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Superfund Glossary
(From the Superfund Fact Book)
Mark Reisch & David
Michael Bearden
Environment and Natural Resources Policy
Division
Updated March 3, 1997
97-312 ENR
Glossary of Superfund Terms102
A | B | C | D | E |
F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |
Administrative order on consent. A
legal agreement between EPA and PRPs whereby PRPs agree to
perform or pay the cost of a site remediation. 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 that 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 with a copy established at or near the
site, usually at one of the information repositories. A
duplicate file is held in a central location, such as an EPA
Regional Office.
Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry (ATSDR). This organization
established under section 104(i) of CERCLA provides technical
support and assistance to protect human health and worker
safety, determines the toxicological and human health impacts
associated with hazardous substances, develops a
priority-order list of hazardous substances most frequently
found at sites on the CERCLA National Priorities List, and
produces toxicological profiles of chemicals.
Air stripping. A treatment
system that removes, or "strips," volatile organic
compounds from contaminated ground water or surface water by
forcing an airstream through the water and causing the
compounds to evaporate.
Alternative remedial contract
system (ARCS). A strategy in which responsibility
for remedial contract management is relegated to the EPA
regions. An ARCS contract is a form of cost-reimbursable
contract called a "cost-plus-award-fee contract,"
under which EPA reimburses the contractor for all allowable
costs incurred.
ARAR. CERCLA section 121
requires cleanups to meet "ARARs": any 'legally
applicable or relevant and appropriate standard, requirement,
criteria or limitation' that has been promulgated under
federal or state environmental laws. The ARARs include such
things as the Clean Water Act's water quality criteria, the
Solid Waste Disposal Act's land disposal restrictions, and some states' ground
water anti-degradation provisions that require cleanup to
background levels. EPA can waive the ARARS in some
situations.
Bioremediation.
A treatment method that utilizes micro-organisms to degrade
organic contaminants and convert them into non-hazardous
constituents.
Brownfields.
Abandoned, idled, or under-used industrial and commercial
facilities where expansion or redevelopment is complicated by
real or perceived environmental contamination.
Cap. An
impermeable layer that seals the top of a hazardous waste
site.
Carveout.
A term used to designate an exemption from CERCLA law or
regulations. Generally pertains to liability for site
remediations.
CERCLA.
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-510).
CERCLIS or
CERCLA information system. A database
maintained by EPA and the states that lists sites where
releases may have occurred, need to be addressed or have been
addressed. CERCLIS consists of three inventories: CERCLIS
Removal Inventory, CERCLIS Remedial
Inventory, and CERCLIS Enforcement
Inventory.
Coastal
waters. For the purposes of classifying the size of
discharges, means the waters of the coastal zone except for
the Great Lakes and specified ports and harbors on inland
rivers (40 CFR 300.5).
Comment
period. A time period provided for the public to
review and comment on proposed EPA actions or rulemakings
following publication in the Federal
Register.
Community relations plan.
Formal plan for EPA community relations activities at
Superfund sites. It is designed to ensure citizens
opportunities for public involvement at the sites, and to
allow them the opportunity to learn more about the site.
Consent decree. A legal
document approved and issued by a judge that formalizes an
agreement reached between EPA and PRPs where PRPs will
perform all or part of a Superfund site remediation, and
identifies other enforcement action to be taken by the
Agency. The consent decree describes actions that PRPs are
required to perform and is subject to a public comment
period.
Construction completion. Construction
completion at sites refers to the point in the cleanup
process at which physical construction is complete for all
remedial and removal work required at the entire site.
Construction is officially complete when a document has been
signed by EPA stating that all necessary remediation has been
finished. While no further construction is anticipated at the
site, there may still be a need for long-term, on-site
activity before specified clean-up levels are met (e.g.,
restoration of ground water and surface water). Although
physical construction may not be necessary at some sites,
these sites are also included in this category to fully
portray EPA's progress.
Containment. A remediation method that seals off
all possible exposure pathways between a hazardous disposal
site and the environment, which generally includes capping
and institutional controls.
