to provide the proper skill mix for enforcement support, and to train and retain skilled
enforcement staff.
DISCUSSION: Case support units should include the necessary mix of skills required to
complete specific support tasks. EPA needs to devote special attention to making the all-
important initial investment of effort and resources  needed to get the case management
process off to a good start. In light of Superfund's complexity, it is particularly desirable
to use highly skilled government enforcement staff, rather than to rely overwhelmingly on
contractor support. The types of units and skill mixes needed include:
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 Legal Units: Lawyers from the Office of Regional Counsel to work with site managers
 throughout the enforcement and response process.

 PRP Search Units: Civil/private investigators to conduct timely and thorough PRP searches
 and followup with information requests.                                          .

 Administrative Record Units: Paralegals, records managers, or  others to compile and
 update the administrative record.

 Contract Support Units: Contract specialists to relieve site managers of significant amounts
 of administrative tracking and documentation required for proper site management.

 Technical Support Units: Toxicologists, hydrogeologists, geologists, risk assessment experts,
 to provide the  necessary specialized technical experts for remedy and liability questions.
 These individuals  can be made available through special arrangements with the Office of
 Research  and  Development,  as  well  as  through  arrangements with  participating
 contractors.                                                        ,        ,,«

 Cost Recovery Units: Individuals qualified in administrative or financial fields, to build and
 maintain the cost recovery documentation.  The Upward Mobility Program has been
 effectively  used to fill many of these positions.

       These units must be adequately staffed to avoid  bottlenecks, and they must be
 accountable for meeting deadlines for expeditious enforcement action. Where these units
 are located or how they are organized in the Regions is riot particularly important. Some
 may be combined into general support units.  For example, Contract Support and Cost
 Recovery Units could be located in  the Management Division.  These units must be
 adequately staffed to  avoid bottlenecks,  and  they  must be accountable for  meeting
 deadlines for expeditious enforcement action.                                     .
RECOMMENDATION:  EPA must ensure a proper skill mix for case management and
support of enforcement actions.  EPA will encourage the creation of specialized Regional
units for enforcement support activities, such as  searching  for  responsible parties,
assessing their ability to  pay and corporate  relationships, coordinating information
exchange among PRPs, supporting cost recovery efforts, and developing administrative
records.
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             ENFORCEMENT OF INFORMATION REQUESTS AND
                    INFORMATION EXCHANGE WITH PRPS
FINDING:  Section 104(e) of CERCLA authorizes EPA to request information concerning
Superfund enforcement and response actions, and to take enforcement actions against persons
who fail to comply with these information requests.  These information requests are valuable
for establishing PRP liability and for encouraging PRP participation in the settlement process.

      Section 122(e) of CERCLA provides  for EPA to release  information  to PRPs
concerning the other PRPs at the site, the nature of the wastes at the site, and, to the extent
such information  is available, a  volumetric  ranking of the wastes by party.   Despite the
importance of this information, PRPs have described EPA's information release as inconsistent
in timeliness and quality.
Enforcement of Information Requests

DISCUSSION: Section 104(e) letters are used extensively by EPA to gather Superfund
site information.  These letters are typically issued before any response action is taken at
a  site and  may  be supplemented through the cost recovery stage  of a case.   The
information is needed by EPA to identify PRPs, document their liability and obtain site-
specific information.  Timely and accurate responses by PRPs to Agency information
requests are vital  to the development of a comprehensive data base used by EPA during
settlement negotiations, enforcement actions and cost recovery lawsuits.

      There is some data to suggest that EPA does not vigorously enforce its information
requests.  Moreover,  there are those who believe that EPA tends to build a  case by
focusing on parties who respond to information requests, and fails to enforce against
parties who do not fully comply with these requests. If this is true, then EPA is sending
the wrong message.

      Vigorous enforcement of information requests  serves several purposes.   First, it
allows EPA to obtain information that is useful for establishing liability cases, and helpful
as well to  PRPs  in generating acceptable settlement offers.   Second,  enforcement of
information requests provides an opportunity for the government to pursue recalcitrants
at an early stage.  An early enforcement action  encourages recalcitrants to  participate in
negotiations.   In addition, PRPs  are more willing to settle when  they  are assured that
other parties  are not escaping  participation  by  simply ignoring Agency information
requests.
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 RECOMMENDATION:  EPA will develop  specific  goals  and timelines  to improve
 enforcement of information requests.  The Agency will provide for use of administrative
 orders and judicial referrals to compel answers to information requests, and to secure
 civil penalties or criminal sanctions where appropriate,.  The Agency will also provide for
 increased use of its administrative subpoena authority under section 122(e)(3)(B).
 Information Release

 DISCUSSION:   PRP's have  maintained that EPA is inconsistent in its approach  for
 releasing information concerning other PRPs and the nature of wastes at a site.  PRPs
 need information to meaningfully participate in the settlement process and to develop
 settlement offers. The information is also useful to  enable PRPs to allocate costs among
 themselves.

       Two types of information concerning other  parties are important to PRPs: the
 compilation  of general information  indicating the relative share of various PRPs (the
 "waste-in" list), and specific information that links particular parties to a site. The first can
 be used to identify other PRPs and relative shares of the various parties.  The  second is
 sometimes needed to convince corporate  management of the company's own involvement
 at the site.

       EPA  faces quite  different  problems in  producing and  releasing information
 concerning liability. "Waste-in" lists require readily available information at the site, and
 Agency resources to collect and compile  it.  In some situations, the information may be
 evidentiary, and  EPA may feel that release might compromise  potential  subsequent
 enforcement action.  Current  Regional practice often is  reciprocal in nature:  EPA will
 release information  concerning liability  to  the PRPs  when PRPs  respond  to EPA's
 information requests.

       In certain  situations, EPA may choose to take a more active role in facilitating or
 managing the allocation process among PRPs. This approach is more likely to be used in
 situations where there is an extraordinarily large number of PRPs.  Potential options for
 facilitating allocations among PRPs include Agency  funding of neutral parties  to aid in
 dispute resolution, use of nonbinding allocations of responsibility under section 122(e)(3),
 and more extensive Agency development  of information on volume and nature of wastes.
 The purpose of information release is to facilitate settlement, and any of these approaches
 may be appropriate, depending on the specific circumstances of the case.    :

      At present, there is  no comprehensive  picture  concerning information release.
Anecdotal information  indicates that Agency performance has improved,  but is uneven.
There is general agreement that early release of information can facilitate settlement.

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RECOMMENDATION:  EPA will prepare a directive that emphasizes the importance of
releasing  available  information  as  soon  as  possible  to  facilitate  settlements.
Improvements will require guidance, enhanced data bases and additional resources.
                    OVERSIGHT OF PRIVATE PARTY RI/FS
FINDING: Some commenters have criticized the Agency's policy of allowing private parties
to conduct RI/FSs, arguing that this practice results in cheaper, less protective remedies, and
that citizens groups have little opportunity for effective involvement in developing the RI/FSs.
These critics have suggested that EPA return to earlier policies of discouraging or prohibiting
private party RI/FS.  There was broad consensus among EPA managers and staff that the
Agency needs to put more effort and resources into oversight of RI/FS performed by PRPs.


DISCUSSION:  The  Superfund law authorizes EPA to give PRPs the opportunity to
perform site work at various points in the remedial process, including the RI/FS.  In the
interest of taking action at as many sites as possible and as  an  incentive for PRPs to take
on the much more expensive RD/RA phase, EPA has actively encouraged qualified PRPs
to conduct RI/FSs.  PRPs  are currently conducting 50 to 60 percent  of the RI/FSs at
Superfund sites, and if this  policy continues, the percentage of PRP lead activity is
expected to grow.

       When PRPs take the lead on RI/FSs and other site work, the site is assigned to an
Agency Regional Project Manager (RPM) who is responsible for ensuring that PRPs follow
EPA regulations and policies and adhere to agreed-upon schedules.  EPA employs
Technical Enforcement Support (TES) contractors for most of the day-to-day oversight.
Some  commenters believe  that  oversight costs, particularly those of the third-party
contractors required by the statute, are too high.  The TES contractors review workplans
and other major documents submitted by PRPs and observe PRPs (in most cases, the
contractors hired by PRPs) as they conduct site activities.  In all cases, EPA selects the
actual site remedy and writes the Record of Decision (ROD).
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       The task group  did not independently evaluate PRP activities or work products
 and has no direct evidence of widespread problems. However, interviews with Regional
 managers and staff lead to the conclusion that it would be prudent for EPA to carefully
 examine  current  approaches  to oversight  of PRP  RI/FSs and  make  appropriate
 adjustments where additional actions are called for.

       It is clear that PRPs' general incentives and interests in performing site work are
 different from those of EPA, communities, and States.  According to nearly  all Regional
 managers and staff interviewed on this topic, many PRPs try to economize and propose
 only  the  most  minimal remedial  action.    Some variations  exist,  of  course;  this
 characterization certainly does not apply to all PRPs. Nonetheless, EPA's basic approach
 to oversight must first assume that PRPs will try  to  conduct RI/FSs geared to their
 interests alone.  EPA's  credibility with the public and  affected communities  depends on
 ensuring that PRP  work on RI/FSs  is timely, thorough, and  does not  compromise
 environmental goals. Many responsible companies understand this simple fact, and have
 found to be in their own best interest to move beyond minimalist approaches  and to work
 actively with communities and the government.                          •

       Regional managers  and staff also expressed some concern about  the  current
 effectiveness of Agency  oversight of PRPs.  Although it might be assumed that Fund-lead
 sites, where EPA is directly in control, would make more demands on an RPM's time, the
 opposite is usually true.  One reason is that the contractor at the site reports  to the PRP,
 not to EPA  Therefore, after EPA reviews the contractor's document and recommends
 changes, these changes  are frequently negotiated with the PRP.  As noted' elsewhere in
 this report, RPMs often have difficulty  dealing effectively with PRP contractors  on
 technical issues.  In many cases, their extensive workloads preclude attention to every site
 at all times.                                                            ,

      Some EPA staff and critics outside  the Agency have concluded that PRPs should
 not be allowed to conduct RI/FSs at all. They argue that EPA should conduct the RI/FSs
 and then recover costs from PRPs. In some communities, citizens are especially suspicious
 of work  done by PRPs, and  assume that  EPA and the PRPs are together  striving for
 minimal remedies and costs.

      But there are some good reasons for allowing private parties to conduct the RI/FS.
 First,  Congress directed  EPA to provide qualified PRPs with an opportunity  to perform
 the RI/FS.  Second, if the RI/FSs are done by EPA, the money needed for them will have
 to be  diverted from other activities. Third, PRPs will become more accustomed to dealing
with EPA  during  the course of  the RI/FS,  and subsequent settlements that do not
 compromise environmental goals will be easier  to reach.  Finally, PRP conduct of the
RI/FS is an important incentive for PRPs to settle for theRD/RA. All of these reasons
are legitimate objectives, provided that the ultimate product-the remedy-protects human

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 health and the environment. Hence, the task group  endorses the continuation of PRP
 RI/FS, with the proviso that the Agency needs to do a better job overseeing the process.

       EPA has already begun some initiatives on PRP oversight, including an evaluation
 of a sample of PRP RI/FSs to identify possible quality problems and the development of
 guidance on PRP  oversight.  Proposals  to  improve EPA's current approach  to  PRP
 oversight include requiring more deliverables from PRPs, making greater use  of stipulated
 penalties when performance is poor, using the Corps of Engineers to oversee PRP RI/FSs,
 and assigning only experienced RPMs to PRP-lead sites. The task group did ,not  evaluate
 these proposals or suggest different approaches.  In light of the increasing number of
 PRP leads to be  conducted in the coming months and the general concerns raised during
 this study, however, the task group believes that EPA must act quickly to upgrade current
 oversight practices  and, in particular, involve  citizens in this process:          .       ;,
 RECOMMENDATION:  The Agency will expand efforts to promote closer oversight-of
 private party RI/FS, recognizing that the level .of oversight will  vary depending on the
 PRP's experience and willingness to assume accountability for their actions.   Specific
 steps should include reducing the Workload of RPMs who oversee these studies. The report
 of the task  group on Community Relations has further recommendations concerning
 citizen involvement in response actions conducted by responsible parties.    »    , ,    \
                             FUNDING FLEXIBILITY
 FINDING:  PRPs are more likely to agree to do the response work when the Region .can
 threaten them with Fund-financed response and subsequent cost recovery if they fail to settle.
 The ability to move funds among sites within the Region makes this threat more credible.
 Funds need not be available at every site, if there is sufficient flexibility to move funds among
 sites. .•;,'/   ...    •   :        •    -'••;•..-•     ..'•   •          -•.   ••,•.:.*••• •-'  - •?.->:.
                          .  •      .    ••  •  '    r   •   -  . '  . '  .' , . ",;   ••  '  • "; ' • ,  " !', f .' «'':
       But regional flexibility  must also be balanced with  national concerns.  If funds for
 remedial action  become scarce, then a national mechanism will be needed for  allocating
 them.  A national funding system is also useful in ensuring that money can be promptly spent
 and not carried  over to subsequent years.   Regional flexibility may  also be affected- by
^notification requirements that  reflect  Congressional interest in how money is spent.     '•   T
 DISCUSSION:  An integrated program should entail greater flexibility in moving resources
 among sites. Limits on "flexible funding" have, been an issue in the Superfund program for
 over a year.  , The task  group has examined the degree of funding  flexibility currently

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available. "Flexible funding" involves both the ability to move funds between categories of
activities, such as remedial design or PRP oversight, and the ability to move funds among
sites, when a settlement occurs at a site that is targeted for Fund-financed response.

       Once a settlement is reached, it may be useful to shift resources originally targeted
for a  particular  phase of Fund-financed response,  such  as  remedial  design, to PRP
response activities, such as oversight. EPA has increased its flexibility to make such shifts.
Nonetheless, there are some congressional constraints on EPA's ability to move resources
among categories of site activity, such as cleanup and enforcement.

       The threat of Fund-financed response is a well-recognized incentive  for private
party response.  The ability to move resources among sites makes this threat even more
credible.  When  a  site targeted for Fund-financed response instead settles and private
parties pay for cleanup, Regions would generally like the flexibility to use this funding as
leverage for further PRP cleanups, or to pay for response action at other sites.  Funding
need not be  directly available at  every site,  but flexibility  in  moving funds to take
advantage of ripening opportunities makes this threat more  credible.  Funding  cuts, of
course, make the threat less credible.  Many feel that the enforcement program slowed
during CERCLA reauthorization because the credibility of the threat of Fund-financed
response was not as realistic as it had previously been.

       The Regions currently have flexibility in  moving design money among sites.  The
ability  to proceed with remedial design  also constitutes  a useful threat.  There is also
general agreement that Headquarters has been  responsive to Regional requests to move
resources among  sites.

       Problems with leveraging private party response by threatening use of the Fund will
increase, however, if overall funds available for remedial design and remedial action  are
reduced. When settlements are reached, it may be necessary to shift resources to other
sites in other Regions based on determinations of national environmental priorities.
RECOMMENDATION:  EPA should maximize Regional flexibility in shifting funds
among sites, consistent with  Congressional constraints  and notification requirements.
Fund scarcity is a recognized  limitation on Regional flexibility.  If additional resources
become available because of a settlement, Regions should have the opportunity to apply
these resources to other high-priority sites within that Region.  To the extent;practicable,
the Regions should also be able to move resources among categories of activities, such as
remedial  design  and  PRP oversight,  as long as accountability  commitments  and
notification requirements are met
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                                COST RECOVERY
      This section addresses three closely related issues: the types of costs to be pursued,
the expectations concerning revenue to be returned to the Fund, and the efficiency of the
current process for documenting and recovering costs.  Our view is that conflicting and
sometimes unrealistic expectations about revenues to be returned to the Fund have forced
the Federal government to adopt a process for cost recovery that includes some significant
inefficiencies. More realistic expectations for cost recovery should in fact help to maximize
the amount of private party revenue available for cleanup.

Types of Costs

FINDING:  The Cost Recovery program serves a dual purpose for CERCLA enforcement.
It is intended to both recover revenues for the Fund and to encourage voluntary PRP cleanup
action by eliminating any incentive for PRPs to allow the government to do the work.

      As the courts gradually resolve the fundamental questions of CERCLA liability, PRPs
have increasingly focused on the tactic of investigating the documentation supporting EPA's
cost recovery program. Some PRPs have also disputed whether certain  types of costs,  such as
the costs of general program administration by EPA, can be legitimately assigned to particular
sites.

      Rulemaking can be used to identify the specific recoverable costs, the documentation
needed to prove EPA's case, and the documents that will be available to  PRPs.  A cost
recovery regulation should make the process more efficient and narrow the scope of potential
PRP challenges to the government's cost recovery actions. Enforcement resources can  be used
more efficiently  if issues of recoverability and  cost documentation are litigated once in the
context of a regulation, rather than case by case in each individual cost recovery action.
DISCUSSION: PRPs are showing a growing propensity to challenge EPA's cost recovery
claims.  For example, EPA claims for certain "indirect costs" are particularly controversial
with some PRPs.  Indirect costs are the costs of administering the Superfund program not
directly attributable to  response action at individual sites.   Indirect costs may  include
Superfund staff training, national program management, Superfund R&D, and preliminary
assessments and site investigation work at sites where no further action occurred.
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       Section 107(a) of CERCLA establishes PRP liability for all costs of a removal or
remedial action incurred by EPA that are not inconsistent with the National Contingency
Plan (NCP). Although this language authorizes EPA to recover all response costs from
PRPs, some PRPs have questioned the legitimacy of characterizing certain  "indirect"
expenditures as costs of response action. These PRP challenges become more serious as
the amount or proportion of indirect costs that EPA claims at a site becomes greater.
                                                                      !'  •
       EPA has established an indirect cost methodology which can capture these costs
and make them subject to cost recovery.  Through 1988, EPA had spent $2.6 billion under
the program.   Of  that  total,  $153 million was  captured  through  the , indirect cost
methodology, and hence is allocable  for cost recovery,. Approximately $950! million could
also be included  in this category through a broader accounting interpretation of indirect
costs.  But attempts to collect increased amounts of these indirect costs have involved a
number of problems in both negotiation and  documentation.              !

       PRPs frequently question the  fairness of the costs not directly attributable to their
specific site.  These costs are frequently the subject of extended bargaining in negotiations.
The ratio of indirect costs to direct  costs has tended to be higher at smallbr sites.  The
ratio has been high enough in some instances that the issue has delayed or discouraged
PRP settlement.  In addition, the various types of supporting documentation for these costs
have not always been easy to develop.  There is a risk that diminishing returns will set in
if the government makes inordinate efforts to identify, document, and pursue the relatively
small portion of these  indirect costs that are not integrally related to response action
at the site.                                                            j   •
                                                                      i
       EPA must explicitly identify the types of expenditures that will be recovered as
indirect costs, and the methodology EPA will  use to compute these costs and allocate
them  among specific sites.  This issue must be resolved in order to determine what EPA
can expect to recover, and to put PRPs on notice as to what types of costs they will be
liable for.  Because of the controversy surrounding some of these indirect costs,  the large
dollar  value  associated with them, and the  difficulty surrounding their  recovery,  EPA
should use its rulemaking authority to develop a regulation to set out the: rationale for
recovering these  costs. The public and PRPs have a legitimate interest in understanding
the specific costs that EPA will pursue; rulemaking provides  an opportunity to formally
solicit outside views.                                                   i

       In applying the statutory standard of demonstrating that costs are not inconsistent
with the NCP, the government  may identify factors to  be  considered  in'  determining
whether costs are appropriate for pursuit. These factors might include:   i    ,
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       -standard accounting practices;
       -efficiency in collecting information;
       -fairness of attributing costs to a particular site;
       -legal precedents for pursuit of costs.

       The  regulation will serve a number of other purposes in addition to identifying
 specific types of costs to be recovered.   For example, EPA is also receiving increasing
 numbers  of challenges to the  documentation used to  show that response  costs were
 incurred.  In certain cases, monies EPA paid under a given contract may relate to work
 performed at a number of different sites, and disputes have arisen over which documents
 properly establish EPA's claims at which sites.  The regulation will help to establish the
 type of documentation needed to establish a valid claim.

       The  regulation will simplify negotiations and  free up legal  resources for upfront
 negotiations and enforcement that will mobilize additional PRP resources for site cleanup.
 The regulation will also help EPA manage its caseload by limiting the number of issues
 subject to litigation and discovery in the forthcoming cost recovery cases for large remedial
 actions.
RECOMMENDATION:  EPA will strengthen methods for identifying and documenting
costs.  To support cost recovery efforts, EPA will initiate rulemaking to identify the types
of expenditures appropriate for cost recovery, documents sufficient to prove government
costs, and documents to be made available to PRPs, among other purposes.

Cost Recovery Expectations

FINDING:  EPA has been criticized for the low rate of recovery of expenditures from the
Fund.  It has also been criticized for not pursuing all expenditures from the Fund, including
those that cannot be attributed to particular sites.

      A number of factors are involved in determining the appropriate measure of success
for the  cost recovery program.   First, success  should be defined  by comparison  between
amounts recovered and amounts  actually available for cost recovery, not total appropriations
from the Fund. Second, success should involve consideration of amounts committed by PRPs
for response action under settlements, which obviate the need for cost recovery.  Finally, it
must be recognized that not all Fund expenditures are necessarily suitable for cost recovery.

DISCUSSION:  Both  Congress and the public expect substantial cost recovery of Fund
monies.  As of the end of FY 1988, EPA has recovered  $104 million of the $2.6 billion
expended.  EPA has been criticized for this rate of recovery and intends to improve it.
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      EPA needs to work with external constituencies and oversight bodies to establish
both challenging goals and realistic measures of success for the cost recovery program. In
the Agency's view, the most appropriate measure of success for the program involves
comparison with amounts actually available for cost recovery, and not total appropriations.
Simple comparisons of revenues to total amounts authorized for the Fund are misleading.
Funds must be authorized and appropriated by Congress, obligated for particular sites, and
then spent before cost recovery is possible.  Moreover, legally liable and financially viable
PRPs must be available.  Hence, the comparison between dollars authorized and dollars
recovered is not realistic; dollars authorized are not yet ripe for recovery.  ;

      The  success of the  enforcement program must  also be measured by dollars
committed by PRPs for response action under settlements which obviate the!need for cost
recovery.  The  primary  emphasis of  the  enforcement program is on obtaining PRP
commitments to conduct  the  cleanup themselves.  If the  government is [ successful in
obtaining PRP commitments for cleanup, the Fund will tend to be used more and more
for sites with no financially viable PRPs that are not suitable for cost recovery.  If the
primary focus of the enforcement program is instead to require that all expenditures are
recovered, then the Agency will have to forego other opportunities to generate additional
revenue through negotiated settlements for private party response, because Icost recovery
demands have grown too  stringent.  The various arms of government interested in this
issue, including oversight agencies, must come to an understanding on these issues.
                                                                      i
      It is clear  from  the preceding discussion that  cost recovery, and settlement
expectations must be considered together.  As  the discussion of mixed funding indicates,
in some situations  EPA will take the position that potential claims for past:costs may be
reasonably compromised, where the result will be a settlement that benefits the public, and
is administratively more feasible than other methods of mixed funding.     j

      Finally, not all Fund  expenditures are necessarily suitable for cost recovery.  For
example, the costs attributable to abandoned sites, where the Fund has paid for cleanup
and financially viable responsible parties cannot be found, are not assigned to other sites
for collection.  The rulemaking discussed above will help to better  define the ^types of costs
that the Agency can anticipate recovering.  In identifying goals and expectations, EPA will
solicit the views of Congress and other interested agencies,                j  !
                                                                      i

RECOMMENDATION: EPA should immediately undertake a study to identify ambitious
and realistic goals for the cost recovery program, and communicate them to Congress and
the public.
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Removal Cost Recovery

FINDING:  Under the SARA  amendments, the statute of limitations for removal actions
where a remedial action has not been initiated is three years after completion of the removal
The need for preparing referrals to DOJ and filing cases with the court before EPA's claim
expires puts a significant demand on legal and program staff.  These staff may diverted from
other activities, such as negotiations and enforcement for response action,  in order to meet
these deadlines.  The return on EPA's effort for removal actions is likety to be smaller than
for remedial actions.
DISCUSSION: The issue of efficiency and realistic expectations is also relevant to EPA's
process for case  selection.  EPA's top priorities for cost recovery action are remedial
actions, and removal actions valued at over $200,000.  EPA continues to pursue certain
cases where costs are less than $200,000, in order to maintain a risk of liability for PRPs
with relatively small potential exposure.  The expiration date for the Agency's claim under
the  statute of limitations  is an  important factor in  identifying priority sites  for cost
recovery.  The deadline is approaching for a number of removal actions that were  begun
soon after the enactment of SARA.

       EPA anticipates an increased cost recovery workload, because more money is at
stake for remedial action,  and because an increased number of remedial actions are
moving through the pipeline.  Therefore, EPA plans to focus efforts on the sites  which
provide the greatest incentive, and greatest return on revenue received,  while developing
more efficient methods to pursue smaller cases with  less potential revenue.

       Some litigation for small cost recoveries is essential in order to maintain the  PRP's
incentive to settle. EPA must also consider new approaches for cost recovery for removal
actions. EPA is  considering steps to increase the use of arbitration  as provided  under
section 122(h) along with other forms of alternative dispute resolution to settle small cost
recovery cases without litigation.  EPA recently promulgated regulations for arbitration
under section 122(h).  EPA might also increase resources for negotiating and overseeing
PRP removal actions, to limit the number of cost recovery actions needed for removals.
 RECOMMENDATION:  EPA will develop an improved approach for recovery of costs for
 removal actions.  This approach will include a standard Alternative Dispute Resolution
 opportunity, a real threat of litigation against recalcitrant parties, and increased efforts
 to have PRPs conduct future removal actions,  to reduce  the need for subsequent  cost
 recovery actions by the government.
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                   INTERGOVERNMENTAL COORDINATION
FINDING: A number of reports suggested that delays and disputes have resulted from the
division of responsibilities for Superfund enforcement.  The  enforcement process involves
multiple layers of review among various Regional and Headquarters offices and between EPA
and the Department of Justice,  and a number  of commenters  argue that problems are
aggravated by different viewpoints  in  different  organizations.    Frequently, \all of  these
organizations responsible for enforcing the Superfund law need to reach agreement in order to
allow negotiations or litigation to come to a conclusion.                     ;
DISCUSSION:  Responsibility for initiating negotiations and developing case referrals is
lodged with both Regional technical staff and Regional Counsel, while the Department of
Justice is responsible for filing settlements in court and for managing litigation.  Several
Headquarters offices have responsibility for policy direction and resource management for
Superfund  enforcement.  Proposals for reorganization are outside the scope of this review,
but the task group addressed some issues resulting from the division of responsibilities in
the enforcement process.  Issues include the following:
                                                  ,           -       .   ! •
      -Settlement and litigation disputes:  Regions and DOJ staff have questioned  the
effectiveness  of the Settlement Decision Committee (SDC). The SDC has no provisions
for reaching  final agreement except by consensus or by  escalating issues! to Assistant
Administrators and the Assistant Attorney General.  The credibility of the SDC is affected
by delays in reaching decisions and difficulties in communicating the results to the Regions.
                                                                       !'
      -Accountability: There is frustration in both EPA and DOJ concerning the seeming
lack of accountability of the other organization.   Some at EPA feel that they have no way
to hold DOJ  accountable for prompt filing or completion of cases or settlements. On the
other hand, DOJ trial attorneys are not always satisfied with their ability to iget necessary
assistance from EPA. During litigation, courts occasionally extract commitments from trial
attorneys for producing particular  documents or decisions that are in the hands  of EPA.
It frequently requires  considerable  effort for EPA to  mobilize  and produce  these
documents, or reach these decisions, and the EPA is not accountable to the court in the
same respect as DOJ.                                              .   '
                                            -•                          !
      -Technical  and  legal  issues:   Technical and  legal  questions overlap  in   the
enforcement  process. Some technical staff argue that lawyers intrude on their technical
prerogatives,  while attorneys question the sensitivity of technical staff to legal implications
of technical work.                                                      !
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       -Budget and workload planning: The legal arms of the enforcement process do not
view themselves as full partners in the budget planning process. Regional counsel's offices
are frequently perceived as underfunded.  Counsel involvement may occur late in the
process, particularly in issues related to Records of Decision.

       -Differing mindsets:  Agency staff have perceived differences in mindset between
EPA and DOJ, and between technical staff and attorneys, in assessing settlements. There
is a sense that DOJ is less inclined to take risks, more willing to countenance delay,
demands a greater share of the costs  of cleanup than EPA believes is practicable, and
requires a higher level of internal signoff before settlements will be accepted.

       -Delegations:   Recent waivers of  Headquarters concurrence for settlements and
referjals have reduced internal layers of review.  But these waivers have, in turn, raised
questions about national  consistency  concerning  the  government's use  of settlement
authorities and interpretations of CERCLA's liability scheme.

       Commenters and critics have made a number of proposals for addressing these
issues, including:

       -SDC:  The Settlement Decision Committee would be revitalized and streamlined
to resolve EPA-DOJ case specific disputes quickly.  Disputes would generally be resolved
within one week. Remaining disputes  would  be routinely escalated to a final decision-
maker within EPA.

       -"Problem-solver":   EPA would create a  senior position dedicated to  prompt
resolution of enforcement  or settlement issues among Regions, DOJ, or Headquarters.

       -Case  management planning:   Each  Region would  institute a  case  or site
management planning process that would define the coordination necessary  among offices
and Agencies involved in the Superfund process.

       -Early DOJ involvement:  EPA would provide an explicit opportunity for DOJ
involvement in case management planning and in negotiations. DOJ attorneys would be
present at negotiations, or provide input by telephone in a timely fashion.

       -DOJ  involvement   in  program planning:    DOJ  would  be  given  increased
opportunities for involvement in budget planning and the development of  accountability
commitments for enforcement.
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      -DOJ accountability: EPA would use the Superfund Interagency Agreement (LAG)
for funding DOJ's Superfund enforcement  activity to establish DOJ's accountability for
enforcement action.  The IAG could also be used to distinguish technical and legal roles.
                                                                    !
      -Agency accountability:  EPA would develop a method for recognizing judicially
imposed demands in both resource allocations  and in internal Agency! accountability
systems.                                                             j
                                                                    i   •  •
      -Delegations review:  EPA would establish a review and evaluation process, and
issue more detailed guidance to assure proper adherence to delegations.

