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VRP Outreach

VRP Outreach . June 12, 2012 Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. Welcome . Jeffery A. Steers. Director, Division of Land Protection and Revitalization. Brownfields and the VRP. Presented by: Meade Anderson, Virginia Brownfield Coordinator.

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VRP Outreach

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  1. VRP Outreach June 12, 2012 Virginia Department of Environmental Quality

  2. Welcome Jeffery A. Steers. Director, Division of Land Protection and Revitalization

  3. Brownfields and the VRP Presented by: Meade Anderson, Virginia Brownfield Coordinator

  4. Brownfields Legislation, Federal and Virginia, 2002 • January 11, 2002 - Small Business Liability Relief and Brownfields Revitalization Act • Amended Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA or Superfund) by providing funds to assess and clean up brownfields • Virginia – Brownfield Restoration and Land Renewal Action – April 2002 – paralleled federal and pulled existing VRP under the umbrella of Brownfields

  5. Brownfields Act Summary • Small Business Liability Relief • Brownfields Revitalization Funding • Brownfields Liability Clarifications Section- Contiguous Properties, Prospective Purchasers and Windfall Liens, Innocent Landowners • State Response Programs (128a funding) • Additions to National Priorities List (deferral for list if under cleanup )

  6. Brownfields – The Definition • "Brownfield" means real property; the expansion, redevelopment, or reuse of which may be complicated by the presence or potential presence of a hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant.

  7. § 10.1-1231. Brownfield Restoration and Land Renewal Policy and Programs It shall be the policy of the Commonwealth to encourage remediation and restoration of brownfields by removing barriers and providing incentives and assistancewhenever possible. The Department of Environmental Quality and the Economic Development Partnership and other appropriate agencies shall establish policies and programs to implement these policies, including a Voluntary Remediation Program, the Brownfields Restoration and Redevelopment Fund, and other measures as may be appropriate.

  8. Program Funding • 128(a) Grant from the EPA provides bulk of funding for the VRP and associated activities • 128(a) capped at approx. $50 M for all states and tribes • Decreasing allocations as increasing applicants apply for that $50M • As grant awards have decreased, DEQ has focused funding on staff for VRP

  9. Program Funding (continued) • VRP Statutes originally passed in 1995 • Code of Virginia amended in 2002 to add to the Brownfield Restoration and Land Renewal Act • § 10.1-1232 - 5. Registration fees to be collected from persons conducting voluntary remediation to defray the actual reasonable costs of the voluntary remediation program expended at the site not to exceed the lesser of $5,000 or one percent of the cost of the remediation. • Fee structure adapted from 17 years ago and has not been updated to account for actual program costs

  10. Background on Brownfields & Voluntary Programs • 2011 State Brownfields and Voluntary Response Programs: An Update from the States • http://www.epa.gov/brownfields/state_tribal/update2011/bf_states_report_2011.pdf • Summaries program set up and funding • Many states have alternative/supplemental fee structures for the voluntary cleanup programs and Brownfields comfort letters

  11. Other Use of Grant Funds • Site Specific Assessments (previously targeted brownfield assessments) • Special projects such as inspection of institutional controls, mapping/GIS of sites, and scanning • Outreach such as Brownfields Conferences, VRP Outreach, technical assistance to local government

  12. Bona Fide Prospective Purchaser • All disposal of hazardous substances at the facility occurred before the person acquired the facility. • All appropriate inquiries into the previous ownership and uses of the facility • All legally required notices with respect to the discovery or release • Full cooperation, assistance, and access

  13. BFPP, Continued • Institutional Controls • Complies with any land use restrictions established or relied on in connection with the response action • Does not impede the effectiveness or integrity of any institutional control • BFPP not otherwise responsible party, and not affiliated (familial or corporate) with responsible party

  14. BFPP, Continued • The person exercises appropriate care with respect to hazardous substances found at the facility by taking reasonable steps to— • stop any continuing release • prevent any threatened future release • prevent or limit human, environmental, or natural resource exposure to any previously released hazardous substance • Self Implementing Program on both the federal and state level

  15. Providing BFPP Status Letters • BFPP – Brownfields Summary Form • All Appropriate Inquiry with Phase I ESA in accordance with ASTM E-1527-05 • Self implementing program as it is set up with the EPA • In Virginia, to help facilitate redevelopment we will issue a BFPP status letter as a form of a comfort letter • Phase II ESA may be needed • DEQ staff review of submitted data along with agency records should help eliminate pitfalls for a buyer • Also provide Lender Liability Letters and Contiguous Property Owner Letters • Does NOT eliminate the need for “Appropriate Care”

  16. Appropriate Care • Must take “appropriate care” in order to maintain the protections • Construction of a playground on a contaminated site without protections is not appropriate care • Construction of a parking lot over contaminated soil may be appropriate care • Enrolling a site into VRP is clearly appropriate care

  17. Future Trends • “Process Incentives” • Seat at the table for all involved, all along • Pre-purchase or pre-development meetings • Off-setting costs for stake in project • Positive media and success story PR

  18. Reasons for Involving DEQ • Liability Protections for purchase – BFPP • Protections during cleanup under VRP • Enforcement Immunity at completion of clean – VRP with MOA with EPA • Agency “buy in” to Cleanup Goals • Partner at the table for solutions • Resolve liability before sale or purchase • Satisfy lending institutions • Facilitate future sales

