Executive Summary<\/strong><\/p>\n There has never been any hazardous material contaminating anyone or anything from this property and no one doubts or disputes that fact. The decades-long, $100,000 ordeal is about proving a negative, proving that no hazardous material can possibly contaminate anything from this property in the future.\u00a0 This is about the unreasonable regulation, laws and expense, those who profit, and the Kafkaesque bureaucracy of attempting to prove no one is going to be harmed, ever. Licensed Environmental Professional or LEP<\/strong> companies were paid, laws were followed, and thousands of dollars in taxes were paid directly to the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection or DEEP<\/strong>. This is the story of the Connecticut Transfer Accordance Act which we will call The Act<\/strong>.<\/p>\n Most people assume the government has our best interest at heart and government makes laws reasonable for society.\u00a0 But we also know that laws aren\u2019t always reasonable, and some people comply less than others but we all assume consequences when we don\u2019t comply and ignorance of the law is no excuse. Government as a whole does not deliberately engage in misdirection, lies and malevolence, and such things are not in the laws.\u00a0 Rather the power of government is from time to time misused by malevolent, incompetent and duplicitous government employees as laws are written and enforced.\u00a0 The tax payer is mistreated as a byproduct while these people exercise their power mostly because that is how it has always been done. We are legally misused and still believe in the goodness of government.<\/p>\n If you stick with this story you will realize that assuming the government is solving problems is a harmful assumption and much of the harm is that government will grow while accomplishing less overall.\u00a0 Those who gain from the imposition of government monopolies, regulations and licensing are not the taxpayers though the intent is to keep us safe. Those who gain are government employees and those licensed, like the lawyers and insurance companies and utilities and trades. Mostly the taxpayers and the enforcers of such laws both hate the expensive and inefficient system.<\/p>\n In my case there was extensive testing for hazardous materials and nothing was proved.\u00a0 \u00a0One cannot prove a negative, as if we were testing for unicorns to prove there are no unicorns.\u00a0 We didn\u2019t find a hazard or a unicorn and we are just as sure today as we were 20 years ago there is no hazardous waste on this property. Only the government itself and its licensed professional monopolies profited by the efforts. \u00a0We are no safer even if we are poorer.<\/p>\n The Act makes it necessary to delineate where any hazard would be if there were a hazard.\u00a0 We must find the highest detectible levels of hazard even if those levels are thousands of times less than levels found in fruits and vegetables we all eat daily.<\/p>\n The law clearly and nearly explicitly favors abandoning such property to a municipality. Government has its own interests and we accept penalties and punishments for non-compliance with laws and tacitly support The Act which is not likely to find any hazards and encourages property owners to give their land to the government. The Act compelled me to either buy services from government licensed monopolies or give up the property.\u00a0 This property would have deteriorated in downtown Torrington and the taxpayer would then own the abandoned property like so many other abandoned buildings.\u00a0 The costs of complying with The Act are well over the cost of buying equivalent property.\u00a0 But if the property reverts to the government there are many taxpayer funded programs and loopholes in the law which will make it easier for a government owner to comply than a private owner to comply with the Act.<\/p>\n Even legislators responsible The Act obviously do not understand it and did not read it.\u00a0 The only reasonable solution to a systemic failure like this is a very unlikely systemic reform.\u00a0 The clear remedy to benefit taxpayer and government alike is a concerted effort to simplify laws and repeal the laws that do not help taxpayers but only government.<\/p>\n As we read The Act in this book we see the stupidity of law as written because the gist of this law is simple.\u00a0 But this law and every law is so badly written with too many words, extremely redundant, and intentionally difficult to understand. But the heft and breadth and language and redundancy and obscurity built into the law is akin to bullying.\u00a0 Millions in penalties no one ever pays, prison time is proscribed but awaits no one, paragraph after paragraph no one ever read but does not apply to any real situation, ridiculous redundancy\u2026.\u00a0\u00a0 While we await justice to enter the system we can acquaint ourselves with the government system we have adopted. If you aren\u2019t angry you aren\u2019t familiar with The Act. There are no supporters even if there are beneficiaries.<\/p>\n In general there are two partisan political views.\u00a0 The prevailing opinion is that we all must be protected at any cost from greedy business that causes damage in search of profits like me.\u00a0 The other is that there are conflicting, restrictive, and expensive laws that do not help society.\u00a0 This is a case study of such a law and the harm it does.\u00a0 I expose The Act as a testament to how simplifying such a law would help the entire State of Connecticut.<\/p>\n The only hesitation I have is that revealing the law as I do in this book will make it easier for government employees to understand this law and thereby misuse it.\u00a0 When those in power know their power they will seize more properties unjustly and legally, and perhaps retaliate against me or other people like me who only want to employ their property for business and pleasure.<\/p>\n History<\/strong><\/p>\n In November of 2006 I became interested in this commercial building at 233 East Main Street, Torrington, which once was a dry cleaner.\u00a0 I made an offer conditional that the \u201cproperty to be delivered clear and in accordance with the Connecticut Transfer Accordance Act\u201d.\u00a0 This law is more commonly called the Transfer Act which here we call The Act, although it does not appear by any of those names in the law itself.\u00a0 I was rebuffed and instead leased the property beginning in August of 2007.<\/p>\n I would not buy the place for fair market value in 2007 because of The Act, but after the owner died the family did not want it. I continued to lease from the estate and purchased it the following year under The Act paying $35,000 via private funding (no bank would touch it) in November of 2011.\u00a0 Yeah, well, that might seem like very cheap, but you don\u2019t know about The Act yet and I didn\u2019t either. I was stupid to buy it. Everyone who knows The Act would walk away from receiving such property even for free.<\/p>\n As we will see The Act is designed to make it ridiculously difficult to privately own ex dry cleaners or auto body shops.\u00a0 Perhaps someone knows why, but the reasons for the existence of The Act are not readily apparent.\u00a0 Property that is not ex dry-cleaner or ex- auto body shop is only tangentially mentioned and I doubt many other properties have to comply with The Act. \u00a0Perhaps other industries have better lobbyists. \u00a0My city of Torrington, Connecticut bought a property for a dollar and has spent nearly $2 million to clean<\/em> it according to the law which may very well be parts of The Act, but that is beyond the scope of this book.\u00a0 I only refer to journalist reports of the purchase and incomplete cleanup for a 41 space parking lot in Downtown Torrington.<\/p>\n The Act, as we will see, seems designed to coerce people into abandoning dry cleaners and auto body shops so that it will be seized by government and then, with government ownership, it will not need to be cleaned. This is a story about the law which coerces us while we blindly trust a benevolent government.\u00a0 Perhaps it is not nefarious, that our legislators know and understand and believe that such property should reasonably be abandoned so that government can take over for their own unstated reasons. \u00a0I cannot say that it is a bad thing, or that the coercion and seizure is calculated, or that the results of The Act are what our lawmakers intended.\u00a0 I can only show what happened to me, and that such is written in law as clearly as any law is written.<\/p>\n For all I know this book is about government greed, or incompetence or disinterest, or most probably all three.\u00a0 Unless there is a Deep State level of calculation of the effect of laws such as The Act we should assume few in government consider how their jobs affect us all.\u00a0 Like the rest of us we all seem to believe the government is protecting us from evil business interests like, for example, me. \u00a0Simply put government makes laws to punish people for doing evil and fix damages caused. \u00a0Then government has agencies to make regulations for our safety, designed to stop us from doing evil before we do that evil or cause the damage.\u00a0 Then government adds more laws to punish us for not complying with those agencies and safety regulations in addition to punishing us for the original evil and making us fix damages according to the original laws.<\/p>\n The only hazardous material detected on this property was found in three out of 120 soil samples which came from 14 test borings. There were also a dozen \u201chand samples\u201d of soil taken through holes drilled through concrete to the soil below.\u00a0 But the hand samples did not turn up any reportable levels of hazardous material.\u00a0 Off the property, in 1993 water samples taken at the Wall Street gas station some 75 yards downstream (the property line is the Naugatuck River) found 27 parts per billion (ppb) of dry cleaning fluid also called PCE or Perc<\/strong>.\u00a0 Much lower levels of Perc<\/strong> were found as it is nearly impossible to not find a chemical with modern testing techniques.\u00a0 The requirements of Act \u00a0makes us delineate the highest concentrations of these extremely small concentrations of Perc.