      -Conference:  EPA and the Department would convene a top-level conference to
assure a consensus on goals for the  program and  procedures for addressing Superfund
settlement and litigation.  Among other things, the conference would address the questions
of national consistency in the enforcement program and standards for cost recovery.
                                                                    I
      Most of these recommendations  will receive further consideration, but the task
group has focused on a subset of them for this report.  The recommendatitms concerning
accountability are closely related  to resources.    There is little advantage  in  cutting
resources of the Department of Justice,  even if targets are  not met.  DOJ attorneys are
ultimately accountable to courts, which exercise more control over DOJ's jworkload than
EPA can.  The recommendations set out below focus on establishing a shared sense of
what the program is intended to accomplish, and clear expectations concerning timing for
litigation and settlement.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

Conference; EPA and the Department of Justice should convene a top-level conference to
ensure a consensus on goals for the program and procedures for addressing Superfund
settlement and litigation issues.   Issues that  may be addressed  include methods for
assuring national consistency, and the management process for cost recoyery.
                                                                    i
                                                                    i
Case Management Planning;  Each Region will institute a case or site management
planning process that will include provisions for coordination among the different offices
and organizations at critical stages in the enforcement process. EPA, in consultation with
the Department of Justice, will establish a  single timeline for  the Superfund remedial
program that sets out expected timeframes and results for each of the  critical stages of
the enforcement and remedial process.  Regions will have flexibility in establishing the
level of detail of their own planning process.                           [
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Evaluation;  EPA will undertake a formal study of the organization of the Superfund
enforcement program to evaluate whether a reorganization among Headquarters offices is
appropriate. This study should address, among other things, the question of relationships
between the  Office  of  Waste  Programs  Enforcement (OWPE)  and the  Office  of
Enforcement and Compliance Monitoring (OECM); suggestions that the planning and
budget functions of OWPE and the Office of Emergency and Remedial Response (OERR)
be consolidated; and questions of overlapping responsibilities among OECM, the Office
of General  Counsel, Regional  counsel, and the Department of Justice.   As part of this
review, EPA should assess implementation of existing delegations of authority to  the
Regional offices, and the waivers of Headquarters concurrence in referrals of enforcement
actions to the Department of Justice.
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III. ACCELERATING AND IMPROVING REMEDIAL ACTION

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                                CHAPTER III
        ACCELERATING AND IMPROVING REMEDIAL ACTION
INTRODUCTION:  The remedial process is  the heart of the Superfund program; its
purpose is to identity and implement enduring solutions to the environmental problems
at uncontrolled hazardous waste sites.  Unfortunately, the remedial process is not as
efficient or as effective as many people inside and outside EPA think it should be. To
some extent, this gap  between expectations  and  reality  is a reflection of unrealistic
expectations, but, to a larger extent, it is attributable to several factors associated with the
legislative mandate for the Superfund program, EPA's interpretation and implementation
of that mandate,  and resource  constraints under which EPA has had  to manage the
program.

      The task group has concluded that EPA can and should take  steps to deal with
the most significant concerns about the remedial process—including steps to speed up
remedial studies, control hazardous waste releases while remedial studies are in progress,
arid ensure that remedy selection is as consistent as it can be, given the constraints of the
law and the complexities of hazardous waste sites.  In addition, the task goup has identified
steps that can be  taken to  make technical support more readily accessible to EPA's
Regional Offices,  to strengthen EPA's oversight of remedial activities undertaken by
Potentially Responsible Parties (PRPs), and to improve the  remedial process in a number
of other ways.. The task group's specific findings and recommendations are presented in
this chapter.

      The task group  is not recommending radical changes in the remedial process.
More than two years have passed since the enactment of the Superfund Amendments
and Reauthorization Act (SARA).  While it took a long time for EPA to make the policy
changes needed to bring the Superfund program into  conformity with SARA (and that
process  is still under way), a great deal of the groundwork is now in place, and the
program is gathering momentum.  EPA anticipates, for example, that the required 175
Remedial Actions will be started-either by EPA or by PRPs-by the October 16,  1989,
deadline.  Also, by March 31, 1989, the number of Remedial Investigations/Feasibility
Studies (RI/FS) initiated under SARA had reached 269, only 6 short of the 275 starts
required by the upcoming October deadline.
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      Historically, uncertainty about the direction of the Superfund program and frequent
changes in policy and procedure have been among the most significant obstacles to
progress.  Radical changes at this time could slow  down the program once again, while
EPA and other Federal and State personnel charged with carrying it out learn and adjust
to new approaches.  The task group therefore believes that such changes should be made
only after their implications have been fully analyzed, and it is clear that their benefits will
offset any disruption and delay they may cause.

Background                                                            !

      The remedial process includes the following  phases:                 j;
                                                                       i
      *      Remedial Investigation (RI):  an assessment of the nature and
             extent of  contamination and  the  associated  health  and
             environmental risks.

      *      Feasibility Study  (FS):  an analysis of potentially applicable
             remedial technologies, usually undertaken concurrently with the
             Remedial Investigation.

       *      Remedy selection:  selection of a remedial alternative-often a
             combination of treatment, containment, and other technologies.

       *      Record of Decision (ROD) preparation: documentation of site
             conditions  and  explanation/justification  of EPA's  remedy
             selection.

       *     Remedial Design (RD): preparation of plans and specifications
             for implementing the  chosen remedial alternative.
                                                                       i •
       *     Remedial Action  (RA): construction or other work necessary '
             to implement the remedial alternative.                      j

 Each phase of the  remedial process can be undertaken either by EPA or by States-using
 Superfund dollars-or by PRPs under the supervision of EPA or States.     |

       EPA managers and staff, as well as external groups (such as environmental and
 community groups and PRPs) have many concerns about the remedial process.  Not all
 groups have the same concerns, but any list of the most common ones would include the
 following:
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       *     The remedial process is too slow-each step takes too long and
             actual cleanup  often doesn't begin until years after sites are
             identified.                            •                       .    .

       *     EPA's decisions on how much cleanup to undertake and what
   -"  '-       technologies to use often appear to be inconsistent from one
             site to another.

       *     Workloads and turnover among  EPA staff  responsible for
             managing or overseeing remedial projects are excessive.

       To analyze these and  other concerns about the  remedial process and  to identify
 possible solutions, the task group examined EPA's management of Fund-financed remedial
 projects and State management and  oversight of remedial projects.   The task  group
 focused most of its attention  on the first four phases of the remedial process.

       The task group's study of the remedial process included interviews with  more than
 seventy-five Superfund managers  and staff in EPA's Regional  Offices (including many
 Remedial Project Managers (RPMs), who are directly responsible for management and /or
 oversight of remedial activities  at Superfund sites)  and in the Office of Emergency and
 Remedial Response (OERR), which has primary responsibility for national management
 of Fund-financed remedial activities and for development of the policies and procedures
 under which such activities are conducted; meetings  with representatives of environmental
 groups, contractors  involved in remedial activities, and Congressional staff; and review of
 many of the studies of Superfund that have been completed in recent months, as well as
 numerous other internal and external documents.   The task group examined not only
 external groups' ideas on how to strengthen the remedial process but also a large number
 of steps that  Superfund managers have already  taken, including EPA Headquarters
 initiatives and efforts undertaken by individual Regional Offices.

 Resource Implications                              .     ...-•-,

      Many of the  task group's recommendations for strengthening the remedial process
have resource  implications, particularly the recommendation  that RPMs' workloads be
reduced. The staff resources needed to implement them could come from an increase in
total staffing in the Superfund program, from reallocation of existing resources,  or from a
reduction in planned accomplishments.                         .  ,
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                          MAKING ACTION A PRIORITY
 FINDINGS:  Too often, some staff and managers in EPA and other Federal agencies-most
 of whom are outside the Superfund program itself but who are key participants in portions of
 the  remedial process-are hindering rather than promoting fast action.  In large part, these
 people are responding to their own organizations' priorities rather than to the overriding priority
 of the Superfund program-cleaning up sites as  rapidly as possible.  This situation can be
 reversed only by strong and consistent messages from EPA's leadership and by providing
 greater incentives for risk-taking and decisive management.                 '
 DISCUSSION:  The primary purpose of this component of the task group'[s work was to
 identify opportunities to improve the pace and quality of action at Superfund sites. Most
 of the remainder of this chapter addresses specific problems  or issues in sijte assessment,
 decision-making, and program  management.  As appropriate,  the  task [group makes
 recommendations for discrete actions to address these problems.          j

       In conducting  its inquiry,  however, the task group identified a pervasive, yet subtle,
 set of  forces that  may impede progress in Superfund  much  more  thar* the specific
 problems addressed in the remainder of this chapter.  The effect of these forces is that
 relatively few people among the thousands who  play  some role in implementing the
 program  have unambiguous incentives to  keep the program relatively simple,  easily
 implementable, and focused  on action.

       This situation is most evident in Regional Office decision-making processes. While
 most Regional Offices experience some problems in obtaining quick review and approval
 of key actions, the  precise causes of the delays vary greatly across Regional Offices.  A
 common  thread that emerged,  however, is that  many of  the  people  responsible for
 providing technical, scientific, or legal advice to Superfund managers and staff are able
 to hold up actions until their own professional concerns are fully satisfied.!
                                                                      i
      Perhaps the most egregious example  is  the case  of a  Regional Office where
 commencement of Remedial Investigations/Feasibility Studies (RI/FSs) is routinely delayed
 for three  to six  months while the Waste  Management Division and the Environmental
 Services Division debate the contents of site-specific Quality Assurance Project Plans. In
 other Regional Offices, such problems may involve Office of Regional Counsel staff or
 technical advisers (such as hydrogeologists, toxicologists, and air pollution modelers) who
 are in the Waste Management Division but who occupy positions  funded afj least in part
by Superfund.   Some Regional Offices  have encountered   analogous  problems with
attorneys in the Department  of Justice.
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       Superfund managers and staff complain that many of these people do not share
 the Superfund staffs accountability for deadlines and are rewarded for providing technical
 precision in their areas of expertise, rather than for giving Superfund managers and staff
 advice that can be balanced against  the many other factors affecting decisions.  The task
 group found not that Superfund managers and staff want to ignore legitimate scientific,
 technical, and legal  concerns, but rather that they want to assess such concerns in the
 context of EPA's responsibility to move as quickly as possible from studying and analyzing
 Superfund sites to taking action at them.

       In EPA Headquarters as well, there are people involved in the Superfund program
 whose primary interests do not coincide with the Regional Offices' responsibility for taking
 action at hazardous waste sites. The long development time for the proposed revisions to
 the^National Contingency Plan (NCP)  is evidence both of the program's complexity and
 of the fact that limited organizational interests often take precedence over moving the
 program forward. Similarly, a cursory examination of legal and policy decisions regarding
 how other Federal statutes will apply to Superfund leads to the conclusion that EPA tends
 to choose paths that restrict and complicate program implementation rather than those
 that take advantage  of whatever flexibility and simplicity are available.

       Clearly, Superfund will never be  a simple program, and forces affecting it will never
 lead uniformly to fast action at all sites.  Moreover, program participants who may now
 appear to be  impeding progress are in many cases  simply responding rationally to their
 organizations' current reward  structures.   Nonetheless, it is clear to  the task group that
 developing a more effective Superfund program will require more than the formal changes
 recommended in  the remainder of  this chapter.  We believe that implementation of those
 recommendations will be helpful, but we also believe that they will mean little without two
 more fundamental changes-changes that focus on attitudes  and approaches rather than on
 processes and systems.  First, to guide the hundreds of large and small activities that take
 place in the  Superfund program  each  day,  the Agency must  establish  a clear  and
 overriding emphasis  on  action. Second, all program participants must develop a strong,
 shared commitment to the program's mission and feel individually responsible not just for
 meeting performance targets, but for doing everything possible to support RPMs and to
 move sites toward cleanup as rapidly as possible.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

The Administrator should take the following steps:

      1.     Communicate and regularly reinforce to Superfund managers
             and staff that the primary mission of the program is to take
             responsible action at sites as rapidly as possible.
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       2.    Communicate the same message to the Attorney General and
             the heads of other Federal agencies involved in the Superfund
             program and  secure their personal commitment to support
             EPA's Superfund mission.

       3.    Hold EPA  line  managers accountable for  managing the
             program in accordance with its primary mission and track
             their performance in doing so.   For example, direct  each
             Regional Administrator to identify and eliminate avoidable
             delays in Superfund decision-making in his office.

       4.    Direct the development of formal and informal mechanisms to
             reward  innovation, risk-taking,  and  decisive  action  in the
             Superfund program.
                  ACCELERATING THE REMEDIAL PROCESS
FINDINGS:  Because of technical complexities, statutory and regulatory requirements, and
enforcement and cost-recovery concerns, the remedial process is inherently time-consuming.
DISCUSSION:
Technical Complexities

       The  first  phase  of  the  Superfund  remedial  process   is  the  Remedial
Investigation/Feasibility Study (RI/FS) which, as  its name indicates,  has two| distinct but
interdependent components.  The purpose of the RI, which relies heavily on  sample
collection and analysis, is to assess the nature and extent of site contamination and the
associated health and environmental risks.  The purpose of the FS, which relies, in part,
on data developed in the RI, is to analyze and evaluate potentially applicable remedial
technologies.
                                                                       i-
       RI/FSs are often technically complex undertakings, requiring detailed)engineering,
hydrogeologic, and exposure/risk testing and analysis.  Moreover, hazardous waste sites
tend by their very nature to be associated with a level of uncertainly thai makes site
characterization particularly difficult.   There usually is no blueprint of the  [site showing
the physical source or sources of contamination, no road map charting the routes of
                                       3-6

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potential exposure and harm to humans and the environment, and no manifest detailing
the nature and extent of contaminants present. Even during the course of the RI/FS, site
conditions can change, and previously hidden hazards can emerge, necessitating additional
sampling and analysis and a reevaluation of remedial alternatives.

      At present, the average RI/FS takes over two years to complete, and some take
considerably longer.  Nevertheless, the task group found general agreement that severely
reducing the RI/FS to a cursory investigation and feasibility analysis at sites where complex
contamination and remediation issues exist would result in no overall shortening of the
remedial process but would  simply shift thorough  site  and technology evaluation to a
subsequent phase.  Furthermore, postponing all but superficial investigation until after
remedy selection in such cases could  weaken the Record of Decision (ROD), requiring
time-consuming  ROD amendment and  complicating negotiations with PRPs,  ultimately
lengthening the full remedial process. At selected sites, however, it may be appropriate
to abbreviate steps in the remedial process; ways to expedite the process in those cases
are discussed later in this section.

      Because  of  the  frequently extensive  and unusual  nature of contamination  at
Superfund sites,  as well  as SARA's requirement that permanent solutions and alternative
treatment technologies be used "to the maximum extent practicable," it is often necessary
or advisable to  conduct treatability studies to determine whether a proposed remedial
technology will prove effective at a site. In the past, treatability studies-which usually take
months to complete—were generally not  conducted until  after the ROD had been signed.
OERR  has  recently  recommended that treatability studies,  if they  are  necessary,  be
conducted during the RI/FS, prior to remedy selection. The task group found strong
support for this  recommendation.  Most of those who commented on this issue believed
that although early treatability studies might lengthen the RI/FS, they would not increase
the total amount of time the remedial process takes. In addition, they thought that early
treatability studies would strengthen the ROD and facilitate  negotiations with PRPs by
minimizing disagreements over the potential effectiveness of EPA's chosen remedy.

Statutory and Regulatory Requirements

      SARA  and the NCP impose a variety of requirements  that consume  significant
amounts of  time during the remedial process.  A number of these requirements are
associated with two of the program's  fundamental goals: (1) promoting and facilitating
voluntary PRP performance or financing of site investigation and remediation and (2)
ensuring that  affected  communities are involved from the  outset in  developing and
selecting site remedies.
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      To promote  settlement with PRPs, for example, SARA includes provisions for
          ^                     _   _    __    .  ~   ,-m     . • . •    ••  ,      T"IT^ A  	J
special-notice moratoria to allow  for formal periods of negotiation between
  	        ^            _                EPA and
PRPs:  60 days prior to RI/FS, RD/RA, non-time-critical removal actions, and section 106
enforcement actions.  Each of these 60-day moratoria (with the exception of | the RI/FS
moratorium, which can be extended for 30 days) can be extended for an additional 60 days
if a PRP submits a good faith offer during  the initial 60-day period.

      To ensure  that  communities  have an  opportunity to  participate pi  remedy
development and selection, as required  by SARA, the proposed revisions to the NCP
provides for a 30-day notice  period for public, including PRP, comment onj non-time-
critical removal plans, a 30-day-minimum public comment period (extended from 21 days
in the current NCP) after publication of the Proposed Plan for remedial action, and a 30-
day public comment period prior to the Department of Justice's entry of a judicial consent
decree for PRP-financed remedial action.


      Provisions such as those noted above are essential to achieving statutory aims, but,
in combination, may add months to the remedial process. (Region I has prepared a chart
that graphically illustrates  how enforcement and other requirements affect thp length of
the remedial process; the time elapsed  from the initiation of PRP search and the initiation
of RD/RA is five years.)
                                                                        to recover
                                                                        to be able
Enforcement and Cost-Recovery Concerns

       Whenever viable PRPs exist, EPA must be prepared to take action
program funds spent at the site.  To support cost-recovery actions, EPA has
to show that its remedy-selection decision was neither arbitrary nor capricious, and it must
be able to provide adequate documentation of costs related to the site.  In addition, the
Agency must always be prepared  to defend its actions in the event of a citizen or State
lawsuit challenging the selection of remedy.

       The task group found considerable frustration among Regional Officje staff and
managers with the extensive quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) and voluminous
documentation required throughout the  remedial process.  Most of those interviewed
thought that the level of QA/QC and documentation currently undertaken is excessive for
purposes of site remediation; on the other hand, most believed that extensive 
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FINDING:  RPMs' heavy workloads contribute significantly to delays during the remedial
process.  High staff turnover, particularly among RPMs, also causes delay.
DISCUSSION:   The  task group found virtual consensus  among staff and managers
interviewed that a significant--if not the most significant-source of  delay  during  the
remedial phase is the heavy workload borne by the typical RPM.  (The number of sites
an RPM manages varies not only from Regional Office to Regional Office but also from
RPM to RPM. It is difficult to gauge an RPM's workload simply by counting the number
of sites he or she manages,  since sites vary  enormously in their complexity and  the
demands they place on the RPM.)

       Staff and managers cited three specific sources of delay that stem from excessive
RPM workloads:  First, because of competing demands on their time, RPMs cannot always
respond quickly to  the problems that inevitably arise at technically  complex hazardous
waste sites. Second, responsibility for multiple sites forces RPMs to focus their attention
on major, pressing events, such as ROD preparation, to the detriment of routine, day-to-
day management of other sites.  Third, heavy  workloads make  it  difficult for RPMs to
develop or adhere to long-range site plans.

       High staff turnover, particularly  RPM  turnover,  was  cited  as a problem  and a
source of delay in nearly every Regional Office.  Headquarters estimates that the annual
turnover rate among RPMs may be as high as 20 percent.  Because the remedial process
lasts years, it is not unusual for a single site to have multiple RPMs (as many as four or
five) over the course of the RI/FS; with each change, knowledge of the site is lost, and
established relationships-with the  State,  the  community,  contractors,  and others-are
broken and must be rebuilt.
FINDING:  The remedial process requires the participation of numerous parties outside the
Superfund program itself.  In many cases, these participants have priorities or are subject to
constraints that are at odds with speedy action.
DISCUSSION: Superfund staff and managers interviewed by the task group cited many
sources of delay in the remedial process.  Although factors noted as significant sources of
delay varied somewhat from  Regional Office to Regional Office (aside from delays
inherent in the program and those associated with RPM workload and turnover), most had
one characteristic in common:   they involved parties external to the Superfund prograrri-
-and beyond the control of RPMs and their managers-with priorities and constraints that
are often inconsistent with rapid site investigation and remediation.   Several of these
external sources of delay are discussed below.
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 State Concurrence

       State concurrence with remedy selection is essential if a  site is 1:0  be moved
 efficiently through the remedial process. At Fund-lead sites, States are required to finance
 10 percent of the cost of remedial action (unless the State is a responsible party, in which
 case its share is 50 percent).  In addition, States must pay 10 percent of any operation and
 maintenance (O&M) costs for ground-water and surface-water restoration for up to ten
 years after remedial action is completed and 100 percent thereafter; for all cither types of
 action,  States must pay  100 percent of O&M costs as  soon as systems are operational.
 Before  remedial action can begin at a Fund-lead site,  the State  must sign: a  Superfund
 State Contract in which it agrees to assume these costs.  At enforcement-lead sites, SARA
 provides that States may withhold concurrence, by intervening in the enforcjement action
 prior to entry of the consent decree, if they believe that the proposed remedial action fails
 to meet  a  Federal  or  State  Applicable  or Relevant and Appropriate  Requirement
 (ARAR). (See section on remedy selection for a fuller discussion of ARARs.)

      Several Regional  Offices cited lack of State concurrence with remedy selection as
 a major delay in moving sites  toward remedial  action.   In some cases, State resistance
 appears to be cost-related—States are unwilling  or unable to assume their share of the
 cost of the  remedial alternative selected or  to commit themselves to financing lengthy
 O&M.   In  other cases,  State  resistance  stems  from differences with EPA concerning
 feasible or appropriate levels of site cleanup.  Whatever the underlying cause, lack of
 State concurrence can cause  substantial delays in the remedial process, including the
 "shelving" of RODs at Fund-lead sites and lengthy legal  battles at  enforcement-lead sites.

 PRP Participation

      A number of Regional Offices noted that PRPs' preference for least-cost remedies
 impedes progress throughout the remedial process.  The problems cited included PRP-
 lead RI/FSs that were strongly biased toward least-cost remedies; PRP failure to meet
 RI/FS work schedules; and PRP foot-dragging and recalcitrance during negotiations, often
 requiring extension of moratorium periods.

 Internal Review

      Although the  number  of people outside of the  Waste  Managemjent Division
involved in document review during the remedial process varies from Regional Office to
Regional  Office,  reviewers typically  include  representatives from the  Environmental
Services Division, the Office of Regional Counsel, and several program offices.
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       Superfund staff and managers in several Regional  Offices attributed substantial
 delay to internal review, though there was no consensus regarding which divisions were
 responsible for bottlenecks in the review process. Two Regional Offices cited slow Office
 of Regional Counsel review of RODs, one cited intensive Environmental Services Division
 scrutiny of quality assurance plans,  and two cited lengthy review by numerous program
 offices  of various documents as sources of delay.   In some cases, slow review was
 attributed to inadequate resources in reviewing offices.  In other cases, it was attributed
 to priorities at odds with fast action--for example, Office of Regional Counsel's interest in
 challenge-proof RODs and Environmental Services Division's desire for high-integrity
 quality  assurance plans.
FINDING:  The two Regional Offices that have used removal authorities and contractors
during the remedial phase to expedite remedial action have found this approach  to  be
workable and effective in appropriate circumstances.  Other Regional Offices either support or
have no objection to adding this approach to their options for accelerating remedial action.


DISCUSSION:  To hasten progress at sites, Regional Offices have sought ways to expedite
remedial action.  The most frequently used method is to divide a single site into two or
more parts~or operable units~so that work can proceed quickly at portions of sites where
fast action is essential or where relatively straightforward contamination can be addressed
quickly.   Although  RI/FSs and  RODs  are  required  for each  operable unit, they  are
normally less detailed and complex,  and therefore less time-consuming, than RI/FSs and
RODs for full sites.  In some cases, it is not necessary  to conduct a  discrete RI/FS for
each operable unit; instead, two or more operable units are extracted from a single RI/FS
undertaken for the full  site.

       Within  the past two years, two Regional Offices-Regions  III and IV-have begun
using a variant of the operable unit to accelerate site remediation.  RD/RA at the typical
operable unit  is carried out by remedial contractors, since  RD/RA is a remedial-phase
activity. At selected sites, however, Regions III and IV have used removal contractors for
RD/RA.   This  approach can  result in substantial  time  savings largely  because  of
differences between the  types  of contracts  used for  removal and  remedial  actions.
Removal actions are carried out under Emergency Response Cleanup Services contracts,
which are time-and-materials contracts.  RD/RA has in the  past been carried out under
Remedial Planning Contractor contracts and will  in  the future be carried out under
Alternative Remedial Contractor Strategy contracts, both of which  are fixed-price, level-
of-effort contracts.
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        According to both Regions III and IV, this difference has important implications
  for the speed  with  which site  action can  be undertaken  and completed   Removal
  contractors are able to respond quickly to the many uncertainties and unknowns that are
  typical of hazardous waste sites because their contract provides that they will be paid
  whatever the full response action has cost. Remedial contractors, on the othbr hand must
  submit change orders if they encounter conditions that require deviation from the original
  work plan, which can introduce considerable delay.

        Managers in Regions III and IV emphasize that the use of removal contractors is
  appropriate only for specific types of remedial actions-primarily those  involving surface
  contamination and source control. They agree that this approach is not appropriate for
  ground-water restoration and long-term treatment activities.                j

        One possible disadvantage of using removal contractors for remedial 'action is that
  the capacity of removal contracts may be too limited to accommodate a large number of
  remedial actions. In addition, EPA's Office of the Inspector General has expressed some
  concern about the use of removal contractors to carry out remedial actions.

        Overall, Regional Office managers and staff expressed support for taking innovative
 approaches to speed the initiation of cleanup activities, including using remova'l contractors
 during the remedial phase under appropriate circumstances. Several Regiona1! Offices for
 example, have successfully persuaded PRPs to take early action at enforcement-lead sites
 where conditions were suitable for expedited cleanup.


 FINDING:  Superfund staff and managers were unanimous in their support fob limiting the
 number of remedial alternatives considered during the RI/FS process to tho^e  with  clear
potential applicability to site conditions.  In addition, there was strong support for development
 of prototype RI/FS and remedy-selection models for commonly occurring site situations.


DISCUSSION: All Superfund staff and managers interviewed by the task group supported
limiting the number of remedial alternatives considered in the RI/FS to thosb with clear
potential effectiveness. This attitude is consistent with the proposed revisions io the NCP
which states the following:  "[A]  lengthy list of remedial alternatives is not required
The number and type of remedial alternatives  should be tailored to fit the siie problems
being addressed and established remedial action objectives." Recent Headquarters RI/FS-
streamhmng  guidance also  calls  for limiting
considered.
                                              the  number  of remedial  (alternatives
                                       3-12

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       The  task group, however, found widespread belief among RPMs and managers
 that the number of alternatives being considered remains excessive.  Some believed that
 they were required to consider numerous alternatives, even ones with little potential for
 success; others indicated that there was little incentive to limit the number of alternatives
 considered  and substantial pressure, often because of  enforcement and cost-recovery
 concerns, to consider numerous alternatives.

       Nearly all the Superfund staff and managers interviewed favored development and
 use of prototype Rl/FS and remedy-selection models (sometimes called model or generic
 remedies) for recurrent site situations such as municipal landfills, battery-cracking sites, and
 wood-treatment facilities.  Such prototypes would be used as a starting point for planning
 and conducting studies; where conditions at a specific site differ significantly from those
 built into the model, RPMs would be expected to deviate from the model.  Most believed
 such prototypes would speed the RI/FS and  remedy-selection process and would also
 represent a  strong signal from Headquarters that, at least for some sites, consideration of
 a limited number of remedial alternatives is both appropriate and expected. OERR has
 recently begun developing a prototype for municipal landfills.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

EPA  should take steps to reduce  RPMs' workloads.   Possible  approaches include
expanding the Superfund workforce, modifying expected accomplishments, and providing
RPMs with additional administrative and technical support

To accelerate the remedial process, EPA Headquarters should take the following steps:

      1.     Encourage Regional Offices to take expedited approaches to
             site cleanup whenever possible-for example, by using removal
             contractors during the remedial  phase, dividing sites  into
             operable units that facilitate fast action, and encouraging PRPs
             to  finance early  remedial measures.  Headquarters should
             monitor the extent  to which such approaches are being used
             and quickly take steps  to remove any identified barriers to
             their use.

      2.     Proceed as rapidly as  possible with  the development of
             prototype RI/FS and remedy-selection models  for recurring
             types of sites already identified (municipal landfills, battery-
             cracking sites, and wood-treatment facilities) and ask Regional
             Offices  to identify other types of sites for which prototypes
            would be useful.
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       3.     Emphasize to Superfund staff and managers and to remedial
             contractors the existing policy that the number of remedial
             alternatives considered during the RI/FS should be narrowed
             as quickly as possible to those with clear potential applicability
             to the site.
             PROMOTING CONSISTENCY IN REMEDY SELECTION
FINDINGS:   EPA has already taken steps to strengthen the remedy-selection process.
Additional steps are necessary to foster consistency and more frequent use of permanent
remedies and to improve the quality of EPA's Records of Decision.  Rernedy\ selection is,
however, a process that requires EPA  officials  to make judgments about complex and
controversial matters under a law that requires consideration of various factors that sometimes
conflict.
DISCUSSION:

      Remedy  selection  is  the  process  by which EPA officials—usual y Regional
Administrators—choose among alternative ways to meet SARA's requirements
action at hazardous waste sites.  In its inquiry  into remedy selection, the
br remedial
 task group
concentrated on three issues—the use of EPA's nine criteria for assessing and comparing
alternative remedies, how SARA's requirements for compliance with ARARs affect remedy
selection, and ways in which remedy selection can be made more consistent among similar
sites.                       .                          ,            -;
      The task group's examination of these issues was aimed at determining not only
what is being done and how the  process could be strengthened,  but alsoj how much
improvement can reasonably be expected. For this purpose, the task group examined the
decision-making  process in EPA's  Regional Offices  and the steps EPA Headquarters
offices have already taken to provide policy  guidance and technical support! for remedy
selection and to oversee and evaluate the Regional Offices'  remedy-selection  decisions.
The task group did not actually  examine or analyze decisions that have been made at
Superfund sites, though it did review and consider OERR's recently completed analysis of
fiscal 1988 RODs.                                                      I
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       Clearly, some potentially fruitful steps have been taken. Because it will take some
time for results to be apparent, the task group can offer only a preliminary assessment.
Nevertheless, it seems  clear that some additional steps would be  productive; specific
recommendations are presented below.

Nine Criteria

       EPA has taken a number of steps to provide increased assurance that  Regional
Administrators' remedy selection decisions satisfy  SARA requirements.  One such step
was the formulation of a set of nine  criteria to  be used in assessing  and comparing
remedial alternatives.  These criteria  were first articulated in a memorandum  issued in
July 1987.  They are included in  the  proposed  revisions to the NCP (together with
additional explanation of how decision-makers should use them  in  evaluating  remedial
alternatives) and thus have been subject to public  review and comment.  EPA  currently
is analyzing the  public comments  and deciding  whether to modify the  NCP  before
promulgating it. Accordingly, it would be inappropriate for the task group to  offer any
comments on the nine criteria, per se.

