CERCLA SECTIONS 301(a)(1)(B) AND (D)
HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE RESPONSE TRUST FUND
RECEIPTS, OBLIGATIONS, AND DISBURSEMENTS
- FINAL REPORT -
OFFICE OF SOLID WASTE AND EMERGENCY RESPONSE
U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
December 4, 1984

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CERCLA SECTION 301(a)(1)(B) AND (D)
THE HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE RESPONSE TRUST FUND .
RECEIPTS, OBLIGATIONS, AND DISBURSEMENTS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
NUMBER
I. INTRODUCTION 	 1
II. CERCLA SECTION 301(a)(1)(B) SUMMARY
OF SUPERFUND RECEIPTS, OBLIGATIONS, AND
DISBURSEMENTS	 2
1.	Trust Fund Receipts, Obligations, and
Disbursements 	 2
2.	Obligations and Disbursements
By Superfund Activity 	 5
3.	Interagency Support 	 7
III. CERCLA SECTION 301(a)(1)(D)REVIEW OF COST
RECOVERY ACTIONS 	 11
1.	Superfund .Cost Recovery Strategy	 11
2.	Summary of Cost Recovery Actions ..... 12
3.	Cost Recovery Settlements/Judgments .... 13
4.	Cost Recovery Actions Filed by DOJ	 13
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I. INTRODUCTION
The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation,
and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA or Superfund) establishes
Federal authority to respond to the release or potential
release of hazardous substances, pollutants, or
contaminants into the environment. The Act establishes
the Hazardous Substance Response Trust Fund (Fund) to
finance response activities. Under Executive Order 12326,
the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was assigned
primary responsibility for managing and implementing the
hazardous substance release cleanup effort.
Section 301(a)(1) of CERCLA requires the President to
submit a series of studies to Congress on the experience
with implementing the Act. The studies are intended to
provide Congress with an assessment of the accomplishments
and impacts of the Superfund program. Paragraph (B) of
section 301(a)(1) specifically requires "a summary of past
receipts and disbursements from the Fund." Paragraph (D)
requires a study of the Superfund program's "record and
experience in recovering Fund disbursements from liable
parties."
This report was designed to meet the requirements of
sections 301(a)(1)(B) and (D). Paragraphs (B) and (D)
have been combined into one study because both paragraphs,
in effect, call for a review of the financial aspects of
the Fund's uses and receipts. Since cost recoveries are
receipts into the Fund, the cost recovery summary required
by paragraph (D) supplements the summary of receipts
required by paragraph (B).
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II. CERCLA SECTION 301(a)(1)(B) SUMMARY OF SUPERFUND
RECEIPTS, OBLIGATIONS, AND DISBURSEMENTS
The objective of the CERCLA section 301(a)(1)(B) study
is to present descriptive reports summarizing past
receipts into and disbursements from the Fund.
1. TRUST FUND RECEIPTS, OBLIGATIONS, AND DISBURSEMENTS
Exhibit A on the following page summarizes Fund
transactions by fiscal year and indicates:
Receipts - comprised of excise taxes levied on
various petrochemicals, inorganic raw materials,
and crude oil and petroleum products; interest on
the invested balance of the Fund; recoveries from
responsible parties of funds spent to cleanup
hazardous substance releases; appropriations from
the General Fund; and a one-time transfer from a
fund established by Section 311 of the Clean
Water Act.
Appropriations - the portion of the Trust Fund
made available by Congress for obligation.
Obligationa - legal commitments of the Fund for
specific response activities.
Disbursements - actual outlays of the Fund for
work completed.
By summarizing Fund receipts and disbursements,
Exhibit A fulfills the mandate of CERCLA section
301(a)(1)(B). Exhibit A also includes appropriations
because they represent the actual amount of the receipts
available for use, and obligations because they indicate
the entire amount of funds EPA is planning to disburse.
The receipt and disbursement data in Exhibit A were
compiled from the U.S. Department of Treasury monthly
reports. The monthly data were aggregated yearly for all
data elements except interest income. Since the Treasury
reports do not show receipts until they are actually
deposited into the Fund, they may not reflect the actual
interest income earned for that month. Although interest
on the Treasury Bill investments results from purchase of
the Bill at a discount and is not received and recorded
until the redemption (at the time of sale or maturity) of
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EXHIBIT A
HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE RESPONSE TRUST FUND RECEIPTS, OBLIGATIONS, AND DISBURSEMENTS
(THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS)
Unappropriated Balance,
Start of Year. ...
Receipts
Excise Taxes ....
Interest^).....
Fines and Recoveries
Appropriations fro*
the General Fund .
311 Fund Transfer
Total Receipts ....
Appropriations ....
Obligations....
Unappropriated Balance,
Bnd of Tear ....
Disbursements ....
Unexpended Balance
Trust Fund 	
FY 1981 FY 1982 FY 1983
	 78,293 229,050
127,900 243,994
9,393 67,854
9,000
6,743
153,036
74,743
40,283
2,309
26,600
340,757
190,000
180,744
230,225
60,978
356
40,000
331,559
210,000
230,233
78,293 229,050 350,609
8,039 79,576 147,803
144,997 406,178 589,934
FY 1984
350,609
261,235
77,941
3,440
44,000
386,616
460,000
465,619
277,225
285,279
TOTAL
863,354
216,166
6,106 (2)
119,600
6,743
1,211,969 (2)
934,743
916,879
277,226
520,697
FY 1985
(Estimate)
