Redeveloping Environmentally Challenged Property: Federal vs. State Liability Protections, Defenses, Due Diligence

Course Details
- smart_display Format
On-Demand
- signal_cellular_alt Difficulty Level
Intermediate
- work Practice Area
Environmental
- event Date
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
- schedule Time
1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT
- timer Program Length
90 minutes
-
This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.
This CLE course will provide practical guidance to in-house real estate and environmental counsel on the similarities and differences between federal and state liability protections available under CERCLA, RCRA, and their state law counterparts; best practices for choosing (where possible) which programs to most effectively limit client exposure; and new options for changing authorities mid-project.
Faculty

Mr. Gillay heads the Brownfields and Environmental Transactional Practice Groups and provides environmental counseling in connection with assessing environmentally challenged properties. Over the last decade, David has focused on the legal, regulatory, and technical impact and implications related to the vapor intrusion pathway. He also represents an influential multi-state environmental consultants’ association and works closely with leading technical experts on a wide array of environmental matters, including rapidly evolving vapor intrusion guidance. Prior to joining Barnes & Thornburg, he obtained an advanced environmental engineering degree and practiced as an environmental consultant on various projects across the country.

Mr. Howland is head of the firm’s Environmental Group; co-leads its hydrogen practice; and has an active renewable energy-focused practice. During his 28 year tenure at EPA he worked at the intersection of land cleanup and energy development, and spent his last four months at the Agency in 2018 in the Agency’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assistance, working on Superfund Task Force implementation. Mr. Howland’s work focuses on providing practical advice in the acquisition and sale of facilities and the redevelopment of brownfield sites; regulatory issues associated with renewable energy projects; counselling, enforcement, and litigation matters involving facility cleanups under federal and state laws; risk management plan preparation and emergency release/spill reporting; crafting real estate and other commercial transactions to address environmental concerns; and helping businesses identify ways to advance their operations in accord with national and international sustainability initiatives. Mr. Howland is nationally known for his work helping to facilitate the development of renewable energy projects on environmentally impaired land.

Mr. Kendall focuses his practice on brownfield redevelopment and urban renewal projects and routinely advises local and national industrial, multi-family, mixed-use, and retail clients on the acquisition, development, disposition, management, and financing of properties with significant environmental issues and properties within urban and industrial areas across the country. He also represents corporate and lending clients on environmental issues in the context of a host of corporate transactions, including mergers and acquisitions. Mr. Kendall is knowledgeable in all aspects of the federal Superfund law and its state equivalents and has expertise across the country in state voluntary cleanup programs, underground storage tank programs, environmental due diligence, environmental compliance, wetlands/water permitting, and emerging environmental issues such as vapor intrusion, PFAs, and environmental justice.
Description
Both the federal and state governments administer a wide variety of statutory programs that govern the remediation of a potentially contaminated site, including the extent to which remediation is "voluntary" or at the direction of the government.
But the federal CERCLA and RCRA Corrective Action programs differ materially in terms of defenses and obligations, as do the various state programs, leaving counsel to navigate a complicated maze of legal, technical, and practical aspects of site remediation projects. Whether redeveloping a Superfund NPL site or a brownfield site going through a state voluntary cleanup program, an active commercial/industrial facility or an abandoned landfill, there are a myriad of strategic and practical decisions to be made to ensure that a site gets remediated and a new project or green space built.
Listen as our experienced panel discusses the latest developments in federal all appropriate inquiries and reasonable steps under CERCLA, and compares these with elements of RCRA Corrective Action and their state law counterparts. The panel will also address strategies and options in deciding which program to pursue.
Outline
- CERCLA and RCRA Corrective Action overview
- Latest developments in EPA regulation
- State "mini superfunds" and voluntary cleanup programs overview
- Strategic and practical considerations under various programs
Benefits
The panel will review these and other key issues:
- What are the key differences between CERCLA, RCRA Corrective Action, and state remediation programs?
- When can, or should, a party influence which program governs a cleanup?
- What are the most critical legal, technical, and practical aspects of contaminated site remediation projects?
- How does a purchaser qualify as a bona fide purchaser under CERCLA?
- What happens when state law addresses liability differently than federal law?
- What are the best practices for evaluating which program provides the most robust protections?
- How does a party conduct an "all appropriate inquiry"?
- What are the most pressing emerging issues in environmental due diligence (e.g. PFAS)?
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CERCLA Liability and Reopened Superfund Sites: PRP Impact, Settlement Consequences, Insurance Considerations
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