       The task group  did attempt to determine,  however, whether and how  Regional
Offices use  the nine  criteria and whether they need additional guidance  on their use.
Regional Office managers and staff clearly regard the criteria as useful,  because they
translate SARA requirements into a practical tool for evaluation of remedial alternatives.
In some Regional Offices, however, there seems to be a tendency to use the nine criteria
mainly to verify the acceptability of those remedial alternatives that have informally been
judged most suitable based on experience, expert advice, and  RI/FS results. In  any case,
there is a high level of awareness in the  Regional Offices that the criteria are intended to
help them ensure that their decisions satisfy SARA requirements.   OERR's analysis of
fiscal 1988 RODs provided evidence to  support this conclusion; of the RODs evaluated,
nearly  80 percent addressed all nine  criteria.  The  task group believes that additional
experience with the criteria, coupled with implementation of the recommendations made
in this  report, will result in real improvements in remedy-selection decisions.

Consistency:  Current and Planned Initiatives

       EPA has been criticized for inconsistencies  in its remedy selections  at Superfund
sites.  External groups maintain that remedies should be similar at sites that are similar.
EPA managers recognize that inconsistency can and does occur (in part because of SARA
requirements and other  factors, as discussed below), though they do not agree that it is as
common or significant  as external groups have  contended.  Nevertheless,  both EPA
Headquarters and some Regional Offices have taken some steps to reduce inconsistency-
-including steps designed to provide information in advance of remedy selection  and/or
feedback based on either real-time or retrospective review of remedy-selection decisions.
                                       3-15

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       Giving Regional Office managers and staff easy access to information about past
remedy-selection decisions  clearly could  promote  consistency.   Such information  is
presented in the RODs that document and explain all remedy selections. EPA has been
assembling and distributing copies of RODs and ROD abstracts for some time. A step to
provide this information in a more easily retrievable form was taken in September 1988
with the introduction of an automated database containing the full texts of RODs.  All
fiscal 1986 and 1987 RODs and about one-half of those completed in fiscal 11988 are now
in the database. EPA staff members and contractors have access to it and can use it to
obtain the full texts of RODs or to conduct searches for specific information.  Thus far,
the Regional Offices' use of the database has been limited, largely because n; still does not
contain all recent RODs and because  many  Regional  Office staff have ncjrt had  formal
training in its use.   While the use of the database does not guarantee consistency in
                                                                      of comparing
                                                                       RODs.  This
 remedy selection, it at least offers Regional Offices a relatively easy means
 remedy selections at similar sites.

       EPA Headquarters also is instituting a Quality Control program for ______  _„„
 initiative is designed to give the Regional Offices a framework for review of RODs before
 they are signed.                                                        j

       EPA Headquarters recently conducted a retrospective analysis of a sample of RODs
 completed  in fiscal 1988.  This  analysis focused  on the quality of RODs,| in terms  of
 measures such as the extent to which the RODs presented a complete rationale for the
 decisions they described.  While evaluating RODs in such terms clearly is important, this
 retrospective review also could be a means by which EPA Headquarters could  identify
 trends in remedy-selection decisions. Follow-up discussions with Regional Office managers
 and staff could include both positive and negative feedback, as appropriate.  Such an
 evaluation of remedy-selection trends, coupled with the type of analysis already being
 performed,  could serve not only to  improve the  Regional Offices' documentation  and
 explanation of remedy-selection decisions, but also to give  EPA Headquarters managers
 opportunities  to provide concrete  advice about  remedy  selection  from1  a national
 perspective.  In  addition, making the results of these analyses widely available would
 facilitate public understanding and discussion of EPA's decision-making process.

       Peer reviews of remedy-selection decisions also  could foster consistency-provided
 such reviews are  performed before decisions  are final.  Some Regional Offices have set
 up formal or informal peer review processes (in addition to the normal chainif-command
reviews)  that often involve scientific and technical experts from various groups,  including
those involved in protection of air, water, and ground-water quality. Such reviews within
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 a Regional Office certainly could promote consistency in remedy selection for sites within
 that Regional Office's jurisdiction.  Their effectiveness in fostering consistency nationwide
 obviously will be limited unless peer reviewers are aware of remedy-selection decisions
 elsewhere  in  the  country-awareness  that   could be   acquired  through  personal
 communications with people in other  Regional Offices and through use of the ROD
, database.

       In addition, while EPA Headquarters does not formally participate in many remedy-
 selection decisions, the Regional Coordinators in OERR and the Office of Waste Programs
 Enforcement (OWPE) can help promote consistency by reviewing drafts of Proposed Plans
 (by which Regional Offices obtain public comment on the  remedial alternatives they are
 most likely to choose) and RODs.  Currently, however, the Regional Coordinators often
 do not have time to perform more than a cursory review of many of these documents.

       A common theme in the task group's discussions with Regional  Office managers
 and  staff-whenever the consistency issue was raised-was  the  need to  have  a clear
 statement of EPA's expectations about remedy selection.   An initial version  of  such a
 statement appeared in the preamble to the proposed revision of the National Contingency
 Plan (see Federal Register. Vol. 53, No. 245, December 21, 1988, pages 51422-51423).
 EPA currently is considering how  best to codify  and communicate the content  of this
 statement.

 Limitations on Consistency

       Clearly, EPA's interests are served by doing everything it reasonably can do  to
 promote compliance with SARA requirements and consistency in remedy selection. Even
 so, the Agency's remedy-selection decisions will not satisfy all interested  parties in  all
 cases-nor is  it  reasonable  to  expect  that  they  will.   EPA has been  criticized for
 decentralizing remedy selection-delegating it to Regional Administrators in most cases.
 The  task group believes,  however, that either  returning this  responsibility to EPA
 Headquarters or requiring Headquarters concurrence in all remedy-selection decisions
 would significantly slow down the Superfund program and-mbre significantly-would tend
 to isolate decision-making from the citizens most affected by it and the Regional  Office
 managers and staff who are most knowledgeable about site conditions.

       Furthermore, EPA has to be wary of allowing or encouraging expectations about
 consistency in remedy selection to rise to a level not called  for by SARA, not reasonable
 in dealing with  hundreds  of hazardous waste  sites that differ in many  respects, and
 probably not attainable under a statute that requires consideration of several factors that
 militate against  consistency in remedy selection  and are in conflict with one another,  in
 some cases. For instance, the statutory requirement to comply with State ARARs-which
                                       3-17

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 may vary significantly from one State to another-makes consistency difficult to achieve.
 In addition,  Superfund sites differ so much in terms of factors that affect the practicability
 of alternative remedies, such as size, geology, and waste composition, that it may not
 always be feasible to use similar remedies at sites with similar routes of human exposure
 or similar health risks.
 ARARs

       SARA requires  that remedies selected at  Superfund sites comply with ARARs
 established under Federal or State environmental laws.  Federal or State requirements
 are applicable to a Superfund site if they would otherwise be legally applicable to the
 types of hazardous waste, types of action being taken, or other circumstances at the site.
 They are  relevant and appropriate if, while not applicable, they deal with problems
 sufficiently similar to those existing at the site that they are well suited for use in selecting
 a remedy for the site. State requirements are ARARs only if they are more
 corresponding Federal requirements.
stringent than
       Regional Office managers and staff identified two major problems arising from the
 statutory requirement for compliance with ARARs.  One is that it often] is difficult to
 determine  whether environmental laws and regulations-especially  those  established  by
 States-that do not meet the "applicable" test are "relevant and appropriate" for Superfund
 sites.  In this regard, a question that arises frequently is whether States are consistently
 applying--in their own environmental protection programs-standards and regulations they
 identify as  ARARs.  There is a widespread perception among Regional Office managers
 and staff that ARARs-especially those in the "relevant  and appropriate" category-add
 more to the cost than to the public health benefits of remedial actions in many cases.
       The ARAR-related problem clearly considered most significant by
the Regional
Offices is the question of when and where the land disposal restrictions being established
by EPA under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) are ARARs.  There
is widespread concern and confusion among Regional Office managers and siaff about the
extent to which they must comply with RCRA requirements for treatment of waste that
is to be  land-disposed. There is also a widely  shared view that the RCRA treatment
requirements often dictate the selection of remedies that are technologically impracticable
(reflecting the difficulty of treating contaminated soil and debris to comply \nth treatment
standards based On what is technologically feasible for concentrated waste streams).  There
also are  many uncertainties  and unresolved issues surrounding the interpretation and
implementation of  SARA provisions allowing  ARAR waivers  and RCELA  provisions
allowing variances from treatment requirements.  As a result, these statutory approaches
to ARAR compliance rarely are used.
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    v   EPA has issued some policy guidance on RCRA issues (including a memorandum
 issued in April 1989 that deals with the .question  of when the  RCRA land disposal
 requirements are "applicable" but leaves many other issues unresolved) and is developing
 more. In addition, an effort has been underway for about three years to develop RCRA
 treatment standards for contaminated soil and debris, but key issues remain unresolved.
 Historically, disagreement among senior managers in the Superfund and RCRA programs
 has been the principal stumbling block in the way of efforts to furnish the Regional Offices
 definitive guidance.  With many issues unresolved, there is at least a potential for Regional
 Offices  to make  inconsistent decisions on questions  about  the application of RCRA
 'requirements to Superfund sites.
 RECOMMENDATIONS:

 To promote consistency in remedy selection-end emphasize the statutory preference for
 permanent remedies-the Office of Emergency and  Remedial Response, in cooperation
 with the Office of Waste Programs Enforcement, should take the following actions:

•       1.     Provide  real-time  feedback on proposed  remedy-selection
              decisions by ensuring that Regional Coordinators in the two
         ? ..•   offices have time to  review drafts of Proposed Plans-rwhich
.-.•-.-        identify  the remedial alternative  likely  to  be chosen for a
              Superfund site~and Records of Decision.

       -2.     As part  of overseeing Regional  Office  activities, examine
              remedy-selection decisions  from a  national  perspective by
             .conducting regular reviews to identify any trends that run
              counter  to statutory requirements or EPA's expectations and
              by clearly communicating the results of these reviews to EPA's
              Regional Administrators.  Such reviews  could foe part of a
              productive  relationship  between  EPA  Headquarters  and
            ,  Regional Offices.

  •;.    3.,    Ensure that the Regional Offices have Information on previous
              remedy-selection decisions by keeping the Record of Decision
          .;•••>. database updated; ensure that all RPMs are trained to use it
  •;•       ••'    and have access to it.

  To promote consistency in remedy selection, compliance with  statutory mandates, and
  appropriate consideration of available  factual and analytical data about  site conditions
  and potentially applicable remedial  technologies, the Regional Offices should take the
  following  actions:
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        1.     Within those Regional Offices that have not already done so,
              establish peer review processes for drafts of Proposed Plans
              and draft Records of Decision.

        2.     Ensure that RPMs check the Record of Decision database
              before making any  recommendations  on remedy selection;
              where a recommended remedy materially differs from thos'e
              previously selected for similar sites, require that RPMs b|e
              prepared to present the rationale for the difference.
 To minimize uncertainty and confusion about Applicable or Relevant and
 Requirements of Federal environmental laws, the Offices of Emergency
 Response and Waste Programs Enforcement, in cooperation with other
 Offices, should take the following actions as quickly as possible:
       1.
                                                          Appropriate
                                                        and Remedial
                                                        EPA Program
       2.
Resolve all outstanding questions  about the applicability or
relevance  and appropriateness  of Federal  standards an
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 Regional Office staff on Proposed Plans and RODs.  Most of the coordinators' contacts
 with Regional Office staff are by telephone, and most of the calls they receive are from
 RPMs.  Another major responsibility of Regional Coordinators  is to help Headquarters
 managers  obtain  information from  the  Regional Offices.   For example,  Regional
 Coordinators  may be  asked  to  gather information about  controversial  sites  or as
 preparation for Congressional testimony.   All Regional Coordinators have additional
 responsibilities; most of them spend 10 to 50 percent of their time on coordination duties.
 Regional Coordinators meet weekly to discuss issues that Regional Office staff have raised,
 and they use these meetings to promote consistency in the  answers they provide.

       When the position of Regional  Coordinator was first created, a large part of the
 Regional Coordinators' role was to review and recommend Headquarters action on RODs.
 Since  the  approval of. RODs  was   delegated  to  the  Regional  Offices,  however,
 Headquarters' formal concurrence role no longer exists, except in a very limited number
 of  cases.   When ROD  approval was delegated to the Regional Offices,  Regional
 Coordinators' duties were reduced from full- to part-time.

       The task group found great support among Regional Office managers  and staff for
 the function of Regional Coordinators, but concerns about how the role is currently being
 filled.  First, the fact that Regional Coordinators have taken on responsibilities in addition
 to their coordination role  has necessarily reduced their ability to  be responsive to RPMs.
 This, in  turn, has  led some RPMs to hesitate to call Regional Coordinators, under the
 assumption that they will be too busy to assist or will do  so to the detriment of other
 work.  Second, since the  Regional Coordinator function was scaled back, turnover has
 increased.  New Regional Coordinators, even if they are familiar with  some aspects of
 the Superfund program,  naturally cannot  provide the  same quality of  guidance and
 assistance that a Regional Coordinator  with several years of experience can.  Third, no
 one in EPA's Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response is  responsible  for knowing
 about  all the  technical support services available  to  RPMs (see  section on  technical
 support). Regional Coordinators may be aware of some, but not  all, of these services. It
would be logical to assign Regional Coordinators this coordination function, or to have the
 Office  of Research and Development perform it.

       Despite the present emphasis in Headquarters and the trend for Regional Offices
to integrate Fund and enforcement activities, questions on Fund-lead sites currently go to
OERR coordinators, and those on enforcement-lead sites to OWPE coordinators.  Since
many  Regional  Offices  now  have  geographic-based branches  in which  Fund- and
enforcement-lead functions  are integrated,  it would be easier  for RPMs  if  areas  of
responsibility for Regional Coordinators were also further integrated.
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 RECOMMENDATIONS:
To strengthen the  role  and  effectiveness of Regional  Coordinators,
Emergency,  and Remedial Response  and the Office  of Waste Programs
should take the following steps:
       1.     To increase the retention of Regional Coordinators and  to
             improve the quality of the services they provide, upgrade these
             positions, assign experienced staff to them,  and assure that
             Regional Coordinators have sufficient time to be responsive to
             requests from the Regional Offices.

       2.     Direct technical and procedural questions  relating to the
             planning  and conduct  of remedial activities  to Regional
             Coordinators in  the Office of Emergency  and  Remedial
             Response and legal and enforcement questions to Regional
             Coordinators in the Office of Waste Programs Enforcement.
             Consider an eventual merger of the two  groups of Regional
             Coordinators at EPA Headquarters.

       3.     Publicize  within EPA the existence and role of Regional
             Coordinators and  aggressively encourage RPMs  to  call on
             Regional Coordinators for assistance.
the Office of
 Enforcement
                       PROVIDING TECHNICAL SUPPORT
FINDINGS:  The range of technical support services available to RPMs is expanding- RPMs
generally are able to obtain the technical support they need to keep their projects going, but
they often are not aware of what is available or how to obtain it.  In short, technical support
is not made available to RPMs as efficiently or effectively as it should be.
DISCUSSION:  Technical support is the means by which RPMs  get the  advice and
information they need to resolve the many scientific and technical questions that arise at
Superfund sites—questions dealing with matters such as sampling and analysis methods, risk
assessment, and waste treatment technology.  Technical support for RPMs is essential.
Though many of them have degrees in science or engineering, they cannot be expected to
have all the scientific and technical expertise needed to do their jobs  properly unless they
have assistance from other sources.

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      Typically, when RPMs  need technical  advice, they  begin by  consulting their
supervisors,  other  RPMs, or members of a technical  support  group in the Superfund
program, if  there is such a group.  Then, either because these people cannot provide
answers or have suggested other sources, RPMs may consult people in other groups in
their  Regional Office, including people  in  the RCRA  and  ground-water protection
programs  or  in  Environmental Services Division,  which generally has  expertise  in
environmental sampling arid analysis.  An RPM's search also  may encompass  experts
elsewhere in EPA and may involve the use of automated databases.

      The trouble is not that technical support is unavailable;  indeed, the number and
range of technical support services available to  RPMs have increased significantly within
the past two years.  Within the Superfund program,  there  are now technical support
groups in several Regional Offices.  EPA's Office of Research and Development (ORD)
has established four Technical Support Centers to provide advice about assessment and
remediation of ground-water contamination, treatment of hazardous waste, sampling and
analysis at hazardous waste sites, and  assessment of ecological risks.   The Technical
Support Centers reflect a general increase in ORD's responsiveness to needs for technical
support in the Superfund program.  OERR also has  undertaken or sponsored a number
of other technical  support  efforts, including the  creation of Biological and Technical
Assistance Groups  in virtually all Regional Offices;  these groups provide scientific and
technical advice on ecological risk analysis.   ORD is setting up a clearinghouse  for
information  on hazardous waste treatment technology.  Regional Forums in the areas of
engineering  and treatment and ground-water fate and transport  have been established to
improve  communication  among Regional Offices and to help in  routing requests  for
technical advice and assistance.

      Despite these initiatives, RPMs often must spend too much time searching  for
answers. Some of the existing technical support services are not well publicized. In some
instances, RPMs may find that designated experts already have more requests awaiting
their attention than they can satisfy (which is why some technical support services are  not
widely publicized).  In some cases, people involved in other environmental programs in the
Regional Offices that are staffed to provide specific types of  technical support  to  the
Superfund program (e.g., reviews of RI/FS reports or RODs) do not share the sense of
urgency with  which Superfund operates; thus, their responses  may be  belated  or
substantively insufficient.

      In general, the technical support services available to RPMs are not organized for
efficiency. They seem to have proliferated rapidly but not in accordance with any  master
plan.  As a result, there is now a patchwork of technical support  services that cries  out for
management attention. There is a need for both near-term and longer-term action.
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      Near-term actions are needed to ensure that RPMs are well aware of the range
of technical support services available to them and know how to obtain these services.
Many Regional Office managers and staff suggested that a directory of technical support
services be promptly developed and regularly updated; if one already exists, most of them
are unaware of it.  In the case of automated databases, needed near-term actions include
training to familiarize RPMs with the content of the databases and the procedures for
obtaining  access to them; some RPMs may need easier access  to  computers and basic
training in the  use of computers to communicate with  automated databases.  Although
some of the computer-based technical  support services for  RPMs are available  only
through EPA's Electronic Mail System, relatively few RPMs know how to use the system
or have easy access to it.

      In the longer term (but within the next 12 months), it is essential that the Agency
take steps to improve and coordinate technical support services.  While it may be neither
necessary  nor  feasible  to  have all  technical  support  services  housed  in  a single
organizational unit, the  task group believes that they all should operate under  a single
"umbrella"—one group or one official responsible for ensuring coordination in assessing and
meeting technical support needs and establishing and evaluating technical support services.
The task group was  encouraged to learn that OERR's  Deputy Director has  been given
special responsibility for overseeing OERR's technical  support  activities.  There is no
question that the Deputy Director can make sure that appropriate action is
taken, but he
clearly cannot decide what should be done and monitor and evaluate the results without
staff support.
                                                                        ' !    '  ,  '
      To lay the groundwork for development and implementation  of a ttias,ter plan in
this area, a number of questions need to be answered:  Which technical support needs
are most pressing? To what extent are the existing and planned technical support services
meeting or designed to meet the most pressing needs?  Are they being effectively used?
A definitive assessment of technical support needs and resources could provide answers to
these and other critical questions.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

To enable RPMs to identify and use  EPA's technical support services, the Office of
Emergency and Remedial Response, in conjunction with the Office of Waste Programs
Enforcement and the Office of Research and Development, should quickly take the
following actions:

      1.     Prepare and publish a directory of technical support services,
             update it frequently, and ensure that every Remedial Project
             Manager promptly receives the initial and all updated editions.
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       2.    Ensure that all RPMs know how to use automated databases
             containing information relevant to their work and that they
             have access to computers configured for data communication.

 Within the next several months, the same three Headquarters offices should lay the
 groundwork for effective long-term management of technical  support services.  Toward
 this end, they should take the following actions:

       1.    Designate an existing group,  or establish  a new  one, to be
             responsible for EPA-wide management of technical support
             services to RPMs.

       2.    Direct this group to develop and implement a master plan for
             assessing and meeting RPMs'  needs for technical support.
       DEFINING STATES' ROLE AND IMPROVING THEIR CAPABILITY
FINDINGS:  Although some States have effective site cleanup programs, many currently do
not.  As a result, there often are delays arid quality problems at sites where States have the
lead role in managing Fund-financed  RI/FSs or in overseeing RI/FSs being conducted by
PRPs.  Thetdck of a clear definition of States' roles in the Superfund program limits efforts
to improve current State capabilities and will prevent EPA and States from combining their
resources most effectively in the future.
DISCUSSION:  If EPA determines  that a  State is capable of undertaking remedial
activities at a site, the Regional Office can allow the State  to  take the lead  for the
Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study (RI/FS) and Remedial Design (RD). States have
taken the lead at some sites, (to date, primarily on RI/FSs) in most Regions.  On Fund-
lead projects, States  conduct RI/FSs with EPA funding, using their own consultants,
contractors, and staff.  States can also take the  lead at enforcement sites (i.e., those  at
which PRPs are conducting remedial activities) for which they receive EPA grants to cover
their oversight costs.   EPA Regional Office  staff are responsible for overseeing State
activities at these sites.  In order to take the lead at a Fund site, a State must enter into
a cooperative agreement with EPA, which defines each entity's responsibilities during the
remedial period.

      With some  exceptions, State-lead RI/FSs have not been  fully successful.  The
primary problem is that States have often been slow in conducting these activities.  There
are three reasons for this lack of timeliness.  First, State Superfund programs tend to be
underfunded and,  because of low salaries and high turnover, lack  experienced staff.

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Second, some States' contracting procedures and other administrative procpsses lead to
delays.  In at least one State,  for example, it can take up  to  two years to select a
contractor through the competitive bidding process.  (The task group acknowledges that
EPA faces similar personnel and  administrative  problems in  the Superfund program.)
Third, some States that take on Federal sites place a higher priority on addressing their
own, non-NPL sites and let deadlines slip for their activities at Federal sites. JEven though
the cooperative agreements  specify deadlines, EPA has no means  to  enforce them.

      In at least three Regions, EPA has had to take back sites from States because of
lack of progress.  One Regional Office, for example, took back a site frorrj a State that
had spent four years on the RI/FS and was still  far from completing it.  There are, of
course,  exceptions  to this generalization  about  State programs.   Severalj  States have
developed effective Superfund programs.  These States have highly competent staffs and
well funded programs.  They  usually move quickly and  aggressively in addressing both
their own sites and Federal  sites for which they have the lead.               ;          /

      Current problems with State-lead sites are of concern for two reasons.  The most
immediate is that EPA and States should be striving to achieve effective and  efficient
action at all  Superfund sites, regardless of the lead agency. A broader concern is that
with over eleven hundred sites on the NPL and thousands of others identified as possibly
needing action, the magnitude of the hazardous site cleanup problem is  larger than EPA
alone can manage and will require that States and EPA marshal their combined resources.

      In the task group's view, the lack of an agreed-upon vision for  future State/EPA
roles in hazardous  site  cleanups (both NPL and non-NPL) is a major  obstacle both  to
improving current work on State-lead sites and to making the most effective use of State
and EPA resources in  the  long term.  Without that shared  vision and a strategy for
implementing it, EPA and State managers and staff are often operating on inconsistent
assumptions  about  their roles in each other's programs.  For example, scjune  Regional
Office managers have concluded that States should never play a stronger role in managing
NPL sites; others view the States as "the future of the program" and State program
development as an important, if small, part of their current responsibilities.

      State  managers who  advocate a more extensive State role  at both NPL and non-
NPL hazardous waste sites  have suggested that EPA take several measures to increase
the number,  efficiency, and  quality of State cleanup activities:

       *     Allow States with strong Superfund  programs to assume more
             project leads at both Fund and enforcement sites.

       *     Eliminate any existing  disincentives to State assumption  of
             project leads.
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             Over time, scale back EPA oversight of State-lead sites; shift
             resources saved through reduced oversight to EPA-lead sites.

             Improve weak State Superfund programs by providing training
             and tools to strengthen their technical, legal, and administrative
             capabilities.

             Examine proposed mechanisms  to encourage increased State
             activity at non-NPL sites, including deferral of sites to State
             agencies.
RECOMMENDATIONS:  EPA should begin now to resolve the  fundamental policy
question of what States' long-term role in the Superfund program will be.  Based on that
policy decision, EPA and States should jointly develop short- and long-term strategies to
enhance State program capability, improve  State performance at State-lead Superfund
sites, and foster State remedial activity at sites not on EPA's National Priorities List.
       MAKING TECHNICAL AND POLICY GUIDANCE MORE USABLE
FINDINGS: Existing technical and policy guidance for Regional Offices is generally too long
and detailed for its intended purpose and is often not easily accessible. Questions also exist
as to whether guidance is prescriptive or advisory.
DISCUSSION: In a program as complex as Superfund, it is clearly necessary that EPA
Headquarters  provide a  considerable amount of technical and policy guidance to  the
Regional Offices.  Formulating and distributing such guidance is one of OERR's  and
OWPE's major responsibilities.  In addition, EPA's Office of General Counsel and Office
of Enforcement and Compliance Monitoring contribute legal and enforcement guidance.
There currently are some two hundred technical and procedural guidance documents  and
policy directives,  and more are being developed.  Although all this guidance is well
intended, there is a consensus among Regional Office managers and staff that much  of the
existing  Superfund guidance is too long and detailed to serve its intended  purpose.

      Neither RPMs nor managers are able to read and retain all the guidance coming
from Headquarters, let alone incorporate it into their day-to-day thinking and planning.
This is especially true of guidance on policy and procedures.  While the task group could
not conduct a formal analysis of  the existing Superfund guidance,  task group members
did read many of the existing guidance documents (a term that will be used in this section
to encompass technical and procedural guidance documents and policy directives).  Their

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                                                                     staff in both
assessments echoed  those offered  by many Superfund managers and
Headquarters and Regional Offices-that many guidance documents are much longer than
necessary, that they tend to be repetitive, that they frequently provide unnecessary advice
on straightforward issues, and that they often dwell on exceptions rather
"rule" to be followed in most cases.
                                                                    than stating a
      OERR has begun responding to the Regional Offices' concern about the length of
guidance documents by developing and issuing "short sheets." Those developed so far are
two to six pages long-including tables and charts designed to present information clearly-
-and summarize  material that occupies two or more  chapters in conventional guidance
documents.  To  the extent that they have seen or know about short shjeets, Regional
Office managers  and staff welcome them.  The task group agrees that short sheets are a
reasonable  approach, not only as a way to make existing guidance more accessible  but
also as the basic format for aU future guidance.  Where Headquarters believes that more
detailed material should be available to Regional Office managers and staffj such material
could be presented as reference documents.

      RPMs also have problems obtaining access to guidance.  They tend to consult
guidance documents  for answers to specific questions when they know there is guidance
that deals with those questions; often, however, RPMs are not even sure whether there
is  relevant  guidance  or  whether  the  material they  can  find is the  most  recent
pronouncement on the subject in question.  In  addition, RPMs report that they sometimes
cannot locate copies of guidance even when they know it exists, that their Regional Offices
generally receive few copies of  guidance documents and directives (which means that
RPMs cannot take  such  materials with  them on trips),  and that they  sometimes have
difficulty obtaining copies of guidance documents from Headquarters.  Regional Office
managers and staff also report that PRPs sometimes receive new guidance  documents
before Regional  Offices do.

      There is no indication that the deficiencies of  existing guidance prevent Regional
Office managers  and staff from getting their work done.  Furthermore, it is obvious that
guidance on implementing a statute as complex as SARA cannot always bp presented in
simple declarative sentences.   In short,  the task group recognizes that there are some
significant limitations on what can and should be done  about the problems identified here.
The task group has  concluded, however, that guidance is of limited value |to people who
find it difficult and frustrating to use.

      The  task group identified two other problems relating to the formulation and  use
of technical and  policy guidance:  First—and somewhat ironically—there are technical and
policy issues on which Regional Offices want guidance but have been unable to obtain it.
One example brought to the task group's attention is the question of whether and how
land use considerations should be taken into account in remedy selection.  Another is the
Regional Offices' interest in having Headquarters provide copies of RODs or sections of

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RODs that are considered exemplary.  The second problem identified is  a lack  of
definition as to the  force  and effect  of  Superfund guidance-that  is,  whether  it is
prescriptive or advisory. This uncertainty sometimes leads EPA contractors to argue that
they cannot do less than is called for in Superfund guidance (because they are concerned
about liability) and PRPs to resist Regional Office requests to do anything beyond what
is explicitly called for in the guidance.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

To facilitate Regional  Offices' use  of and access  to program guidance, the Office  of
Emergency and Remedial Response and the Office of Waste Programs Enforcement,  in
conjunction with the Office of General  Counsel and  the  Office of Enforcement and
Compliance Monitoring, should take the following steps:

      1.    Continue to develop and issue "short sheets" that summarize
            existing  guidance,   ask  the  Regional Offices  to  suggest
            candidates for additional "short sheets," and issue new guidance
            first as  "short sheets" and later,  as necessary, as  longer
            reference documents.

      2.    Designate in each office a single official to take responsibility
            for overseeing the planning  and development of all technical
            and policy guidance and ensuring that guidance issued by the
            various offices does not conflict.

      3.    Establish procedures to ensure that guidance is prepared and
            updated in a timely fashion  and systematically distributed to
            all  Superfund managers and staff in the Regional Offices.

      4.    Explain how Regional Offices and other interested parties can
            distinguish  between  prescriptive  and  advisory elements  of
            Superfund guidance.
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IV. BRINGING INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES TO BEAR ON




  POLLUTION AT SUPERFUND SITES TO STRENGTHEN




              REMEDY SELECTION

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                                 CHAPTER IV

BRINGING INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES TO BEAR ON POLLUTION
   AT SUPERFUND SITES TO STRENGTHEN REMEDY SELECTION
INTRODUCTION: The ultimate success of the Superfund program depends on its ability
to select remedies that protect human health and the environment, that maintain protection
over time, and that minimize untreated waste.   Treatment that reduces the toxicity,
mobility, or volume of the waste plays a vital role in achieving this goal.  SARA requires
that EPA  give a strong preference to  such remedies in cleaning  up Superfund sites. Use
of these treatment technologies, which include physical, chemical,  thermal and biological
treatment, is the focus of this chapter.