277,190
276,000
31,000
46,000
44,000
397,000
620,000
651,000 <4>
54,226
448,000 <4>
691,271 (5)	691,272 <2>	640,272
PROJECTED TOTAL
END FY 1985
1,139,354
247,166
52,106
163,600
6,743
1,608,969
1,554,743
1,567,879
54,226
968,697
640,272
(1)Includes	unamortized interest.
(2)	Total does not add due to rounding.
(3)	Does not include offsetting collections froa other Federal agencies.
(4)	Preliminary number based on $620,000 appropriation.
(5)	Includes unamortized interest ($73.7 million) on investment maturing September 1985.
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the investment instrument, it is actually being earned
throughout the period from purchase to redemption. The
interest income reported in Exhibit A for a given fiscal
year includes the amount of interest paid into the Fund
during the fiscal year plus any unamortized interest
(interest earned but not yet paid) minus the unamortized
interest included in the previous fiscal year.
The appropriation and obligation data were acquired
from EPA's Financial Management System. These totals are
end-of-year figures which do not include offsetting
collections from other Federal agencies or deobligations.
CERCLA sections 221 and 303 provide for maximum auth-
orizations for appropriations from the General Fund and
excise tax collections of $220 million and $1.38 billion,
respectively, by September 30, 1985.
Exhibit A shows that as of September 30, 1984, $1.2
billion in total receipts had been deposited into the Fund
and $520.7 million had been disbursed, leaving a balance
of $691.3 million. The greatest portion of receipts,
$863.4 million or 71.2 percent, was derived from excise
taxes. Annual tax collections reached a high of $261.2
million in FY 1984, with projections for FY 1985 of $276.0
million. Interest receipts totaled $216.2 million for the
four fiscal years and at 17.8 percent were the second
largest category of receipts.
A total of $6.1 million, or .5 percent of total
receipts, had been collected from responsible parties and
deposited into the Fund as of September 30, 1984 with 56.3
percent of this total collected in FY 1984. EPA estimates
$46 million in cost recoveries for FY 1985. No fines or
penalties had been reported as Fund receipts.
Appropriations from the General Fund totaled $119.6
million and comprised 9.9 percent of receipts during the
four fiscal years while the 311 Fund transfer provided .6
percent of total receipts.
Congress appropriated (i.e., made funds available for
obligation) $934.7 million of the $1.2 billion in total
receipts over the four fiscal years. Of the $934.7
million appropriated, $916.9 million was obligated for
Superfund activities. EPA projects an estimated 39.8
percent increase in obligations in FY 1985. Disbursements
also increased each year and totaled $520.7 million for
the four fiscal years. The unexpended balance of the Fund
projected for FY 1985 is $640.3 million.
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2. OBLIGATIONS AND DISBURSEMENTS BY SUPERFUND ACTIVITY
Exhibit B was developed to show how Fund money has
been used. Exhibit B presents obligations and disburse-
ments by Superfund activity. The obligation and dis-
bursement data in this exhibit were acquired from EPA's
Financial Management System (FMS). Both the obligation
and disbursement data were supplemented by data on
transfer allocations (Transfer IAGs) of CERCLA funds
reported by other Federal agencies with Superfund respon-
sibilities (Interagency Support). Transfer IAGs are not
reported in FMS since they are not considered obligations
by EPA. Transfer IAGs are included in these exhibits
because they are a use of Fund money and will be obligated
and disbursed by the Federal agency to which the funds are
transferred. Only the obligations and disbursements
reported by the agency which received the transfer are
included.
Exhibit B indicates Superfund program obligations and
disbursements by the following program activities:
Hazardous Substance Response - This category
includes all activities associated with removal
and remedial response actions. Removal actions
are short-term responses designed to prevent or
mitigate an immediate threat caused by the
release or potential release of.hazardous
substances" into the environment. Remiedial
actions are longer-term responses designed to
provide a permanent remedy.
Enforcement - This category includes adminis-
trative and judicial efforts at specific sites
designed to induce privately-financed cleanups
and to reimburse the Fund for CERCLA-financed
cleanup actions.
Management and Support - This category includes
overall program management and administrative
support, training, and contingency planning.
Research and- Development - This category includes
scientific and technical support provided by
EPA's Office of Research and Development such as
the evaluati-on and field testing of equipment as
well as techniques for discovering, assessing,
preventing, removing, and disposing of hazardous
substances releases.
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EXHIBIT B
OBLIGATIONS AND DISBURSEMENTS BY SUPERFUND ACTIVITY
(THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS)
ACTIVITY	FY 1981	FY 1982	FY 1983 FY 1984	TOTAL
Obligations*
Hazardous Substance Response
30,761.6
149,009.6
175,902.4
366,746.1
722,419.7
Enforcement
2,317.1
8,364.4
17,669.7
26,697.4
55,048.6
Management and Support
2,323.9
9,511.2
11,396.1
17,183.3
40,414.5
Research & Development
4,740.5
13,813.2
6,818.5
10,171.0
35,543.2
Interagency Support
140.0
45.2
18,446.7
44,821.7
63,453.6
Total
40,283.1
180,743.6
230,233.4
465,619.5
916,879.6