Contribution. A legal doctrine that enables parties
sued under joint and several liability to obtain compensation
from other parties who may have been legally liable, but who
were not proceeded against in the original court action.
Cost-effective alternative. An
alternative control or corrective method identified as the
best available in terms of reliability, permanence, and
economic considerations.
Cost recovery. A legal proceeding,
authorized under CERCLA, that allows the government to
proceed against PRPs for recovery of both administrative and
actual cleanup costs expended in either emergency removal or
remedial activities at hazardous waste sites.
Covenant not-to-sue. CERCLA authorizes EPA to
release responsible parties from liability to the United
States under CERCLA, including future liability resulting
from releases or threatened releases addressed by a remedial
action.
Delisting. The process by which a Superfund site
is removed from the National Priorities List (NPL) after it
has been completely cleaned up.
Dense non-aqueous phase liquids
(DNAPLs). Generally
organic compounds (or mixtures of such compounds) that are
immiscible (do not mix) with water.
Environment. As defined by CERCLA §101(8):
"(A) the navigable waters, the waters of the contiguous
zone, and the ocean waters of which the natural resources are
under the exclusive management authority of the United States
under the Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976,
and (B) any other surface water, ground water, drinking water
supply, land surface or subsurface strata, or ambient air
within the United States or under the jurisdiction of the
United States."
Environmental income tax. A tax on
corporations imposed on their modified alternative minimum taxable income
over $2 million, the proceeds of which go to the Hazardous
Substance Superfund Trust Fund. The tax is 0.12% ($12 per
$10,000 of income in excess of $2 million). It is the Fund's
largest single source of revenue, and raised $612 million in
FY1995.
Environmental response team (ERT). EPA hazardous waste
experts who provide 24-hour technical assistance to EPA
Regional Offices and states during all types of emergencies
involving releases at hazardous disposal sites and spills of
hazardous substances.
Facility.
As defined by CERCLA §101(9): "(A) any building,
structure, installation, equipment, pipe or pipeline
(including any pipe into a sewer or publicly owned treatment
works), well, pit, pond, lagoon, impoundment, ditch,
landfill, storage container, motor vehicle, rolling stock, or
aircraft, or (B) any site or area where a hazardous substance
has been deposited, stored, disposed of; or placed, or
otherwise come to be located; but does not include any
consumer product in consumer use or any vessel."
Feedstock tax. An excise tax that is levied on 42
chemical raw materials, the proceeds of which go to the
Hazardous Substance Superfund Trust Fund. The taxes range
from $0.24 to $4.87 per ton. In FY1995 it supplied $291
million.
Ground water. As defined by CERCLA §101(12):
"water in a saturated zone or stratum beneath the
surface of land or water."
Guarantor. As defined by CERCLA §101(13):
"any person, other than the owner or operator, who
provides evidence of financial responsibility for an owner or
operator under this Act."
Hazard Ranking System (HRS). 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 (0-100) based on the actual or potential release of
hazardous substances from a site through air, surface water
or ground water. A score of 28.5 places the site on the
National Priorities List.
Hazardous substance. As defined by
CERCLA §101(14), any substance designated or listed
under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, CERCLA, the
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, the Clean Air Act,
and the Toxic Substances Control Act. The term excludes
petroleum, or any fraction thereof, unless it is specifically
listed under one of the mentioned laws; it also excludes
natural gas, natural gas liquids, liquefied natural gas, and
synthetic gas usable for fuel (or mixtures of natural gas and
such synthetic gas).
Hazardous wastes. Those wastes that
are regulated under the Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act (40 CFR Part 261) either because they are
"listed" or because they are ignitable, corrosive,
chemically reactive, or toxic. As such, they are hazardous
substances under CERCLA.
Information repository. A file
containing current information, technical reports, reference
documents, and technical assistance grants application
information on a Superfund site. The information repository
is usually located in a public building (often a library)
that is convenient for local residents.