  19. Brownfield Tax Relief Form Typically, form sent with Eligibility Letter DEQ responses with a confirmation letter If site is enrolled in the VRP, the confirmation is straight forward. These tax credits must be approved by Congress although at times late in the year but costs allowed were retroactive Once DEQ provides confirmation of the remediation project the tax credit is dealt with by the project developer and tax personnel Costs allowed include: Site assessment and investigation; Site monitoring; Cleanup costs; Operation and maintenance costs; State voluntary cleanup program oversight fees; and Removal of demolition debris

  20. Risk Based Decision-Making Soil/Debris Management Internal committee reviewed other examples and drafted a process Have completed public notice and two public informal meetings Variance during interim; future regulatory change Should be a tremendous benefit to Brownfields redevelopment projects Not intended to replace the need for remediation but rather to provide a common sense risk based tool to manage low level soils

  21. Revitalization Goals • Virginia Brownfields Policy – Encourage, Remove Barriers, Provide Incentives & Assistance • Process sites and complete cleanup to a risk based standard • Get sites cleaned up, redeveloped, and back into productive reuse • Increase in value leads to additional tax income to locality • Rising tide theory – benefits come to the community and adjacent properties • Our goals should be very much parallel to the goals of the participants in the programs • We must all work smarter!

  22. Questions?

  23. VRP Overview and DEQ’s Internal Process Presented by: Kevin Greene, VRP Program Manager

  24. Brief History • Statute implemented in July 1995 • Operated under “agreement” format • Regulations promulgated in 1997 • Agreements no longer necessary • Memorandum of Agreement with EPA January 2002 • Regulations revised in 2002 • Only minor modifications made • Brownfield Restoration and Land Renewal Act enacted in 2002

  25. What made the VRP Different? • Remediation is not mandated by other programs • The explicit use of Engineering and Institutional Controls • Site Specific Risk Based Clean-up Standards • Closure that constitutes enforcement immunity • Final Agency Action • Immunity is Transferable • End use driven - not process driven • No “Cook Book” • Regulations are less than 12 pages long

  26. Memorandum of Agreement between EPA and DEQ • Executed in February 02 • Constitutes determination of “no federal interest” in sites that have completed cleanup under the VRP • Provides comfort that EPA won’t pursue a VRP participant • Sets de facto performance expectation on the VRP • Consistent remediation standards • Demonstrative progress towards completion

  27. Certificates Per Year

  28. Cumulative Totals 147

  29. Certificate Issuance Time After 1999 • Averages • Since 1999 - 1150 days • Apps w/ Cert submitted since 1/1/06- 745 days • Staff hours /site- 160

  30. Voluntary Remediation Program Groundwater Use restriction 83% Residential Use restriction 45% Other (SSDS, etc) 20% Excavation Limitation 18% No institutional controls 10% Certificates & Institutional Controls (total 237)

  31. Technical Documents/Revisions Submitted for DEQ Review Application Enrollment Fee submitted Site Considered “Enrolled” Regional Office Review Eligibility Confirmed Kickoff Meeting (NEW) Site Characterization Report Revisions/Comments Demonstration of Completion Report Risk Assessment Public Notice DEQ Concurrence of SCR and Risk Assessment Is Remedial Action Necessary? NO Certificate Drafting YES Remedial Action Completion Report Certificate Issuance Remedial Action Performed Remedial Action Work Plan Certificate Recordation and Return to DEQ DONE!

  32. The Risk Assessment

  33. VRP Funding /Staffing • 100% federal funded program • No DEQ funds allocated to VRP • Annual competition for $50 MM • 149 applicants in FFY 12 ( 10/1/12- 9/31/13) • Virginia was awarded $550,000 for FFY 12 • FFY 12 Workplan • 100% salaries • 3 FTE RPMs • 1 FTE Risk support • 1 FTE Admin. • No travel to sites • Limited training/outreach

  34. Excerpt for 128 (a) FY 12 funding guidance • “In FY13 the maximum amount that EPA will consider for a funding request will likely decrease at a rate up to 30% a year, and could decrease at a greater rate depending on enacted Congressional budget amounts and demand for funding.”

  35. Other Duties As Assigned • Program Administration • Tracking 400 sites • Site Database Management • Planned & Completed sites list • Semi annual report • Sites with no Activity • Status inquiry / Finding current owner • Institutional Control Tracking • On EPA Radar Screen! • Electronic Imaging of VRP files • FOIA • VRP Regulations • TAC meetings in 2008-2009 • Proposed draft submitted August 2009

  36. Other Duties As Assigned • Program Administration • Tracking 400 sites • Site Database Management • Planned & Completed sites list • Semi annual report • Sites with no Activity • Status inquiry / Finding current owner • Institutional Control Tracking • On EPA Radar Screen! • Electronic Imaging of VRP files • FOIA • VRP Regulations • TAC meetings in 2008-2009 • Proposed draft submitted August 2009

  37. What You’re Going To Hear Today • It takes time! 2 years+ • First come, first serve • Participation is Voluntary • Tank Closure does not a certification make • -TPH is of little value • Meetings early in the process • It’s all about the risk! • Certificate language is fixed • Uncertainty • Tips for Characterization • You know the site, we don’t. You conclude, we concur • Conceptual site model • Several rounds of sampling • Plume Stability • Evaluate offsite risk • Formatting • Summary Tables • Nice maps • Full and complete responses • State all assumptions • Follow the format/terminology of the Regulations • Show your work

  38. Questions ?

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