Disbursements


Hazardous Substance Response
6,144.3
58,903.0
109,993.2
209,656.1
384,696.5
Enforcement
753.4
6,619.7
11,389.1
17,553.7
36,315.9
Management and Support
1,006.7
7,701.2
10,712.2
15,003.1
34,423.2
Research ( Development
132.6
6,283.3
10,994.2
9,402.2
26,812.3
Interagency Support
1.7
69.2
4,714.6
33,664.2
38,449.7
Total
8,038.7
79,576.4
147,803.3
285,279.3
520,697.6
Obligations do not include offsetting collections from
other Federal
agencies.

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Interagency Support - This category includes
ongoing Superfund activities performed by other
Federal agencies.
Total obligations increased 27.4 percent between
FY 1982 and FY 1983 and more than doubled in FY 1984.
Specifically, in FY 1984, Hazardous Substance Response
obligations increased 108.5 percent. Interagency Support
obligations increased each fiscal year along with the
increase in Hazardous Substance Response. Obligations for
Enforcement to induce privately-financed cleanup and cost
recovery have also increased steadily since FY 1981.
As of September 30, 1984, $520.7 million had been
disbursed from the Fund for completed Superfund
activities. The greatest portion of Fund disbursements,
$384.7 million or 73.9 percent, were made for Hazardous
Substance Response. Disbursements from the Fund for work
completed increased 85.7 percent in FY 1983 and 93.0
percent in FY 1984.
3. INTERAGENCY SUPPORT
Exhibit C-l presents the total amount of CERCLA funds
provided through Interagency Agreements (IAGs) to other
Federal agencies for ongoing Superfund -activities. The
amount of each IAG and the amounts obligated and disbursed
by the agency receiving the funds are shown. Exhibit C-2
presents the yearly distribution of the IAGs," obligations,
and disbursements.
Two types of IAGs have been used to fund Interagency
Support: Transfer IAGs and Reimbursable IAGs. Transfer
IAGs have funded the following ongoing Federal support
activities:
Services by the Department of Justice (DOJ) to
carryout portions of the Superfund program in-
tended to facilitate private party cleanup and
cost recoveries.
Oversight and technical support of response
actions in coastal and marine areas by the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA).
Temporary and/or permanent relocation of indivi-
duals by the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA).
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Implementation of the health-related authorities
of CERCLA by the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS).
Response management activities by the Department
of the Interior (DOI) which support EPA's spill
and site response.
Protection of personnel at Superfund sites by the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA), including development of specific health
and safety guidelines.
Reimbursable IAGs have funded United States Coast Guard
(USCG) on-site training, outfitting and enforcement
activities, as well as maintenance of the National
Response Center.
Exhibit C-l indicates that a total of $67.0 million
had been provided to other Federal agencies for Inter-
agency Support, $63.5 million had been obligated and $38.4
million had been disbursed as of September 30, 1984. FEMA
received the greatest portion of funds (60.4 percent of
the total), HHS received 21.9 percent of the total, DOJ
received 8.4 percent of the total, and USCG received 7.7
percent of the total funds provided.
Exhibit C-2 shows that FY 1983 w.as the first fiscal
year in which substantial Fund IAGs were made. Prior to
FY 1983, DOJ was the only agency to receive CERCLA funds.
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EXHIBIT C-l
AGENCY
DOJ
NOAA
FEMA
HHS
DO I
OSHA
USCG
Total All Agencies
For All Fiscal Years
INTERAGENCY SUPPORT
CUMMULATIVE TOTALS
(THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS)
FY 1981 THROUGH FY 1984
IAG
5,610.8
615.0
40,456.0
14,656.0
315.0
151.6
5,189.2*
OBLIGATIONS
5,085.7
599.7
37,929.5
14,320.8
315.0
13.7
5,189.2
DISBURSEMENTS
4.497.2
410.2
27,834.0
3.987.3
242.1
5.6
896.1
63.453.6
38.449.7
*Reimbursable IAG.
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EXHIBIT C-2
INTERAGENCY SUPPORT BY FISCAL YEAR
(THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS)
FY 1981
FY 1982
AGENCY
IAG
OBLIGA-
TIONS
DISBURSE-
MENTS
IAG
OBLIGA-
TIONS^ 11
DISBURSE-
MENTS
DOJ
175.0
140.0
1.7
60.0
45.2
69.2
Total All
Agencies pec
Fiscal Year
175.0
140.0
1.7
60.0
45.2
69.2