      The Superfund  program  must  deal with several Congressional  directives  in
addressing use of treatment technologies.   In  addition to the  requirement to give
preference to treatment remedies, are the requirements to employ "cost-effective" solutions,
and the requirements to ensure that remedies protect human health and the environment.
These objectives are difficult to balance because of the relatively early state  of develop-
ment of treatment technologies and uncertainties about their performance and costs.  It
is clearly more difficult to choose treatment  as a remedy if there are uncertainties about
the  effectiveness (in terms of reducing the toxicity  of a waste), reliability, and cost-
effectiveness. Even the enforcement provisions of SARA complicate the decision  to use
treatment  technologies.   EPA's objective is  for the Responsible Parties at the site to
implement (fund) the remedy EPA selects, but these same parties are often reluctant to
agree to a remedy that carries with it significant uncertainty of success and potentially high
costs.  Other SARA requirements, such as the 10 percent cost match by States, present a
similar dilemma, because  States have  similar concerns about viability and cost.

      An aggressive, broad based technology development initiative is needed to address
these issues  so the SARA requirements can be met to the fullest extent possible.  This
initiative must focus on reducing technical uncertainties, expanding the technology base,
and overcoming policy and regulatory barriers to use of treatment technologies.  Specific
initiatives  can be grouped into three program areas:

      1.     Reduce any non-technical  barriers,  such as regulatory  and policy
            constraints that inhibit use of treatment technologies.

      2.     Provide extensive technical assistance, expert advice, and information
            transfer to make the best use of the information that is available now
            and is being developed.
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      3.    Aggressively support the research, development,  demonstration
            evaluation of new treatment technologies for Superfund sites
 and
      The findings and  recommendations in  this chapter fit into the three categories
above.  Each addresses a separate issue or topic that is a statement of an [area where
action is needed.  Listed  below is a summary of topics organized under the three general
categories above:

             Reduce non-technical barriers to use of treatment technologies.

                   Topics:

                   1.      Establish  clear guidance  for  use  of  treatment
                          technologies                                   I

                   2.      Management oversight of expanded use  of treatment
                          in Superfund remedies

                   3.      Remove regulatory  and  policy  barriers to  use  of
                          treatment technologies.
                   4.     Remove  barriers  to procurement  of treatment
                          nologies

             Provide  extensive  technical assistance,  expert advice,  and
             transfer.
tech-
information
                    Topics:

                    1.     Technical assistance to the regions for evaluation of
                          treatment technologies

                    2.     Treatability tests of treatment technologies

                    3.     Technical information dissemination on  treatment
                          technologies

             Aggressively support research, development,  demonstration and evaluation
             of new technologies.
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                   Topics:

                   1.     Development, demonstration, and evaluation of new and
                         innovative treatment technologies

                   2.     Expand research to develop new treatment technologies

                   3.     Reduce institutional barriers  to commercialization of
                         innovative treatment technologies          .
                 ESTABLISH CLEAR GUIDANCE FOR USE OF
                         TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
FINDINGS:   Insufficient  implementing guidance exists to support the regional project
managers in applying current Agency policies on use of treatment technologies, particularly
with regard to the criteria for technology selection.
DISCUSSION:   Since the passage of SARA, EPA has been selecting treatment  more
frequently as a  clean-up remedy.  During FY88., 72 percent of the final remedies to
control sources (e.g. lagoons, landfills, and soils) used treatment in some aspect of the
clean-up.  The EPA can improve on this record by using treatment more often and  more
effectively.                                            :•;..'•

      The proposed revisions  to  the  National  Contingency Plan (NCP) and  Agency
guidance emphasize the  importance of treatment  to achieve reliable, long-term remedies.
"Advancing the Use of Treatment Technologies for Superfund Remedies", February  1989,
encourages treatment and innovative technologies by laying out the expectations for the
use of treatment, promoting use of technologies other than incineration and solidification,
stressing innovative technologies, and underscoring the value of treatability studies in the
remedial program.   But other  existing guidance does not emphasize treatment to the
extent needed.   Examples include the guidance for Remedial Investigations/Feasibility
Studies (RI/FS) and guidance for Records  of Decision (RODs).

      These guidances need to express not only a clear policy preference for treatment,
but also need to provide specific implementation guidance that on a day-to-day basis  helps
regions carry out the policy.
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                                  The RPMs Dilemma

      For this site I have three remedies that should work-that is, should protect human health.
      One is a conventional containment approach and the other two use treatment. One of the
      treatment methods involves chemical fixation and encapsulation; the other would: yield
      nearly complete destruction of the toxics at the site. Although that remedy provides the
      most complete treatment and is the most reliable long term remedy, it is significantly more
      costly - nearly two times the cost of the other treatment remedy, and six times the cost of
      the containment remedy. SARA emphasizes use of treatment technologies that reduj^ the
      toxicity and mobility of the waste, and I know the lower cost remedy may not be as reliable
      in the long term, but I don't know how much more to spend on treatment. How do I deal
      with this in applying the nine remedy selection criteria and choosing a remedy?
       Regional project managers must apply the nine remedy selection criteria described
in the proposed NCP.  Five of these criteria must be "balanced" in selecting a remedy.
These are long-term effectiveness, mobility or toxicity reduction through treatment, short-
term effectiveness, implementability and cost.  Further guidance would help the  project
managers balance these criteria, especially long term effectiveness and treatment versus
cost in making the final remedy selection.

       Because of their heretofore limited track record, innovative technologies currently
involve greater uncertainly  than  more conventional  remedies in performance and  cost.
Project managers  need  to better understand the  latitude they  have  to  select  such
technologies in the face of these  uncertainties.  One  idea that has been discussed by the
regional offices is "contingent remedies", where an innovative technology is selected, but
backed-up by another remedy that would be implemented quickly if the primary  remedy
does not meet requirements.                                              I

       We believe that the realism that innovative technologies involve uncertainties and
higher costs  has to be considered  in  developing  the  guidance.   But  as!  technology
development evolves further this will change.  Thus, Superfund remedy selection guidance
should appropriately reflect the statutory preference  for treatment and shoulp encourage
the  use  of  innovative  technologies, which should  increase as more  experience  with
innovative technologies is gained.                                          I
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RECOMMENDATIONS:  Superfund policies and guidance should be reviewed and revised
to ensure that use of treatment technologies is given stronger emphasis in accordance
with SARA's directions. Guidance should emphasize the use of treatment technologies in
early actions to mitigate  significant threats at sites,  as well as in later actions to fully
clean up the sites.
         MANAGEMENT OVERSIGHT OF ACTIONS TO EXPAND USE
                 OF TREATMENT IN SUPERFUND REMEDIES
FINDINGS: The wide range of activities at EPA related to technology development require
coordination and direction.  In addition,  regional implementation is sometimes inconsistent
among regions, and with headquarters guidance.
DISCUSSION:  Cooperation from several offices is necessary to achieve greater use of
technologies.   The Office of Emergency  and  Remedial Response (OERR)  within
(OSWER) has the overall responsibility for managing the Superfund program. This Office
is responsible for the National Contingency Plan, providing policy and guidance, measuring
progress against program goals, and other management tasks.

      The Office of Program Management and Technology (OPMT) was established in
OSWER to help integrate  and coordinate activities between OERR, the Office of Solid
Waste, and the Office of Research and Development (ORD).  An ongoing activity of the
technology staff in OPMT is joint responsibility with ORD  for  implementation of the
Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation (SITE) program.  The  staff also provides
technology transfer of  information  on  innovative  technologies  and limited technical
assistance to the Regions. Another joint effort with ORD is to help facilitate rapid, direct
technical contact between remedial  project managers in the  field and experts  in the
Regions and ORD laboratories. The staff is also responsible for representing OSWER on
the Research Committee to help guide ORD activities and budget.

      The activities of the Office of Program Management and Technology have provided
needed support, coordination and  emphasis  to  development and  use  of treatment tech-
nologies.  The functions of this  Office  appear to  be needed and  perhaps should be
strengthened  to ensure  appropriate leadership and coordination on removing barriers to
use of innovative technologies.  A clear senior management focus is needed to ensure
success either as part of this group of another appropriate organizational arrangement.
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      Another form of management oversight and coordination relates to the activities of
the regional offices. The Agency has been criticized for inconsistency among the regional
offices in selecting clean-up remedies.  Often this criticism has incorrectly assumed that
the same remedy or clean-up  level invariably should be chosen from site A to site B.
This fails to recognize the complexity of each Superfund site situation. The j consistency
should come in the process that is used to select the remedy, the application j of the nine
criteria that have been established for  remedy selection, and  the statutory mandate for
permanence to the maximum extent practicable and the use of treatment technologies.

       Consistent application of these criteria is particularly important regarding selection
of treatment technologies. Because the selection process involves a balancing of the nine
criteria, the potential exists for inconsistency in the cost and other trade-offs relating to
selecting treatment versus other remedies. To ensure consistency, and to promote use of
treatment technologies, an appropriate level of headquarters oversight and  review of
regional decisions is appropriate.                                         i
                                                                      i
RECOMMENDATIONS:  A senior program manager in the Office of Solid Waste and
Emergency Response should serve as "Technologies Czar" and should be responsible for
working with other offices to develop and implement actions necessary to remove barriers
to use of treatment technologies.

The Office of Emergency and Remedial Response should work with the Regions to provide
national consistency on procedures for selection of treatment technologies. The expanded
role for regional coordinators outlined  in the previous  chapter on improving  remedial
work should include this task as a major activity.
           REMOVE REGULATORY AND POLICY BARRIERS TO USE
                        OF TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
 FINDINGS:   Regulations developed under the Resource Conservation  and Recovery Act
 (RCRA) that are considered "applicable or relevant and appropriate" to Superfund may have
 unanticipated  cost or technical impacts.  For example, new land ban regulations required
 under RCRA that are based on "best available technology" may limit the potential treatment
 technologies that can be used in Superfund clean-ups.  Technologies such as solidification,
 stabilization, and biological treatment may be precluded because they may not meet the highest
 level of perfonnance required by the land ban regulations.  In addition,  there is a tension
 between the cost recovery goals of SARA and the selection of innovative treatment^ technologies
 for site clean-up.
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DISCUSSION:  Under the RCRA land disposal restrictions, hazardous waste is banned
from land disposal unless the waste meets specified treatment standards promulgated by
EPA. These standards, represent the Best Demonstrated Available Technology (BDAT)
for the waste. They are expressed as a maximum allowable concentration in the waste, as
a required treatment technology, or in  a few instances, as an  absolute ban.   Under
CERCLA, Superfund remedial actions that generally address contaminated soil and debris
must comply with RCRA standards when they are applicable or relevant and appropriate
requirements (ARARs).  Given the close similarity between the wastes and the activities
covered under CERCLA and RCRA, the land disposal restrictions will often be an ARAR
for Superfund.

      Innovative technologies, such as biological treatment, soil washing, and solidification
will in many cases not be able to  achieve  the same levels achievable by BDAT tech-
nologies that are the basis for the land disposal restriction rules, and would therefore be
precluded from use at Superfund sites.  This is  true especially because  the BDAT
treatment standard for many wastes, particularly organic waste, is based on incineration or
thermal treatment, which can achieve nearly total destruction, albeit generally at significant
cost.  Although a treatment  technology, such as chemical or biological treatment,  may not
be able to attain the  "best" level of treatment defined in the land disposal restriction
regulation, it may well be able to achieve a level that is protective for the site.

       For some waste types, solidification technologies that  do not actually  destroy the
waste may not be able to meet land disposal restriction regardless  of their effectiveness in
immobilizing the waste, since attainment of the standard for many wastes is based  on "total
waste analysis,"  rather than an extraction and leachate test of the treated waste. Only
actual reduction in the concentration of  the waste - as opposed to immobilizing it - can
achieve the  standard.   (Another RCRA rule  that may restrict  use  of solidification at
Superfund sites  is the Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure-the extraction test used
to determine if a waste is  hazardous.  This  test requires grinding of solids, so that a
significant part  of the inherent benefits  of solidifying a waste are defeated in the test.)
Even though solidification may not be equivalent to BDAT, for soil and debris with lower
concentrations of organics, or organics mixed with metals,  it can be a protective and cost-
effective remedy.

       Even if an innovative technology is capable of attaining a level comparable to the
BDAT standard, these technologies  are  by definition  relatively  unproven and untried.
There may not  be sufficient information at  the time the remedy is selected to make the
determination with confidence that a new but promising technology can attain  the land
disposal restriction  levels.  Decision-makers may  be reluctant  to select an unproven
technology for fear that, after investing time and dollars, the technology  cannot comply
with those levels.
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                                                                              I
                          Making RCRA Regulations Fit Superfund                 j
                                                                              i
      The rules written under RCRA, such as land ban, are not developed with the characteristics
      and peculiarities of Superfund wastes in mind.  In some cases these rules are difficult to
      apply to Superfund wastes, or they create unanticipated  - perhaps counterproductive  -
      effects  This is in part because the contaminated soils and debris typically found at
      Superfund sites are different from the process waste streams that RCRA was designefl to
      address  Yet, if the RCRA rules are applicable (e.g. meet the regulatory definition of
      applicability) or relevant and appropriate (i.e. not legally applicable but address a similar
      situation and are well suited to the site), SARA says that they must be applied to Superfund
      clean-up.

      The  land ban rules are a case in point.  They would be "applicable" to any placement of
      Superfund waste that meets the definition of a hazardous waste in Part 261 of the RCRA
      regulations. For other "similar" wastes, they may be "relevant and appropriate". If land ban
      applies, the treatment choices for the site are limited by the  RCRA rule to the fbest
      demonstrated available technology", even though for contaminated soils other technologies
      may provide sufficient, and more cost-effective treatment.
       An important policy issue that can act as a barrier to use of innovative technologies
concerns the cost recovery provisions of SARA. EPA's goal is to have responsible parties
fund and conduct Superfund clean-ups. A related goal is to recover costs from responsible
parties to the maximum extent possible when site clean-up is performed by tjie Agency.
                                                                              i
       Responsible  parties will  frequently implement Superfund  remedies,  and the
willingness of responsible parties ttf consider innovative technologies may affeqt  their use.
In some  cases, the  responsible parties conducting RI/FS may  suggest  innovative tech-
nologies themselves.  The innovative technology may be less expensive than more conven-
tional technologies,  it may  provide the responsible party with an opportunity to test an
innovative technology with potential commercial application, or the responsibly party may
believe the innovative technology is less likely to  fail.  In such  situations, they bear the
risk of paying for any subsequent remedial action if the innovative technology does not
work.                                                                        |

       In other situations, responsible parties may object to  innovative  technologies.  If
EPA implements a  technology that fails or that costs more than projected, then respon-
sible parties can be  expected to argue that EPA is not entitled to full cost recovery.  This
possibility tends to  create pressures within the Agency that  discourage the selection of
innovative technologies.
                                                                              i
       Although this potential for challenge exists at any site with potentially .responsible
parties, remedies selected by EPA will be upheld in court unless arbitrary and, capricious,
                                           4-8

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or otherwise riot in accordance with law.  The Superfund law encourages the selection of
innovative technologies, and EPA should continue to select them where appropriate,  the
threat of challenge from responsible parties notwithstanding.                       ;


RECOMMENDATIONS:   The impact of RCRA land ban  or other rules on use of
alternative technologies should be carefully evaluated to identify technologies that may be
precluded by the rules. The Office of Emergency and Remedial Response and Office of
Solid Waste must jointly explore ways to apply these rules that preserve their intent and
spirit without restricting use of viable treatment approaches for Superfund sites.

EPA should develop guidance that balances the goal of advancing innovative technologies
against the need to minimize challenges during cost recovery actions.
                  REMOVE BARRIERS TO PROCUREMENT OF
                         TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
FINDINGS:  Current implementation of the Federal Acquisition Regulations  (FAR) has
revealed unanticipated obstacles to the procurement of innovative and proprietary treatment
technologies,


DISCUSSION: Provisions in the Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR) are reducing the
flexibility of the Superfund program in procuring innovative technologies.  One concern
relates  to  treatability tests.   FAR  allows  contractors to  either prepare  plans and
specifications  or implement construction; but prohibits  contractors from doing both
activities for the same project. Treatability tests are  an important part of the remedial
planning process to evaluate, select and design remedial actions.  Often there is a narrow
group of firms that can conduct treatability tests for particular technologies. Also, many
companies are not interested in conducting treatability tests if their participation precludes
them from bidding on the construction contract.  A contractor performing a treatability
test during the remedial investigation/feasibility study (before remedy selection and design)
probably is not precluded from bidding on the construction contract.  However, treatability
work is often needed s during design  to establish  the operating  parameters of  the
technology. Innovative technologies are especially impacted because of the greater need
to assess feasibility and reliability.
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        Another constraint is an Agency policy that restricts a contractor frdm working for
  the EPA and a responsible party on the same site. The purpose of this policy to ensure
  that a contractor does not end up working for two parties with different interests.  Under
  this policy responsible parties generally cannot use the same contractors or! expertise that
  was used by the EPA.  At many sites there has been a cooperative efforlt between the
  EPA and the responsible parties with EPA managing (i.e. funding) part of- the work and
  responsible parties agreeing to take over other parts of the site work. Specifically, if a
  firm is retained by EPA, or an EPA contractor, to perform a treatability study during the
  RI/FS or design phase, that firm  is precluded  for three years from working  for the
  responsible party during any phase of site activity including construction.  Although there
  is a waiver provision in the policy, the policy itself has proved to be an impediment for
  conducting treatabiliiy tests, and therefore to selecting treatment technologies to clean UD
  the site.                                                              I
        There are also contracting constraints related to the procurement of proprietary
  technologies. Federal Acquisition Regulations allow for sole source procurement, but this
  is often a slow and uncertain process.  Other approaches need to be explored to make
  these proprietary technologies more widely available.  The Agency may want to enter into
  discussions with companies that own such technologies, regarding their willingness to sell
  patent rights or offer licensing of their  technology to  other contractors. While it may at
  first appear mundane, this  proprietary  principle  stands as one of the | major  initial
  impediments to  the use of a  wide range of emerging technologies. Procedures must be
  developed to allow greater freedom in performing treatability studies  and In the use of
  sole-source procurements for  proprietary technologies.                    I
 RECOMMENDATIONS:  EPA should evaluate the provisions of the FAR jto determine
 where latitude exists to eliminate procurement constraints to utilizing treatment tech-
 nologies.  Procedures should  be developed to allow greater flexibility in performing
 treatability studies and in how "proprietary" technologies are defined for purposes of these
 regulations.                                                           I
               TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TO THE REGIONS FOR
                EVALUATION OF TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
FINDINGS:   Many treatment technologies for  Superfund  sites are new and  technically
complex. In many cases, data on their performance are limited. EPA project managers are
notfulfy knowledgeable about the availability, performance and costs of these technologies
As a result, they are often unable to confidently determine which, if any, of these] technologies
can best clean-up a given site.                                           '. •
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DISCUSSION:  Superfund projects are  managed in the  Regions  by staff level project
managers  supported by other regional staff and by contractors.  The project managers
must oversee one or more contractors, manage project schedule and budget, communicate
with the public, and make decisions and recommendations on a  number of legal, policy
and technical issues. The management demands of their jobs leave little time for them to
become expert in any given area, particularly one  as  complex and rapidly evolving as
treatment  technology.  They must depend on other experts to support them in technical,
legal and other areas.

       In the past, they have relied heavily on their contractors for much of the technical
.expertise needed in the project, but this has reduced their  ability to properly manage and
direct the contractor.   Furthermore,  many contractors  are not expert in new treatment
technologies  because  information is  rapidly  evolving and changing.  Thus, neither  the
regional project managers or their contractors are in the best position to stay abreast of
developments in new treatment technologies.

       As  a consequence, some new technologies that might be applicable for clean-up of
a site are  never considered.  Studies of those that are considered sometimes take longer
and cost more than they should, and in the end, the technology selected may not include
treatment, or it may be used less extensively  than the Agency desires.

       A technical assistance program can greatly assist regional project managers if it is
comprised of knowledgeable individuals,  is well coordinated,  and is focused on the  key
decision points in the  site evaluation process.
                                    A Typical Situation

       The contractor and regional project manager are meeting to discuss the contractor's work
       plan for the RI/FS.  In the first phase, the remedial investigation (RI) the contractor will
       collect data to characterize the site. This must also include data that will enable them to
       evaluate alternative remedies in the second phase, the feasibility study (FS). A key question
       that must  be answered  now,  or  later  in the RI, is what  are the potentially viable
       technologies that could be applied to this site.  The answer will guide the field sampling
       and data gathering efforts. Unfortunately, in the face of uncertainty, a long list of potentials
       is often suggested.  This adds up to time and costs in the study. Later, at the end of the
       RI, a further narrowing of remedy  alternatives  must be made.  How many technologies
       should we  evaluate during the  feasibility study.  Again, the list may be too long, or new
       technologies with real potential may be left out. At the end of the feasibility study,  the
       even tougher job of weighing the information and recommending a remedy must be done.
       ("Vacuum extraction of organics looks like a good option, but has it ever been done with
       these concentrations?")  At each of these points the technologies at issue include several
       innovative  treatment technologies with very limited track records. What the RPM needs
       and wants  is a  source of expertise and  advise  — someone whose job is knowing about

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       innovative technologies, someone with "grey hair" and "dirty hands" from answering these
       questions every day, someone that makes it their business to keep abreast of the [rapidly
       expanding information on these technologies.  They need a team of technology experts.
       The primary source of expertise in the Agency is the  Office of Research and
 Development (ORD).   Within  ORD, the  Office  of  Environmental Engineering and
 Technology Demonstration (OEETD) has been conducting  research, development and
 demonstration of waste treatment technologies for a number of years. This office currently
 conducts the Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation (SITE) program, which will be
 discussed later in this report.  Building on this core of expertise, ORD has l!he capability
 to field a highly effective team of experts.                                !

       The strong feeling among Superfund staff is that this should be a dedicated team
 whose sole job is assisting the Regions. Otherwise, competing job demands would interfere
 with effective delivery of services.  A model  for this approach is EPA's Environmental
 Response  Team, which  for several years has provided expert advice  on response to
 chemical emergencies and  other time critical response actions.
                                                                       i
       For a technical assistance program to be effective, it must be focused on the critical
 decision points in the site evaluation process and applied consistently and systematically.
 It must become a routine part of the evaluation process.  It must be applied first  in the
 earliest part of the evaluation to identify the potential range of technologies  to  be
 evaluated; it must  assist at intermediate points  to  evaluate alternatives and  select  an
 appropriate technology; and it must assist in the final engineering design of the selected
 technology.
RECOMMENDATIONS:   EPA should establish nationwide technology support teams
within, the Office of Research and Development, to provide en-site, projebt-by-project
technical advice to regional project managers on treatment technologies. These support
teams should work in conjunction with regional coordinators in the Superfund program
office to identify  specific technologies or combinations of technologies to respond to
generic site situations.                                                  I
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    TREATABILITY TESTS OF ALTERNATIVE REMEDIAL TECHNOLOGIES
FINDINGS:  To evaluate the application of treatment technologies to particular sites, it is
essential to conduct laboratory or pilot-scale treatment tests on actual wastes from the site,
including, if needed and feasible, tests of actual operating units prior to remedy  selection.
These "treatability tests" are not currently being performed at many sites to the necessary extent,
or their quality is not adequate to support reliable decisions.

       General treatability testing can be performed in the laboratory to determine the physi-
cal/chemical properties of wastes that make them suitable for certain technologies, and on a
site-by-site basis  as part of the remedy selection process to determine the  viability of a given
technology for that site.  These approaches are complementary in that the general testing can
be used as a screening tool whereas site specific testing is required to know how a given
technology will perform at a particular site.
DISCUSSION:  Treatability tests are laboratory or pilot-scale treatment tests on actual
wastes from a site, and are essential to evaluating alternative treatment approaches.
Without these tests it is difficult to determine how effectively a given technology will treat
wastes at the site. These tests are needed at virtually every site because the physical and
chemical nature of the waste, soil, and water mixtures differ greatly from site  to site.
Treatability tests have to be conducted as a part of the Remedial Investigation/Feasibility
Study (RI/FS) - the study leading to the selection of a clean-up remedy at a Superfund
site.

      The first part of the study,  the Remedial Investigation, includes characterization of
the contamination at the site and a preliminary identification of technologies that may be
applicable  to the  site and should be  further evaluated.  The  Feasibility Study includes
assessment of exposure  and risk, determination of a clean-up level, and evaluation  of
alternative approaches to clean-up the site, including various treatment technologies.  At
the end of the Feasibility Study the Agency evaluates the data and selects a remedy to be
implemented, documenting their decision in a Record of Decision (ROD).  This is followed
by the preparation of an engineering  design of the selected remedy to set the stage for
competitive bidding.

      Treatability tests are needed at two different stages of the above  process. They
are needed during the Feasibility Study  to help determine the potential  effectiveness  of
different treatment approaches that are  being evaluated.  Since the wastes differ widely
from site to site, these tests are  essential to determining the feasible, and best, treatment
                                        4-13

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 approaches.  Secondly,  they are  needed during the design phase.  At this stage  more
 detailed treatability tests are needed to ensure the design parameters being developed
 are correctly specified and that the effectiveness of a given technology within'the remedial
 situation can be counted upon by site managers.                          |

       Currently, both types  of treatability tests are being done sporadically and  often
 inconsistently.  Several factors contribute to the deficiencies in treatability tests.  One is
 simply that clear guidance has not been provided from Headquarters. An'other is that
 standard testing protocols are not  available to ensure that the tests are done [correctly and
 consistently. Finally, the Regions have difficulty finding laboratories that  ar,e capable of
 performing these tests.                                                  i
                                                                        • i  '  , .  ..
       A third type of treatability test that can be very useful is a study to| characterize
 generally the waste types (chemical and physical characteristics) that can be processed by
 a given technology.  These tests  are not site specific, but instead can involve tests ,,on
 wastes from a  variety of sites to determine the  limits of a particular  technology, or
 determine  types of technologies that can treat a particular waste.  This information can
 significantly aid the screening of a host of technologies during the Remedial Investigation
 and Feasibility Study.                                     ,
                                                                        i
      As  a result of these problems, the analysis of treatment alternatives is  not as
 complete or effective as it should be.  This has resulted in uncertainties about performance
 and a tendency to avoid the risk of selecting treatment as  a clean-up remedy.       ;
RECOMMENDATIONS: EPA should establish a treatability assistance program within
the Office of Research and Development to perform treatability tests, develop standard
testing protocols, and maintain a data base of test results.  This program should work
closely with the Technology Czar and Regional Coordinators in the Office of Solid Waste
and Emergency Response, and with the regional offices.                   ''...-.-..•
                                                                        i
          .                 .           .    •                   ,  '         \     . • .
The Office of Emergency and Remedial Response (OERR) should provide policy guidance
to the Regions to ensure that treatability tests are emphasized, and should jalsp provide
guidance on how to use treatability tests in selection of a clean-up technology.
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               TECHNICAL INFORMATION DISSEMINATION ON
                        TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
FINDINGS: Information on performance and costs of alternative treatment technologies is
essential to EPA project managers and their technical advisors and contractors.  Although
much data is being generated in the public and private sector, it is not being collected and
organized and is not widely available.
DISCUSSION:  A broad spectrum of information  on treatment technologies is  being
generated constantly.   Demonstrations under the Superfund Innovative Technology
Evaluation (SITE) program and treatability studies are two of many potential sources of
data.   EPA, States, and other  Federal agencies all generate significant amounts  of
information  on treatment technologies.  This information is  not being collected and
disseminated in any organized way. Thus, it is difficult for a regional project manager (or
contractor) in  one region to know what has been  done in another region, or by a  State,
responsible party, or other Federal agency in testing, demonstrating, or  applying new
technologies. To take maximum advantage of work that has already been done, the results
of that work must be assembled  and  distributed through an information clearinghouse.
Simply knowing whether anyone has tried using technology A to treat waste B in matrix
C, and having the results at hand and the name of a contact person can  save needless
wasted effort and expense and avoid repeating past mistakes.

      Another important benefit  of data sharing is  consistency.  Only if all participants
are "playing from the  same  deck" of information can we expect decisions on use  of
treatment technologies to be consistent.

      Every regional project manager speaks of the need to have technical information
available.  EPA's Office of  Research and Development has recognized the need  to
centralize data from their own studies  and demonstrations, as well as from other sources,
and has  begun to set up a clearinghouse for technical information on treatment tech-
nologies.  This clearinghouse, called the Alternative Treatment Technology Information
Center (ATTIC), is still under development, but is  scheduled to go on-line in the near
future. It will provide access to a wide range of treatment technology data from EPA and
other sources.  This clearinghouse is a strong step in the right direction and EPA should
give priority to supporting and fully developing its  capabilities.
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       In  addition to having basic data on new technologies  readily available, further
benefits can come from periodic interpretative summaries of the information.  Such
summaries could "interpret" for project managers the overall status  of development of
certain technologies, and the types of wastes and sites where they appear to be applicable.
Regularly updated technology handbooks would be the product of this effort.

       Finally, information can be effectively transferred through more traditional means,
such as report distribution, conferences, seminars, and technical forums.  These efforts
constitute a baseline that to date has been the primary means of activity information
transfers.  Although these are essential activities, there is frequently criticism of the timing
and technical complexity of reports.   Users want faster turnaround and management
summaries.  Similarly, users generally prefer to attend technical forums to share informa-
tion with their peers as  opposed to long, structured conferences.
                                                                       i
RECOMMENDATIONS:  The  Agency should establish  an information  clearinghouse,
within the Office of Research  and Development (ORD) containing data,  reports and
references  from EPA, State and other evaluations  of technology performance.   The
clearinghouse should include  a  computerized data base  that  allows access through
telephone inquiry, on-line computer access, and printed material.           !
                                                                       i
ORD should continue, and expand as necessary, its current technology-transfer activities
of dissemination of technical reports, technology forums, seminars and conferences and
should ensure that this transfer is effectively directed at Regional Project Managers and
their contractors.                                                       '
          DEVELOPMENT, DEMONSTRATION AND EVALUATION OF
            NEW AND INNOVATIVE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES i.
FINDINGS:  There are not now  enough proven, cost effective treatment technologies to
address the widely varying range of wastes and site conditions that Superfund encounters. As
a result, regional project managers cannot choose these remedies with enough confidence that
they will perform successfully.   Technology demonstrations under the Superfund Innovative
Technology Evaluation Program (SITE)  are addressing this need, but additional technology
development support is needed to further expand the range of available technologies.   In
addition, information from these demonstrations must be produced in a more timely way.
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                                   Technology Jargon

      The words used to describe the various stages of technology development can be confusing.
      EPA uses the following terms to define these stages.   "Available" technologies are fully
      proven and in routine commercial use.  "Innovative" technologies  are fully developed
      technologies for which cost or performance information is incomplete, thus hindering
      routine use at hazardous waste sites.  Innovative technologies require field testing before
      they are considered proven and available for routine use. "Emerging" technologies are those
      that have involved laboratory testing and/or some pilot scale testing, but this testing is not
      yet sufficient to document the technical  viability of  the process.  Obviously, the lines
      between the various stages of development are not always sharp, but these definitions serve
      as a way of communicating about the continuum of technology development.
DISCUSSION:  The Superfund program needs a broad range of treatment technologies
to address the widely varying chemical and physical characteristics of waste/soil/water
mixtures found at sites. Although a lot of technology development and adaption is taking
place in the private sector, very few of these technologies have actually been used  at
Superfund sites.   Without this  experience base, the performance  and costs of these
technologies are highly uncertain.  Project managers are reluctant  to  choose them  as
remedies.  To break out of this "chicken and egg" dilemma EPA  has  implemented a
program (SITE)  to allow developers to bring technologies to Superfund sites to demons-
trate their performance.

