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Archive for February, 2024

The Murphy DEP Cuts Another Corporate Sweetheart Settlement With American Cyanamid At Superfund Site On The Raritan River

February 15th, 2024 No comments

DEP Settles For Just $78,775 and 112 Acres Of Wetlands Restoration At Duke Farms’ Private Property

DEP Settlement Implements Mike Catania’s Corporate Green Ponzi Scheme

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(Caption: This is Mike Catania’s  Model, taken from an annual Report by his organization, CRI)

Unlike the recent controversial sweetheart settlement with BASF for Natural Resource Damages (NRD) at the notorious Ciba-Geigy Superfund site in Toms River, in the DEP’s most recent corporate sweetheart deal with American Cyanamid at their Superfund Site along the Raritan River, there was no self congratulatory press release issued by DEP, and no environmental groups cheerleading to provide green cover.

Amazingly, DEP just proposed a draft NRD Settlement with American Cyanamid for ….. wait for it ….. $78,775 and 112 Acres Of Wetlands Restoration.

Read the DEP Public Notice and the DEP Proposed Draft Settlement Agreement and Appendices which identify the “restoration projects”.

The public comment period is open for 60 days after the December 18, 2023 NJ Register Notice. It is telling and outrageous that DEP issued this settlement not only quietly, but during the Holidays and over New Years.

Almost all of this “restoration” is located UPRIVER from the Cyanamid site (e.g. impossible to restore downriver damages) and it is being conducted on PRIVATE PROPERTY on billionaire Duke Farms Foundation land.

Let that sink in for a moment.

The American Cyanamid site is huge, 435 acres, heavily contaminated, and located on the flood prone banks of the Raritan River.

According to DEP:

The contamination at the Site was allegedly caused as a result of waste storage and disposal impoundments at the Site that contain or contained hazardous substances, including volatile organic compounds (VOCs), semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs), and/or metals. Investigations also found hazardous substances, including VOCs, SVOCs, polychlorinated biphenyls, and metals in soils at the Site, and that the groundwater underlying the Site contains metals and VOCs, such as benzene, chlorobenzene, ethylbenzene, and xylene. This contamination led the United States Environmental Protection Agency to add the American Cyanamid Site to the National Priorities List of Superfund Sites in 1983.

I have not read the NOAA NRD damage assessment documents yet, but there can be no doubt that there has been off site release and migration of toxic pollutants to the Raritan River that has resulted in the poisoning and lost use of wildlife (fish and birds), aquatic biota and ecosystems, groundwater, and river sediments (including perhaps drinking water supplies).

So how is it possible that DEP can settle for peanuts for decades of this massive toxic assault on the Raritan River?

Once again, there is no information at all provided by DEP in the public notice or the draft Settlement agreement.

There is no document published by DEP that provides a science based assessment of natural resource damages or the economic value of these damaged resources or the nexus between the NRD damages and the restoration plan or how the public will be compensated fully for those damages.

Adding insult to injury, the settlement is part of a longtime corporate scam by Mike Catania, formerly head of Duke Farms (see:

This is another in an outrageous pattern of negligent enforcement of the DEP’s NRD powers as Trustee of the State’s natural resources.

This is exactly what one might expect from a former corporate lawyer who represented corporate polluters in successful legal challenges of DEP NRD claims and has refused to disclose that fact and recuse from DEP decision-making in NRD cases.

Forget it Jake, its Chinatown.

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The Woods I Played In As A Kid Are Mostly Gone

February 14th, 2024 No comments

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And you know the sun’s settin’ fast,
And just like they say, nothing good ever lasts.
Well, go on now and kiss it goodbye,
But hold on to your lover,
‘Cause your heart’s bound to die.
Go on now and say goodbye to our town, to our town.
Can’t you see the sun’s settin’ down on our town, on our town,
Goodnight. ~~~ Our Town, Iris Dement

I just Google mapped the place I grew up in. I was stunned.

I started inserting red arrows for all the corporate office parks and luxury housing that was built since I was a kid.

I had to stop before the image became all red arrows.

When I was a kid, you could walk from Hackley School lower fields for miles northeast to the Saw Mill River Parkway and north to Tarrytown Lakes through unbroken forest. Today, it’s all fragmented by corporate office parks and luxury housing and Hackley School athletic facilities.