FY 1983


FY 1984

AGENCY
IAG
OBLIGA-
TIONS (!)
DISBURSE-
MENTS (2)
IAG
OBLIGA-
TIONS t D
DISBURSE-
MENTS (2)
DOJ
2,008 .4
1,987.2
1,482.8
3,367.4
2,913.3
2,943.5
NOAA
365.0
348.3
133.4
250.0
251.4
276.8
FEMA
13,461.5
7,455. 5
1,464.1
26,994.5
30,474.0
26,911.6
HHS
9,656.0
7,140.9
1,634.3
5,000.0
7,179.9
2,353.0
DO I
0.0
o
•
o
o
•
o
315.0
315.0
277.6
OSHA
©
•
o
o
•
o
0.0
151.6
13.7
5.6
uscg<3)
1,514.8
1,514.8
©1
•
O
3,674.4
3,674.4
896.1
Total All
Agencies per
Fiscal Year
27,905,7
18.446.7
4,714.6
39.752.9
44.821.7
3 3.664.2
(1)	Obligations include some carryover of the unobligated balance of the Transfer IAG.
(2)	Disbursements include dollars obligated in previous fiscal years.
(3)	Reimbursable IAG.
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III. CERCLA SECTION 301(a)(1)(D) REVIEW OF
COST RECOVERY ACTIONS
The objective of the CERCLA Section 301(a)(1)(D) study
is to present descriptive reports summarizing cost
recoveries from liable parties.
Section 107 of CERCLA authorizes the recovery of costs
incurred by the Fund. In general, section 107 provides
that past and present owners, operators, generators, and
transporters of hazardous substances may be liable for the
costs of removal or remedial actions undertaken at those
sites and for damages to, or loss of, natural resources.
Although the Agency generally favors actions that encour-
age responsible party cleanup efforts, EPA is authorized
to use CERCLA funds for removal or remedial cleanup
actions. For Fund-financed cleanups, EPA attempts to
document and recover the maximum practicable amount of
money due to the Fund from responsible parties that may be
liable under section 107 of CERCLA.
Cfost recovery includes any settlement or legal judge-
ment whereby a responsible party deposits money into the
Fund to cover CERCLA response cost's. In other words, a
cost recovery includes (1) money from responsible parties
that reimburses the Fund for actual cleanup costs incurred
as well as (2) upfront payments into the Fund from respon-
sible parties to finance cleanup actions.
Exhibits D, E, and F of the 301(a)(1)(D) study do not
include information on other private party response
actions, where the parties either perform the cleanup
activity or establish an escrow account to privately-
finance the response activity. To date, the Agency has
successfully negotiated private party responses worth an
estimated $300 million. The 301(a)(1)(A) study which
evaluates the overall effectiveness of the Superfund
program provides a more comprehensive discussion of
private party response actions.
1. SUPERFUND COST RECOVERY STRATEGY
The figures presented here should be reviewed in the
context of the Superfund cost recovery strategy. During
the initial years of the Superfund program, cost recovery
efforts were considered part of negotiations for a
remedy. Cost recovery agreements, if pursued, were
generally incorporated as one part of broader settlement
agreements or legal judgements.
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Cost recovery efforts were not priority activities in
the initial years of the Superfund program for two
reasons. First, initial Fund-financed removals were
generally limited to emergencies that required a slow rate
of Fund expenditures, so cost recovery of these actions
was not emphasized. Second, initial program policies
resulted in a slow rate of Fund expenditures for remedial
activities. EPA chose to wait until the remedial response
was entirely or substantially complete before initiating
remedial cost recovery efforts. Since remedial actions
take several years to complete, cost recovery efforts have
only recently been initiated for these actions.
More recently, EPA began placing greater emphasis on
the importance of cost recovery actions. In 1983, EPA
increased the level of Fund-financed removal and remedial
activity with greater reliance on cost recovery as a means
of keeping the Fund solvent. The increased removal
activity placed greater demands on the Fund which resulted