<\/p>\n This whole story is about Perc.\u00a0 Tetrachloroethylene, also known as tetrachloroethene, or perchloroethylene and many other names.\u00a0 It is a chlorocarbon or organocloride chemically similar to DDT type insecticides with the formula Cl2C=CCl2.\u00a0 But to keep perspective, one billion is 9 zeros.\u00a0 So 27 ppb is 0.00000027%.<\/p>\n Because of this find 25 years ago the Licensed Professionals I hired urged me to declare this location a Significant Environmental Hazard (SHE) in 2016, nearly 25 years after the significant environmental hazard was detected.\u00a0 There was no additional evidence. This led to estrangement from my LEP and an expensive legal battle lasting over a year.\u00a0 In the end all my expenses were reimbursed by the LEP and I was reimbursed for the paid retainer, but more about that later.<\/p>\n The Back Story<\/em><\/strong> Gene said he doesn\u2019t know what got into him, and he doesn\u2019t even know what the other two Americans were doing, but Gene yelled in German a phrase that meant surrender, put down your weapons, and the Germans did it.\u00a0 The three of them marched the Germans to the American position.<\/p>\n Gene was a pip, a little guy.\u00a0 He would offer to show the three scars where he was shot. He had three Purple Hearts, he said.\u00a0 I introduced him to my mother, the both of them in their 80s, and he said in an opening remark \u201cI could make love to you, you know\u201d.\u00a0 So my mother sat down with us in the kitchen that day.<\/p>\n He bought this property after the Great Flood of 1955.\u00a0 It was one of the oldest houses in Torrington and seen on the maps from the early 1800s.\u00a0 Gene said it was a roadside rest stop for people traveling from Hartford to Albany, which it very well might have been according to the Torrington Historical Society.\u00a0 Gene was born in the house next door, which is now a four family apartment building. Gene\u2019s father\u2019s house next door was built in 1900 or so like so many houses in Torrington.\u00a0 Gene was born to a large family and did not have anything good to say about his father, who owned the house until he died.<\/p>\n Behind his father\u2019s house was a garage that was lost in the flood.\u00a0 Gene used to clean carpets in that garage. But after the flood he needed to find a new location for his rug cleaning so he borrowed money from his wife\u2019s family and bought this historic landmark next door.\u00a0 He jacked it up eight feet, added a basement, two car garage and tripled the size of the house with the concrete dry cleaning shop add-on.\u00a0 He paved nearly every square inch of the downtown property.\u00a0 Three quarters of the property now is the old cleaners and I live in the apartment, the original 2 story house.\u00a0 Gene had it completely rebuilt in the early 1960s.\u00a0 The original beams probably from the 17th<\/sup> century are visible from the basement and some of them 18 inches square and hand hewn.<\/p>\n Gene struggled with The Act when he wanted to sell his property. He told me he paid HRP Associates LLC hereafter called HRP, a major player in this sad story, $20,000.\u00a0 I will always remember Gene telling me about them with these words: \u201cThat\u2019s how they fucked me, Kent\u201d.\u00a0 He said it nearly every time he spoke on the subject.\u00a0 He so regretted ever letting them near his property.\u00a0 Gene did not realize he didn\u2019t have any choice.\u00a0 The Act requires an LEP to transfer ownership. He saw it all as a scam, which in a way it is, but probably only a few of those involved in the scam know it is a scam.\u00a0 We call it The Act.<\/p>\n He paid HRP $20,000 thinking they would prove what he knew to be true, that the property was not contaminated.\u00a0 Gene would tell stories about how careful he was, how a brother who worked in dry cleaning at a different Torrington location had died from exposure to Perc.\u00a0 The danger of Perc according to OSHA is breathing it in and Gene said he could always smell it on his brother.\u00a0 Gene said he was always careful not to mis-handle Perc the way his brother did.<\/p>\n When he wanted to sell the property I believe Gene felt rich.\u00a0 It is a nice property in what he considered to be a prosperous area of downtown, worth a lot of money.\u00a0 He certainly asked for a lot of money.\u00a0 David Dean was his Real Estate Agent, and Gene told me Dean was the one who talked him into hiring HRP and started on The Act to sell the property.\u00a0 So HRP did testing and prepared the Phase I reports required by The Act.<\/p>\n If you were paying attention you know already HRP found what they considered to be some problems when they tested the property.\u00a0 They could not let the property be transferred without a lot more testing, and more reports and a lot more money. They worried about their license if they are audited by the State of Connecticut Department of Energy and Environment al Protection, the \u00a0DEEP. The recommendations from the $20,000 Phase I report might be resolved; Gene was quoted, for about $130,000 with no guarantees, depending on what more is found.\u00a0 No wonder he felt \u201cfucked\u201d.<\/p>\n While this was going on about 2003 Gene had another company remove the old underground oil tank so it didn\u2019t pollute the ground in the future if it rusted out. It was common for small companies and even homes to have underground oil tanks at one time. But of course that can\u2019t happen anymore. I once was talking to Scot Kuhn of HRP and he pointed to the patch in the asphalt where the tank had been and referred to it as though he had removed the tank.\u00a0 I said I had new respect for HRP since they had done so within the $20,000 Gene had paid.\u00a0 Scot nodded, taking responsibility, but now, with more experience and having been through all the documents and bills, HRP had recommended the removal of the tank but Gene had paid another company to remove the tank, not HRP.<\/p>\n Requirements? Really?<\/em><\/strong> In 2016 HRP said I had to report this property is a Significant Environmental Hazard or SEH because Perc was detected at 2 ppb above the reportable limit 23 years earlier.\u00a0 They would fill out the report for me for $6,000.\u00a0 This is because in preparation for work I had told HRP about a drinking water well used in a household about 1500 feet uphill from here. As a drinking water well was adjacent to my property, and testing showed 27 ppb Perc in ground water 23 years earlier, according to their logic, made my property an SEH.<\/p>\n It is this action of HRP in March of 2016 that is the impetus of this book and all the ridiculousness that happened afterwards. I refused to file a report of SEH and instead wrote a letter to the commissioner of \u00a0DEEP, to explain the situation. So far as I know I was found to be in compliance with the law. But if you check the maps by the DEEP keeps of where the hazards are I am on the map. But I am getting ahead of myself.<\/p>\n Twenty-seven ppb concentration of Perc was reported 75 meters downstream from the Cleaning Clinic in 1993.\u00a0 But on the property of the Cleaning Clinic itself, with over $65,000 spent so far to follow direction from the DEEP, testing done in Phase I and Phase II for the Transfer Act from 2003 -2005 there were 120 soil samples from 14 borings and another dozen \u201chand samples\u201d.\u00a0 Only three soil samples contained reportable levels of Perc. The highest sample was 122 ppb.\u00a0 The other two were 40 ppb and 35 ppb.<\/p>\n One hundred twenty two ppb is about 12 molecules per 100 million molecules or 1 molecule per ten million molecules.\u00a0 If there were 10 million marbles each of them one centimeter in diameter on the flat ground the marbles would cover 2.5 acres of land and one those marbles could represent Perc.\u00a0 One billion square centimeters, or marbles, are about as many 1 centimeter marbles as would fit in Hangar One, a NASA building that covers about 8 acres of land and reaches a height of 200 feet, and 122 of those marbles could represent Perc.<\/p>\n The dosage for LSD, a very, very potent drug is generally thought to be 100 micrograms for a 220 lb. (100kg) adult.\u00a0 Assume that in soil 1 ppb is 1 microgram per kilogram or one billionth part, and in liquid 1 ppb equals 1 microgram per liter (a liter weighs a kilogram) then 112 ppb = 112 micrograms per liter.\u00a0 At that concentration one would eat nearly a kilogram of soil from a very specific hole under this building to take an LSD trip.\u00a0 If we were instead to compare to water found \u201ccontaminated\u201d with LSD at the level of 27 ppb in the gas station down the road, then one would have to drink well over 4 liters to get the 100 micrograms for a trip.<\/p>\n Ricin is touted as one of the most toxic poisons with a lethal dosage of one milligram per kilogram. That is a hundred times the dosage for an LSD trip.\u00a0 So you would need to drink 450 liters of ricin solution for a lethal dose.\u00a0 If you don\u2019t die, ricin and LSD wear off.\u00a0 LSD has a half-life of less than 8 hours. Eventually there will be no measurable residue in your body to prove you ever ingested these substances.\u00a0 Whether or not you were harmed by exposure to these substances is an argument.<\/p>\n I repeat in 1993 a level of Perc two parts per billion above the reportable level was found 75 meters downstream from this location.\u00a0 This is the only evidence of any hazardous material leaving this property and although it was detected it contaminated no one.\u00a0 It was found in ground water. It was found the year after stopping all dry cleaning and 25 years before these words were written.\u00a0 The laws and government regulations require expensive testing and reporting by LEPs to prove these facts which no one doubts or disputes.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Our governments\u2019 environmental protection agencies regulate Perc at levels 200 times less than the dosages of the most potent drugs or poisons that exist.\u00a0 These quantities are buried in soil under a concrete building and so they are extremely unlikely to be eaten. And the danger of LSD or ricin in the water is a theoretically greater danger than Perc in the soil, but still no danger at all at these levels.