       The SITE program was established  in the 1986 Superfund Amendments (311(b))
to help provide the treatment technologies necessary to implement new clean-up standards
in the law. The goal of the program is to maximize the use of alternatives to land disposal
in cleaning up Superfund  sites by encouraging the development and demonstration of new,
innovative treatment and  monitoring technologies. The program is implemented as a joint
effort  between  OSWER and ORD.  ORD,  through the  Risk Reduction Engineering
Laboratory in Cincinnati,  provides  the  personnel responsible for managing individual
projects.

       Although  the program has several  components, the primary  focus  has been the
Demonstration Program.  This addresses the demonstration and evaluation of innovative
full-scale or pilot-scale technologies that can be scaled up for commercial use.  These tech-
nologies are considered to be fairly well developed and almost available for selection for
remediation of Superfund sites, but are tracking operating experience in the field on actual
wastes.   Firms  are  accepted into the program through a  formal annual solicitation.
Demonstrations  usually occur at Superfund sites or under conditions  that duplicate  or
closely simulate  actual conditions.  The developers are responsible for  transporting and
operating  their equipment during the demonstration while EPA assumes the remaining

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 costs for planning, sampling and analysis, and evaluation.  Although the law allows funding
 up to 50% of operating costs when developers can't pay, the terms are quite restrictive
 and the Agency has not provided funds directly to any developers.        ,

       At the present time, approximately thirty projects are in various stages of demonst-
 ration and/or evaluation.  Over one hundred proposals were submitted in response to the
 first three solicitations.  The primary reason for  rejecting proposals has been that tech-
 nologies are not ready for field demonstration (i.e., inadequate data or no operational unit
 available) or the technology is not applicable to Superfund problems.     ;
                                                                      I
                                                                      I
       Ten field demonstrations have been conducted and a like number are planned this
 year. To  date reports on six of these demonstrations have been published. | A concern of
 the Superfund program is that it is taking ORD  too long to complete and distribute
 project results.                                                        j.
                                                                      E
       Another component of the SITE program is the Emerging Technologies Program
 for the investigation of technologies that are not ready for full-scale demonstration.  The
 focus is on the evaluation of units which show promise at the pilot or laboratory scale.
 Two-year  funding  is  available  through  competitive cooperative  agreements.    While
 approximately seventy proposals were submitted in  response  to  each of the first two
 solicitations, the Agency will fund only about seven projects per year.
                                                                      i
       Although the SITE program is  off to a decent start, it  must be streamlined and
 modified to more fully satisfy technology information and development needs.  Oppor-
 tunities exist  to  help evaluate  and support  technologies not covered in the existing
 program.  This includes additional emerging technologies which  require further laboratory
 testing  and pilot scale development.   It  includes demonstrating additional innovative
 technologies that require more data and other kinds of information before they can meet
 current qualifications for the demonstration program. It  also includes new j innovative or
 available technologies which are being used commercially for the first time \ at Superfund
 sites—not as SITE demonstrations, but as the  selected remedy  for clean-up.  This latter
 type of "real world" performance data can be particularly important, especially in the areas
 of process reliability and cost.

       Other expansions have been suggested  by  those familiar with the SITE program.
Evaluating combinations of technologies is one example.   Currently, the | site program
focuses on individual technologies, but often two or more technologies must! be combined
to treat a  waste.  For example, soil contaminated  with metals and volatile drganics might
require use of a  thermal process to extract the organics, followed by use i of a washing
process to chemically remove the metals.  Each of these  steps involves subsequent steps
to treat the extracted organics and metals.  It may be difficult to  find vendors willing to
team-up on site demonstrations, but to  date a focused effort has not been made to do so.
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      There is  also a  need to expand the range and  types  of technologies that are
currently participating in the program.  While thermal and solidification technologies are
well represented, others such as biological, soil washing, and physical/chemical treatment
are sparse.  This is not the fault of the program since the solicitations are open.  But to
help expand the technology base, special outreach efforts may be needed to bring other
technologies into the program.

      The lesser focus on emerging technologies in the SITE program has largely been
a matter of program priorities.  Trying to get innovative technologies demonstrated in the
field has appropriately  been of higher priority  than further development  of emerging
technologies. But if emerging technologies are not fostered, the pipeline of technologies
ready for demonstrations could dry up.  One valuable  program that  is already under
development by ORD is the establishment of a "test and evaluation center" where vendors
can* bring emerging technologies for independent  (EPA) testing.  This facility  will  be
permitted for this purpose, thus eliminating that as an issue for the vendor. It is important
that the current  ORD effort be given priority so that the full potential of this facility can
be realized  in a  timely way.
RECOMMENDATIONS:  The Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation Program in
the Office of Research and Development should be expanded to demonstrate and evaluate
more new technologies,  and revised to provide more rapid dissemination of results.
Suggested expansions include:

       1.    .Evaluate performance and cost of technologies already being
             used at Superfund sites.

       2.     Conduct additional demonstrations of innovative technologies.

 ,.     3.     Support development of emerging laboratory and pilot scale
             technologies.

       4.     Establish a  fully permitted  and licensed test and evaluation
             center.

       5.     Evaluate combinations of technologies in addition to individual
             technologies.

       6.     Provide rapid  reporting  of demonstration results  through
             performance bulletins and by placing results in an information
             clearinghouse.  Reduce production time for full reports.
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        7.     Suggest ways to eliminate internal barriers to the introduction
              of new technologies into the Superfund program.
                                                                      r.
                                                                      i
    EXPAND RESEARCH TO DEVELOP NEW TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
 FINDINGS:  Although many new technologies begin in private-sector research laboratories,
 EPA supported research is a necessary and important ingredient to expanding development of
 new treatment technologies due to gaps in private research.                 '<


 DISCUSSION:  Continued research  is  needed to promote the  development of new
 technologies suitable for cleaning up contaminated sites. For example, additional research
 is needed on in-situ removal and recovery of organic contaminants as well as methodolog-
 ies to remove these contaminants from groundwater beneath the site.  The effectiveness,
 costs and cross-media impacts of these technologies must be investigated. Other research
 is needed to provide technologies for the removal of contaminants from soils, sludges and
 sediments.  In order to be cost-effective, the technologies developed must ireturn a large
 portion of the cleaned soil to its original  site with only the concentrated contaminant to
 be treated or removed. Several additional treatment technologies should be developed to
 determine  their effectiveness  for soil  and  debris  clean-up.   Improve^ combustion
 technologies for destroying contaminants in soil must also be  developed.   '

       To a large extent  private sector research  is  being  relied on to develop the
 technologies needed to  clean-up  ^Superfund sites.   The profit potential, of  successful
 technologies provides a natural incentive for this research.  Many new technologies have
 come to the market in this way. But private sector research does not completely address
 the needs for new technologies.  Since research can be costly, with payback bany years in
 the future and uncertain at  best,  private research is often limited  to justl a handful  of
 technologies believed to offer the greatest  potential for commercial success.  Some
 companies conduct little  or no  research, waiting instead for someone else to successfully
 prove a new concept that they can further develop.                       ,

       Given this situation, and the need for many new technologies to match the wide
 range of waste types and mixtures at differing sites, continued  EPA supported research is
 needed. A recent report on EPA's research activities by the EPA Science Advisory Board
 emphasized the need for a stronger long range EPA research program.  To (carry out this
research the Agency should continue its practice of support to  universities apd other non-
profit institutions and should devote some of its own people and laboratory facilities to this
effort.  To the maximum extent possible, EPA should  focus its research on areas not
adequately being addressed by the  private  sector.                         i
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      Congress passed a new law in 1986 that greatly improves the potential for EPA
research to be adopted and commercialized by the private sector.  This law, the Federal
Technology Transfer Act, P.L. 99-502, allows the laboratories of Federal agencies to enter
into cooperative R&D agreements with private companies, universities and state and local
governments.  The laboratories may enter into a variety of cooperative agreements and
may accept, retain and  use  funds, personnel, services and  property from  collaborating
parties in the interest of R&D and commercialization of issuing technologies.

      ORD has  successfully implemented this  new  authority  to license its patented
technology for the  control of emissions from coal-fired boilers.   A number of other
promising licensing  and joint-venture opportunities are  currently under  negotiations  or
being explored.


RECOMMENDATIONS: In-house and university research programs should be expanded
in & few, targeted areas where private research is lacking.   The Office of Research and
Development should convene an advisory group of industry and academia to develop a
priority list of areas where expanded EPA research is needed and where the private setior
is not currently engaged. EPA should actively conduct or support research in areas where
there is 'limited- private sector involvement.                        •
       REDUCE INSTITUTIONAL BARRIERS TO COMMERCIALIZATION
                OF INNOVATIVE TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES
FINDINGS: Many companies and entrepreneurs who develop technologies in their laborator-
ies are unable to successfully commercialize them even though they may be technically sound.
This is often due  to  lack of financial resources,  unfamiliarlty with the  marketplace,  or
inexperience in dealing with government requirements.
DISCUSSION:  A series of planning, marketing, financing, regulatory and other require-
ments must  be addressed before a  technically viable treatment technology becomes
commercially  available.  While well  established, financially sound companies may  be
experienced in addressing these issues, many of the newer and smaller firms that often
develop treatment technologies are not. Adding to the problem is the complexity of the
market for these technologies.

       There are great market uncertainties caused by changing statutes, as well as State
and Federal  regulations. The potential for the health of neighboring populations to be
negatively affected in a site cleanup also presents potential legal and financial liabilities.
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  The technologies  are inherently costly, so that even building a prototype can require
  substantial financing; but lenders are reluctant to put up capital unless they see test data
  substantiating technical viability and a credible marketing plan.  This creates a classic
  "chicken and egg"  problem.

        There are no easy solutions to these problems, but without a helping hand many
  promising  technologies may never make  it to the  marketplace.   EPA has recently
  embarked on one  program that holds promise for providing the help needed.

        The Office of Research  and  Development has recently established  a unique
 partnership of government, industry, and academia that  is dedicated to assisting with the
 commercialization  of new environmental technologies and products.  This partnership is
 called the National Environmental Technology Applications Corporation (NETAC). This
 new partnership, which is still under development, proposes to provide a wide range of
 commercialization  assistance, including business development (market analysis, financing
 analysis and referral, and planning), regulatory assessments and coordination, patent and
 licensing support, and related services.  The partnership  will also provide facilities where
 companies can test and evaluate their technologies to generate the technical data needed
 for  financing  and  marketing.  Education, training, and technology  transfer are  other
 planned activities for NETAC.
     «•                                                                 '

       This  new partnership offers great potential for bridging the very difficult commer-
 cialization gap faced  by innovating entrepreneurs.  This prototype partnership should be
 aggressively developed and given a high priority.  Although the NETAC charter is broader
 than hazardous waste technologies, priority should be given to  some earlyj efforts in the
 hazardous waste  area.  If NETAC is successful, it may serve  as a model that can be
 duplicated in the nation.
RECOMMENDATIONS:    The  Office  of Research  and  Development has  recently
established a partnership of government,  industry, and academia called the National
Environmental Technology Applications Cooperation that is dedicated to commercializa-
tion of new technologies and products.  It should receive strong support and emphasis
within the Agency to ensure rapid, full implementation.                 ;
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V.  AN AGGRESSIVE PROGRAM OF COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT

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                                 CHAPTER V
    AN AGGRESSIVE PROGRAM OF COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
INTRODUCTION

      In a very fundamental sense, EPA's Superfund staff are working for the people who
live near Superfund sites.  These people -- "the affected public" - are the ones whose
health may be threatened by contaminated soils or drinking water.  They have often had
to put up with the  site for years, unsure of its effects.  Typically, the initial EPA
investigations of the site raise both fears and hopes:  fears that the risks may be worse
than they had thought, and hopes that the government will finally do something about it.

      EPA owes these  people  action:   we owe them accurate, timely, understandable
information  about the site, its risks, and what we are doing, and we owe them a chance
to influence what will be done about the contamination.  EPA must communicate:  we
must listen, and we must respond.

      As discussed in other chapters of this report, the public finds the pace of Superfund
cleanups to be  unacceptably slow.   At some Superfund sites,  however,  the  public's
relationship with EPA has still been quite positive. At these sites, EPA staff met  with the
public early and often. They clearly explained to the public the reasons for the length of
time until cleanup, and they shared the results of their studies along the way.  The public
developed a deeper understanding of the problems of contamination, what can be done
about them technically,  and how EPA  will make cleanup decisions.  EPA staff now
understand the public's concerns, and have found ways to respond to them.

      At other sites, frustration has been the more typical response. To the public, the
"Super" "Fund" conjured  up images of quick cleanup, with Uncle Sam footing the bill. But
the reality was quite different. EPA took some years to  add these sites to the Superfund
list after its initial investigation of  them.  Long and complex studies came next.  The
companies that  caused the pollution in  the first place began to  play a major role in
carrying out first the studies and then the cleanup.   Citizens  became frustrated by the
delays and  doubted  the information produced by the studies.   EPA went into  long
negotiations with the companies, leaving citizens in the dark about what was going on.
Frustrations mounted. Citizens began to ask whether EPA is more interested in protecting
them, or making a deal with the  companies.
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                                     A Tale of Two Sites                        j
                                                                              i
       In  Woburn, Massachusetts, there are  two Superfimd sites that  illustrate  contrasting
       approaches to the community and contrasting results.                         .

       At the Industriplex Site, EPA communication with the public virtually ceased during years
       of protracted negotiations with the PRPs before the design of the remedial action.  Angry
       citizens involved their congressmen  and senators, and attracted day after day of critical
       coverage in the local paper.  When EPA finally held public meetings on its proposed
       actions, the room was packed with loud and hostile crowds.

       At about the same time, EPA was also working on a nearby    site,   a   contaminated
       municipal wellfield known as "Wells  G and H".  EPA's Remedial Project Manager worked
       actively and aggressively to inform the community there about the status of the site and to
       involve the citizens in making decisions about cleaning it up.  She sent out regular fact
       sheets and press releases, and she met frequently with the public and the local citizens
       group.  The site mailing list was expanded to included hundreds of residents, who were
       invited to join a work group to represent citizens' preferences during the earliest stage of
       developing the Feasibility Study.

       When the study was  about one-third  complete, EPA held an information session to
       familiarize the community with the remedial technologies and to solicit their initial reactions
       and ideas.  After this extensive community involvement, the public meeting on the proposed
       cleanup plan was a constructive working session.   Fifty people listened attentively and
       offered cogent comments as  partners in the process, rather than as angry adversaries. EPA
       is now writing the Record of Decision to choose the final remedy.              !
       In reviewing EPA's record in community involvement, the task  group  combined
case studies and interviews. We examined in detail events at four sites:  the Koppers and
McColl sites in California, the Toms River site in New Jersey, and the  Industrial Excess
Landfill site in Uniontown, Ohio.  We interviewed citizens, local officials, state staff, and
EPA staff at each of these sites. At a natipnal level, we interviewed the staff of several
national environmental organizations, and participated in joint discussions with staff of the
House and Senate.  We also interviewed EPA staff and managers in  the regions and  in
Headquarters.  We organized our work around five major topics:  citizen views of PRPs,
citizen involvement in EPA decisions, citizen access to information, EPA's communication
with  citizens,  and  the Technical  Assistance Grants  (TAG) program.   In  total, our
conclusions  are based on over 90 interviews.
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EXPANDING THE PUBLIC'S ROLE IN AN "ENFORCEMENT FIRST" PROGRAM
FINDING:   Citizens see a fundamental inequity between their role in the Superfund program
and the role of the potentially responsible parties C'PKPs"), who have more access to EPA, and
more information, expertise and resources with which to fight for the decisions that they want


DISCUSSION:
                  ....... Citizen perspective on PRPs, in a Nutshell        ;

       We didn't cause this problem, but we're living with it. We have a right to influence cleanup
       decisions. The company that caused the problem will have much more influence than us
       on these cleanup decisions.  They will have high-powered attorneys and technical advisers
       who speak EPA's language. They have access to information that we do not have, and they
       have lots of time and resources to devote to influencing EPA's decision.  This situation is
       unfair 100%,,    .                                             ,.  _. ..   . . . •„
Citizen Concern About PRPs

       The most consistent finding from our case studies and interviews is the strongly held
belief of citizens that the polluters who caused a Superfund problem cannot be trusted to
study the problem objectively or to clean it up. "There is a built-in conflict of interest for
PRPs," said one citizen.

       Compared  to citizens, PRPs  are seen  as having  unfair influence  on  cleanup
decisions.  They have easy access  to EPA through technical meetings and  negotiation
sessions.  PRPs often directly control data  on which remedial decisions are based  by
conducting the Remedial Investigation and Feasibility Study, subject to oversight by EPA,
which  is seen, as less than consistently effective.  Citizens  see themselves systematically
excluded from technical and negotiation sessions with PRPs.  The formal views that citizens
express during the comment period on a proposed remedial action have much less weight
than the views of PRPs, because the PRPs can frame more effective technical arguments
and because potentially responsible party willingness to carry out a remedial action may
affect EPA's choice  of remedy.

       At all four sites examined in this review, the role of PRPs in site investigation and
cleanup was an important  issue.  Citizens near McColl cited Exxon's track record in the
Alaska oil spill as an example of corporate behavior that they feared.  At McColl, EPA
carried out  the remedial investigation and feasibility study, but PRPs may carry out the
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 remedial action.  Exxon itself is not a PRP at the site, but is a symbol to the citizens of
 their reasons not to trust corporations to do environmental cleanup. At the Koppers site
 in northern California, citizens mistrust the operator of the site, and are concerned about
 a long history of pollution problems caused by the site.  At the Industrial Excess Landfill
 site in Uniontown, Ohio, there is deep animosity between the active citizen group and the
 PRPs. When the PRPs rejected a citizen request for a direct Technical Assistance Grant
 by  sending the group an unsigned letter  bearing no company's  identifying letterhead,
 citizens saw this as brusque and insensitive.

       At the Toms River, New Jersey, site, citizens are opposed to  Ciba-Geigy's activities,
 but the relationship between citizens and the Company is somewhat different than at the
 other sites.  Citizens were strongly opposed to letting the Company conduct the Remedial
 Investigation and Feasibility Study, but they are not so opposed to having Ciba-Geigy carry
 out the remedial action itself.  Of the four case studies, Toms River is the only site where
 citizens seem comfortable with the idea of PRP cleanup work.  There seem to be four
 reasons why they tolerate PRP involvement. First, EPA has been heavily involved with the
 site and has worked directly with the citizens.  The citizens do not appear to question
 EPA's effectiveness or  trustworthiness.   Second,  Ciba-Geigy funded a direct "Technical
 Assistance Grant" to the citizens, at the urging of EPA Region 2.  Third, Ciba-Geigy has
 given citizens direct access  to information about the site.  Fourth, the citizens have been
 meeting directly with EPA and Ciba-Geigy to discuss their technical concerns. Even with
 this background, however, citizens still expressed their fear that Ciba-Geigy would have
 undue influence on the impending cleanup decision.

 Citizen Concerns about EPA

       EPA staff often are  puzzled about why the public seems not to trust them.  They
 see themselves as the people hired to carry out the Superfund law, representing the public
 interest in clashes with the responsible  parties.  But many citizens see EPA staff quite
 differently.  They have a skeptical view  of government generally, and they often have an
 unfavorable impression of  Superfund, drawn from press coverage and  the  barrage of
 criticism leveled at the program nationally.  In their  initial encounters with EPA, their
 expectations for quick action are not met.  They may wonder whether their  idea of
 cleanup is the same as EPA's.  They may be somewhat overwhelmed by technical
 complexity and resent losing control to the "experts".  In that setting, citizens may not be
willing to completely trust EPA to represent them in confidential negotiations with PRPs.
RECOMMENDATION:

      If EPA is to gain public support for an "enforcement-first" approach to Superfund
cleanups, EPA must correct this imbalance by giving citizens a greater role in Superfund
decisions. It is critical that EPA have - and be seen to have - a fair and open process

                                       5-4                       •    !

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 that gives citizens some measure of control over what will happen. Three major sections
 of this chapter contain specific recommendations that are important in correcting the
 citizen/PRP imbalance. Briefly, they cover these points:

       I.  EPA should involve citizens more extensively in the process of making
       decisions about clean-up at Superfund sites, including  innovative ways of
       bringing citizens and PRPs together to build a consensus (see pages 5-5 to
       5-8).

       2.  EPA should assure that citizens have access to the same technical
       information about the site that EPA and the PRPs have,  (see pages 5-13 to
       5-15).

       3. EPA should reform the Technical Assistance Grants program to eliminate
       barriers to their use (see pages 5-16 to 5-22).

 In addition, EPA should strengthen its oversight of responsible party work.  This issue is
 covered  in Chapter  Two.  Its importance is underlined here,  however, because of the
 emphasis placed on  this point by citizens.
                      INVOLVING CITIZENS IN DECISIONS
FINDINGS:  Citizens question whether they actually influence EPA decisions, or whether
EPA's community relations program is really just "sophisticated public relations"   EPA
managers have mixed feelings about public involvement.   Some are strong supporters of it;
others object because of philosophy, cost, and delay.


DISCUSSION:  Some critics of EPA charge that EPA's community relations program is
primarily a "public relations" program rather than a "public involvement" program.   They
mean that EPA  is concentrating on giving communities information, not on finding ways
to learn about  their concerns  and give  them  some weight in EPA's decision-making
process.  People  do give EPA high marks for the quality of the information it puts out, but
they want EPA to make the communications process a two-way street.

Philosophy

      Some EPA managers believe strongly in the role of citizens in decision-making.  A
regional manager said:  "Better community relations will always lead to better site  work.
The  public is  our best  critic and judge of acceptable performance."   A Headquarters
manager said:  "An  open process leads to better  decisions.  It lets citizens add fresh

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information to the process.  It forces EPA to defend its. assumptions, judgements, arid
decisions, and it exposes their weaknesses."  However,  other EPA managers  believe
strongly that Superfund decisions are primarily scientific, and that citizens are unlikely to
be able to raise the kinds of evidence or questions that they will find persuasive.  These
managers tend to stress EPA's obligation to inform and educate the citizens, but they tend
not to give citizen concerns substantial weight in their decisions.        -  j  ,   .

Cost                                                                 !

       Allowing people  to  participate  meaningfully in  Superfund  decisions  requires
extensive  resources,  because the decisions  and the problems are so  complex.   Some
managers and RPMs who support more extensive public involvement are simply unable to
do much  more without sacrificing other important objectives of the program, such as
technical oversight of PRP or contractor work.

Delay

       EPA is frequently criticized for being "bean-driven" -- that is, for putting deadlines
ahead of other important considerations, such as citizen concerns.  At the same time, EPA
is also criticized for not meeting its deadlines and for the slow pace of the program. This
tension is intrinsic to Superfund.  We found RPMs uncertain about the relative priority of
citizen concerns and adhering to schedules.  One RPM said:  "What  does Headquarters
really want?  Do they want us to meet deadlines no matter what, or  do they want us to
be responsive  to citizens?"

       A good example of this tension is when citizens ask for more sampling in order to
better understand the contamination at a site.  If this request is made after the remedial
investigation is completed, responding to it usually means delaying the schedule  for the
remedial decision. The additional cost of sampling can also be a constraint.  While some
requests for additional sampling may have little technical validity, others may be warranted,
but site managers are unable to respond to them because of limited budgets or impending
deadlines.

       Another practical problem confronting site managers is how much time they should
allow for public comment and response in their planning for ROD deadlines.  While some
sites with little or no controversy can be handled with  the  minimum 30 day  comment
period, experience has shown that a 60 day comment period is much  more reasonable
whenever citizens or PRPs are actively involved.                                   '
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RECOMMENDATIONS:
                               a
The Administrator should strongly support increased citizen involvement in Superfund
decisions, dedicating the resources necessary for greater citizen involvement, and accepting
occasional delays as a result

EPA managers and staff should listen carefully to what citizens are saying, take the time
necessary to deal with their concerns, change planned actions where citizen suggestions
have merit, and then explain to citizens what EPA has done and why.

Regional managers should factor adequate time  for public comment and response  into
their planning for ROD deadlines.

The standard public comment period on EPA's proposed plans should be 60 days (rather
than 30), whenever citizens or PRPs request it.

Regions should have a discretionary fund that they could use to fund additional work
necessary to respond to citizen concerns.
FINDING:  EPA cannot always do what citizens ask.  Citizens do not always get clear,
candid explanations from EPA about its actions, however.
DISCUSSION:    There are limits to EPA's ability to respond to citizen concerns. The
law can be an important constraint.  Sometimes EPA clearly lacks authority (oil and gas
problems are excluded from Superfund, for example).  Sometimes  EPA believes it has
sufficient legal authority to take an  action, but the PRPs challenge that authority.  For
example, at the Koppers site,  citizens wanted air monitoring, but the PRPs challenged
EPA's legal basis for requiring it.  EPA eventually did the monitoring, and a court ruled
in EPA's favor on the challenge  by the PRPs.  Despite this effort,  relations with the
community remain strained.

      Clear, candid explanations of the reasons for EPA's decisions are often a  missing
element in EPA's relationships with citizens.  Responsiveness summaries are a formal tool
for providing such explanations. However, these summaries often seem to citizens to be
defensive legal exercises by EPA to prevent legal challenges to its decisions.
RECOMMENDATION:  Whether EPA can do what citizens ask or not, we should always
provide them a clear explanation of the basis for our decision. A responsiveness summary
should reflect a genuine attempt to come to grips with citizens' questions and concerns;
it should not appear to be an advocacy brief piling up evidence for why EPA's original
decision was the only possible one.
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FINDING:   The earlier that EPA establishes a working relationship with citizens near a site,
the greater chance there is for trust and confidence to develop between the parties.
DISCUSSION:   It has long been a principle of EPA's community relations program that
early involvement is critical to a  successful working relationship with the public near
Superfimd sites.  Citizens are still  concerned, however, that they are sometimes brought
into the process later than they  would like.  One important  early point for citizen
involvement is EPA's initial investigation  of a site (the  Preliminary Assessment/Site
Inspection).  Another early point of concern to citizens is the initial development of EPA's
community relations plans at sites on the National Priorities List.

      The selection of the cleanup remedy is not the only important decision made at a
Superfund site. Significant decisions are made throughout the Superfund cleanup process.
Key  decision  points  include  (1)  the  scope  of  the  Remedial  Investigation  (what
contaminants to look for); (2) screening alternatives for the Feasibility Study (what ways
are there to clean up the site);  (3) what treatability studies are needed; (4) the selection
of remedy through the Record of Decision; and (5) any modifications to  the selected
remedy as a result of the remedial design work.

      One Headquarters manager suggested that EPA should have  a "docket" approach
to its Superfund decisions at each site.  By that, he meant that EPA should add documents
to the administrative record as they become available, and be open to receiving comments
on the accumulating information and studies about the site.  This approach would allow
citizens or- PRPs to provide comments at any stage of the Superfund cleanup process,
rather than just waiting for the formal comment period on the proposed plan.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

EPA  managers  and staff should plan for citizen involvement  at  each stage of the
Superfund process, beginning with the initial investigations at a site.

EPA should discuss site findings and decisions as they are developed,  not only at the end
of the Feasibility Study.

While a formal comment period is required only at the Proposed Plan stage, EPA should
make documents available to citizens and to PRPs throughout the cleanup process, and
be open to receiving comments continually as well.
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                MAINTAINING CONSISTENT COMMUNICATION
FINDING: EPA's communication with citizens near sites is not as frequent as site managers
and community relations staff think is necessary.   Citizen  expectations of what constitutes
regular and consistent communication are even higher than what EPA thinks is "frequent".
DISCUSSION:  Communicating to the public is the strongest part of EPA's community
relations program.  Fact sheets are widely used to let the public know what is going on,
and to explain the complexities of site contamination, risks, cleanup options, and EPA's
study and decision procedures.  EPA Headquarters has written some excellent fact sheets
explaining the Superfund program generally, and regional fact sheets on particular sites are
often very good.  EPA staff meet with people in their homes, and they use small group
workshops, public meetings, and public hearings, as appropriate.  EPA Headquarters has
sponsored training on community relations and communication  skills; a  course on risk
communication is the newest offering.

      We  found,  however, that  regional community relations  staff and site  managers
believe our communications program  does not start early enough and is less consistent and
effective than is necessary. As a result, EPA is not meeting citizen expectations for
consistency and continuity in communications.

Resource Problems

      Limited time  and  resources  for  regional  staff  keep  them from doing the
communication they think necessary and essential. Site managers and community relations
staff are concerned that EPA may be letting some potentially serious conflicts develop with
communities because they cannot get out to the sites early enough or frequently enough.
They must spend their time on sites with long  histories of citizen  concern and on sites
going through the formal public comment process at the proposed plan/Record of Decision
stage. At other sites, their contact with citizens  is irregular at best.

      Fixing this problem is not easy. It is simply part of the larger problem of resources
for all the staff that implement Superfund in the field.  Staff we talked to believe that the
site  managers and  the  community relations  staff  need more  time  to devote  to
communications.  (The  division of responsibility for communicating with citizens varies
from region to region.  In some cases the site manager carries the primary responsibility,
while in other cases the community relations staff does.)
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      In addition to increasing EPA's own staff, there are a few other ways pf increasing
the resources devoted to communications with the public:

      1.     Regions are hiring Senior Environmental Employees to work
             with the TAG program.  These people are retirees hired by a
             senior citizens organization, such as the American Association
             of Retired Persons, to work for EPA. These employees do not
             count against staffing ceilings, and EPA's experience in using
             retirees to represent the Agency has been quite good in the
             asbestos program.  All the regions have contracts in place  to
             hire such staff as they need them. Regions could experiment
             with using these staff for more extensive communications work
             besides TAGs.