in greater emphasis on cost recovery efforts.
CERCLA cost recovery efforts often involve complex and
lengthy legal procedures. Generally, these efforts in-
clude three elements: documentation, issuance of a demand
letter, and settlement with responsible parties. Complete
documentation requires that the government document all
costs it incurred, document any release or threat of'
release of a hazardous substance and.the resultant
liability of the responsible parties, and provide doc-
umentation to rebut the contention that site work was not
consistent with the National Contingency Plan which
implements CERCLA. EPA routinely issues a demand letter
to parties liable for response costs summarizing the costs
incurred and demanding payment for those costs. In
response, liable parties may pursue negotiations for cost
recovery settlement with EPA. If this approach fails, EPA
refers the case to the Department of Justice (DOJ) for
appropriate litigation. These legal procedures are often
complicated by the presence of more than one responsible
party.
2. SUMMARY OF COST RECOVERY ACTIONS
Exhibit D summarizes successful CERCLA section 107
cost recovery civil actions, as well as those actions
filed by DOJ, referred to DOJ, or in development (to be
referred to DOJ) at the end of FY 1984.
As of September 30, 1984, a total of 155 cost recovery
actions had been initiated to recover funds valued at
approximately $144.4 million. Of the 155 actions, 33 were
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successful cost recovery settlements/judgements for a
total of $6,641,196. In addition, 77 section 107 actions
had been filed, 26 actions were pending (had been referred
to DOJ), and 19 actions were in development (to be
referred to DOJ). The approximate dollar value of these
actions are $117 million, $13 million, and $7 million,
r espectively.
3.	COST RECOVERY SETTLEMENTS/JUDGEMENTS
Exhibit E presents successful cost recovery actions by
region, site and fiscal year. As indicated earlier, cost
recovery settlements/judgements had been reached at
33 sites for a total of $6,641,196 as of September 30,
1984. During FY 1981, there was one cost recovery
settlement/judgement for $30,000. During FY 1982, there
were three cost recovery settlements/judgements for a
total of $2,409,688 compared to 13 cost recovery
settlements/judgements in FY 1983 for $2,155,133. During
FY 1984, 16 settlements/judgements were reached to recover
response costs of $2,046,375.
Many of these successful cost recoveries represent
only partial reimbursement by a portion of the responsible
parties at each site. The non-settling parties will
generally be pursued for cost recovery. Of the 33 sites
for which cost recovery has occurred, 23 sites are on
EPA's National Priorities List (NPL), and 18 sites (NPL
and non-NPL) have had a removal action taken.
EPA reports successful cost recoveries when
settlements/judgements are reached. Exhibit E indicates
the sites where a portion of the cost recovery has not yet
been received from the responsible parties (i.e.,
collections outstanding).
4.	COST RECOVERY ACTIONS FILED BY DOJ
Exhibit F provides an account of the actions filed by
DOJ, including the site and approximate dollar value of
recovery sought by EPA. As of September 30, 1984, there
were 77 section 107 actions filed by DOJ. Of the 77
actions filed, 48 apply to sites on the NPL and 52 apply
to sites (NPL and non-NPL) where a removal action has been
taken.
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EXHIBIT D
SUMMARY OF COST RECOVERY ACTIONS
NUMBER OF ACTIONS
Cost Recovery Settlements/Judgements
Cases filed by DOJ
Cases referred to DOJ
Cases in development
33
77
26
19
155
VALUE OF ACTIONS
$ 6,641,196
117,688,300 (approx.)
13,0Co,300 (approx.)
	7 ,049,200 (approx.)
$144,384,996
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EXHIBIT E
COST RECOVERY SETTLEMENTS/JUDGEMENTS
FISCAL YEAR REMOVAL
OF SETTLEMENT/ ACTION(S)
REGION	NPL	SITE/STATE	JUDGEMENT	AMOUNT RECOVERED ($)	TAKEN
1
*
Woburn, MA
1982
60,000