The land between my house on Maple Avenue and Axe Castle was all woods and streams. The Castle was surrounded by hundreds of acres of woods. It’s now apartment buildings, luxury housing, roads, and things like spas.

The land between Benedict Avenue and the NY Thruway and along White Plains Road (Rt. 119) was all woods and wetlands and streams. It’s all developed now.

The corporate office parks to the east of the Saw Mill River Parkway were not there either.

And the housing costs are obscene – the tiny dilapidated 2 bedroom house on a tiny lot I grew up in sells for half a million dollars now. Absurd.

Just take a look at all those red arrows.

Say goodbye…

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Proposed Affordable Housing “Reform” Bill Ignores Land Use Planning And Environmental Considerations

February 13th, 2024 No comments

Another Case Of Democrats Using Social Justice To Mask Bad Policy

My friend Bill Potter, a longtime prominent land use, energy, and environmental lawyer, has an excellent Op-Ed running today at NJ Spotlight on the affordable housing “reform” bill (S50 [1R]) moving rapidly through he Legislature, read the whole thing:

I was particularly distressed by this conclusion:

Most troubling of all, the 76-page bill does not so much as mention the municipal mandates to protect the environment in all its many features and human impacts:

  • Freshwater wetlands, preservation of natural stream buffers, no-build flood-prone areas, wooded hillsides and steep slopes, as well as such perennial hot topics in land use disputes as controlling stormwater runoff (sure to increase with global warming), traffic impacts, sewerage capacity and water supply, all are given short — if any — shrift in Sen. Singleton’s omnibus legislation.

The Supreme Court in each Mount Laurel decision eloquently described various environmental limitations to the allocation of affordable housing obligations. For example, “They do not extend to those areas where the State Plan discourages growth — namely open spaces, rural areas, prime farmland, conservation areas, limited growth areas, parts of the Pinelands and Coastal Zone areas” among others.

Affordable housing claims have long been used to attempt to over-ride sound land use planning and environmental considerations, and there are many disastrous developments and environmental damages that have been allowed under sham affordable housing claims. So I was stunned and appalled by the failure of the bill to address those issues.

Where the hell are the environmental groups who used to prioritize and work on land use and “anti-sprawl” campaigns? 

I’m particularly disgusted that the NJ Chapter of Sierra Club seems to be AWOL in this debate, and my sense is that they will actually end up supporting the bill (if they haven’t already) under their twisted new direction set by Jeff Tittel’s retirement replacement, Anjuli Ramos-Busot. 

I read the bill recently and shared Bill Potter’s assessment, but, frankly, I was so baffled by reading the bill that I couldn’t muster an analysis and sufficient clarity to criticize it!

It will be very difficult to stop this bill (I assume that Gov. Murphy and his former corporate lawyer DEP Commissioner support it), but Bill’s Op-Ed is an important first step in doing so. Perhaps Bill’s high credibility in NJ policy circles will open the eyes of some people in Trenton in policymaking or media positions.

That might be the only effective strategy to block this bill, because conditions have changed radically since I was active in NJ land use and environmental battles (roughly 1994 – 2017).

  • There is no longer a credible environmentally oriented activist land use organization working on land use issues at the State level.
  • The environmental groups that used to work on land use – like Sierra Club – have drank the “EJ” social justice Kool-aid and are likely to support the bill.
  • The Democrats are in bed with the builders and very effective in using the EJ & social justice arguments to disguise bad policy.
  • There is no press appetite or capacity to cover any of this stuff.
  • There is no Foundation money to fund land use campaigns.

Perhaps the only approach that could work would be to try to get the bill injected into the polarized, partisan, culture and urban/suburban wars and hope for gridlock. I”m sure there are Republicans in the legislature eager to go there.

But my ethics won’t let me feed that beast, so, I’ll basically just try to do what Bill Potter has done: inject solid critical analysis into the debate and hope for the best.

If nothing else, that might shame the so called activists and public interest pretenders into doing something.