Institutional controls. Measures, such as access
restrictions and deed restrictions, that separate people from
the source of contamination. More than one institutional
control may be used at a site.
Joint and several liability. A legal standard, where any
involved party can have the legal responsibility for cleaning
up the entire site, regardless of its degree of involvement,
unless there is a reasonable basis for apportioning
liability.
Leachate. A contaminated liquid resulting
when water percolates, or trickles, through waste materials
and collects components of those waters.
Lead agency. The federal agency (or
state
agency operating pursuant to a contract or cooperative
agreement) that has primary responsibility for coordinating
response actions under the National Contingency Plan. A
federal lead agency provides the On-Scene Coordinator (OSC)
or Remedial Project Manager (RPM). A state lead agency
carries out the same responsibilities delineated for
OSCs/RPMs except coordinating and directing federal agency
response actions (40 CFR 300.5).
Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL). Under the
Safe Drinking Water Act, the maximum permissible level of a
contaminant in water delivered to any user of a public water
system.
Maximum Contaminant Level Goal (MCLG). Under the Safe Drinking
Water Act, the maximum level of a contaminant in drinking water at which no known or anticipated adverse
effect on human health would occur, and
which
includes an adequate margin of safety.
Mixed funding. The practice by which the
government can assume some proportion of cleanup expenses,
with other parties assuming the rest.
Monitoring wells. Special wells
drilled at specific locations where ground water can be sampled at
selected depths and studied to determine the direction of
ground water flow and the types and amounts of contaminants
present.
National Contingency Plan, or National Oil
and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan (NCP). The
basic policy directive for federal response actions
under CERCLA. It sets out the organizational structure and
procedures for responding to releases of hazardous
substances, pollutants, and contaminants, and contains the
Hazard Ranking System and the National Priorities List as
appendices.
National
Response Center (NRC).
The federal operations center that receives notification of
all releases of oil and hazardous substances into the
environment.
National
Response Team (NRT). Representatives of
13 federal agencies who as a team coordinate federal
responses to nationally significant incidents of pollution
and provide advice and technical assistance to the responding
agency(ies) before and during a response action.
Natural
resources. As defined by CERCLA §101(16):
"land, fish, wildlife, biota, air, water, ground water,
drinking water supplies, and other such resources belonging
to, managed by, held in trust by, appertaining to, or
otherwise controlled by the United States ..., any state or
local government, any foreign government, any Indian tribe,
or, if such resources are subject to a trust restriction on
alienation, any member of an Indian tribe."
NBAR. Nonbinding allocation of
responsibility. A device, established in SARA, that allows the EPA to
make a nonbinding estimate of the proportional share that
each of the various responsible parties at a Superfund site
should pay toward the costs of cleanup.
Notice
letter. EPA's formal notice by letter to PRPs, also
called a Section 104(e) letter, that CERCLA-related action is
to be undertaken at a site with those PRPs being considered
responsible.
NPL.
National Priorities List. The list of (currently,
approximately 1,200) hazardous waste sites that have been
determined (by a hazard ranking score) to pose a serious
threat to human health and/or the environment.
Offshore facility. As defined by CERCLA
§101(17): "any facility of any kind located in, on, or under
any of the navigable waters of the United States, and any
facility of any kind which is subject to the jurisdiction of
the United States and is located in, on, or under any other
waters, other than a vessel or a public vessel."
On-scene coordinator (OSC). The
federal official predesignated by the EPA or USCG to
coordinate and direct federal responses under the National
Contingency Plan; or the DOD official designated to
coordinate and direct the removal actions from releases of
hazardous substances from DOD vessels and facilities (40 CFR
300.5).
Onshore facility. As defined by
CERCLA §101(18): "any facility (including, but not
limited to, motor vehicles and rolling stock) of any kind
located in, on, or under, any land or nonnavigable waters
within the United States."
Operable unit. A discrete
part of the entire response action that decreases a release,
threat of release, or pathway of exposure (40 CFR 300.5).