      2.     Where sites are located at some distance from EPA's regional
             office,  it is usually difficult for EPA  staff to see citizens  in
             person very often.  As a variation on option #1, EPA could
             hire retirees who live in the community near the sites.  These
             employees  could work on a part-time basis to inform local
             officials, citizen  groups, and other community leaders about
             developments at the site.

      3.     Using  state or  local  officials  to represent EPA at  sites is
             another way of coping with the limits to EPA resources and the
             distance problems.  At the Bunker  Hill site in Idaho, for
             example, a local health officer of the state health agency serves
             as the community representative for both EPA and the state.
             EPA supports this position with grant money to the state. One
             problem at some sites, however, is that EPA and the state (or
             the local government) sometimes disagree strongly about the
             appropriate course of action at a site.   Such disagreements
             make it both difficult and inappropriate for a  state  or local
             official to represent EPA.

       4.     EPA also uses contractors to support its community relations
             work.  The results are mixed.  In some cases, where EPA has
             used contractors to communicate directly with the community,
             citizens have resented not being able to speak directly to EPA
             EPA often uses contractors to interview citizens as they prepare
             community relations plans, however, and this practice is likely
             to continue, given EPA's starring problems.  Contractors can
             also be used to write fact sheets, provide logistical support  for
             public meetings, and  so forth.  EPA's  experience  is that
             contractor support is most effective where the contractors can
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            ensure the continuity of their staff.  In that case, the cost of
            using  a contractor to draft  fact  sheets  (or other short
            turnaround tasks) declines, and the quality goes up.  Continuity
            is so  important to  communications, however,  that more
            contractor support for community relations cannot be relied on
            to solve the "consistent communication"  problem described
            above.  We must do the bulk of this important work ourselves.

Citizen Expectations

      Citizens' perceptions of what constitutes regular and consistent communication are
not the same as EPA staffs.  We found that citizens expect more than EPA staff, even
though EPA staff members think they should be doing more than they are able to do.
Where EPA has a successful relationship with a community at a controversial site, there
is a consistent pattern of regular, frequent communication with the community.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

The Administrator should increase the number of site managers and community relations
staff to allow more frequent communication with the affected public.

EPA should firmly establish communication as a high priority for Superfund managers,
site managers, and community relations staff.

Regions should experiment with using Senior Environmental Employees more extensively
in Superfund. Where sites  are some distance from EPA offices. Regions can hire retirees
who live in the communities near the sites to take questions and provide information.

EPA should consider using state or local officials to represent EPA at sites as another
way of coping with the limits to EPA resources and the distance problems.
FINDING:  Frequent turnover of EPA staff is hurting EPA's communications with citizens
near sites.
DISCUSSION:   Citizens are frustrated by turnover in EPA staff. Communities complain
that they have to train EPA staff about the site.  The history of the site matters a great
deal to site residents; new government staff do not know the history.  Communities feel
that they must rebuild their relationship with the new staff, and reeducate them about
their concerns. The turnover of any key staff can be disruptive - EPA's site manager or
community relations staff, state staff, or contractors. Citizens often view them all together.
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      Some of this turnover is inevitable. The turnover of site managers in some regions
has been quite high, and similar turnover patterns for community relations staff also exist
in some regions.  Even where staff are not leaving, there are continuity problems. As the
number of sites and the number of EPA staff have increased, some existing staff shift part
of theu: workload to new people.  EPA tends not to think of this as staff turnover, since
no one has left, but the effect on citizens is the same.   Both shifts in workload and staff
departures create real problems for EPA's relationship with site residents.

      Some regions have dealt with the turnover problem by emphasizing communication
with the community. They hold a meeting with the community where the old site manager
introduces the new site manager, and explains his or her departure. Some regions have
sent supervisors to such meetings to assure the community of continuity.  If a meeting is
noj  possible, some departing site managers have  written a  letter to  the  community
explaining their departure, introducing their replacement, and explaining the reasons for
the switch.

      Turnover also creates  a continuing need for training.  The turnover rate of site
managers and community relations staff is high enough that only the more experienced
regional staff are likely to have received EPA's community relations and communications
training.  Training is another  area where the broader problems for RPMs overlap with
those of community relations. New site managers in particular face a formidable  list of
demands  for a variety of technical, administrative,  and safety training; communications
training is one significant part of that mix.
 RECOMMENDATIONS:

 EPA should be sensitive to the problems that staff turnover create for the community,
 and should preserve the continuity  of  staff assignments as much as possible.   For
 example, these problems should be considered as costs in deciding whether to reorganize.

 EPA managers should try to keep continuity and site history on the team if one  team
 member must be replaced. For example:  if the site manager is new, the community
 relations coordinator probably  should not be switched.

 EPA should educate new staff about the site's history and the community's involvement
 and concerns, and the importance of those concerns.

 EPA should communicate staff changes to the community and demonstrate that their
 concerns are understood.

 EPA  should  provide communications training  (both speaking and  listening)  to all
 Superfund staff who deal directly with the public.
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                ENSURING CITIZEN ACCESS TO INFORMATION


 FINDING:   Citizens cannot consistently get the information they request.  Citizens are
 concerned that their access to information is much less than that of PRPs.
 DISCUSSION:    Ensuring citizen access to information is an important goal, but it is
 sometimes difficult to put in practice. We found examples where EPA staff had worked
 out practical ways of providing citizens direct access to information about a site.  We
 found other cases where citizens perceived EPA as holding back information from them.
 There are a few  damaging examples of barriers to  citizen use of information, such as
 information repositories only open during the working day, high copying costs, or refusal
 to  release information  until Freedom of Information requests were filed.  While  these
 barriers are the exception, not the rule, they should not exist at all.

       One major reason why EPA staff sometimes withhold information from citizens is
 that EPA wants to be sure that data are accurate, and  that reports done by contractors
 do not contain misstatements of EPA policy or  plans.  Yet the delay caused by EPA's
 review seems to citizens as an attempt to cover up information, raising questions about
 EPA's motives.   Explanations  about EPA's need to review or correct contractor  work
 products only cause citizens to wonder why EPA is using contractors  at all, if they can't
 be trusted to do good work.  EPA staff thus face a tough dilemma - they must choose
 between possibly having to explain errors in an unreviewed draft, or losing trust by being
 accused of withholding  information from the public.
                       Success story: Bowers Landfill, Circleville, Ohio

       EPA Region 5 staff gave citizens a schedule of "deliverables" — the reports and data that
       the PRPs were sending to EPA The citizens were told which products they would get
       immediately (at the same time that EPA got them from the PRPs conducting the study),
       and which products they would get on the second draft (to allow EPA review time to assure
       that the products were accurate). Citizens then knew exactly what information was being
       produced about the site, and when to expect it.
      Another important reason why EPA staff are sometimes unresponsive to citizen
requests is that the quantity of information is large, and the costs of providing easy access
to it are significant.  Hence, EPA staff sometimes tend to rely on the fact that a copy of
a document may be in the information  repository, and they  resist requests for ways of
making  the information more  directly accessible to the requesting citizens. In a program
where staff are consistently overworked, it is not unreasonable that they will look for ways
to manage their workload.
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      It is clear that there are real limits to what EPA can accomplish at current staffing
levels.  Citizens should have reasonable expectations of EPA.  At the Uniontown site, for
example, citizens have asked for individual copies  of EPA's studies for about 15 citizen
/leaders as well as for their technical advisers.  It is appropriate for EPA to provide copies
of relevant reports directly to technical advisers, and it is consistent with the purpose and
spirit of this provision  of the law.  Providing  individual copies of lengthy studies directly
to many citizen leaders is  much less practical, however.

      Both these conflicts, however, ultimately damage EPA's credibility with  citizens,
which depends heavily on citizen  confidence that  they can count on EPA  to share  all
information with them. One EPA regional staffer observed:

     . The costs of not giving information to  citizens, of being seen as  closed and
      secretive, far outweigh the costs of giving the information, even of explaining
      errors in drafts.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

EPA should be more aggressive about supplying information to citizens and their technical
advisors.  Citizens' access to information should be comparable to that of PRPs.  Neither
citizens nor PRPs should have to wait until the end of the Remedial Investigation and
Feasibility Study to learn the results of the studies.

EPA should ensure access to information by (1) establishing information repositories that
are convenient to the affected public; (2) completing any necessary review of documents
quickly,  so  that  the documents  can  be  released;  (3)  placing  documents  in  the
administrative record and the information repositories  as soon as possible;  and (4)
notifying citizens of the  availability of that information through  fact sheets  and other
mailings.

EPA  should  require PRPs  and  its own  contractors to write clear,  understandable
summaries of complex  technical documents.  EPA  should  provide  copies of those
summaries directly to citizens.
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FINDINGS:  Citizens mistrust EPA's practice of closed-door sessions with PRPs.  They feel
excluded from the technical debate about a site.  EPA success stories in working with citizens
often include some open forum for technical discussions throughout the Remedial Investigation
and Feasibility Study process.  Some PRPs have found a well informed community to be an
asset in facilitating a timefy remedy selection process that does  not  arouse  community
opposition.  Some of these PRPs have made technical assistance grants directly to citizens'
groups.
DISCUSSION:    Citizens have asked to attend EPA's meetings with PRPs.  EPA is
concerned about allowing citizens access to negotiations, because it is not consistent with
practice in disputes where litigation is a distinct possibility. Citizens ask, however, whether
there are reasons to exclude them from technical meetings. Access to these meetings does
not pose  a  direct challenge to  the legal  negotiations, but it does  pose some practical
problems  of whether citizens  have a right to notice, to convenient meeting times and
locations, to ask and have questions answered, to fully participate hi technical debates, and
so forth.  It is difficult to craft a policy that creates rights without encountering a lot of
problems in implementation.  Because of these problems, we stop short of recommending
that citizens have a right of access to all technical meetings.

       On the  other  hand,  EPA's  success stories in working with citizens have often,
included some forum for technical discussions.   The  enforcement  chapter  of EPA's
community  relations  guidance  encourages technical workshops, preferably  with  the
participation of PRPs. At the Toms River, New  Jersey, site, citizens and their technical
advisers have met directly with Ciba-Geigy and EPA to discuss remedial alternatives. The
Bowers site in  Ohio has an information  committee of citizens, state  and local officials,
EPA, and PRPs formed in response to citizen comments on a proposed consent agreement
for the PRPs to do the Remedial Investigation and Feasibility Study.  For four years, the
Bunker Hill site in Idaho has had a task group that serves as a regular forum for meetings
between representatives of the community, local officials, state officials, and EPA.
RECOMMENDATION:

EPA should encourage the Regions to find ways to bring citizens into technical discussions
early in the Remedial Investigation and Feasibility Study process, especially where there
are active citizen groups, technical advisers to those groups, or interested local officials.
This may mean involvement in technical meetings with PRPs, or it may mean other
mechanisms that have proven successful, such as Technical Review Committees composed
of citizens, local government officials, and PRPs.  The Agency should also encourage PRPs
to provide grants to communities to enable  them to acquire  independent technical
assistance. EPA should provide information and advice to PRPs and citizens regarding
the successful use of such grants at other Superfund sites.
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               SIMPLIFYING TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE GRANTS

FINDING:   Technical Assistance  Grants  (TAGs)  are an important symbol  of EPA's
commitment to public involvement.   The TAG program is not working well.  Citizens are
deterred from using TAGs by the match requirements, and by the complicated application and
procurement processes.  EPA financial managers are wary of potential risks in failing to
exercise strict oversight of the TAG program.
DISCUSSION:      Citizens  near NPL  sites,  members  of  Congress,  and  national
environmental organizations all view TAGs as an important symbol of EPA's commitment
to .public involvement.  TAGs are particularly important as a way of addressing the
imbalance between citizens  and PRPs, since they are a way for citizen groups near
Superfund NPL sites to acquire independent expertise to  interpret technical information
and to participate in the technical debate about site cleanup.

      TAGs were authorized by the 1986 Superfund amendments.  In March 1988, EPA
issued an interim final rule that allowed the first TAGs to be granted.  Nineteen grants
have been awarded to date, and technical advisors have been hired at only a fraction of
these sites.

      EPA's implementation of the TAG program has been roundly criticized by both
Houses of Congress, national environmental groups, the Office of Technology Assessment,
citizens, and others. The people we interviewed are upset by  the delays in establishing the
TAG program, the low rate of applications, and the restrictions, complexity, costs, and red
tape.  They conclude that EPA is trying to frustrate the intent of the statute.

      The perception  exists, especially  among those familiar with  the TAG
      legislation, that EPA specifically wrote the regulations to  discourage groups
      from  applying  [for  grants]  and to resist Congressional pressure to make
      money more available to citizen groups that might challenge EPA decisions.
                                      — EPA survey of citizen groups.

      A consistent picture of the problems with TAGs emerges  from two recent detailed
surveys of citizen groups near NPL sites.  One survey was done for Congress, and one was
done for EPA itself.  Both surveys found the following:

      *     The  35% matching  fund   requirement  is  excessive  and
            discourages a significant number of groups from participating
            in the program, particularly when coupled with the 15% cap
            on administrative in-kind services.
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      *     The application process is too complex and burdensome. As
            a result, many groups interested in TAGS do not actually apply.
            Those who do apply complain about the complexity and length
            of the process and the time and effort required.

      *     Few community groups have experience with grants. Even if
            administrative  requirements are simplified, most will  need
            personal  assistance  from  EPA staff,  starting  early  in the
            application process.

      *     The  procurement  regulations  and  other  administrative
            requirements are too complex and should be simplified as much
            as prudent financial management will allow.                       ,

Our own interviews with citizens and EPA staff confirmed these findings. While EPA may
not have deliberately  erected barriers to discourage  applicants, the Agency's strict and
cautious application of federal policies and procedures in the regulations, guidance and its
implementation of the TAG  program have had that effect.

      We believe it is critical for EPA to correct these problems.   Citizens deserve  an
equal voice in technical debates about Superfund sites,  and Technical Assistance Grants
are an important tool to help them.  The rest of this section discusses specific problems
with the TAG program and  our recommendations for improvements.

Matching Fund Requirements

      The TAG regulations require grant recipients to provide matching funds equal to
35% of the total of the federal grant and citizen's matching funds.  For example, groups
must contribute  $26,923 in cash or in-kind services to match a  $50,000 federal grant.  A
maximum of 15% of the total grant amount can be  used for  administrative costs  or
services.  EPA estimates that a group contributing only  in-kind  services to meet the 35%
match for a $50,000, three-year grant would have to contribute about 20 hours per week
for those three years.

      The matching fund requirements established by the previous Administration go well
beyond the minimum requirements  set by Congress.  The 35% match is more than the
minimum 20% Congress required, and the 15%  limit on administrative costs has  no basis
in the statute. These  requirements are significant deterrents to applicants because of the
money and time necessary to meet them.   Any match  may discourage some applicants,
particularly those with limited financial resources or time.  Congressional staff report that
these are the very groups  the grants were intended to help. A match may also seem art
unfair burden to groups who already perceive themselves as victims of the situation or who
may already have suffered adverse health or economic impacts. For groups who have no
cash or technical expertise and can only contribute administrative services as their match,
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  the 15% cap on administrative costs may keep them from qualifying for a grant.  EPA
  should reduce the match requirement to the statutory 20%, and should eliminate the limit
  on administrative costs.

        Congress established the requirement that groups  contribute at least 20% of the
  costs of technical assistance, but  provided for waivers of the match  requirement "if the
  grant recipient demonstrates financial need and such waiver is necessary to facilitate public
  participation in the selection of remedial action."

        The TAG regulations for waivers of the match are more restrictive than the law in
  several ways.   First,  the regulations say waivers should only be granted in "exceptional
  circumstances."  This language has been interpreted by  some Regions and citizens  as
  establishing a more stringent standard for waivers, although EPA Headquarters staff say
  this was not intended.  Second, the regulations  require EPA to make  three findings  to
  grant a waiver:  (1) proof of unusual financial hardship, (2) proof of an effort to raise the
  match, and (3) proof that a waiver is necessary to facilitate public participation.  The first
  finding is more restrictive than the statute; finding #2 seems consistent with Congressional
  intent; finding #3 is directly from the law. EPA should delete the reference to "exceptional
  circumstances" and should change finding #1 to match the statutory  language.

       Finally, EPA interpreted the last clause of the waiver portion of Section 117(e) as
 a prohibition  on waivers after  the  Record  of Decision  (ROD)  is signed  for  the last
 operable unit  at a site.  This may preclude waivers  and therefore participation at sites
 where the ROD must be re-opened,  where decisions affecting the remedy are made after
 the ROD, where the effectiveness  of the selected remedy will  be tested during the design
 phase (after the ROD), or  where the ROD is performance-based.    EPA should allow
 petitions for waivers in these circumstances.

 The Application Process

       The process is tedious and complex.  I have prepared applications for grants worth over
       a million dollars that are simpler and easier to deal with [than the TAG program
       application].                                                      r
                                             - a successful applicant.

       EPA has  received letters of intent to apply for grants at 93 sites; 36 groups have
 followed through with grant  applications, and the Agency has awarded 19 grants to date.
 Twelve more applications are still being processed or are awaiting revisions by citizen
 groups.  EPA  has rejected five applications,  either because of a group's ineligibility or
 because  a group has failed to make needed revisions to its application.

      A majority of citizen groups surveyed reported they were frustrated by or did not
follow through  with the application process primarily because they were overwhelmed by
the complexity and  bureaucracy of  the program and the 35% match.  The standard
Federal grant application seems complicated to most applicants, particularly the budget

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portion, which is especially difficult. EPA has added to the burden by requiring applicants
to provide additional information to  help the Agency determine eligibility and evaluate
competing applications.

      The application forms and process could be simplified without sacrificing quality,
particularly  if EPA staff work  closely with applicants.  EPA  should streamline the
application  while reserving the  right  to request additional information if competing
applications are submitted.  EPA should  allow applicants to defer development and
submission of the detailed budget until after a grant is awarded.

      The first  impression many interested groups get of the TAG process is the inch-
thick Citizens' Guidance Manual.  Most groups surveyed rated the manual "somewhat
difficult" because it was  too long, the pages were not adequately indexed, examples were
difficult to follow, and some statements were misleading. Not surprisingly, many conclude
that the application must be extremely difficult to require such a lengthy manual and may
not be worth the bother. EPA should simplify the manual and develop an index to make
it easier to use.

       Hands-on EPA assistance to citizen groups is invaluable from the very beginning of
the  application  process.  Most  Regions provide such assistance, although this was not
always the case earlier.  Delays in the application process are less frequent and are shorter
than when the program first started, but still occur.  EPA should continue  to emphasize
help to applicants and expeditious processing of their applications.

Procurement

       Citizens are also frustrated by the complexity of procurement requirements, which
many see as out of proportion to the size of the grants and  the intent of the law.EPA's
survey  found  that most  TAG applicants  agree  with  EPA that some competitive
procurement process should be  followed to ensure that groups get qualified advisors that
will provide them the  assistance they want.  However, EPA  has been  criticized for
requiring grantees to  follow standard federal procurement requirements, rather than
adopting simplified, TAG-specific requirements.  EPA has also been criticized because the
 citizen's manual suggests that people are required to do more than the minimum required
by law.

       A recent  Congressional report recommended  that  EPA  simplify the TAG
 procurement process by issuing a class deviation to apply small purchase regulations for
 the entire  grant  amount (the  current ceiling is  $25,000).  This  recommendation  is
 controversial within EPA because of the precedent it would set foi; other small purchases.
 EPA should (1) immediately clarify  the TAG guidance on procurement to emphasize the
 flexibility possible under the current regulation and (2) amend the TAG regulations as
 soon  as  possible  to  specify  procurement  procedures  similar   to  small  purchase
 requirements.   .
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 The Reincorporation Requirement

       The reincorporation  requirement has kept  some  groups from  applying  for  or
 receiving grants. Virtually all parties agree that groups should be incorporated to  ensure
 that individuals are protected, but some groups that are already incorporated and show a
 history of involvement at a site don't want to reincorporate or are prohibited from doing
 so by their own rules.  EPA  should revise the  regulations to allow groups already
 incorporated and with a history of involvement  to apply without  reincorporating.

 The $50,000 Limit Per Site

       In the regulations, EPA prohibited waivers of the $50,000 limit per site and did not
 provide for renewal of grants, even though such waivers and renewals are allowed  by the
 statute.  This was done to allow the Agency to gain some practical experience with the
 grants and to reach consensus on what the waiver standards should be. Some groups are
 already asking for waivers and renewals.  EPA should move quickly to establish criteria
 for waivers and should amend the regulations to permit them, consistent with the  law.
 EPA  should also establish guidelines for renewal of grants where necessary to faciitate
 public participation in all stages of remedial action.

 Restrictions on Eligible Activities and Groups

       The primary concern expressed by some citizen groups about restrictions on eligible
 activities is  the prohibition on collection of new primary data  - i.e., sampling.  EPA has
 reservations -about collection of data for several reasons, including the high cost of
 sampling and  concerns  about sampling and analysis quality control.  There is also some
 debate about  whether taking samples is consistent with  the intent of the statute,  which
 provides these grants "to obtain technical assistance in interpreting information...."  At the
 very least, the Congressional study recommended finding  some way for the Agency to
 respond to  requests for additional sampling.  This appears to be a  reasonable idea to
 respond to  concerns about the possible need for more sampling.  EPA should develop
 some way to  accommodate  reasonable requests  for additional  sampling (see related
 discussion on  page 5-6).

       Another problem is a misunderstanding  about the proper interpretation of the
 language in the regulations that funds "may not be used to  challenge final decisions."
 Some citizen groups and EPA regional staff have interpreted this language to mean  that
 the Agency wants to discourage and avert possible challenges to its remedial  decision-
 making.  This seems to critics to be  another example of EPA's interpreting the law as
 strictly as  possible and restricting participation.  EPA's intent  was only to prohibit grant
funds from being used to finance legal challenges or lobbying, as Congress indicated  in the
 Conference  report.  EPA should clarify the meaning of this section in guidance to the
Regions.
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Outreach

      EPA Regions have used many tools to make citizens aware of the availability of
TAGs, including mass  mailings, workshops,  press  releases, calls  to  citizen groups,
newspaper ads,  and standard language in fact sheets.   However,  the  low number of
applications for grants  has called the Agency's  outreach efforts into  question.  The
Congressional report and EPA's own survey raise questions about the  effectiveness of
EPA's outreach.  EPA regional staff believe, however, that flaws in the TAG regulations
outlined  in this  report  are  the  most important reasons for the limited number of
applications received to  date.

      EPA should first revise the TAG regulations to make the grants easier to obtain.
Then EPA should inform citizens about TAGs once again. We suggest that all Regions
insert a standard explanation about TAGs at the bottom of each fact sheet If a TAG has
been awarded at the site, the insert would tell the citizens how to contact the Technical
Advisor for assistance. If there is not yet a TAG, the insert would explain how to find out
more about the program.  Headquarters  should develop examples of inserts for Regions
to use.  In addition, the Agency should use press releases in communities with sites to
publicize the changes in the program and the purpose and availability of these grants.

EPA Perception: Significant Financial Risk

       EPA financial managers are wary of the potential risks in the TAG program.  They
are generally being held to a high standard of care and documentation for any Superfund
expenditure, either because of the specialized nature of the trust fund, or because of the
litigation potential  for cost recovery.  In addition, they are concerned  that the lack of
established financial control systems  in most citizen groups make  TAGs  more vulnerable
to financial mismanagement.   One EPA manager called TAGs  "super audit  bait", and
defended extra restrictions and caution in their implementation  as absolutely necessary
under the  circumstances.  Another EPA manager recalled some of the financial problems
encountered by the poverty  program's grants  to  citizen groups some years ago.  These
managers  are also concerned about  the risks to the citizen groups themselves.  They do
not want to expose well-intentioned groups to the risk of unfavorable audits and attempts
 at cost recovery from those groups, should funds be spent unwisely or illegally.

       We believe  that these concerns are legitimate.   Financial systems are like  safety
 systems; they seem unnecessary most of the time, except when  something goes wrong.
 The problem with TAGs, however, is that the very inexperience of the citizen groups that
 makes financial managers nervous also makes the burden of EPA's financial procedures
 especially heavy for these volunteer organizations. The question that EPA must confront
 is whether the financial risks of the  TAG program are so high as to warrant the present
 degree of financial controls and cautious  implementation.  We believe that the benefits of
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the TAG program  outweigh the  financial risks of fewer and  less rigid controls.   The
Administrator should explicitly encourage EPA managers to run the TAG program with
the minimum red tape necessary  to meet legal requirements, and should make it clear
that the Agency is willing to take  the financial risks entailed in this program.

State-Lead Sites

      Currently, states are not taking a lead role in administering the TAG program. A
survey of nine states found  that  most of them are not interested in administering the
program because  of financial and  staffing constraints, as well as perceived problems, with
the program.  Most were unaware that EPA provides administrative assistance to states
involved  in the program. Since states typically handle community  relations at state-lead
NPL sites, EPA staff may be unable or unwilling to do outreach  and  adequately judge
community interest  at these sites.  So  long as states  remain  unwilling to participate,
implementation of the TAG program at these sites will most  likely remain a problem.
However, once EPA amends  the TAG rules to remove the barriers identified above, states
may be more willing to assist in implementing the program at state-lead NPL sites.
RECOMMENDATIONS:

The Administrator should strongly support the reform of the Technical Assistance Grants
program to eliminate barriers to their use. Specific recommendations to carry out this
reform are included throughout the discussion above.  The most important  of those
recommendations are summarized here:

EPA  should  amend the interim  final  rule  immediately to  (1)  reduce the match
requirement from 35%  to 20%, (2) eliminate the 15% cap on administrative, in-kind
services, and (3) modify the reincorporation requirement.              .

EPA should simplify the application process, simplify the procurement requirements, and
establish guidelines for grant renewal in cases where circumstances warrant.

EPA should encourage citizen groups to apply, not discourage them with red tape, so long
as they demonstrate a willingness to manage TAG grants responsibly and  a reasonable
ability to do so.  The Administrator should acknowledge and accept the financial risks of
fewer and less rigid controls, flexibly applied by Regions.
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                   A FINAL COMMENT ON EXPECTATIONS

      One of the most difficult aspects of public involvement is trying to figure out how
much is enough.   Some reasonable  questions for a reader of this chapter are:   how
different are these recommendations from what is now being done; how much demand is
there for intensive public involvement; and what should we expect in the future?

      There is very little in these pages that does not reflect the tried-and-true approaches
that have already been found to work by EPA staff at a number of sites.  We found that
many EPA staff already are working hard to be good communicators and involve the
public in key decisions, within the limits of their time, resources* and experience.  The
consensus we found is that more is needed, but that does not mean we envision the need
for the most elaborate programs at every Superfund site around the country.

      A group of regional site managers estimated that about one-quarter to one-third of
Superfund sites were sufficiently controversial to warrant fairly extensive communication
and citizen involvement programs.  That estimate is crucial, for the practicality of carrying
out a more extensive public involvement program, which is what we are advocating in this
report, depends very much on the number of sites where the Agency needs to increase its
efforts.  Our sense is  that EPA should inform citizens early at  all sites, and should then
work most intensively at those sites where there appear to be substantial citizen concerns
and incipient controversies. While there may be claims that all citizens at all sites deserve
our complete engagement, we can only say that  it seems reasonable to  us to focus our
communications and citizen involvement resources on the highest priority sites, just as we
focus our technical resources.

      Finally, the strategy articulated for the Superfund program at the beginning of, this
report carries important implications for community involvement.  Where sites will not be
completely cleaned up for some  time, EPA's relationship with the nearby communities is
critical to their acceptance of EPA's strategy. Community acceptance will depend upon
confidence that EPA will finish the job and that  EPA and its staff are to be trusted.
Regardless of the wisdom or quality of EPA's overall management strategy for Superfund,
gaining this  confidence  and trust will require  a  substantial investment in community
participation at each Superfund site.                                       ,.--,'
                                       5-23

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    VL  MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION:




FREEING UP THE SKILLS AND TOOLS TO DO THE JOB

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                                 CHAPTER VI

                 MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION?
       FREEING UP THE SKILLS AND TOOLS TO DO THE JOB
INTRODUCTION: The breadth and complexity of the Superfund program have presented
enormous administrative management challenges to the Agency.  Superfund required EPA
to hire a new breed of employee, to create new and responsive administrative systems to
support them, and to design  a management structure to effectively direct an extensive
contractor workforce. It shifted EPA's focus from a predominantly regulatory and research
mission to an operational one. From an administrative management perspective, EPA has
not been as successful in developing the support systems Superfund needs as it could have
been; however, it  has  the  talent  to  face these challenges.  This paper  outlines  some
important aspects of the administrative strategy needed to make  mid-course  corrections
which will make us more successful in the future.

       Effective administrative strategies are basically plans for deploying people and tools
to support getting the job done. Superfund's goal is quick, safe cleanup; tackling the most
dangerous sites first and requiring private parties  to conduct or pay for the  clean-up
wherever possible. Clearly, the most critical area requiring improvement is the manner in
which EPA goes about hiring and retaining a technically skilled field staff and a capable
cadre of field enforcement attorneys.  Turnover among key field staff, as high as 20% in
some areas, leads to slow-downs  in  site  cleanups, a loss of technical expertise, and a
disruption in relations with the communities and States. EPA needs to offer a competitive
compensation and retention package in order to attract and keep staff who are the critical
linchpin in the Superfund program.

       Internal reports have shown that salary and benefits are not the only reason people
leave the Superfund program.  A  major disincentive is the overwhelming  amount of
paperwork, lack of secretarial support, inadequate working space,  and lack of  the tools to
access information systems.  All bureaucracies tend to over-regulate themselves. In this
case, the natural  tendency to do so is unacceptable if we expect to clean up hazardous
waste sites effectively.  Freeing up the field staff from administrative duties so they can
concentrate on  technical, community and legal issues is a simple strategy and one that will
yield demonstrable results.

       The task group's recommendations will yield more time for field staff to  do their
jobs and to  do  them well.  The field staff needs to  have the time and the opportunity to
both maintain and expand its technical skills as changes occur in the program and in state-
of-the-art technology. This paper  outlines the Agency's commitment to training field staff
at all levels by  supporting and strengthening the existing program.