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Murphy DEP Settles Statewide Drinking Water Toxic Pollution Lawsuit With Chevron (and Texaco) For Just $175,000

February 12th, 2024 No comments

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Lawsuits On Gasoline Additive MTBE Involved Over 6,000 Polluted Groundwater Sites

DEP Has Collected Over $350 Million From Other Big Oil Corporations For MTBE Pollution

DEP Provided No Data On The Number Of Chevron Sites Or The Economic Cost Of Chevron’s Pollution Damages

Chevron Settlement May Rival The Notoriously Corrupt Christie DEP Exxon Deal

The Murphy DEP recently quietly settled a very old lawsuit, initially filed back in 2007, against Chevron (and Texaco and Unocal) for polluting NJ drinking water supplies for just $175,000 (that’s not a typo! $175K!) (read the draft settlement document here).

The DEP’s public notice states: (emphases mine)

“In June 2007, the NJDEP instituted lawsuits against nearly 50 companies, alleging that those companies were responsible for contamination of waters of the State of New Jersey caused by MTBE. The defendants included MTBE manufacturers and refiners, as well as major brand marketers of gasoline containing MTBE. The defendants also included companies within the chain of distribution of gasoline containing MTBE in the State of New Jersey. The NJDEP has identified over 6,000 sites where MTBE has been detected in the waters of the State.”

The DEP public notice and draft settlement document do not provide any information about:

1) how many Chevron/Texaco/Unocal  gas stations are involved in the settlement or Chevron’s market share in NJ;

2) how many groundwater pollution sites were caused by Chevron/Texaco;

3) how many public drinking water supplies and private wells were contaminated by Chevron/Texaco;

4) what the costs to the public and ratepayers was to cleanup the Chevron/Texaco pollution and/or monitor and treat polluted drinking water or to develop alternative water supplies; and

5) data or estimates of the economic damages to natural resources caused by Chevron/Texaco.

These are egregious flaws that must be corrected, because DEP’s continuing failure to conduct this work is what is causing these pathetic pennies on the dollar settlements.

DEP merely concluded and alluded to DEP’s “beliefs”, not facts and science:

“In consideration of the valuation of natural resources injured by MTBE contamination, the Chevron Settling Parties’ proportionate responsibility for that contamination, and the public trust benefits described in this notice, the NJDEP, as trustee of the public’s natural resources, believes that the proposed terms are fair, reasonable, faithful to the intent of the aforementioned statutes, and in the public interest.”

I don’t care what DEP “believes” – I care about what they KNOW and are not telling the public.

It is impossible to determine if this draft settlement is in the public interest – as required by law – but I strongly doubt that it is.

I guess that DEP felt that after environmental groups praised the BASF sweetheart NRD deal in Toms River, that anything goes. (and exactly what one would expect from a DEP led by a former corporate lawyer who successfully litigated NRD claims agains DEP:

One case LaTourette litigated, however, stands out for its harm to the environment, DEP, and the public interest. And that case is:

Alan E. Kraus argued the cause for respondent (Latham & Watkins, L.L.P., attorneys; Mr. Kraus, Kira S. Dabby, Kegan A. Brown, and Shawn M. LaTourette, on the brief).

(I even filed an ethics complaint against DEP Commissioner LaTourette for failure to disclose and recuse on that)

This Chevron settlement could actually be worse than the Christie DEP’s notorious Settlement with Exxon, where DEP settled for less than 3 pennies on the dollar of an $8.9 billion claim.

The public comment period closed on Jan. 17 and the agreement is not yet final and approved by the federal judge. I wrote to legislators to demand Legislative oversight hearings to uncover facts and expose major flaws in DEP’s “Natural Resource Damage” program that lead to these pennies on the dollar settlements, but Senate Environment Committee Chairman Smith has ignored my criticisms for years now so I don’t expect a reply. (recall that Smith created a Legislative Task Force to reform DEP’s NRD program, but the corporate polluters killed it).

Let me provide some context, to remind readers of just how corrupt the whole MTBE situation is.

Perhaps you forgot or were not aware of the issues of drinking water pollution caused by the toxic gasoline additive MTBE, a national  issue that emerged over 40 years ago.