ORC. Office of Regional Counsel. The
EPA's legal office in the regions. Tyrpically, an ORC
attorney is assigned to each Superfund case.
Orphan share. A share of
waste at a site that cannot be collected because the PRP is
either unidentifiable or insolvent.
Petroleum exclusion clause. Language in CERCLA
§101(14)
that excludes petroleum from the
definition of "hazardous substance".
PRP. Potentially
responsible party. Any individual or company that may have
contributed to contamination at a Superfund site. Examples of
PRPs include waste generators, waste transporters, current or
former landowners, and site operators. One who may be liable
for site cleanup costs under CERCLA.
Preliminary Assessment/Site Inspection
(PA/SI). The PA is the process of collecting and reviewing available
information about a known or suspected hazardous disposal
site or release to determine if the site requires further
study. If so, the more extensive site inspection is
undertaken to gather technical information and laboratory
samples. The information is used to score the site using the
hazard ranking system to determine whether the site will be
placed on the National Priorities List.
Pump-and-treat.
A treatment process that involves removal of contaminated
ground water through pumping or other processes, followed by
treatment of the water and either re-injection of the water
into the ground or discharge of the water to a stream or
lake.
RCRA.
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (P.L. 94-580).
The principal federal law that regulates the definition,
transportation, and disposal of hazardous wastes (as well as
solid wastes in general). A key difference from Superfund is
that it addresses current and future waste disposal
practices, while Superfund was established to clean up
inactive hazardous waste sites.
RD/RA.
Remedial design/remedial action. The final stage of a site
cleanup, when the remedy is conceived and put into effect.
Regional
response team. Representatives of federal, state,
and local agencies who may assist in coordination of
activities at the request of the On-Scene Coordinator or
Remedial Project Manager before and during response actions.
Release.
As defined by CERCLA §101(22): "any spilling, leaking,
pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting,
escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing into the
environment (including the abandonment or discarding of
barrels, containers, and other closed receptacles containing
any hazardous substance or pollutant or contaminant...."
It excludes certain workplace releases, engine exhausts, and
releases of nuclear materials covered by other law.
Relevant and appropriate requirements. Those federal or state
cleanup requirements that, while not "applicable,"
address problems sufficiently similar to those encountered at
the CERCLA site that their use is appropriate. Requirements
may be relevant and appropriate if they would be
"applicable" except for jurisdictional restrictions
associated with the requirement (40 CFR 300.5).
Remedial
action, remedy. The actual construction or
implementation phase that follows the remedial design of the
selected remediation alternative at a site on the National Priorities List.
Remedial action plan. A plan that details the
technical approach for implementing the remedial response. It
includes the methods to be followed during the entire
remediation process -- from developing the remedial design to
implementing the selected remedy through construction.
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.
Remedial project manager (RPM). The
federal
official designated by EPA (or the USCG for vessels) to
coordinate, monitor, and direct response activities under the
National Contingency Plan; or the federal official the
Department of Defense (DOD) designates to coordinate and
direct federal response actions resulting from releases of
hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants from DOD
facilities or vessels (40 CFR 300.5).
Remedial response. A long-term action that
stops or substantially reduces a release of a hazardous
substance that could affect public health or the environment.
The term remediation, or cleanup, is sometimes used
interchangeably with the terms remedial action, removal
action, response action, remedy, or corrective action.
Remediation. Activities to clean up a
contaminated site.
Removal, or emergency removal. An
action taken by the EPA under the emergency removal
provisions of CERCLA, that enables the agency to take
preliminary steps to clean up a site or reduce its danger
when there is an imminent and substantial threat to public
health or the environment. A removal cannot exceed $2 million
or one year for any one action at any one site.
Reopener. A
clause, usually included in Superfund consent decrees at government
insistence, which allows the government to reopen a case and
proceed legally against a responsible party who has already
settled with the government, if certain contingencies occur,
such as discovery of additional unexpected waste, or failure
of a remedy.
Reportable quantity (RQ). The minimum quantity of a
hazardous substance which, if released, is required to be
reported.