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      This paper also presents a strategy to resolve an increasingly visible issue which
undermines the confidence of the public and the Congress in EPA's ability to manage its
contractor workforce.  The issue is whether EPA has the in-house  capability to  make
Superfund policy or whether contractors are increasingly directing the policy development
of the program.  EPA fully recognizes that the practice of having contractors develop the
very policies and regulations that they are charged with implementing in the field is totally
unacceptable.  We will move aggressively to hire more in-house policy experts, thereby
reducing dependence on contractors.  In  addition, the  Agency will  take clear steps to
ensure  that no contractor  currently  working in policy  support areas is  using that
information to profit or benefit another client in any way.

      To be successful,  administrative systems  must be designed and implemented to
support program needs and adapt  quickly when requirements shift.  The strategies laid
out in this paper are right for the direction of the Superfund program, and more needs to
be done in the months to come.
              ATTRACTING AND RETAINING KEY FIELD STAFF
FINDING:  Turnover among key field personnel in the Superfund program is unacceptabfy
high.  EPA's pay and compensation system is not competitive with private-sector systems.


DISCUSSION: Of paramount importance to Superfund's success are the 484 field project
managers and the 148 enforcement attorneys in the Regions that manage the program in
the field.   These field staff, called Remedial Project Managers  (RPMs), On  Scene
Coordinators (OSCs), and Field Enforcement Attorneys (FEAs) have not received all of
the support they need due  to Superfund's explicit policy  of giving contractors relative
freedom to execute the remedial program in the field.

       These project managers happen to be among the best educated and most dedicated
of all of our employees.  Over 96 percent have college degrees, and 35 percent of them
hold Masters or Doctorates.  Over half of them hold degrees in engineering.  An Agency
job analysis reveals that Superfund site management jobs rank high among EPA's most
difficult and diverse professions, requiring superior technical, administrative, managerial and
communications skills. \lost of these people work in excess of 50 hours a week, often in
contentious situations, and they burn out quickly.
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      By and by, these people should have been deployed and supervised by the Agency
as if they were an elite force; thus far they have not.  Just about 70 percent of all EPA's
field project managers are paid at the GS 11/12 level ~ only 73 of them have reached GS-
13 and two are  at the GS-14 level.  In other words, in what is acknowledged to be a
rapidly shrinking labor pool of qualified technical personnel,, the Agency pays these people
an average annual salary of about $36,000. In a number of Regions, project managers are
leaving EPA to earn twice that amount in the private sector.  Moreover, these project
managers receive lower performance scores than the average employee in the Regions, and
earn less in bonuses and cash awards. Even though these employees manage construction
projects worth millions of dollars, almost 20 percent of them were not even rated by their
supervisors at performance evaluation time last year. If past performance can be regarded
as prologue to the future, one out  of every five RPM/OSCs will not be on the job next
year.  Clearly, the Agency must do everything it can to attract and retain high quality
people to serve the public as Remedial Project Managers, On Scene Coordinators and
Field Enforcement Attorneys.
RECOMMENDATIONS: The Agency should take immediate steps to offer a competitive
compensation and incentive package to its key Superfund frontline personnel:

      *     Immediately raise the full performance level of Remedial
            Project Managers and On-Scene Coordinators from GS-12 to
            GS-13.                                      .

      *     Bevelop a  uniform  policy to open  up the  possibility of
      .•'•'-;• promoting regional Superfund Enforcement Attorneys from
       - • •  •' GSU13 to GS-14.   .. '  -             .    .     • •:.          .         ;•

      *     Pursue initiatives with Congress,  the Office of Management
            and the Budget and the Office of Personnel Management to
            allow the Agency to:
    4 ''.,'/'=',•'"'   ' " .   '     * .    -  . '                ' .'
                   pay salaries competitive with the private sector
                   in certain high cost geographic areas;

         .'•-.-'..  accelerate the promotion process;

                   design more flexible leave and working hour
                  policies;

                  award bonuses to staff who remain with EPA;
                                       6-3

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                   provide high-cost, specialized training outside the
                   federal  family  in  exchange  for  additional
                   government service; and

                   offer early retirement rights.
                  TRAINING FOR TECHNICAL COMPETENCE
FINDING:  The technical competence of EPA field staff has been questioned from time to
tim,e.  EPA acknowledges that it is critical for the public to trust EPA's technical judgments.
DISCUSSION: The General Accounting Office and the EPA Inspector General, along
with a number of other organizations interviewed by the task group, strongly emphasized
the importance of EPA's training  programs to develop quality staff for the Superfund
program.  The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee has also supported
certain specific initiatives in this area; for example, advancing Institutes that tap academic
expertise to develop specialized training for field staff.  Representatives 'from the Office
of Technology Assessment and the contracting community believe  that retention of a
technically qualified Superfund workforce in EPA is perhaps the most critical element to
the eventual success of Superfund.

      During the course of its review, the task group learned that the Superfund program
has made considerable progress in strengthening its training component over the past year.
It acknowledges the competence and dedication of its frontline employees, all of whom are
actively seeking opportunities to enhance their technical skills.  While training funds are
usually among those typically cut during periods of constraint, EPA's Office of Emergency
and Remedial Response has actually increased resources in this area to address thes special
training needs of all Superfund field staff.  Towards this end, EPA has recently launched
three new training programs.  For new field staff, a six-week session of the new Superfund
Academy offers training in all  phases  of the program, from contracts management to
technical issues.  A second Academy program provides new field staff with a senior field
mentor for on-the-job training for the first six months of the new employee's tour of duty.
For  more advanced field  staff, EPA  has  created  the Superfund  University  Training
Institute.  This training program takes place on a University campus and provides learning
through case studies of Superfund sites involving groundwater management, controlling
pollution at the source, and responding to emergencies.
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       In addition to the structured training programs offered by the Superfund program,
 field staff have been  enhancing their technical skills by performing in-house remedial
 investigation and feasibility studies in some  regions.   This practice  is  specifically
 encouraged for all regions in an earlier chapter of the report.  In our interviews with
 RPMs  representing the ten regions,  the  project  managers  expressed their desire to
 continue and expand hands-on training, citing both the successful results of the recent in-
 house remedial  investigation and  feasibility  studies,  and the opportunity  to  develop
 additional contractor management skills.
RECOMMENDATIONS:   EPA recommends improving the technical knowledge, skills,
and abilities of field staff through budgeted support of additional EPA training initiatives:

       *     Implement a mandatory training requirement for field staff at
             all levels: Basic, Intermediate, Advanced, and Master.  This
             should serve as an incentive  leading to certification of EPA
             field staff at various levels.

       *     Implement pilots in all regions encouraging EPA field staff to
             .perform remedial investigation and feasibility studies in-house.
           .: Reward outstanding  achievement in this area.  This practice
             will improve the ability of front-line staff to better oversee
             contractors in the field.
                        PROVIDING FIELD STAFF WITH
                   ADEQUATE ADMINISTRATIVE SUPPORT
FINDINGS: Key field staff do not have adequate administrative support and lack important
information management tools. They spend approximately 25% of their time on administrative
tasks that could be delegated to clerical or support staff.   They also lack the necessary
equipment to gain access to the information systems established by the program.

      '-,:='' \  •'•    ••'..-••'•                 ".            '.
     •  - ' - ". i ' >  .' •--.   '•  -. ••-() ,_ I,'. , ,,* f '  '  • .  ' -     -   •'••;.  - •  • '-,  ,'----     '  -\   '     ',• •-
DISCUSSION:  Inconsistent administrative support to Regional OSCs and RPMs and the
lack of a clear  distinction between the roles and relationships of project managers and
support staff are major sources of frustration that lowers morale and raises turnover rates
among key Superfund personnel.                                                  .
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       In  1985,  an EPA task group addressed  the  administrative  support issue  and
concluded that the amount of administrative burden in the program negatively affected
the field  staff's  ability  to  focus  on contractor oversight,  community  relations,  and
enforcement work.  That situation still exists today, in the opinion of the Task Group.

       Although the Regions have made progress in this area over the last 18 months,
much  remains to be done.   One recommendation the task  group is  not  making  is a
mandatory reorganization using some predetermined configuration. Field project managers
can be supported successfully through a decentralized system-which may work better in
smaller regions—or through a centralized model, which is probably more appropriate for
EPA's larger regions.  RPM's and OSC's  interviewed by the Task Group favored the
designation of specialized administrative support staff to handle each site's administrative
work.  These personnel would become an integral part of the site team, developing strong
allegiance and a commitment to completing the site cleanup project. These people would
be familiar with  all aspects of administrative management, but would  not be expected to
be expert in every area.  They could draw  on other administrative  experts in the region
and know where to get what the site manager needs, thereby freeing,up the RPM or OSC
to concentrate on supervising contractors and working with communities.   In the larger
Regions, teams made up of people with varied skills and specialties could be organized
into support groups for specially designated  sites or groups of sites. Team members could
come from both the Waste Management Division and the Management Division.

       The  most important  prerequisite  for  success  appears to lie  in  the  working
relationship in the Regions between the Assistant Regional Administrator, who heads the
delivery of support services, and the Director of the  Waste Management Division or
Environmental Services Division, who supervises field project  management staff.  If this
relationship is built upon cooperation and a clear  definition of roles arid responsibilities,
then support systems will work and the site will be cleaned up successfully. For  this
relationship to succeed,  however, staff in both  divisions must work  together  as  full
partners. Hence, the task group favors action that will create strong working  relationships
between Superfund staff and Management  Division personnel. The approach Would be
carried out best  under the provisions of a Memorandum of Understanding  between the
leadership of the two programs in the Regions, set around a defined list  of administrative
tasks.

       In the information management area, EPA has made important strides in the past
two years.  Problems in this area no longer arise from a lack of systems, but rather from
a lack of proper equipment and access in many regions.  The  systems developed include
the OSWER Bulletin Board  which provides a way for Headquarters to communicate with
the field, and more importantly, for OSCs and RPMs to communicate with one another.
The Record of Decision (ROD) data base  went live in 1989,  providing data on remedy
selection at  sites nationwide.   The  OSWER Directives System provides  access to
Superfund program guidance, special directives,  and policy decisions  in an electronic

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format, although the system might be more effective if placed on a local area network.
WasteLan, a management information and tracking system, is on-line in three Regions and
is expected to be up nationwide by September 1989.

       All these systems are important to effectively managing information for Superfund.
However, the task  group  found that virtually  no personal computers are at the field
project managers' direct disposal, and E-mail communications software and modems are
sadly deficient. Making personal computers, portable "laptop" computers, communications
hook-ups, hardware, software, printers,  and other equipment available to OSC/RPMs
would  improve the  flow  of operations and strengthen the remedy selection process
considerably.

       At present, RPMs are largely unaware of the skills and techniques needed to access
the on-line systems that have been put in place  to assist them.  All the systems described
above  are fairly simple to use.  The extent to which OSCs and RPMs make use of them
depends  not  only on the  availability of equipment, and the quality of instruction  and
support they receive, but also on how effectively their supervisors  and managers use them
in the  field.
RECOMMENDATIONS

The Assistant Administrator for Solid Waste and Emergency Response and the Assistant
Administrator for Administration and Resources Management should:

      *     Work out a format for assigning certain administrative tasks
            to  the  appropriate Management  and  Waste  Management
            Divisions in the Regions.  These two Assistant Administrators
            should   then  solicit  the   agreement  of  the  Regional
            Administrators on  the assignment of these  administrative
            tasks in a regional Memorandum of Understanding.  Should
            this approach prove successful, it should be extended to include
            key activities of Environmental Services Divisions and lawyers
            in  the  Office  of  Regional  Counsel.   Ultimately, Regional
            Administrators have the principal  responsibility for assuring
            successful cooperation  among the various offices responsible
            for implementing Superfund in the Regions.

      *     Ensure that all key  field staff have  immediate  access to
            personal computers, portable computers for the field, related
            hardware and software and E-Mail capabilities  to access the
            OSWER information systems.
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     DELEGATION AND EXERCISE OF ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITIES
FINDING: Certain administrative delays can be eliminated through delegating administrative
authorities to people more accessible to RPM/OSCs, or to the RPM/OSCs themselves.
DISCUSSION: Field staff interviewed cited paperwork, excessive layers of review and
concurrences to be a barrier to efficient program performance.  The task group identified
a  number of areas  which the  Assistant Regional  Administrators and the  Waste
Management Director should reevaluate to determine whether the authority to complete
a task has been assigned to the level most closely responsible for it. For example, RPMs
ancLOSCs recommended eliminating excessive sign-offs and time delays through delegating
the authority to authorize travel to managers one level  above them.  The use of blanket
or monthly travel authorizations/vouchers or paperless travel authorizations, coupled with
quicker travel advances could go a long way towards reducing delays and frustration for
field staff.                                                    .•:.',.

      Other areas to be considered include making  automobiles available for RPMs and
OSCs or providing an easy way for them to rent them.  The  purchase of equipment and
other property for necessary site work should be streamlined through the extension of the
Bankcard program to  the  Regional Waste  Management Divisions, and  delegating
OSC/RPMs or persons  in the administrative  support  units  the authority  to sign  for
purchases up to   $1,000.  This would  obviate the need for contractors to purchase
property and-equipment at greater cost to the government. The last area to be examined
is simplifying the processes for approving overtime, compensatory time, hazardous duty
pay, and stand-by pay.
RECOMMENDATION:  The Assistant Regional Administrators and Waste Management
Division Directors should examine administrative authorities such as approval of travel
authorizations and vouchers,  acquisition or the lease of motor vehicles for site-specific
work, purchase  of  necessary site  equipment and property,  approval  of overtime,
compensatory time, hazardous and stand-by  duty pay  and delegate them to the most
appropriate and efficient level.
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            REDUCING AGENCY DEPENDENCE ON CONTRACTORS
                   AND AVOIDING CONFLICT OF INTEREST
 FINDING: The Superfund Program's dependence on contractors for certain categories of
 policy and regulation development has been the object of considerable criticism in Congress
 and from the public at large.  While the practice of using contractors as an "extra pair of
 hands" in regulatory and policy work may have been viewed as a necessity in the past, it is
 clear that continuing along these lines in the future threatens the integrity of the program.


 DISCUSSION:   Public interest groups  and  Members of  Congress are  increasingly
 concerned about the  possibility  that Agency contractors exercise undue influence on
 Superfund implementation.   At the outset,  the  Superfund program was legislatively
 designed to utilize  a large contractor workforce, thus minimizing the  growth of a large
 EPA bureaucracy.  This approach is sound only if the lines between what work is done by
 EPA employees and what support is appropriately provided by contractors are  clearly
 drawn.

       In a program as broadly complex as Superfund, even well-intended contractors can
 find themselves in awkward positions.  Conflict of interest situations arise  when a set of
 conditions impairs the objectivity of the contractor working for EPA. This has been most
 problematic in the Superfund Program when a firm is awarded a contract for a clean-up
 program that they  also helped to design.  A real potential for conflict arises if the firm
 recommends using   cleanup technologies or methods  offered  by its  subsidiaries  or is
 charged with implementing in  the field the very policies  or regulations it  developed  for
 EPA in Washington.

       The task group agrees that EPA contracts managers need to collect information on
 where contractors are  working and  where they have worked  in  the past.  ERA must
 develop procedures  to apply its own independent judgment to potential conflict-of-interest
 situations, and not rely solely on self-certification by contractors.  Contractors too need to
 know where they can get fast answers to their questions about potential conflict situations.

       Many of EPA's policy support contracts are large, open-ended "mission contracts"
that provide considerable flexibility to EPA and contractors in making and receiving work
assignments. The key activities that are written into the scope of work for these contracts
are the following:
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       *      Analysis of program, regulatory and legislative issues;

       *      Drafting of alternative polity approaches and policy guidance;

       *      Analysis of comments on Federal Register notices;

       *      Development of technical  policies, strategies and  plans  for
             Superfund response activities;

       *      Design and development of new ways of addressing issues
             related  to  Superfund  regulations,  policies  and  .response
             activities, and;

       *      Analysis of response policy issues such as remedial/removal
             cost  effectiveness determinations, innovative and  alternative
             technologies, response claims  and enforcement  policy issues
             as they affect remedial and removal programs.

       The first step is to clearly define the roles, responsibilities and relationships between
EPA and its support contractors  and communicate them to Congress and the public.

RECOMMENDATIONS: To protect the integrity of the program and to  preserve the
reputations of participating contractors who are so important to Superfund's success, EPA
should begin immediately to develop guidance proceedings and award criteria to preclude
firms from holding both policy and regulatory support  contracts as well as response
action contracts under the Superfund program. Contractors currently  involved in such
arrangements should be asked  to make  voluntary disclosures of potential conflict
situations  and to refrain from executing policy  and regulatory analysis  or guidance
preparation on work they are also charged with carrying out in the field.   Superfund
program staff should also exercise appropriate care in issuing work assignments.

EPA should immediately develop additional procedures for detecting and  avoiding conflict.
This should include issuing clear guidance to contractors  on what constitutes a conflict-
of-interest, and requiring a corporate executive to certify that no conflict-of-interest exists.
EPA should  also  send  procurement review teams to examine  Superfund contractors'
conflict-of-interest prevention systems.

To fully  mitigate the serious perception problem that exists with regard to contractors
assisting the program  with  policy  and regulatory development,  EPA should begin
increasing  in-house staff to reduce dependence on contractors. EPA staff should analyze
which  portions of the current contractor workload should be performed in-house  and
establish a timetable for phasing manageable portions of this work from contractors to
EPA staff.

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   VII.  ACCOUNTING FOR ACHIEVEMENT:




COMMUNICATING PROGRESS TO THE PUBLIC

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                                  Chapter VII

                   ACCOUNTING FOR ACHIEVEMENT:
            COMMUNICATING PROGRESS TO THE PUBLIC
      One of the most significant challenges for the Superfund program is effective
communication.  It is very difficult to convince people that a site is being "cleaned up"
when they cannot actually "see" any measurable activity.  Superfund's communication
challenges are heightened because the program has always been extremely complex, highly
publicized, and often very controversial.

      To meet the challenge of telling a story that makes sense to the public, we need
to commit to communication goals and efforts that build a basis for public understanding,
trust, and confidence. From our task group's investigations, we found that these goals
and efforts fall into the five major topics: (1) informing the nation about Superfund; (2)
expanding participation  in national  program development and oversight;  (3) making
communication part of everyone's responsibility;  (4) measuring Superfund progress; and
(5) achieving incentives for efficiency and results.
               INFORMING THE NATION ABOUT SUPERFUND
FINDINGS: EPA has concentrated  its  communication efforts in  an active community
relations program designed to meet the needs of citizens affected by Superfund sites.  But
there are very different communication needs for community, Regional, and national interests.
Inadequate attention has been paid to developing and communicating an accurate, timely,
and meaningful national picture of the program.  Moreover, the language used to describe
the starts and completions of steps in the Superfund process does not convey progress in a
way the public can understand. Hence, EPA and its constituencies often interpret and define
components of the program differently.  This can result in apparent inconsistencies  and
confuse the audience with differing definitions of success.
DISCUSSION:

Commitment to Communicate

      A commitment to communicate must become an integral part of every aspect of
the Superfund program. Many people interviewed mentioned that the perceived lack of
commitment and willingness to talk with the public about the program severely hampers

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our  efforts   to   establish  and   maintain   meaningful   two-way   communication.
Communicating effectively  with  the public not  only  enhances the credibility of the
program, but can deter potential impediments to program progress.  We found that EPA
staff and management  do not follow a common philosophy of communication.
                             PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNICATION

       In EPA's work on Risk Communication, we have identified seven basic principles of
       communication.  Although the principles may seem simplistic, they are all too often
       violated in practice.  People who are involved at all levels of Superfund implementation
       need to accept the following principles as a real working philosophy of communication
       and apply them in the context of their individual roles in the program.

       *      Accept and involve the public as a legitimate partner:  The Superfund
              program is mandated, paid for, and accountable to the public. Members
              of the public have a  right  to expect more opportunities for meaningful
              involvement in decision making.

       *      Plan carefully:  Communication concerns need to  be  factored into all
              aspects  of Superfund program planning.  Everyone who works  in  the
              program must be viewed (and trained) as a communicator.

       *      Listen to the public's specific concerns: Frequently members of the public
              are concerned about issues different from those the "experts" expect them
              to be concerned about.  Exhibiting a willingness to learn from citizen's
              experience will increase public trust in the program.  If we don't listen
              to the public, we shouldn't expect them to listen to us.

       *      Be honest and open:  To gain credibility, the Superfund program must
              make a concerted effort to "tell it like it is."  People are more willing to
              accept what we  have to say when they feel they are  part of an open
              process.  EPA must be more realistic about the progress we are making
              and what we  can and can't do; otherwise the public will always be
              expecting us to accomplish impossible goals.

       *      Coordinate and collaborate with other credible sources: The Superfund
              program has often benefitted by collaborating with other authoritative and
              trustworthy sources (e.g., Centers for Disease Control, the  Agency for
              Toxic Substances and Disease  Registry, and locally respected medical
              authorities) and  needs to continue doing so.

       *      Meet the needs  of the media;   The media are a prime transmitter of
              information about the Superfund program.  We need to  redouble our
              efforts to understand and meet their needs.
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             Speak clearly and with compassion:  The Supeffund program routinely
             asks people to understand and believe things they can't see in
             circumstances that are generally upsetting.  Thus, the program needs to
             focus on both the words and the tone that it uses to communicate.
             Presenting EPA as a group of people working to make communities safer,
             rather than as a bureaucratic organization, will increase confidence in our
             ability to protect the public's health and the environment. The good news
             is that when properly presented, the key messages  of the Superfund
             program can be understood and even accepted by most people, if not by
             everyone.
Need for a National Communications Plan

       The  interviews revealed that there are  very  different needs  for  site-specific,
Regional, and national interests.  Many people believe we are effectively communicating
with communities at the more active Superfund sites.  At these sites, our communily
relations program has maintained a visible role and we have implemented a well-planned
program through trained staff and useful support materials. However, the same effort has
not been put into developing an  accurate, meaningful, and credible national picture of
the Superfund program.

       Members of Congress, local government officials, prominent community members,
the media,  and public interest groups  can have a  significant influence on community
relations and on the local and national perceptions of the program. From gur discussions
with Regional staff, it is apparent that we need a comprehensive national communications
plan that ensures systematic and continuous distribution of information about Superfund
to people who inform and  represent  the public.   As we identify different needs for
different groups, we can  develop appropriate communication materials to meet those
needs. For such a plan to be effective, however, our information must be delivered early,
before a problem occurs.

       Numerous communication mechanisms currently in place within the Agency can
be directed toward getting Superfund  information to the general public.   These range
from the very informal (ad hoc), to the formal (planned); from printed and professionally
produced  documents,  to  personal contacts  and media  presentations;  and  from
communication oriented to a specific local issue, to  messages of nationwide importance.
Examples of mechanisms we currently use include such publications as general program
and site-specific fact sheets, the Superfund advisory quarterly program update, brochures
like 'The New Superfund: What It Is, and How It  Works," and Regional newsletters.
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We have  also been successful in using visual mechanisms such as videotapes,  For
example, in Region V the community relations and program staff have effectively used
a videotape on cleanup activities at one of their prominent sites to inform the public
about the program.

      It is apparent from our interviews that our use of these mechanisms  could be
more effective and broader. There must be an asserted, proactive outreach to the people
we have identified as needing to be well informed about the program.  To ensure early
and effective outreach, the following examples were suggested for expanding or refining
what we have in place:  public service announcements, distribution of regularly updated
site summaries, promotion of available information depositories, informal community and
national meetings  (brown bag  lunches with  management),  and  increased  use  of
videotapes.   In addition, professional communicators from the private companies and
other government Agencies could teach EPA about innovative communication techniques
that have been successful in other sectors.

The Words Get In Our Way

       The language used to describe steps in the Superfund process does not convey
progress in a way the public can understand. EPA and its constituencies often interpret
and define  components  of the program  differently.   This can result  in  apparent
inconsistencies and can confuse and frustrate  the audience.

       As indicated by our interviews and the various Superfund reports, such terms as
"remedial" "removal," "operable units," and "national priorities list" may be meaningful to
those involved with the program, but are often confusing to the public and may, in fact,
raise their expectations unrealistically high.  Such bureaucratic  terms as  "fund versus
enforcement" or "Headquarters versus  Regional" are often viewed by the  public as
irrelevant. Our findings showed that the public sometimes views these bureaucratic terms
 as smoke screens meant to dodge accountability  because  we have not  met their
 expectations or sufficiently explained our actions.

        In task group meetings, Regional and Headquarters personnel noted that  the
 media  has perhaps the greatest impact on how the Agency and the Superfund program
 are viewed  by the public.  Because the media can reach so many, so  quickly, it is
 imperative that reporters, editors and news directors understand what we mean when we
 describe the program's process and progress.


 RECOMMENDATIONS: Develop and  implement a national plan to inform the public
 at large about the Superfund  program and its achievements.  Seek  help from the
 program's many constituencies in developing this plan and in carrying it out.
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 Specific actions include:

       *     Reaffirm a commitment to communication that includes:

             - involving the public as a legitimate partner;
             - listening to the public's specific concerns;
             - being honest and open; and
             - meeting the needs of the media.

       *     Identify those  who influence public opinion  nationally and
             locally, including  the  media, elected officials, and public
             interest groups,  and provide them with  timely, accurate
             information.

       *     Evaluate the efficacy of existing communications techniques
             and public information materials to intended audiences and
             identify new methods for public  education, including the
             increased use of stand-alone approaches, such as videotapes,
             to describe general or actual Superfund site experiences.

       *     Work with reporters to develop a "Journalists' Guide to
             Superfund" which would  provide a national context for the
             program, describe steps in the process, identify points where
             public interest is high, and describe remedial technologies.

       *     Address language and definition problems in Superfund by
             eliminating jargon from our Superfund lexicon.  This may be
             difficult, but the Agency needs to make the effort.
                    EXPANDING PUBLIC PARTICIPATION
                    IN NATIONAL PROGRAM OVERSIGHT
FINDINGS:  Citizens, industry, Congress, public interest groups and government officials
want earfy and continuous involvement in Superfund oversight.  The Superfund program can
benefit by involving these constituencies as legitimate partners at the national level.  EPA
needs to invite the public in to participate in oversight of the Superfund program.
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DISCUSSION:   Public  participation  in  the decision-making process results  in  the
development of better public policy.  This is especially true for programs like Superfund
that were created in  response to public concern.  Most of the people we interviewed
indicated that effective public participation must be early, frequent, and consistent.

      Stakeholders like  states, local officials, responsible parties, industry associations,
and environmental/public interest organizations have varying expectations of the Agency's
implementation of Superfund.  In their reports and during our interviews, these groups
expressed concern about not being involved in Superfund oversight, decision making, and
implementation early in the  process.   They want  to  be  involved  during policy
development, national decision making, and discussions about different program issues
as they evolve.  EPA needs to better understand the specific needs of each interest group
with an eye toward more effective involvement.  Information gathered through  surveys
and at focus group meetings could be used in a participatory process that incorporates
and assesses stakeholders' viewpoints.

      Congressional  staff expressed an interest in increasing our dialogue with them.
Before we finalize a policy  or rule, they would  like more involvement in  regulatory
development through more frequent discussions on such issues as congressional intent.
They also believe information briefings and site visits could be productive.


RECOMMENDATIONS: Identify more effective ways to include interested parties in the
policy debate at a national level.

Several specific actions should be taken:

      *     At the national and/or Regional level, immediately convene
             a forum(s) representing varying perspectives on the program.
             The initial forum(s) should be designed to begin an ongoing
             dialogue with follow up sessions to address specific policy
             and/or  implementation  issues.     The  preparation  of
             authoritative reports is not an explicit goal of this exercise.
             Dialogue   and  discussion  among  Superfund's   diverse
             constituencies is the principal objective.

       *     Use communication tools, such as focus  groups or surveys,
             to assess our constituency groups' opinions of Superfund and
             use this information to more effectively involve these groups
             in Superfund oversight and decision making.
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         COMMUNICATING IS PART OF EVERYONE'S RESPONSIBILITY
FINDINGS:  Too  often,  Superfund staff  and  managers  do  not  view themselves as
"communicators" even though the nature of their responsibilities projects them into roles as
frontline: Agency spokespeople. Presently, we tend to see public communication as the job of
a few specialists in Headquarters  and the Regions.  With the  exception of the  community
relations program, outreach does not appear to be  consistently viewed as an integral part of
carrying out the program.
DISCUSSION: Those interviewed made it clear that we must alter our attitude and begin
to realize that "communicating" is simply talking with others.who are interested in what we
are trying to do.  Thus, EPA Superfund staff must be well informed about their jobs and
comfortable with talking about the  program.  This factor is essential to presenting an
accurate representation of Superfund's process and progress.

         We learned that technical staff and managers are often called upon to respond to
questions and concerns from the press, local officials, or residents who drop by the site.
While site  managers  consider the technical  needs of  the site  to  be  their primary
responsibility, other demands to represent EPA and clearly communicate the progress at the
site are placed on these individuals by public concern. If communications break down, we
are perceived to be insensitive to the affected community.  This opens the door to criticisms
like: "you don't live here, so you don't care."

         Relying solely on  trained "communicators"  has often tended to  isolate  the
program's technical staff and managers who may be  more frequently called on to deal with
concerned citizens.
 RECOMMENDATIONS: Make public education a Superfund priority for all front-line
 managers and staff.

 Specific actions include:

         *      provide appropriate   communications  assistance   to
                Superfund staff and managers to make communications
                and outreach successful.
         *      provide communications  skills training to  all staff and
                managers.
         *      reward communication successes in  ways that serve  as
                positive examples for all employees.
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                      MEASURING SUPERFUND PROGRESS
         To communicate the successes of the Superfund program, data describing program
 accomplishments must be collected from the sites and delivered to the  public.  The data
 must reflect activities at all stages of the cleanup process—not just final actions.  The data
 must demonstrate that the program is meeting the expectations of the range of audiences
 interested in the program.

         Program  progress  can be  shown  through the  accountability  measures EPA
 routinely collects for internal management and through other informational measures which
 are chosen to report on specific expectations held by the public. Ultimately, a balance must
 be struck between having a large  enough set of measures to manage the Agency and
 keeping the number  and complexity down  so that  the  measures we track  send  an
 unambiguous message to the public of desired program results.