\u00a0 Luckily I don\u2019t have to test for LSD or ricin.<\/p>\n A World Health Organization survey published in 1996 reported:<\/p>\n \u201cA survey of drinking-water in the USA in 1976\u201377 detected tetrachloroethene [Perc<\/strong>] in nine of 105 samples at levels ranging from 0.2 to 3.1 [ppb] (mean 0.81 ppb). In other surveys of drinking-water supplies in the USA, it was found that 3% of all public water-supply systems that used well-water contained tetrachloroethene [Perc<\/strong>] at concentrations of 0.5 ppb or higher.\u201d<\/p>\n In general drinking water in the US has well under 1 ppb Perc.\u00a0 The EPA standard for Perc in drinking water is 5 ppb.\u00a0 The WHO nor OSHA nor anyone else I could find except the EPA lists standards for Perc in water but WHO and OSHA list standards for Perc in the air. The Act is not interested in the amount of Perc that is in the air, which is where other agencies believe the danger of Perc is found.<\/p>\n How Do We Figure?<\/em><\/strong> No one can say definitively if a detectable quantity of any substance can have unknown future effects.\u00a0 Studies show the levels at which damage can occur, and the EPA regulations do not allow such amounts, or even thousands of times less than such amounts. Also every substance we take into our bodies leaves our bodies sooner or later.<\/p>\n Here we are talking about government regulations concerning a known hazardous chemical from dry cleaning.\u00a0 No one reasonably believes there are harmful quantities of such chemicals at this location or that such chemicals that are not here can leech into our water.\u00a0 But government regulations require that we prove that they aren\u2019t and it can\u2019t.\u00a0 The reason we have to do it is because of the law, or more specifically, The Act.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n This chemical, Perc, like pesticides and fertilizers, does not grow in the body.\u00a0 If you ingest a gram of these harmful chemicals you might show reactions and need treatment, but they will leave your body.\u00a0 And if you ingest a smaller quantity you might not have any symptoms, will not need treatment, and the chemical will leave your body even without you ever knowing.<\/p>\n There are claims that even when the amounts are small and there are no symptoms there could be damage done. Whether true or not, and all the claims about pesticides notwithstanding, the amount of chemicals we are talking about with Perc in ground water or drinking water are hundreds or even a thousand times less than the pesticide amounts found in fresh produce.\u00a0 I am certainly not suggesting anyone taste anything harmful only pointing out that quantity makes a difference and we are not talking about sure and deadly consequences.<\/p>\n Captan is an ingredient in many pesticides that is detected in fruits and vegetables we buy at the store.\u00a0 I only chose to talk about this one because it is common and often listed first due to alphabetical order.\u00a0 The EPA (and curiously not the FDA) has instituted standards or a \u201ctolerance\u201d for public consumption of Captan and that tolerance is different for different produce.\u00a0 For blue berries that tolerance is 25 ppm. Parts per million are a thousand times more parts than ppb. For grapes the tolerance is 50 ppm.\u00a0 Of course it is extremely rare that any produce would contain that much Captan and generally the tests come up with a hundred times less than the maximum allowable.\u00a0 But even at these allowable limits of 10,000 times the amount of Perc in the samples at this site there are no expected symptoms or treatment.\u00a0 If vegetables test that high don\u2019t eat them. Report such a thing to the government and they will find out where they came from and stop any further contamination.<\/p>\n It is the same with Perc.\u00a0 The data about harmful effects of Perc are about breathing it, and the DEEP in Connecticut doesn\u2019t care about Perc in the air.\u00a0 The dangers of Perc on the skin, we are told by OSHA, might cause a rash. But it is ridiculous to think that within 100 yards of this location there are enough Perc molecules to cause such a rash.<\/p>\n With today\u2019s technology we can detect parts per billion of Perc or Captan.\u00a0 That is like being able to count those 112 Perc marbles in the building that is 200 feet tall and covers 8 acres.\u00a0 Being able to detect the presence of Perc doesn\u2019t mean that ingesting that amount of Perc is harmful.\u00a0 Even if you could separate them from the rest of the molecules there would not be enough to do harm according to any generally accepted theories of hazards to humans. And Perc in soil leaves the body as easily as it enters the body, or perhaps even easier.<\/p>\n The FDA will allow the sale of produce with 1000 times higher quantities of these chemicals on fresh vegetables in grocery stores than the DEEP will ignore in the soil under my basement. We might wonder why the EPA and the DEEP are more concerned about lower quantities of chemicals in soil under the Cleaning Clinic than the FDA is concerned with those chemicals in food we eat. Whatever the reason we have to comply with The Act.<\/p>\n According to the World Health Organization or WHO survey \u201cMice treated with doses as low as 70 mg per kg (70,000 ppb) of body weight per day exhibited significantly increased liver triglyceride levels and liver-to-body-weight ratios.\u201d<\/p>\n The implication is that if people are like mice and a 220 pound (100 kg) person were to regularly ingest as little as 7 grams of Perc a day it might cause significant changes in that person\u2019s liver function.\u00a0 But as I said no one believes there are 7 grams of Perc molecules within 100 yards of this place, or that anyone would eat one\u2019s day\u2019s ration of Perc if they could.\u00a0 But this is not about logic or reason; this is about laws, rules and regulations.<\/p>\n Somewhere between one ppb and seven grams is an amount that causes harm to humans over time.\u00a0 The FDA has allowed either 50 ppm or 25 ppm for Captan on your fresh produce and the DEEP has disallowed 0.0035 ppm (35 ppb) Perc in the soil under my basement. EPA set Maximum Contaminant Level or MCL at 5 ppb for drinking water and 25 ppb for ground water.\u00a0 If a level above 5 ppb is found in drinking water it must be reported and notices given to the public.\u00a0 However we can sell tomatoes with nearly a thousand times that concentration of Captan.<\/p>\n Perc belongs to the same class of chemicals as DDT, banned in 2001 as an environmental hazard to egg shells but not particularly harmful to humans.\u00a0 It has since been allowed in some countries and in the US under certain circumstances.\u00a0 The FDA allows DDT in commercially sold milk, carrots, fish and potatoes at 100s of times the levels found in soil samples of Perc from under the Cleaning Clinic.<\/p>\n Small fruits and berries sold in the grocery stores may have 100 ppb of DDT which is slightly less than the highest amount in one of the 120 soil samples taken.\u00a0 But no one eats soil. Insecticides of similar chemical properties to DDT or Perc are not banned and can be found in fresh produce at higher concentrations.\u00a0 The DEEP is concerned with quantities of such chemicals in soil under a basement while quantities even thousands of times higher, are found in foods we eat daily as regulated by the FDA (luckily not by the EPA).\u00a0 <\/strong><\/p>\n The Act is the law we are talking about here, not reason or logic.\u00a0 And the law requires one of several options be followed.\u00a0 The law guarantees that LEPs must certify that the property is up to DEEP standards or I will be eligible for jail time and millions of dollars in fines and other penalties paid directly to the Connecticut General Fund.<\/p>\n The obvious big winners here are the LEPs, and the DEEP who hire lots of people to perform work, file reports and pay a lot pensions at taxpayer expense. And the lawmakers, the vast majority of which have no idea what The Act is or how it attempts to clean up the environment will vote for the \u201cenvironment\u201d as a worthy cause out of ignorance.\u00a0 As always the taxpayer has no direct interest in such things, only wondering why taxes are so high.<\/p>\n The Transfer Act or \u201cThe Act\u201d It is very dry reading, so I will abridge, translate and\/or spice it up with BOLD commentary<\/strong> to make reading a bit easier. If you have never read a law before this is your chance to get an education in our legislature and legal system. You may ask yourself why laws are written this way and the best answer I can supply is that it is tradition.\u00a0 There can be no benevolent purpose to being obtuse, redundant and overly severe.<\/p>\n The parts that concern Luciano\u2019s Cleaning Clinic \u201ctransfer\u201d or change of ownership are our primary concern here.\u00a0 But there are also some really stupid and badly written or confusing sections.\u00a0 The main gist, then, is transfer of \u201cestablishments\u201d.\u00a0 I italicize establishments<\/em> because that word means ex-Dry Cleaners and ex-Auto Body Shops almost exclusively.\u00a0 \u00a0Also note the unique use of the word \u201csiting\u201d. <\/strong><\/em>Later in the law you will note that the \u201cguidance document<\/em>\u201d which I have italicized is what I would have thought was the law.\u00a0 The law could save a lot of ink if it just told us the DEEP as the power to enforce the guidance document<\/em> and left it at that.<\/p>\n Another curiosity about Connecticut law is reference to \u201cthe commissioner\u201d means the department.\u00a0 In this case when the law say \u201cthe commissioner\u201d it is really saying the DEEP.<\/p>\n Everything that is not bold, both sides of the ellipsis (\u2026) where I have abridged the text is in the law. Sometimes I have italicized some of the text, but it is law. Really, it is, as ridiculous as it reads.\u00a0 I just abridged some and with bold commentary I wrote to accompany it.<\/strong><\/p>\n Start Now:<\/strong> The first stated purpose is to benefit Connecticut by making waste disposal facilities in Connecticut.