Respond or response. As defined by CERCLA
§101(25), "means remove, removal, remedy, and remedial
action; all such terms (including the terms 'removal' and
'remedial action') include enforcement activities related
thereto."
Retroactive liability. Parties can be held liable
for releases resulting from actions prior to when Congress
enacted CERCLA in 1980.
RI/FS.
Remedial investigation/feasibility study. The remedial investigation is an engineering study that
assesses the geographical, geological, and hydrological
properties of a site, and the nature and extent of the
hazardous waste contained therein. It is usually combined
with the feasibility study, which identifies the
various cleanup alternatives and specifies their costs and
benefits.
Risk assessment. A qualitative and
quantitative evaluation performed to define the risk posed to
human health and/or the environment by the presence or
potential presence and/or use of specific pollutants.
ROD. Record of Decision. The formal document by which
an EPA administrator (usually the regional administrator)
chooses the remedy to be applied at a Superfund site.
RPM. Remedial project manager. The
EPA official
who has charge of the remediation at a particular Superfund
site.
SACM (Superfund Accelerated Cleanup Model). A
model developed by EPA to accelerate remediations
so that most contamination is removed early in the process.
SARA. Superfund Amendments and
Reauthorization Act of 1986 (P.L. 99-499).
Section 106 order. A unilateral
administrative order that allows EPA to order PRPs to perform
certain remedial actions at a Superfund site, subject to
treble damages and daily fines if the order is not obeyed.
Selected alternative. The remediation
alternative selected for a site based on technical
feasibility, permanence, reliability, and cost. The selected
alternative need not be the least expensive alternative. If
there are several remediation alternatives available that
deal effectively with the problems at the site, EPA must
choose the remedy on the basis of permanence, reliability,
and cost.
Settlement. A legal agreement reached between
EPA and parties at a Superfund site. The settlement outlines
the payments of each party, the time frame of remediation and
the remedy selected.
SITE
(Superfund Innovative
Technology Evaluation). This
program supports development of technologies for assessing
and treating waste at Superfund sites. EPA evaluates the
technology and provides an assessment of its potential for
future use in Superfund remediation actions. The program
consists of four related components: the Demonstration
Program, the Emerging Technologies Program, the Monitoring
and Measurement Technologies Program, and Technology Transfer
activities.
Source control action. The construction or
installation and start-up of those actions necessary to
prevent the continued release of hazardous substances
(primarily from a source on top of or within the ground, or
in buildings or other structures) into the environment [40
CFR 300.5].
Source control maintenance measures.
Those measures intended to maintain the effectiveness of
source control actions once such actions are operating and
functioning properly, such as the maintenance of landfill
caps and leachate collection systems [40 CFR 300.5].
Strict
Liability. The government needs to prove only
involvement at a waste site, not negligence. Under CERCLA,
proof of strict causation is not necessary.
Technical Assistance Grant (TAG) Program. A
grant
program that provides funds for qualified citizens' groups to
hire independent technical advisors to help understand and
comment on technical decisions relating to Superfund
remediation actions.
Third-party suits. In the context of
Superfund, third-party suits are those brought by PRPs at a
site who are sued by the government, and against other PRPs
who were not sued, in order to obtain compensation for their
costs and expenses. See contribution.
United States and State. As defined by CERCLA §101(27):
"the several states of the United States, the District
of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam, American
Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Marianas, and any other territory or possession over
which the United States has jurisdiction."
Viable PRP. A PRP that is financially solvent and
that can be expected to pay its share of the total cleanup
costs at a site.
Go to Superfund Fact Book
Endnotes
102 The definitions are taken from several
sources, including:
Church, Thomas W. and
Robert T. Nakamura. Cleaning Up
the Mess:
Implementation Strategies in Superfund. Washington, D.C.: The Brookings
Institution [1993].
Wagner, Travis P. The Complete Guide to the Hazardous Waste Regulation. New
York: Van Nostrand Reinhold [1992].
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