         This section provides our findings with regard to (1)  the measures needed to
 communicate progress in line with public expectations and (2) changes that could be made
 to improve our data collection to support public information needs and to ensure that the
 measures selected for management provide the correct  incentives  for accomplishing the
 major goals of the program.   We looked at many efforts already under way to  bring the
 data collection in line with expectations for results and suggest possible additional  measures
 that would increase our ability to report progress for all the stages of the program.
FINDINGS:   EPA has  not reported Superfund progress in ways that meet the public's
expectations for timety completion of sites, vigorous enforcement against potentially responsible
parties (PRPs), and - most importantly -- protection of human health and the environment
Effective national oversight requires information on Superfund's environmental results.  Future
reporting of progress in this area will help to regain public confidence in the program.  For this
reason,  the Superfund program  has begun to  develop  additional measures  to address
environmental as well as enforcement results.  Even though none of these measures is perfect,
we are committed to start collecting the data on them in October 1989, with the expectation that
they will be improved over time as  we start to report progress  on achieving public health,
environmental and enforcement goals  early in 1990.
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DISCUSSION: EPA has primarily collected progress data for use in program management
and accountability. Although certain accountability measures are necessary for management
and budget purposes, such as remedial action starts and fund  dollars obligated, reporting
these administrative actions outside the Agency has not been an effective way of
communicating the accomplishments of the program.  They have been perceived as primarily
reflecting  "inputs"  (beginnings of activity), rather than "outputs" (results of actions) and
generally don't describe what is actually occurring in the cleanup process in terms that are
consistent with the public's expectations for Superfund.

         In particular, the current set of measures  doesn't address the public health and
environmental results of the program.  For example, removal of  leaking containers and
contaminated materials serves to control or even eliminate the  imminent danger to human
health and the environment. Similarly, during remedial actions to clean up sites, continual
progress is made in reducing the hazards the  sites pose.  However,  the measures EPA
currently tracks and reports for management purposes, such as "removal completion" and
"RD/RA completion" don't convey the public health  or environmental benefits of those
activities.

         The  current set of measures also doesn't do a very good  job communicating the
range of results from intermediate actions taken at sites.  For example, "deletion" of a site
from the National Priorities List, widely accepted as the only  measure of progress in the
Superfund program, is an accountability system measure. But,  the  relatively small number
of sites in this category doesn't reflect the real reduction in  risk to human health and the
environment or the extensive long-term work conducted at the site before the deletion stage.
In the action stages of the program,  there are many sites where extensive work to reduce
risks has been done, even though long-term treatment and/or pumping remedies might be
needed before the site is finally "delisted." This "delisting" process  can take several years.

         We found that the following additional measures are needed to communicate
program progress:

         *     Environmental Results.   The principal expectation of the
               public is that EPA and PRPs will take the necessary steps
 ,    „          to control the risks to human health and the environment
               from abandoned waste sites.  The public  wants  to  see
               action to remove, treat, or contain  hazardous  substances,
               and progress toward achieving the  human  health and
               ecological goals on and near the sites.

          *     Timeliness.  Recent critiques of the  Superfund program
               note that it is difficult for those outside the Agency to
               follow a site or set of sites though the cleanup process and
               to determine   whether  cleanup  activities  are   being

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conducted in a timely manner. At the same time, there are
many constraints on timeliness that may make it difficult
to develop a good measure of timeliness. Nonetheless, it
has been suggested that some measure of timeliness based
on expected time frames for average sites is needed to help
communicate progress in cleanup activities.

Community Involvement.  Recent studies suggest that some
measure is needed to reflect the degree  or quality of
community involvement in site decisions nationwide  and
that we need to use measures that provide an incentive for
early,  frequent,  and  consistent  communication  with
communities near sites.  Some have also suggested that
measures of Agency-wide community relations activities are
needed.

Innovative Technologies.   Currently, there is no measure
to reflect the  kinds of remedies being selected at sites,
particularly the use of innovative technologies and  the
extent of preference for treatment.  Some people have
suggested that measures are needed  to  communicate
whether the appropriate remedies are being used and how
extensively and quickly new technologies are being used.
The Agency has  already conducted a  study of remedy
selection in site decisions (1988 ROD Survey) that can be
used to communicate this information to the public.

Enforcement.  Use  of existing accountability measures to
communicate  enforcement  accomplishments  has been
criticized for two primary reasons. First, measures assigned
to the enforcement program don't measure  the degree or
quality of participation or co-operation from PRPs  and
what this means in terms of Fund money saved.  Second,
measures assigned to the remedial program  are not linked
to successful enforcement actions.  New measures should
focus on those activities that result in early and substantive
involvement by PRPs and on activities most likely to result
in actions closely linked to actual site cleanup-
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         Several major initiatives are already under way that will provide new measures for
communication of program progress.   EPA plans to begin  tracking a limited set  of
environmental measures or "indicators" in 1990 to better reflect Superfund's progress in
protecting human health and the environment.  In addition, changes to the accountability
measures will make them more useful for informational purposes.  For example, existing
measures of "first Record of Decision" and "final Record of Decision" will be combined into
one measure reflecting remedy selection at sites on the National Priorities List (NPL).
Similarly, a new measure has been developed to describe the percent of all proposed or
final NPL sites that have been addressed.
RECOMMENDATIONS:  Accelerate  the  improvements  to  the  existing management
measures to support  the national  program managers'  communication of  Superfund
progress.  Wherever possible, report the information in 1990.

Specific actions should include:

         *     by October 1, 1989  begin collection of data to  report
               environmental results indicators for:

                      the number of sites where  exposures from
                      air,  surface  water and/or  ground  water
                      releases of hazardous  substances have been
                      controlled.
                      progress towards meeting the human health
                      and/or ecological goals at sites.
                      the amount of hazardous material treated or
                      removed and  area of material contained.

          *      also by October 1, 1989, begin collecting data to report:

                      the timeliness of moving a  site through the
                      various stages of site remediation, measured
                      against preestablished criteria.
                      the extent of PRPs'  participation in the
                      program.

          *      accelerate the development  of additional measures for
                reporting:

                      the types of technologies used to control and
                      cleanup  sites,  including  alternative  and
                      innovative technologies.

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                      additional environmental indicators for 1) the
                      number of people protected from exposures
                      to hazardous substances, and 2) changes in
                      concentrations of contaminants at sites.
           ACHIEVING INCENTIVES FOR EFFICIENCY AND RESULTS
FINDINGS:  The large number of management measures, linked to specific action and sites,
limits the Regions' flexibility to creatively apply the variety of tools in Superfund to achieve
maximum results. Ultimately, with a large number of measures,  everything is an equal priority.
This reduces the ability of the Regions to concentrate on a limited set of strategic priorities such
as greater PRP participation  and faster cleanup actions at sites.  Recognizing that the existing
set of measures is the basis for much of the planning and Regional resource distributions, and
that major reductions in the number or diversity of measures could have serious consequences
for our budget and management systems, nonetheless it is time to look at other approaches that
could provide a greater incentive for efficiency and action.
DISCUSSION:

Adding More Meaningful Measures?

         A cursory review of the accountability measures only begins to suggest the
magnitude and complexity of the  Superfund  program.   These  measures  have  been
developed and refined over time to reflect the statutory goals, the institutional organization,
public expectations,  and incentives  and disincentives for implementing  the  program.
Furthermore, the measures are tied not only to performance but form the basis of our
budgeting system.  Staff resources and contract dollars are carefully apportioned according
to the workload models, which find their basis in the accountability systems.

         In our conversations with the Regions and the program office, we found a delicate
truce between EPA Headquarters' need for measures of accountability and the Regions'
desire for flexibility.  While there was limited agreement as to how many  measures are
enough, the bottom line is resources, and both sides agree that the current  system, while
flawed, works well enough to allocate budgets  and track activities.

         Headquarters managers want a comprehensive set of measures because it provides
more detail for oversight of different  aspects of  the program.  Multiple measures help to
ensure  that numerous  policy  directives under  this  complex  program  are carried out
consistently in all Regions, and the current set reflects those national policies.
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         The  Regions feel the pinch  of the oversight and the heavy reporting burden.
Each Region already has to dedicate a significant amount of resources to reporting, which
they accept (for the most part) as part  of doing business. They don't want to increase that
burden and further believe that reducing the emphasis on "beans" could result in greater
return in increased participation in the program by PRPs.

Using Measures as Incentive for Performance

         The data collection issue becomes more difficult when we look at the role of
measures as incentives for achieving progress.  The large number and broad focus of these
measures serves to split the program into many different small areas.  Hence, there is little
sense of priority; all activities are important. While this has been accepted as a necessary
step to start-up a complex program, we should reexamine the ramifications of such a mixed
message for accomplishing  the goals of  the  program now that  it is reaching greater
maturity.

EPA Should Pilot Test Alternative Approaches to Regional Management

         While no consensus emerged during our interviews, three  different approaches
were suggested to change the  way the Regions  are managed and improve performance.
Since the ramifications of these alternatives are significant, EPA should pilot test them in
a few Regions.  These alternatives  are:

Allowing Greater Flexibility  to Leverage the Fund. Some Regions have suggested that the
existing set of accountability  measures restricts their flexibility to effectively use the mix of
fund and enforcement tools to improve the efficiency of the program. They argue that this
flexibility is necessary to overcome the  overwhelming shortfalls inherent in the Fund and the
significant resources needed to  clean the sites.  In  particular, the Regions would like
greater flexibility to use the  fund as a highly visible lever to apply at sites where the PRPs
are recalcitrant or unnecessarily  delaying negotiations. Because the current system sets so
many specific targets for numbers of individual  actions, the Regions feel that frequently
their hands are tied to shift strategies and types of actions as  a site develops.  Reducing the
number of measures would  mean eliminating many measures and targets with more of a
focus on improved  performance in a limited number of areas. These should be closely
 linked  with  the overall  goals  of the program,  such as  increased responsible  party
 participation and faster site  cleanups.

          While attractive, this proposal does presents some difficulties.  First, developing
 workload models without the wide range  of measures may  be  difficult. Also, EPA would
 have less of the national  data base of actions that Congress and specific  interest groups
 often ask it to produce. While these problems are significant, they are not insurmountable.
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 Using National Audit Teams. A second supplemental approach would pilot test the use of
 national audit teams to visit the Regions to assess performance.  The idea would be to have
 these audit teams substitute for some components of the existing quarterly reporting now
 done by the Regions.  The audit teams would be expected to collect the necessary progress
 and accounting information to report on the Region's progress.  An added benefit of this
 approach is  that  the audit teams could  function as  effective vehicles  for  transferring
 innovative program approaches from Region to Region.

         To  be effective, these teams would have  to work closely with  the  Regional
 Coordinators  and be staffed  with senior, experienced  personnel  who  understand the
 program.  They would have to view the audits as  part of a productive partnership with the
 Regions and not as a opportunity for fault finding.

 Targeting Awards to Results. Another supplemental suggestion is to improve the Superfund
 personnel award system.  Superfund staff are under great public and management pressure
 and scrutiny.  A greater emphasis on "celebrating successes" would convey a message to
 staff and the public regarding our  emphasis on action and results.   Highly selective  (and
 lucrative)  awards for  innovative  approaches that produce significant accomplishments in
 environmental results, timeliness,  community involvement,  and enforcement could be
 presented as examples of desired performance. While this step would not directly change
 the number of measures, an enhanced  and highly visible awards  system  would serve to
 emphasize key areas of performance  expectations.
RECOMMENDATIONS:  Begin a process to review Superfund's  internal management
measures with an eye toward eliminating unnecessary or redundant reporting and focusing
more directly  on improving performance.  Pilot test alternative approaches to increase
Superfund performance and achieve environmental results.  Possible pilots include:

        *      Reducing the number of measures tracked in the Regions
               and providing greater flexibility to the Regions to leverage
               Fund monies to increase PRPs' participation in settlements
               and to accelerate cleanups.

        *      Supplementing  the  complex  system of accountability
               measures with program audit and oversight teams charged
               with  the  mission   of  improving  performance  at
               Headquarters and in the  Regions.   These  should be
               regarded as productive partnerships for  improving total
               quality in the program.

        *      Celebrating success by expanding the use of awards as
               incentives.

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NEXT STEPS

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                                 NEXT STEPS
      President Bush promised the American people that he was firmly committed to
cleaning up toxic waste sites:  "I'm for an aggressive, no nonsense approach to cleaning up
     wlte dumps, I'm for strengthening enforcement against dumpers,  quickening the
     of our cleanups, and streamlining the bureaucracy that sometimes slows them down.
     report constitutes the first installment toward fulfilling the President's promise.
      According to recent Roper and Associated Press surveys, toxic waste cleanup is
received by the public to be the nations's most pressing environmental problem.  The
L«ndationsPin this  report are the first steps in what  must be an ongoing and
developing effort to make the Superfund program work more effectmty. However for
there to be a meaningful change in the  public perception of Superfund there must be
 trong and determined leadership on the part of those charged with the tasks of managing
 he environmental agencies of the federal and state governments.  Leadership emanates
from Tose Sected by the citizenry and from public officials entrusted with the stewardship
of government programs.

       This leadership begins with EPA's Administrator, William K. Reilly, and with the
 other officials  appointed  by  the President.   The day-to-day managers of Superfund in
 Washington, in Se ten Regional offices, and at the various Superfund sites across the
 nation  mus have the full support of  their appointed leaders.  These managers at
 Headqu^ers and in the Regions should reflect the leadership and commitment necessary
 to make this program work.

       Several of the recommendations  in this report address the necessity of a  more
 productive partnership between EPA Headquarters  and the Regional offices    The
 Regional offices are the focal point  from  which the real job of cleaning up sites gets  done
 Thf Regional  offices will be given the cooperation and continue to have the ^flexibility to
 be innovative  in their approach to especially difficult or unusual tasks  There will be
 how^r, more of an emphasis on consistency of result:  abatement of toxic substances
 at the greatest possible number of sites on the National Priorities List so that Brisks to , the
 health and safety of people in surrounding communities  is minimized in the shortest
 possible time.

        Action is now the key requirement for success.  While EPA will continue to engage
 in the productive dialogue with Congress and with Superfund's many other constituencie
 that has characterized the investigations  leading to this report, we now have to get serious
                                         8-1

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 about making sure we have the resources to get the job done.  Accordingly, the Agency
 should request the reprogramming of certain funds already in  the Superfund budget in
 order to put more employees into Superfund enforcement, policy and regulatory analysis,
 community relations work and site management.

       EPA must also now begin the process of developing a results  oriented plan and
 schedule for implementing the major  recommendations and actions mandated in this
 report. Though some recommendations have already been acted upon, and many others
 are presently in various stages of completion, a complete schedule and implementation plan
 for all recommendations in the report will be  prepared by September 1, 1989. These task
 schedules and timelines will subsequently be reflected in the work plans of Agency program
 managers and supervisors at Headquarters and in the Regions. EPA's implementation plan
 will .manifest a respect for the deadlines that have been  set forth in the 1986 SARA
 legislation.

       The Task Groups anticipate that prompt action on the recommendations contained
 in this report will help to regain the credibility necessary to restore public confidence in
 the Agency's administration of this very demanding program.  Indeed, public trust in the
work of dedicated employees is the most important asset any government program can
hope to achieve.  EPA looks forward to working with  Congress and with the  program's
many constituencies to achieve the public  health and environmental goals  in Superfund's
enabling statutes.  What we seek now is public acceptance of the approach set forth in this
report and  room to operate in a supportive environment.
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                                  EPILOGUE
      Finally, in addition to the far reaching recommendations in this report, there are
several significant matters that were not capable of being adequately addressed during the
90 day review period.  Though each task group identified several noteworthy issues for
further investigation and review,  the three issues below were selected as management
concerns substantially intertwined with the action agenda outlined in this report.
STATE/FEDERAL PARTNERSHIP

      Because of the large number of sites that require cleanup and the long-term nature
of the Superfund program, it is necessary  to reexamine the roles of state and federal
governmental entities in the program.  EPA will convene a conference of key state and
federal officials to  examine the evolving state/federal relationship and to make further
recommendations to the Administrator on this issue.  EPA also will work with the states
to develop a plan for state participation in the Superfund enforcement program.


CONTRACTOR CAPACITY TO  MEET SUPERFUND NEEDS

      The Offices of Emergency and Remedial Response and Administration should
undertake an analysis of the long-term contract needs of the Superfund program to project
how EPA will meet the workforce demands  of the future using a combination of available
technically competent  contractors arid in-house  expertise to ascertain what in-house
expertise EPA should build.
      This analysis should examine  the complete hazardous  waste personnel market,
including:  State hazardous waste programs; RCRA corrective action;  Departments of
Energy and Defense; and private sector personnel requirements and  compensation.


EFFECTIVELY MEASURE AND COMMUNICATE BENEFITS OF SUPERFUND

       EPA should identify ways to measure and communicate the direct and indirect
benefits of the Superfund program beyond  those associated with the  remediation of sites
listed on the National  Priorities List.  This will require characterization of the progress
made at addressing releases of hazardous  substances at sites that are not listed on the
NPL, including the efforts of EPA's Superfund removal program, other  federal agencies,
state and local  governments, and  the  responsible  parties.   It also will require
characterization of the extent of indirect benefits from the Superfund program on such
business sectors as real estate, hazardous waste management and  disposal,  insurance,
corporate mergers and takeovers,  technology development and transfer, and litigation.

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APPENDICES

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                              APPENDIX I
                         ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Charlie Grizzle
Jon Cannon
Ed Reich
Nancy Firestone
Rob Wilkins
Steve Wassersug
Basil Constantelos
Patricia Meaney
Ron Brand
Mike Kilpatrick
Lee Paddock
Lisa Friedman
                             THE TASK GROUP

                          Policy Steering Committee

                          Lew Crampton, Chairman
John Martin
Terry Davies
John Skinner
Tom Dunne
Merrill Hohman
Pat Tobin
William Child
Walter Mugdan
Gary Pulford
Christine O'Donnell
Jack McGraw
                             Task Group Leaders
Tom Dunne, Coordinator
David Ziegele
Jack Stanton
Hank Schilling
John Skinner
Margie Fehrenbach
Bill Finister
John Cross
Randy Smith
Maryann Froehlich
Steve Lingle
Rob Wilkins
                               Special Advisors
 Morgan Kinghorn
 Bruce Diamond
 Henry Longest

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                                  Task Group I

                         Administration and Field Support

                             Bill Fillister, Task Leader
Dave O'Conner
Clarence Hardy
Calvin Lawrence
Hector Suarez
Clarice Gaylord
Elaine Wright
Leigh- Diggs
Colleen Carruthers
Kerry Clough
Arthur Flaks
Steve Tuber
John Brink
Don Patton
Sally Ann Harper
Paul Nadeau
Ika Joiner
Elissa Karpf
Dennis Gagne
Shaheer AM
Marie Murphy
Beth Craig
Sally Mansbach
Kathy Petruccelli
John Edwardson
Andrew Carlin
Tom Voltaggio
William Wisniewski
Richard Lemley
Robert Pavlik
Walter Mugdan
Mary McCaffery
Ralph Rizzo
Debbie Dietrich
Steve Kovach
Susan Gordon
Clem Ratstatter
Patricia Hull
Kathy Seikel
Jan Rogers
Stephanie Del Ree
Steve Gilrein
Jack Shipley
Terry Ouverson
Srikant Sastri
                                 Task Group II

                 Remedial Program Implementation and Oversight
                           David Ziegele, Task Leader
Irv Auerbach
Beth Cavalier
Sarah Larson
Julie Shannon
Alan Youkeles
Dave Webster
Bill Hagel
Chris Beling
Sharon Frey
Suzanne Priftis
Esther Tepper
Dick Green
Rick Schwartz
Betsy Shaw

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                                Task Group III

                                 Enforcement
                    John Cross & Jack Stanton, Task Leaders
Ira Leighton
Bruce Smith
Alexis Strauss
Barbara Grimm
Patty Bubar
Mike Christensen
Dave Van Slyke
Charles Openchowski
Cliff Yee
Kathryn Nolan
Johanna Hunter
Carrie  Capuco
                                Mike Thomas
                                Mike Elam
                                Paul Nadeau
                                Frank Russo
                                Frank Biros
                                Glenn Unterberger
                                Earl Salo
                                Maryann Froehlich
                                Anna Swerdel
                                Kathleen MacKinnon
                                Tony Diecidue
Tim Brincefield
Ann Cardinal
Suzanne Wells
Susan Bullard
Dennis Huebner
                Task Group IV

  Listening and Responding to the Affected Public

           Randy Smith, Task Leader

                                Hank Schilling
                                Margaret McCue
                                Karen Ellenberger
                                Deny Allen
Mary Gade
Anne Cardinal
                 Task Group V

Measuring and Commmunicating Program Progress

         Maryann Froehlich, Task Leader

                                Tom Voltaggio
                                Elaine Stanley

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 John Cross
 Jim Vickery
 Karen Burgan
 Chris O'Donnell
 Craig Zamuda
 Sherry Milan
 Fred Talcott
 Ruth Chemerys
 Kathy MacKinnon
                             Clem Rastatter
                             Russ Dawson
                             Margaret Randol
                             John Wilson
                             Charlotte White
                             Dick Worden
                             Walter Walsh
                             Susan Bullard
                             Joan O'Callahan
Fred Lindsey
Bill Hansen
              Task Group VI

          Innovative Technologies

John Skinner & Stephen Lingle, Task Leaders

                             John Kingscott
Carol Stanzak
Ralph Rizzo
                     REPORT PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
                               Production Staff
                             Kathy Petruccelli
                                Editorial Staff
Tom Kelly
Kathleen MacKinnon
Barbara Grimm
                             Joan O'Callahan
                             Tom DeKay
                                 Staff Support
Sheri Johnson
Paula Hawkins
Roxanne Settle
Gloria BoBo
Pat Savage
                             Annette DiLascio
                             Lillian Games
                             Maria Powers
                             Evelyn Wray
                             Bill McCarthy

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                               APPENDIX H

                               ACRONYMS
ARAR: Applicable or Relevant and Appropriate Requirements

ATSDR:  Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry

CERCLA: Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of
        1980

DOJ: Department of Justice

FAR: Federal Acquisition Regulations

FEA: Field Enforcement Attorney

FS:  Feasibility Study

NEAR:  Non-binding Allocations of Responsibility

NCP: National Contingency Plan

NETAC:  National Environmental Technology Applications Corporation

NPL: National Priorities List

OSC: On-Scene Coordinator

O&M: Operation and Maintenance

PRP: Potentially Responsible Party

ROD: Record of Decision

RA:  Remedial Action

RCRA:  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act

RD:  Remedial Design

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RI: Remedial Investigation




RPM: Remedial Project Manager




SARA:  Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986




SITE: Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation Program




TAG:  Technical Assistance Grants






OFFICES OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (EPA):,




OECM:  Office of Enforcement and Compliance Monitoring




OERR: Office of Emergency and Remedial Response, OSWER




OEETD:  Office of Environmental Engineering and Technology Demonstration, ORD




OWPE: Office of Waste Programs Enforcement, OSWER




OPMT: Office of Program Management and Technology, OSWER




ORD: Office of Research and Development




OSWER:  Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response




OARM:  Office of Administration and Resources Management

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                                 APPENDIX III
                                   GLOSSARY

                    "'    "    "'!•"  '   '     ' - "' •    ,      ,  '.    '
       Administrative Order on Consent: A legal agreement between EPA and potentially
 responsible parties (PRPs) whereby PRPs  agree  to perform  or  pay the cost of a site
 cleanup.  The agreement describes actions to be taken at a site and may be subject to a
 public comment period.  Unlike  a  consent decree, an administrative order on consent
 does not have to be approved by  a judge.

       Administrative Record:  A file which is maintained and contains all information
 used by the lead agency to make its decision on the selection of a response action under
 CERCLA This file is to be available for public review and a copy is to be established at
 or near the site, usually at one of the information repositories. Also, a duplicate file is
 held in a central location, such as a  Regional or State office.

       Cleanup:  Actions taken to deal with a release or threatened  release of hazardous
 substances that could affect public health and/or the environment.  The term "cleanup" is
 often used broadly to describe various response  actions or phases of remedial responses
 such as the remedial investigation/feasibility study.

       Community Relations:'  EPA's program to  inform and  involve the public in the
Superfund process  and respond to community concerns.                   i

       Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,  Compensation,  and  Liability  Act
(CERCLA):  A  federal law'passed in 1980 and  amended in 1986 by  the Superfund
Amendments and Reauthorization Act. , The Acts  created a special  tax that goes into a
Trust Fund, commonly known-as Superfund, to  investigate and clean up abandoned or
uncontrolled hazardous waste sites. Under the program, EPA can either:
            o
            o
                   Pay for site cleanup when parties responsible for
                   the contamination cannot  be located  or  are
                   unwilling or unable to perform the work; or

                   Take legal action to force parties responsible for
                   site contamination to clean up the site or pay
                   back the Federal government for the cost of the
                   cleanup.                                               V

      Consent Decree:  A legal  document, approved and  issued  by a judge, that
formalizes an agreement reached between EPA and potentially responsible parties (PRPs)
where PRPs will perform all or part of a Superfund site cleanup. The consent  decree
describes actions that PRPs are required to perform and is subject to a public comment
period.

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                                        -2-

      Cost Recovery:  A legal  process  where  potentially responsible parties, can be
required to pay back the Federal government for money it spends on any cleanup  actions.

      De Minimis Settlements:  Settlements that are smaller agreements separate from
the larger  settlement for the chosen cleanup remedy.   Under de minimis settlements,
relatively small contributors of waste to a site, or landowners who bought the s.ite but did
not contribute wastes to it, may resolve their liability.

      Emergency:  Those releases or threats of releases requiring initiation of on-site
activity  within hours  of  the  lead  agency's determination that a  removal  action  is
appropriate.
                                                         -•              i   „-_/•"•
      Feasibility Study: See Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study

      Ground Water:  Water found beneath the earth's. surface that fills pores between
materials such as sand, soil, or gravel,   In  aquifers, ground water occurs in sufficient
quantities that it can be used for drinking water, irrigation and other purposes.

      Hazard Ranking System: A scoring system used to evaluate potential relative risks
to public health and the environment from releases or threatened releases of hazardous
substances.  EPA and States  use the HRS to calculate a site score, from 0 to 100, based
on the actual or potential release of hazardous substances from a site through air, surface
water, or ground water to affect people.  This score is the primary factor used to decide
if a hazardous waste site should be placed on the National Priorities List. .

      Hazardous Substance: Any material that poses a threat to public health and/or the
environment.   Typical hazardous substances  are materials  that are toxic,  corrosive,
ignitable, explosive, or chemically reactive.               .

      Information Repository:  A file containing current, information,  technical  reports,
and  reference  documents  regarding a  Superfund site.   The  information  repository is
usually located in a public building that is convenient for local residents ~ such as a public
school, city hall, or library.                                                 ,

      Mixed Funding:  Settlements where potentially responsible parties and EPA share
the costs of the response action and EPA pursues viable non-settlers for the costs EPA
incurred.

      National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan:  The  Federal
regulation that guides the Superfund program.

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                                         -3- '     .         '                   •
           '              -•..•.."'                           p
       National Priorities List:  EPA's list of the most serious uncontrolled or abandoned
 hazardous waste sites identified for possible  long-term remedial response using money
 from the Trust Fund.  The list is based primarily on the score a site receives on the
 Hazard Ranking System.  EPA is required to update the NPL  at least once a year.

       Non-binding Allocations  of Responsibility: Process  for EPA to propose a way for
 potentially responsible parties to allocate costs among themselves.

       On-Scene Coordinator: The Federal official who coordinates arid directs Superfund
 removal actions.

       Operable Unit:  An action taken as one part of  an overall site cleanup.   For
 example, a carbon  absorption system could'be installed to  halt  rapidly spreading ground-
 water   contaminants   while   a  more  comprehensive   and   long-term  remedial
 investigation/feasibility study is underway. A number of operable units can be used in the
 course of a site cleanup.

       Operation and Maintenance:  Activities conducted at a site after a response action
 occurs, to ensure that the cleanup or containment system is functioning properly.

       Potentially Responsible Party: An individual (s) or company (ies) (such as owners,
 operators, transporters, or generators)  potentially responsible for, or contributing to, the
 contamination problems at a Superfund site.  Whenever possible, EPA requires potentially
 responsible parties, through administrative arid legal actions, to  clean up hazardous waste
 sites they have contaminated.

       Record of Decision:  A public document that explains which cleanup alternative(s)
will  be used  at National  Priorities List sites.   The record  of  decision is based  on
information and technical analysis generated during the remedial investigation/feasibility
study and consideration of public comments and community concerns.

      Remedial Action:  The actual construction or implementation phase, that  follows
the remedial design of the selected cleanup alternative at a  site  on the National Priorities
List.

      Remedial Design:  An engineering phase that follows the record of decision when
technical drawings and specifications are developed for the subsequent remedial action at
a site on the National Priorities List.

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                                         -4-

       Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study:  Investigative and analytical studies usually
performed at the same time in an interactive, iterative process, and together referred to
as the "RI/FS." They are intended to:

             o     Gather the data necessary to determine the type
                   and extent of contamination at a Superfund site;

             o     Establish criteria for cleaning up the site;             :

             o     Identify and screen  cleanup alternatives for              .
                   remedial action; and                                '

             o     Analyze in detail the technology and costs of the
                   alternatives.

       Remedial Project Manager:  The EPA or State official responsible for overseeing
remedial response activities.

       Remedial Response:  A long-term action that stops  or substantially reduces a
release or threatened release of hazardous substances that is  serious, but does not pose
an immediate threat to public health and/or the environment.

       Removal Action:  An immediate action  taken over  the short-term to address a
release or threatened release of hazardous substances.

       Response Action:  A CERCLA-authorized  action at a  Superfund site involving
either  a short-term removal action or a long-term remedial response that may include,
but is not limited to, the following activities:

             o     Removing hazardous materials form a site to an
                   EPA-approved, licensed hazardous waste facility
                   for treatment, containment, or destruction.

             o     Containing the waste safely on-site to eliminate
                   further problems.

             o     Destroying or treating the  waste on-site using
                   incineration or other technologies.

             o     Identifying and removing the source of ground
                   water   contamination   and   halting   further
                   movement of the contaminants.

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                                        -5-

      Responsiveness Summary:  A summary of oral and/or written public comments
received by EPA during a comment period on key EPA documents, and EPA's responses
to those comments. The responsiveness summary is a key part of the ROD, highlighting
community concerns for EPA decision-makers.

      Trust Fund:  A Fund set up under the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act to help pay for cleanup of hazardous waste sites and to
take legal action to force those responsible for the sites to clean them up.

      Unilateral Administrative Order:  A legal document issued by  EPA directing a
potentially responsible party  to perform site  cleanup.  It sets forth the liability of the
party for the cleanup, describes actions to be taken, and subjects the recipient to penalties
and damages for noncompliarice.  Unilateral orders may be enforced in court.
                  •A- U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 198&- 623-682/10263

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