\u00a0 Hazardous waste from my site would not be stored in Connecticut however and my only option was Massachusetts and New Jersey. \u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n \u2026 that the safe management of hazardous wastes, including state involvement, is mandated by the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act [RCRA] \u2026<\/strong> and implementing regulations; that the siting <\/em>of hazardous waste disposal facilities is in the best interest of Connecticut’s citizens [though often sent out of state instead] <\/strong>and that the public should participate in siting<\/em> decisions.[by \u201cpublic\u201d that is \u201clegislators\u201d and have italicized the word \u201csiting\u201d for emphasis] <\/strong>\u00a0Therefore the General Assembly declares that it is the policy of the state to initiate final remedial action by the year 2000 at each hazardous waste disposal site listed on July 3, 1989, on the inventory maintained by the Commissioner of Energy and Environmental Protection \u2026 [AND] \u2026 <\/strong>to assure the siting<\/em> of hazardous waste disposal facilities so that the health and safety of Connecticut’s citizens and the environmental and economic interests of the state are protected. The purpose of this chapter is to establish a process for the siting<\/em> of hazardous waste facilities that will protect the health and safety of Connecticut citizens and assure responsible economic development and to have that siting process be at least as strict as that required by federal law.<\/p>\n The law is intended to clean up all sites on a list from 1989 and \u201cestablish a process\u201d for cleaning other sites.\u00a0 The second stated purpose is \u201csiting\u201d. Although the definitions section does not make it clear, soon we shall see that \u201csiting\u201d means most often seizing hazardous sites from private owners for taxpayer ownership and responsibility.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-115. Definitions. As used in this chapter:<\/p>\n (1) \u201cHazardous waste\u201d means any waste material which may pose a present or potential hazard to human health or the environment when improperly disposed of, treated, stored, transported, or otherwise managed, including (A) hazardous waste identified in accordance with Section 3001 of the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (42 USC 6901 et seq.),<\/p>\n Searches for USC Title 42 Chapter 1 Subchapter 1 \u00a7 6901 section 3001 sends us to 42 U.S. Code \u00a7 6921 – Identification and listing of hazardous waste, which tells us the categories of hazardous waste. It is not a list of hazards as implied.<\/p>\n <\/strong>(B) hazardous waste identified by regulation by the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, [In other words, whatever DEEP says it is] <\/strong>\u2026 and<\/p>\n (C) polychlorinated biphenyls [PCBs]<\/strong> in concentrations greater than fifty parts per million, but does not mean by-product material, source material or special nuclear material \u2026 or scrap tires;<\/p>\n We can simplify this list to say that hazardous waste is therefore PCBs plus whatever DEEP says it is but not nuclear material or scrap tires. The nuclear people and the tire people must have good lobbyists.<\/strong><\/p>\n (2) \u201cHazardous waste facility\u201d means [what you think it means. Let\u2019s skip some definitions since they define things to be just what we think they mean.]<\/strong><\/p>\n (3) \u201cDisposal\u201d \u2026 (4) \u201cTreatment\u201d \u2026 (5) \u201cShort-term storage\u201d \u2026 (6) \u201cLong-term storage\u201d \u2026 (7) \u201cMunicipality\u201d \u2026 (8) \u201cPerson\u201d \u2026 (9) \u201cModification\u201d \u2026<\/p>\n Laws could be significantly simplified if the Definitions sections of all the laws were consolidated and every law just says ***See \u201cDefinitions As Defined By Law\u201d in a separate location.\u00a0 <\/strong><\/p>\n (10) \u201cCouncil\u201d means the Connecticut Siting<\/em><\/strong> Council \u2026<\/p>\n The Siting Council is nine full time State Employees who are consulted about seizing land to be used for State created monopolies like hazardous waste disposal, and utilities, power lines, roads, immanent domain, etc.<\/strong><\/p>\n (11) \u201cCommissioner\u201d means the Commissioner of the Department Energy and Environmental Protection;<\/p>\n (12) \u201cClosure period\u201d means the first one hundred eighty days after the hazardous waste facility receives its final volume of hazardous waste or any other period \u2026<\/p>\n (13) \u201cPostclosure period\u201d means the first thirty years after the date of completing closure or any other period \u2026<\/p>\n (14) \u201cPermanent council members\u201d means the membership for proceedings under this chapter, consisting of the Commissioners of Public Health and Emergency Services and Public Protection or their designees, five members appointed by the Governor and one designee each of the speaker of the House and the president pro tempore of the Senate;<\/p>\n Important! Three Commissioners, Five Governor Appointments, and One Appointee Each from the House and Senate.\u00a0 Ten Permanent Council Members, hereafter called Ten Guys<\/em>.<\/strong><\/p>\n (15) \u201cDevelopment and management\u201d means… What you think it means<\/strong> (16) \u201cFederal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act\u201d means\u2026 What you think it means<\/strong><\/p>\n (17) \u201cRecovery\u201d means a method, technique or process designed to produce materials or substances from hazardous waste for reuse, offering for sale, or sale;<\/p>\n (18) \u201cExisting hazardous waste facility\u201d means a hazardous waste facility in operation on or before June 1, 1983 \u2026 Sec. 22a-116. Regulations. (a) Except as specified in this chapter the regulations and procedures of the Connecticut Siting Council shall be the same as those for proceedings \u2026<\/p>\n (b) The commissioner shall adopt \u2026 regulations for licenses, permits and approvals \u2026 which must be applied for \u2026 Awkward wording but clear enough. The commissioner will tell you if you need a license, permit or approval.<\/strong><\/p>\n (c) The permanent members of the council [Ten Guys]<\/strong> shall adopt \u2026 regulations for the siting<\/em> of and the development and management of hazardous waste facilities. Such regulations shall establish reasonable application fees to meet administrative costs. The permanent members of the council [Ten Guys]<\/strong> shall also \u2026 establish procedures for an assessment to finance any additional anticipated expenses of reviewing, hearing, and issuing a decision on an application for a hazardous waste facility, including expenses for staff, consultants and studies which such council deems necessary \u2026<\/p>\n It seems important how the procedures to finance are figured, priced and how much of the costs are covered by the \u201creasonable application fees\u201d which in my case were well over $10,000.\u00a0 Based on quotes I got from LEPs that were more than triple what I ultimately paid \u00a0I doubt my situation is typical. And LEPs are all very busy and therefore generate a lot of application fees for the State, and probably swimming pools in the second homes of their administrative assistants.<\/strong><\/p>\n (d) The commissioner shall adopt regulations \u2026 for the construction, operation, closure and postclosure of hazardous waste facilities.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-117. Construction or modification of hazardous waste facility. When certificate required. Transfer of certificate. Polychlorinated biphenyls. [PCBs]<\/strong><\/p>\n But we will skip the body of this section because they deal with what happens if there is a complaint against me or if I am found to be in violation of the laws, regulations and policies, and must go to a hearing and defend myself.\u00a0 Thankfully that didn\u2019t happen.<\/p>\n <\/strong>Sec. 22a-118. Application for certificate.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-119. Hearing on application.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-120. Parties to certification proceedings<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-121. Record of hearing.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-122. Decision and opinion. Criteria for decision<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-123. Enforcement of certificate requirements and other standards. Penalties.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-124. Exclusive jurisdiction of council.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-126. Use of facility after postclosure period.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-127. Local project review committee.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-128. Payments of assessments or negotiated incentives<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-129. Chief elected official’s right of access<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-130. Regulations.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-131. Civil penalty for violation of hazardous waste program. Any person who violates any provision of the state’s hazardous waste program shall be assessed a civil penalty of not more than twenty-five thousand dollars for each day such violation. Yikes $25,000 per day if I \u201cviolate any provisions\u201d of this law, and the money deposited directly into the General Fund.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-131a. Penalties. Terms defined. (a) Any person who (1) willfully fails to prepare a manifest required in accordance with the provisions of the State Hazardous Waste Program \u2026 \u00a0or any regulation adopted pursuant to said subsection, (2) knowingly makes any false material statement or representation on any application, label, manifest, record, report, permit or other document required [by this law]<\/strong>\u2026 or said regulations, including any such statement or representation for used oil that is regulated under said subsection, or (3) willfully fails to maintain or knowingly destroys, alters or conceals any record required to be maintained [by this law]<\/strong> \u2026 or said regulations, including any record for used oil that is regulated under said subsection, shall be fined not more than fifty thousand dollars for each day of such violation or imprisoned not more than two years, or both. A subsequent conviction for any such violation shall be a class D felony, except that such conviction shall carry a fine of not more than fifty thousand dollars per day.