The first documented case was in Rockaway, N.J., in 1980. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported, way back in 2008, when that first case was settled:

More than a dozen water suppliers in New Jersey likely will share at least $67 million as part of a [$422 million] national settlement with oil companies over drinking water contamination caused by the fuel additive MTBE. […]

MTBE is now the most commonly found volatile organic chemical in the state’s groundwater, said Barker Hamill, who runs the Department of Environmental Protection’s safe drinking water program.

He said perhaps 10 to 15 percent of the state’s wells have detectable levels, but rarely do they rise above the state’s maximum allowable level of 70 parts per billion.

In 2003, Joseph J. McGovern, an environmental lawyer with the Marlton firm Parker McCay, filed suit in the state on behalf of 16 water suppliers.

Most of the companies, including BP Amoco, Atlantic Richfield, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, Shell, Marathon, Citgo and Sunoco, settled the case that included McGovern’s filing on May 8.

The Bergen Record did a followup story back in 2015, updated in 2017, and reported that DEP had recovered over $105 million:

New Jersey has settled with 10 companies in the case, bringing in a combined $105 million. The largest settlements include $33 million from Hess, $30 million from Lyondell and $23 million from Citgo.

Former NJ AG Grewal issued a press release updating the total to $350 million, with $196 million from new with settlements from Sunoco and BP Shell:

https://www.njoag.gov/attorney-general-grewal-announces-total-of-196-million-in-mtbe-settlements-with-sunoco-bp-and-shell/

With the three settlements announced today, the Division of Law has obtained more than $350 million in settlements with defendant companies in the MTBE litigation.

Nationally, the Environmental Working Group tells the familiar corporate corruption story of MTBE: (at least 138 NJ drinking water systems serving 2.1 million people were polluted by MTBE, as of 2005):

The oil industry and its friends in Congress say it’s only fair to shield MTBE makers from lawsuits, because they claim that the government mandated oil companies to add MTBE to gasoline in the first place, to help clean the air. But another story is told by internal industry documents and depositions made public in the California lawsuits. The documents, provided to EWG by attorneys for the communities, show it was the oil companies themselves who lobbied hard for the MTBE mandate because they made the additive and stood to profit.

A paper trail dating back almost 25 years shows how the oil companies took an unwanted byproduct of gasoline refining that was expensive to dispose of and created a profitable market for it. Beginning in the mid-1980s, well in advance of the 1992 federal mandate to reformulate gasoline to meet the standards of the Clean Air Act, the petrochemical industry promoted MTBE to U.S. and state regulators as the additive of choice – knowing at the time that it would very likely contaminate ground water. Only much later did the companies admit that MTBE doesn’t do much to reduce air pollution after all.

MTBE settlements in other states:

California got $422 million from Chevron

https://www.sfgate.com/business/article/big-mtbe-settlement-to-benefit-california-3214558.php

Under the agreement, the oil companies will pay $422 million up front. They also agree to cover 70 percent of the cleanup costs for any of the plaintiffs’ wells that become contaminated with MTBE within the next 30 years.

New Hampshire – over $400 million and in contrast to DEP secrecy, they issued a comprehensive program and public report:

https://www.des.nh.gov/sites/g/files/ehbemt341/files/documents/2020-01/r-wmd-19-1.pdf

Rhode Island – $6 million Mobil

https://riag.ri.gov/press-releases/attorney-general-neronha-announces-6-million-dollar-settlement-exxon-mobil-over-mtbe

RI – over $18 million

https://www.golocalprov.com/news/20-year-ri-battle-over-contamination-continues-mbte-settlement-with-oil-com

Even the Christie AG got $39 million from Conoco Phillips

https://www.njoag.gov/attorney-general-announces-39-million-settlement-with-conocophillips-company-over-mtbe-contamination/

So, we clearly have a major problem here.

What explains the paltry DEP Chevron/Texaco settlement for just $175,000, when other gas companies settled for hundreds of millions of dollars?

How can this be?

I realize that DEP would settle the big cases first and that Chevron/Texaco may not have as many gas stations in NJ, but it sure looks like Chevron was rewarded generously by their intransigence.

It also looks like DEP has zero confidence in the legal defensibility and the scientific credibility of their NRD program.

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Perfection

February 10th, 2024 No comments
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