2
*
Lipari, NJ
1984
67,500

*

*
Batavia Landfill, NY
1984
42,973


3
*
Tybouts Landfill, DE
1983
13,400



*
ABM Hade, PA
1983
635,800
(1)
*

*
McAdOO, PA
1983
4,800




Glenside Chloride, PA
1984
14,504

*

*
Plastifax, MS
1983
226,369

*
4

Lenoir, NC
1984
113,306

*

*
Bluff Road, SC
1984
95,000

*
5
*
Chera Central, MI
1982
140,000



*
Chem Dyne, OH
1982
2,209,688

*


A&F Materials Olney, IL
1983
61,000



*
Enviro-Chem, IN
1983
651,606

*

*
9th Avenue Dump, IN
1983
15,000
(2)


*
Velsicol, MI
1983
500,000



*
FMC, MN
1983
10,000



*
Oakdale, MN
1983
10,000



*
A&F Greenup, IL
1984
340,000
(3)
*

*
Johns Manville, IL
1984
43,735
(3)
*


East Bay Township, MI
1984
144,527

*

*
Haste Disposal Engineering, MN
1984
25,000



*
Allied Chemical, OH
1984
35,000




Union Carbide Dioxin Site, OH
1984
5,000
(3)

6
*
Cleve-Reber, LA
1983
7,646

*

*
Petro Processors, LA
1984
600,000




Pronto Services, NM
1984
26,930

*

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REGION
NPL
EXHIBIT E (Cont'd)
COST RECOVERY SETTLEMENTS/JUDGEMENTS
SITE/STATE
FISCAL YEAR
OF SETTLEMENT/
JUDGEMENT
AMOUNT RECOVERED($)
REMOVAL
ACTION(S)
TAKEN
8
9
10
Aidex, IA
Denny Farm, MO
Arlington, WY
General Disposal, CA
Nickel Solution, CA
American Surplus, WA
1983
1984
1983
1981
1984
1984
TOTAL COST RECOVERIES
TOTAL AMOUNT COLLECTED
AMOUNT OF SETTLEMENTS OUTSTANDING
12,967
155,000 (4)
6,545
30,000
199,500
138,400
$6,641,196
6,106,149
535,047
*
*
(1)	Agreement for $635,800; $605,753 paid as of September 30, 1984.
(2)	Agreement for $15,000; $10,000 paid as of September 30, 1984.
(3)	Agreement reached but uncollected as of September 30, 1984.
(4)	Court judgement but defendants have appealed decision; therefore, payment had not been
collected as of September 30, 1984.
-16-