<\/p>\n Not more than $50,000 per day or two years in prison for \u201cmisrepresentation\u201d of any waste including used oil<\/em>.\u00a0 Doesn\u2019t say motor, vegetable oil, diesel, heating.\u00a0 Says Used Oil is in the Definitions section but I couldn\u2019t find it\u2026 So lying about how you got rid of used oil can take everything we own and put us in prison. <\/strong><\/p>\n (b) Any person who knowingly transports or causes to be transported any hazardous waste to a facility which does not have a permit required \u2026 or who knowingly treats, stores or disposes of any hazardous wastes without a permit \u2026 or who knowingly violates any material condition or requirement of such permit or an order issued by the commissioner regarding treatment, storage or disposal of hazardous waste\u2026\u00a0 Same penalties as above.<\/strong><\/p>\n (c) Any person who knowingly stores, treats, disposes, recycles, transports or causes to be transported or otherwise handles any used oil that is regulated under subsection (c) of section 22a-449 but not identified or listed as hazardous waste in violation of any condition or requirement of a permit under said subsection or under any regulation adopted pursuant to said subsection \u2026\u00a0 Same penalties as above.<\/strong><\/p>\n (d) Any person, who in the commission of a violation for which a penalty would be imposed under subsection (a), (b) or (c) of this section, who knowingly places another person, by commission of such violation, in imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury, shall be fined not more than two hundred fifty thousand dollars or imprisoned not more than fifteen years, or both, and when the violator is an organization, the fine shall be not more than one million dollars. This subsection shall not be construed as a limitation on the amount of fines that may be imposed in accordance with subsection (a), (b) or (c) of this section. As used in this section, \u201corganization\u201d means any legal entity, other than the state or any of its political subdivisions, established for any purpose, and includes a corporation, company, association, firm, partnership, joint stock company, foundation, institution, trust, society, union or any other association of persons.<\/p>\n The \u201cNot More Than A Million Dollar\u201d corporate crime.<\/strong><\/p>\n (e) Any fine imposed pursuant to this section shall be deposited in the General Fund.<\/p>\n (f) Notwithstanding the provisions \u2026 for the purposes of this section, the terms \u201ctreatment\u201d, \u201cstorage\u201d, \u201cdisposal\u201d, \u201cfacility\u201d, \u201chazardous waste\u201d and \u201cused oil\u201d have the same meaning as provided in the State Hazardous Waste Program \u2026<\/p>\n As mentioned earlier, I can find no definition of \u201cused oil\u201d in the law even though this law says it uses the one in the State Hazardous Waste Program, wherever that is written. No doubt the DEEP commissioner can help us find it in a supporting document as I do not find it in law.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-132. Hazardous waste assessment.<\/p>\n This section is a crazy tax on hazardous waste delivered to treatment facilities.\u00a0 I see no requirement the facilities must be in Connecticut. Up to $12 per cubic yard or a half cent per pound or 6 cents per gallon.\u00a0 How it should be paid and what penalties are in store if you don\u2019t. I skipped it for you.\u00a0 Just know they are severe and the waste is sent out of state anyway. Imagine hazardous water pumped from my basement into 55 gallon drums for which I would pay tax in addition to finding it, pumping it out, transporting it out of state, and storing it forever.\u00a0 I feel lucky I didn\u2019t have to do that.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-132a. Administration expenses. Fees. Staff. Consultants.<\/p>\n You might think there was something different from asking for their money from the General Assembly or receiving it from this section of law, but you would be wrong.\u00a0 They just ask the GA when they need money.\u00a0 Their money is in the budget.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133. Payments prohibited if federal funds available.<\/p>\n If the Federal Government pays then Connecticut cannot, according to law.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133a. Definitions: Discovery and cleanup of hazardous waste disposal sites.<\/p>\n We\u2019re not quite to the place where we can talk about transfer.\u00a0 <\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133b. Discovery and evaluation of hazardous waste disposal sites deemed to pose threat to the environment or public health.<\/p>\n The government will actively look for threats at the Waste Disposal sites.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133c. Hazardous waste disposal site inventory. The commissioner shall maintain a hazardous waste disposal site inventory \u2026 Sec. 22a-133d. Site assessments.<\/p>\n They will collect information about sites.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133e. Remedial action.<\/p>\n They will continue to remedy problems, provide plans to remedy problems, check ways to fund such plans.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133f. Costs of remedial action. Regulations. (a) The costs of remedial action \u2026 may be paid from (1) available appropriations, or (2) any account authorized [law]<\/strong>\u2026 The costs may be paid from such funds and accounts \u2026 [when] <\/strong>the commissioner is unable to determine the responsible party for the disposal or cleanup of the hazardous waste, (B) the responsible party is not in timely compliance with orders issued by the commissioner to provide remedial action, or (C) the commissioner has not issued a final decision on an order to a responsible party to provide remedial action because of (i) a request for a hearing \u2026<\/p>\n The commissioner can pay for the remedy.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133g. Reimbursement for costs and expenses of remedial action.<\/p>\n If the commissioner pays for remedies the commissioner will seek reimbursement.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133h. Telephone line for hazardous waste disposal site information.<\/p>\n An anonymous tip line.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133i. Bonds. The commissioner may provide the state share of payments of the costs of remedial action pursuant to CERCLA from funds authorized pursuant to subsection (a) of section 29 of special act 87-77 and subdivision (5) of subsection (e) of section 2 of special act 86-54.<\/p>\n No idea what they are talking about there.\u00a0 Sounds very special, though.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133j. Annual report.<\/p>\n Tells what is in their annual report.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133k. Regulations establishing standards for the remediation of hazardous waste sites and for review and approval of final remedial action reports.<\/p>\n The commissioner will tell you what you have to do.\u00a0 The law doesn\u2019t say what you have to do, it says to ask the commissioner, he will know.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133l. Grants to clean up landfills where hazardous waste was disposed of. (a) The Commissioner of Energy and Environmental Protection may establish\u2026<\/p>\n Grants under a complicated set of rules which will probably shuffle taxpayer money to LEPs who test and certify property seized from small businessmen like me when they achieve municipal or state ownership.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133n. Environmental use restrictions:<\/p>\n A useful section to me.\u00a0 This is how I could avoid remediating or removing lead that was found in testing.\u00a0\u00a0 According to this law I can rather declare that I know about it, record it on the deed to the property \u201cirrevocably\u201d and attach the restriction that the lead must remain covered, paved, and not exposed forever.\u00a0 Lead is bad for children under 6 years old. (2) Within seven days after executing an environmental land use restriction [I doubt all time limits for government action, not gonna happen]<\/strong> and receiving thereon the signature of the commissioner or licensed environmental professional, as the case may be, the owner of the land involved therein shall record such restriction [Oh, I have the time limit, not the government.\u00a0 Never mind.]<\/strong> and documents required \u2026 and shall submit to the commissioner a certificate of title certifying that each interest in such land or any part thereof is irrevocably subordinated to the environmental land use restriction \u2026<\/p>\n (3) An owner of land \u2026 may be released, wholly or in part, permanently or temporarily, from the limitations of such restriction only with the commissioner’s written approval\u2026 The commissioner may waive the requirement to record such release \u2026<\/p>\n This is just tedious and entirely unnecessary.<\/strong><\/p>\n (4) An environmental land use restriction shall survive foreclosure of a mortgage, lien or other encumbrance.<\/p>\n How many times are they going to say it?<\/strong><\/p>\n (c) (1) A notice of activity and use limitation may be used and recorded for releases remediated in accordance with the regulations adopted [Could the language be more awkward?]<\/strong>\u2026 for the following purposes:<\/p>\n (A) To achieve compliance with industrial\/commercial direct exposure criteria, groundwater volatilization criteria, and soil vapor criteria \u2026 by preventing residential activity and use of the area to be affected through the notice of activity and use limitation, provided such property is zoned for industrial or commercial use, is not used for any residential use, and no holder of an interest in such property, other than such owner, has a right of residential use \u2026;<\/p>\n This goes on for several long, single-spaced paragraphs (B) (C) (D) listing quite extensively then ending with<\/strong><\/p>\n \u2026or<\/p>\n (E) Any other purpose the commissioner may prescribe by regulations adopted ..