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CERCLA Amendments—The House Subcommittee Bill

Editors' Summary: In this Dialogue, Mr. Want describes the CERCLA amendments passed by the House Committee on Energy and Commerce's Subcommittee on Commerce, Transportation, and Tourism. At press time, the full committee was proceeding with markup, but the committee version was not expected to differ substantially from the subcommittee bill, with one notable exception. On July 18, the Committee approved by voice vote an amendment, sponsored by Rep.

The Second Chem-Dyne Settlement

Editors' Summary: Of the major pathways now being followed in the implemetation of hazardous waste cleanups under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), several have been charted at one site, Chem-Dyne Corporation's Hamilton, Ohio facility. Chem-Dyne was the subject of the first multi-party CERCLA negotiation, in which state and federal agencies squared off against hundreds of companies whose wastes allegedly cluttered the site.

Transporter Liability Under CERCLA

Editors' Summary: CERCLA continues to be one of the most complex and convoluted of the federal environmental statutes. Many legal battles have been waged over the scope of liability of potentially responsible parties. Although the courts have agreed on some of the issues concerning liability, most of the cases to date have focused on the liability of generators, owners, and operators.

Regulating Genetically Engineered Microbial Products Under the Toxic Substances Control Act

Editors' Summary: Biotechnology has moved out of the labs and scientific journals and into the chemical plants of large chemical companies and small innovators and the popular press. Those in the federal government responsible for protecting the public from threats to its health and environment are struggling to find a coherent framework for regulating biotechnology. But like some other environmental problems of recent discovery—groundwater pollution, for example—no single statute clearly controls.

Thomas v. Peterson: The Ninth Circuit Breathes New Life Into CEQ's Cumulative and Connected Actions Regulations

Editors' Summary: Federal agencies involved in complex, multi-level planning may have to prepare multiple environmental impact statements and environmental assessments to satisfy the requirements of NEPA. A recent Ninth Circuit case, Thomas v. Peterson, has shed new light on NEPA's requirements for analysis of individual actions that are connected to other activities. The case is the first appellate ruling construing the Council on Environmental Quality's connected-action and cumulative-effect regulations.

Hazardous Waste and the Common Law: Will New Jersey Clear the Way for Victims to Recover?

Editors' Summary: Toxic tort cases pose formidable problems of law and proof for plaintiffs. These problems are compounded in environmental suits, where defendants may be difficult to identify and causation may be especially clouded.The author outlines the obstacles to recovery in toxic tort cases arising from hazardous waste disposal, reviews developments in tort law that have reduced certain of the barriers, and then examines two pending New Jersey cases that may break further ground for plaintiffs.

Federal Supremacy and Sovereign Immunity Waivers in Federal Environmental Law

Editors' Summary: Uncle Sam is both environmental policeman and environmental polluter. In 1970, Congress began to create a tough series of pollution control laws that govern the activities of private organizations and individuals. One of the great ironies of the early years of environmental law was that, while these deliberations were taking place, the air outside in the Capitol was often fouled by emissions from the federal government powerplant providing the electricity to light the congressional offices.

Who Pays for Litigation: Recent Developments in Attorneys Fees Law

Editors' Summary: Fee shifting provisions continue to be a vital concern both for those who seek the awards and those who may have to pay them. The law of fee shifting has swung through a series of changes in the past ten years, with Congress and a few courts promoting awards while the Supreme Court has generally discouraged them. Two developments in recent months well illustrate this pattern: Congress has revived and amended the Equal Access to Justice Act, expanding opportunites to claim fees from the federal government, and the D.C. Circuit in Sierra Club v.

Protecting the Built Environment: An Overview of Federal Historic Preservation Law

Editors' Summary: Despite its importance, historic preservation is an unfamiliar area to many environmental lawyers. The 1966 National Historic Preservation Act requires federal agencies to consider and, where possible, minimize the impacts of their actions on historic properties and sites. Harm to historic properties is among the environmental impacts to be considered in NEPA procedures as well.