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EXHIBIT F
COST RECOVERY CASES FILED BY DOJ
REGION
NPL
SITE/STATE
APPROXIMATE $
VALUE OF SITES
REMOVAL
ACTION(S)
TAKEN
*
*
Solvents Recovery, CT
25,000

Baird & McQuire, MA
1,000,000
*
New Bedford, MA
971,000
*
Mottolo, NH
550,000
*
Ottati & Goss, NH
2,100,000
*
Goose Farm, NJ
2,500,000
*
Prices Landfill, NJ
7,600,000

Syncon Resins, NJ
100,000

Berncolors, NY
550,000
*
Love Canal, NY
20,000,000
*
York Oil, NY
893,000
*
Pine Valley Gulf Club, NJ
35,000
*
Tybouts, DE
200,000

Northeast, MD
1,000,000
*
ABM Hade, PA
4,800,000
*
Brodhead Creek, PA
684,000
*
Bruin Lagoon, PA
1,222,400
*
Drake, PA
950,000
*
Glenside Chloride, PA
14,500
*
Lehigh Electric, PA
1,500,000

Roadside Dumping, PA
100,000

Turco, PA
286,000
*
Tyson's Disposal, PA
869,800
*
Big John's Salvage, WV
819,000
*
Holder Corp., WV
170,000
*
Manila Creek, WV
260,000
*
Taylor Road, FL
80,000

Luminous Processes, GA
760,000

Lenoir, NC
113,000
*
Keith Farm Pond, KY
198,600
*
-17-

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EXHIBIT F (Cont'd)
COST RECOVERY CASES FILED BY DOJ
REGION NPL	SITE/STATE
*	Roadside PCB's, NC
*	Bluff Road, SC
*	Carolawn, SC
Dreyfus Street, SC
5	*	A & F Greenup, IL
A & F Olney, IL
Environmental Dynamics, IL
Hixon Plating, IL
*	OMC, IL
*	Enviro-Chem, IN
*	Midco I & II, IN
*	Seymour, IN
*	Berlin & Farro, MI
*	Chem Central, MI
*	Liquid Disposal, MI
*	Northernaire, MI
Peerless Plating, MI
*	Velsicol, MI (2 cases)
*	Verona Wellfield, MI
Isanti, MN (2 cases)
*	Reilly Tar, MN
Anaconda Road, OH
*	Chem-Dyne, OH
Greiner's Lagoon, OH
*	Laskin/Poplar, OH
T. P. Long, OH
REMOVAL
APPROXIMATE $	ACTION(S)
VALUE OF SITES	TAKEN
2,570,000

1,156,200

550,500
*
342,100
*
1,143,700
*
99,000

152,200

43,000
*
2,000,000

1,000,000
*
1,391,900
*
5,500,000
*
1,100,000
*
240,000

2,300,000
*
163,700
*
130,000
*
1,000,000

27,000
*
889,600
*
940,300

40,000
*
4,000,000
*
155,400
*
2,065,900
*
37,000
*
-18-

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EXHIBIT F (Cont'd)
COST RECOVERY CASES PILED BY DOJ
REMOVAL
APPROXIMATE $ ACTION(S)
REGION NPL	SITE/STATE	VALUE OF SITES	TAKEN
6 *
Vertac, AR
695,400

*
Petro Processors, LA
600,000


Argent, NM
40,000
*
*
Homestake Mining, NM
27,000

*
Hardage/Criner, OK
223,000

*
Crystal Chemical, TX
4,000,000
*
*
French Limited, TX
969,100
*
*
Triangle, TX
400,000
*
1
Horse Arenas, MO
1,000,000
*

Denny Farm, MO
447,500

9 *
Mountain View/Globe, AZ
7,000,000
*

Occidental, CA
10,000,000


General Disposal, CA
1,606,200
*

Nickel Solution, CA
209,800
*
*
Stringfellow, CA
9,000,000
.*
10 *
Pacific Recycling, ID
312,600
*
*
Western Processing, WA
1,500,000
*
*
American Surplus, WA
384,600
*

Nortran, WA
8,500


APPROXIMATE TOTAL DOLLAR VALUE:
$117,688,300

TOTAL SECTION 107 ACTIONS PILED: 77
-19-

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