<\/p>\n In sum you can get a land use restriction in place of removing the hazardous waste if the Commissioner says you can.\u00a0 But even if the commissioner says you can\u2019t you can circumvent the commissioner (good luck) for any number of reasons listed in these sections. I bet the legal lobby got this section in place to throw a bone to Environmental Lawyers who can make a living opposing the Commissioner in court. <\/strong><\/p>\n (2) No owner shall record a notice of activity and use limitation on the land records of the municipality in which such land is located unless such owner, not later than sixty days prior to such recordation\u2026 [Oh My God, law really does say you can\u2019t do it without the agreement of all owners of property (unless the commissioner says you can) AND you provide \u2026]<\/strong> \u201cwritten notice to each person who holds an interest in such land or any part thereof, including each mortgagee, lessee, lienor and encumbrancer. Such written notice of the proposed notice of activity and use limitation shall be sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, and shall include notice of the existence and location of pollution within such area and the terms of such proposed activity and use limitation. Any such person who holds an interest may waive such sixty-day-notice period in relation to such interest provided such waiver is in writing.<\/p>\n So they have to be involved, sign off on it, be on all applications, AND then in addition to that you have to notify by certified mail what you are doing what they agreed to do on the form.<\/strong><\/p>\n (3) A notice of activity and use limitation recorded pursuant to this subsection shall be implemented and adhered to by the owner and subsequent holders of interests in the property, such owner’s successors and assigns, and any person who has a license to use such property or to conduct remediation on any portion of such property.<\/p>\n More redundancies.<\/strong><\/p>\n (4) Any notice of activity and use limitation shall be effective when recorded on the land records of the municipality in which such property is located.<\/p>\n The land use restrictions will take effect when you record it with the City. I was not really confused about that point, but thanks anyway.<\/strong><\/p>\n (5) (A) Any notice of activity and use limitation document, as described in this subsection, shall be prepared on a form prescribed by the commissioner.<\/p>\n There is a form to fill out.\u00a0 Good.\u00a0 I kind of thought so.<\/strong><\/p>\n (B) A notice of activity and use limitation decision document, signed by the commissioner or signed and sealed by a licensed environmental professional, shall be referenced in and recorded with any such notice of activity and use limitation, and shall specify:<\/p>\n Goes into several sections, but I would bet a lot that all of these listed items that must be included in the application will be on the form that is required.<\/strong><\/p>\n Why \u2026 [the activity]<\/strong> \u2026 is appropriate (ii) Any activities and uses that are inconsistent (iii) Any activities and uses to be permitted; (iv) Any obligations and conditions necessary (v) The nature and extent of pollution<\/p>\n (6) A notice of activity and use limitation shall not be used in any area where a prior holder of interest in the property has an interest that allows for the conduct of an activity that interferes with the conditions or purposes described in subparagraphs (A) to (E), inclusive, of subdivision (1) of this subsection or if such interest allows for intrusion into the polluted soil.<\/p>\n More extremely awkward wording.\u00a0 I don\u2019t get it. I tried, but I just can\u2019t read it.\u00a0 I am sure I got a lot further than any of the readers here. I urge anyone reading to just skip this, cannot believe it is law and that it serves any purpose whatever.\u00a0 Read the bold parts I will try to explain what follows, but I cannot explain the above, it is too ridiculous. Something like a grandfather clause that if an activity was allowed on what is now deemed a hazardous property this purports to tell us something about when the DEEP can and\/or cannot require the posting of a sign.<\/strong><\/p>\n (7) Upon transfer of any interest in or a right to use property, or a portion of property that is subject to a notice of activity and use limitation, the owner of such land, any lessee of such land and any person who has the right to subdivide or sublease such property, shall incorporate such notice in full or by reference into all future deeds, easements, mortgages, leases, licenses, occupancy agreements and any other instrument of transfer provided the failure to incorporate such notice shall not affect the enforceability of any such notice of activity and use limitation.<\/p>\n They just like redundancy.\u00a0 That is the only possible reason for such a paragraph.<\/strong><\/p>\n (8) If a notice of activity and use limitation is extinguished\u2026[and]\u00a0 <\/strong>(9)<\/p>\n Another long section that means taking off the land use restriction means performing the LEP prescribed remedy and removing the pollution.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133p. Environmental use restrictions: Enforcement of environmental land use restriction, notice of activity and use limitation, statutes and regulations. (a) The Attorney General, at the request of the commissioner, shall institute a civil action in the superior court \u2026 wherein the subject land is located for injunctive or other equitable relief to enforce an environmental land use restriction, a notice of activity and use limitation or the provisions of [law]<\/strong> and regulations \u2026 to recover a civil penalty pursuant to [law]<\/strong>.<\/p>\n (b) The commissioner may issue orders \u2026to enforce an environmental land use restriction\u2026 and regulations adopted pursuant to said sections.<\/p>\n I don\u2019t think anyone ever read this except the writer of the paragraph.<\/strong><\/p>\n (c) In any administrative or civil proceeding instituted by the commissioner to enforce an environmental land use restriction \u2026 any other person may intervene as a matter of right.<\/p>\n (d) In any civil or administrative action to enforce an environmental land use restriction \u2026 the owner of the subject land, and any lessee thereof, shall be strictly liable for any violation \u2026 and shall be jointly and severally liable for abating such violation.<\/p>\n (e) Any owner of land with respect to which an environmental land use restriction \u2026and any lessee of such land, who violates any provision of such restriction or limitation or violates the provisions of sections \u2026 shall be assessed a civil penalty\u2026<\/p>\n Why is there so much redundancy? Perhaps there is a foreboding list somewhere of all the redundant sections of law you break if you \u201cviolate\u201d the land use restriction law and a single action violates so many separate paragraphs with so many aggregate punishments.\u00a0 But I don\u2019t even know how you could violate this one. \u00a0\u00a0Surely the government will check to see that you filed a land use restriction.\u00a0 If you don\u2019t file a restriction I suspect you would know the unfiled restriction is not valid.\u00a0 So why the severe penalties? And why the redundancy?\u00a0 <\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133r. Environmental use restrictions: Abatement of pollution when restriction or notice is void or without effect. In the event that a court of competent jurisdiction finds for any reason that an environmental land use restriction or notice of activity and use limitation is void or without effect for any reason, the owner of the subject land, in accordance with a schedule prescribed by the commissioner, shall promptly abate pollution thereon consistently \u2026<\/p>\n Seems to me if you are polluting on any land, not just land that has a use restriction on it, you should stop even before the commissioner tells you to. And if you don\u2019t you would be liable for crimes other than not following the commissioner\u2019s order to stop.\u00a0 This section of law could never be used against anyone, ever.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133s. Environmental use restrictions: Other powers not affected. Nothing in sections 22a-133n to 22a-133r, inclusive, shall be construed to affect the commissioner’s authority under any other provision of law to abate or prevent pollution or to enforce any statute, requirement, order or permit issued or administered by him.<\/p>\n God Forbid.\u00a0 Nothing to take away any power from the Commissioner.<\/p>\n The longest section was the Definitions which we got through a long time ago.\u00a0 This is just a lot of redundancy and, forgive my saying so, evident stupidity.\u00a0 If you have ever read any laws you knew that already.\u00a0 If you want to go get a coffee I\u2019ll wait.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133t. Special Contaminated Property Remediation and Insurance Fund. There is established and created a fund to be known as the \u201cSpecial Contaminated Property Remediation and Insurance Fund\u201d. There shall be deposited in the fund: (1) The proceeds of bonds issued by the state for deposit into said fund and used in accordance with this section; (2) revenues from taxes or fees required to be deposited into the fund pursuant to law; and (3) interest or other income earned on the investment of moneys in the fund pending transfer or use pursuant to this section and section 22a-133u. The fund may contain any moneys required by law to be deposited in the fund and shall be held by the Treasurer separate and apart from all other moneys, funds and accounts. Investment earnings credited to the assets of said fund shall become part of the assets of said fund. Any balance remaining in said fund at the end of any fiscal year shall be carried forward in said fund for the fiscal year next succeeding.<\/p>\n I wonder if this fund exists and if so if it really is not raided by the legislature for other projects. I hope I didn\u2019t just give them the idea.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133u. Uses of Special Contaminated Property Remediation and Insurance Fund. Repayment of funds. Liens. Criteria. (a) The Commissioner of Energy and Environmental Protection may use any funds \u2026<\/p>\n Just say the Commissioner can do anything and be done with it.\u00a0 I am skipping this section.\u00a0 You can find it on line, but I am ashamed to read this far into the law and what this law means for Connecticut. Stupid with no purpose whatever.<\/strong><\/p>\n (b) The Commissioner of Economic and Community Development may use any funds deposited into the Special Contaminated Property Remediation and Insurance Fund \u2026<\/p>\n The same way the Commissioner can use the funds in section (a) above.\u00a0 Skipping the rest.\u00a0 I am going to the bottom of this section. If the Commissioner uses the funds for anything \u201c<\/strong>which said commissioner deems appropriate\u201d it shall be deemed a loan which will be returned to the funds from which the commissioner took it in no more than five years after the sale of the property according to terms approved by the commissioner. We can add the hope and prayer that the legislature did not raid that account. If someone takes the money from the commissioner\u2019s funds to clean their property it shall be a lien, unless that someone is a municipality. Clearly municipalities can have the contaminated land free and clear.<\/strong><\/p>\n (e) The Commissioner of Economic and Community Development shall establish criteria \u2026<\/p>\n There are programs and forms to apply for the loans.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133v. Licensed environmental professionals. Definitions. Licensing board. Standard of care. Issuance of license. Fees. Suspension or revocation of license or other sanction. Examination. (b) There shall be within the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection a State Board of Examiners of Environmental Professionals. The board shall consist of eleven members. One member, who shall be the chairman of the board, shall be the Commissioner of Energy and Environmental Protection, or his designee. The Governor shall appoint the other ten members of the board who shall consist of the following: Six members shall be licensed environmental professionals or, prior to the publication by the board of the first roster of licensed environmental professionals, persons on the list maintained by the commissioner pursuant to subsection (h) of this section, including at least two having hydrogeology expertise and two who are licensed professional engineers; two members who are active members of an organization that promotes the protection of the environment; one member who is an active member of an organization that promotes business; and one member who is an employee of a lending institution. The members of the board shall administer the provisions of this section as to licensure and issuance, reissuance, suspension or revocation of licenses concerning environmental professionals. The Governor may remove any member of the board for misconduct, incompetence or neglect of duty. The members of the board shall receive no compensation for their services but shall be reimbursed for necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their duties.<\/em> The board shall keep a true and complete record of all its proceedings.<\/p>\n We can call these the Eleven Guys.\u00a0 The chairman is appointed by the Commissioner and the other ten are appointed by the governor with vested interests in the business of hazardous waste.\u00a0 They are obviously lobbyists since they don\u2019t get paid for this state service.\u00a0 In those three short sentences I gave more useful information than the paragraph of five times the length approved by Connecticut lawmakers.<\/strong><\/p>\n (c) A licensed environmental professional [LEP]<\/strong> shall perform his duties in accordance with the standard of care applicable to professionals engaged in such duties….<\/p>\n (d) The commissioner shall receive and account for all moneys derived under the provisions of this section and shall deposit such moneys in the General Fund\u2026.<\/p>\n (e) The board shall authorize the commissioner to issue a license \u2026to any person who demonstrates to the satisfaction of the board that such person\u2026 meets rather strict requirements<\/strong><\/p>\n (f) The board shall authorize the commissioner to issue a license to any applicant who, in the opinion of the board, has satisfactorily met the requirements of this section\u2026.<\/p>\n (g) The board may conduct investigations concerning the conduct of any licensed environmental professional. The commissioner may conduct audits of any actions authorized by law to be performed by a licensed environmental professional. \u2026<\/p>\n (h) The board shall hold the first examination pursuant to this section no later than eighteen months after the date the commissioner adopts regulations \u2026<\/p>\n (i) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize a licensed environmental professional to engage in any profession or occupation requiring a license under any other provisions of the general statutes without such license.<\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133w. Voluntary site remediation in GB and GC areas: Licensed environmental professionals. (a) As used in this [law] <\/strong><\/p>\n Finally we are into the areas which directly affect me.\u00a0 Take another break if necessary, but start here:<\/strong><\/p>\n (1) \u201cPhase II environmental site assessment\u201d means an investigation to confirm the presence or absence of a spill on or at a parcel of real property which investigation may include sampling of soil or groundwater in accordance with the provisions of the Transfer Act Site Assessment Guidance Document<\/em> published by the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, June, 1989, revised November, 1991, or in accordance with comparable provisions in any regulations adopted by the commissioner \u2026<\/p>\n Phase II concerns the \u201cpresence\u201d of hazard and is the investigation Gene paid $20,000 for this investigation that found the three soil samples which caused the rest of the problems.\u00a0 The DEEP published the Guidance Document in 1991 that tells the LEPs what they must do according and the law says to follow the DEEP document.\u00a0 I wonder if ANYONE thought that was the essence of the law.<\/p>\n So the law says, in effect, do whatever the DEEP said to do in their guidance document of November of 1991. \u00a0\u00a0Other than that there is dozens of pages that really just tell us how to the DEEP is structured, the few limits on the powers of the DEEP and the severe penalties in store if you figure out how to break the law.<\/strong><\/p>\n (2) \u201cPhase III investigation\u201d means an investigation to ascertain the extent of a spill on or at a parcel of real property in accordance with the provisions of the Transfer Act Site Assessment Guidance Document<\/em> \u2026 (3) \u201cPhase III remedial action plan\u201d means a written plan prepared subsequent to a Phase III investigation as provided in said guidance document<\/em> or such regulations which plan includes information regarding the feasibility of various alternative remediation strategies and an assessment of the costs of such strategies; (4) \u201cSpill\u201d (5) \u201cCommissioner\u201d Mean what you think they mean.<\/strong><\/p>\n (b) The commissioner shall publish along with any list or roster of licensed environmental professionals \u2026 a record of any work performed by any licensed environmental professional pursuant to a final remedial action \u2026 which is submitted to the commissioner and any action taken by the commissioner with regard to such work.<\/p>\n (c) Any licensed environmental professional who performs any services \u2026 \u00a0shall act with reasonable care and diligence and shall apply the knowledge and skill ordinarily required of a professional in good standing practicing in that field at the time the services are performed.<\/p>\n Why is it necessary to put in this law that LEPs have to \u201cact with reasonable care and diligence\u201d?\u00a0 I can assume that every law says everyone must be careful and honest, except the commissioner and other government employees, who are protected \u00a0from having to do such things by law.<\/strong><\/p>\n (d) Any licensed environmental professional who performs any services pursuant to section 22a-133y shall not have, develop or acquire any business association or financial interest which is substantial enough to create an impression of influencing his judgment in connection with the performance of such services. No licensed environmental professional shall offer or render such services under an arrangement whereby no fee will be charged if a specified finding or result is attained, or where the payment of his fee, or the amount of the fee, is otherwise dependent upon a specified finding or result of such services.<\/p>\n LEPs must not charge based on results. Imagine this in action.\u00a0 I request a quote from an LEP to test and remedy \u00a0the property but what I can get is, like what happened to me twice, a quote saying they will drill monitoring wells etc. not dependent on findings. The crew shows up, but they don\u2019t work for me, they work for the LEP who doesn\u2019t work for me either but rather works for the Commissioner and is more worried about being audited than anything else.\u00a0 The LEP is contracted to do something no one wants to do and no one thinks is necessary but is required by law.\u00a0 And there are very specific requirements according the 1991 document only the LEP knows.<\/p>\n So things never go as expected drilling wells in New England.\u00a0 Every well I have ever had drilled found unexpected results or other problems.\u00a0 And so they take the money and by law they must start over again with a new quote and a new job, usually drilling in a different location with no guarantees, by law.\u00a0 No one is happy because the law makes people responsible to the idea of not being audited, not to the idea of fixing a problem.\u00a0 They have to keep doing the same thing over again until they can approximate the center of the spill, no matter how small.\u00a0 The LEP charges an unhappy customer several times for a job no one thinks is necessary but must be done because of The Act.<\/strong><\/p>\n (e) Any licensed environmental professional who violates any provision of subsection (c) or (d) of this section shall be assessed a civil penalty of not more than twenty-five thousand dollars\u2026. \u00a0Any amount recovered shall be deposited into the Special Contaminated Property Remediation and Insurance Fund ..<\/p>\n Let that sink in.<\/strong><\/p>\n Sec. 22a-133x. Investigation and remediation of contaminated real property. Submission of forms. Review by commissioner. Fee. Notification required. (a) For the purposes of this section:<\/p>\n (1) \u201cApplicant\u201d\u2026 (2) \u201cInterim verification\u201d\u2026 (3) \u201cRelease area\u201d (4) \u201cVerification\u201d\u2026 all mean pretty much what you think they mean.<\/strong><\/p>\n (b) Except as provided in [other law], <\/strong>any person may, at any time, submit to the commissioner an environmental condition assessment form for real property and an initial review fee in accordance with [this law]<\/strong>. Such applicant shall use a licensed environmental professional to verify the investigation and remediation, unless not later than thirty days after the commissioner’s receipt of such form, the commissioner notifies such applicant, in writing, that review and written approval of any remedial action at such property by the commissioner will be required. The commissioner shall not process any such form submitted pursuant to this section unless such form is accompanied by the required initial review fee.<\/p>\n This is the procedure followed.\u00a0 It goes like this: Pay your LEP thousands to write the assessment and pay the DEEP thousands to file the assessment. <\/strong><\/p>\n (c) The applicant shall, on or before ninety days after the submission of an environmental condition assessment form, submit a statement of proposed actions for investigating and remediating the parcel or a release area and a schedule for implementing such actions. The commissioner may require the applicant to submit to the commissioner copies of technical plans and reports related to investigation and remediation of the parcel or release area. Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, the commissioner may determine that the commissioner’s review and written approval of such technical plans and reports is necessary at any time, and in such case the commissioner shall notify the applicant of the need for the commissioner’s review and written approval. The commissioner shall require that the certifying party submit to the commissioner all technical plans and reports related to the investigation and remediation of the parcel or release area if the commissioner receives a written request from any person for such information. The applicant shall advise the commissioner of any modifications to the proposed schedule.<\/p>\n After the assessment no actions should be taken for at least 90 days and make sure you submit \u201ctechnical plans and reports\u201d, which the commissioner can demand any time at all.<\/strong><\/p>\n (d) If the commissioner notifies the applicant that the commissioner will formally review and approve in writing the investigation and remediation of the parcel, the applicant shall, on or before thirty days of the receipt of such notice, or such later date as may be approved in writing by the commissioner, submit for the commissioner’s review and written approval a proposed schedule for: (1) Investigating and remediating the parcel or release area; and (2) submitting to the commissioner technical plans, technical reports and progress reports related to such investigation and remediation. Upon the commissioner’s approval of such schedule, the applicant shall, in accordance with the approved schedule, submit technical plans, technical reports and progress reports to the commissioner for the commissioner’s review and written approval. The applicant shall perform all actions identified in the approved technical plans, technical reports and progress reports in accordance with the approved schedule. The commissioner may approve, in writing, any modification proposed in writing by the applicant to such schedule or investigation and remediation and may notify the applicant, in writing, if the commissioner determines that it is appropriate to discontinue formal review and approval of the investigation or remediation.<\/p>\n This was not my experience.\u00a0 I suppose the procedure we followed is according the power of the commissioner to require such things as the commissioner wants such things and impose time limits and forms instead of following this section. Or perhaps there are policies which count the forms submitted as the ones required by law even though they appear to have a very different function.<\/strong><\/p>\n (e) (1) Upon receipt of an interim verification by a licensed environmental professional, the applicant may submit such interim verification to the commissioner. Any applicant who submits an interim verification pursuant to this subdivision shall, until the remediation standards for groundwater are achieved: (A) Operate and maintain the long-term remedy for groundwater in accordance with such interim verification and any applicable approval by the commissioner or remedial action plan; (B) prevent exposure to the groundwater plume; and (C) submit annual status reports to the commissioner.<\/p>\n
\nEugene Luciano, owner of Luciano\u2019s Cleaning Clinic, died in February of 2010.\u00a0 Gene was a genuine hero of World War II and had the medals and scars to prove it.\u00a0 He wrote a book which he gave away to all who wanted it and signed my copy for me.\u00a0 At the end of the war in Germany he and two other Americans brought in several dozen prisoners without firing a shot.\u00a0 He told me they had been trying to get the guys to surrender for days and the three of them had gone out scouting behind the German position.\u00a0 All of a sudden they found themselves facing the backs of about 50 guys all armed pointing the other way, at the American position.<\/p>\n
\nAccording to our government if ground water testing detects an amount of Perc above 25 ppb it must be reported.\u00a0 If drinking water tests above 5 ppb it must be reported.\u00a0 In 1993 the gas station detected 27 ppb in ground water, a reportable level; found and reported the year after Luciano\u2019s Cleaning Clinic had closed.\u00a0 Dry Cleaning equipment had already been sold and the building was used only as an apartment in 1993.\u00a0 There have been no reportable detections of Perc in the vicinity before or since this one reported detection in 1993.<\/p>\n
\nMany people believe that if a gram of something is bad then a billionth of a gram is also bad.\u00a0 Often people argue that organic products are healthier because less pesticides and other toxic chemical residue are in organics.\u00a0 The produce section of your supermarket has, on a very rough average, 4 times the pesticides found in organic produce in the same supermarket. Following this logical argument, if you eat an average four organic tomatoes you are just as contaminated with toxic chemicals as if you ate one non-organically grown tomato. Each of us has to decide if we want to spend extra money to avoid approximately one quarter of the pesticide and chemical residues on otherwise government approved vegetables and instead buy more expensive organic vegetables.<\/p>\n
\n<\/em><\/strong>The Act is found in Connecticut General Statutes Section 22a ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION (they write such things in all caps).\u00a0 In Section 22a are contained Chapters 439 to 446 and The Act is in Chapter 445 titled \u201cHAZARDOUS WASTE\u201d. So within that chapter is The Act<\/strong> as we call it, but it is also called \u201c22a-sections 114-134a<\/strong>\u201d.\u00a0 There no specific section heading for The Act, only the numbers. It is named The Transfer Act only in DEEP literature that refers to this section of law.<\/p>\n
\nSec. 22a-114. Legislative finding; policy of the state. The General Assembly finds that improper management of hazardous wastes has contaminated the water, soil and air of the state thereby threatening the health and safety of Connecticut citizens; that the economic benefits to the state from industry are jeopardized if hazardous waste disposal facilities are not available in Connecticut;<\/p>\n
\nWe got though the longest section.\u00a0 Congratulations.\u00a0 In pages that was long, but not in substance, probably true of all sections of law.\u00a0 I used the ellipsis to get us through that one.\u00a0 You saw very few of the total number of words in that section.<\/strong><\/p>\n
\ncontinues. The Attorney General, upon complaint of the commissioner, shall institute a civil action to recover such penalty. Any amount recovered shall be deposited in the General Fund.<\/p>\n
\nThey will keep a list.<\/strong><\/p>\n
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\nSec. 22a-133o. Environmental use restrictions: Requirements .. If the commissioner has a program and the commissioner says you can apply and all owners agree unless the commissioner says they don\u2019t have to agree\u2026<\/strong><\/p>\n
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\n(d) The amount of any funds received under subsection (b) of this section by any entity other than a municipality shall be a lien against the real property for which the funds were disbursed\u2026.<\/p>\n
\nAs this has become so ridiculously tedious I will summarize that LEPs and the other definitions in this section are just what you think they are.\u00a0 I can\u2019t imagine anyone thinks this law is reasonable and can defend even the expenditure of electronic ink on its production.\u00a0 Well, no one but a lawmaker, whose job it is to make such laws.\u00a0 What a waste.<\/strong><\/p>\n
\nPhase III concerns the \u201cextent\u201d of hazard and is the investigation that is required to delineate precisely where and how much \u201chazard\u201d there is in every \u201cspill\u201d regardless how ridiculously small, as in my case.\u00a0 <\/strong><\/p>\n
\nIn my case I have had several of these very expensive plans prepared.<\/strong><\/p>\n