PER CURIAM.
Appellant, 50 West Street, LLC, a subsidiary of Hartz Mountain Industries and the former landlord of Crompton Colors, appeals the action of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) rescinding a No Further Action (NFA) letter issued in 2002, and denying appellant's request for a hearing to contest the rescission. We remand for a hearing.
50 West Street is located in a commercial and residential area east of the Garden State Parkway in the Township of Bloomfield. The site was designated 60 West Street until the property was subdivided in 1991. Prior to 1965, this site was owned by Walter Kiddie Fire Extinguisher Company. Hartz purchased the property in 1965 and subsequently leased the premises to Peerless Bindery.
In October 1991, the site was subdivided establishing two parcels currently known as Block 305, Lots 5.01 and 5.02. There were two buildings at the site in 1990, a warehouse occupied by Peerless, and a three-story office building leased to Child Development Center. The warehouse was demolished in 1990 by Stratford Development Company and replaced by a new warehouse, corresponding to Lot 5.02. This property was renovated in the 1990's and leased to Crompton & Knowels Colors, Inc. (later known as Crompton Colors Incorporated). The three-story structure occupied by the Child Development Center remained as Lot 5.01.
As part of the warehouse demolition, Stratford removed from the site a 10,000-gallon No.2 heating oil tank. According to the Discharge Investigation and Corrective Action Report (DICAR) prepared by Cortell Associates on behalf of Hartz:
At the time Hartz removed the 10,000-gallon oil tank, undertook these remediation measures, and commissioned the DICAR, the property had not been subdivided. Thus, the DEP stored the information contained in the DICAR under the 60 West Street address. When the DICAR was resubmitted to the DEP in March 1993, the property was again identified as 60 West Street.
By letter dated October 19, 1995, the DEP Bureau of Underground Storage Tanks responded to the DICAR and requested Hartz to provide disposal information for the contaminated soil, to conduct additional remedial investigation, and to report the results of these efforts within ninety days in a Remedial Action Workplan. In a report dated January 29, 1996, Envirotech Consultants, Inc., responded on behalf of Hartz, providing disposal information regarding the contaminated soil and information on the monitoring wells.
By letter dated March 15, 1996, the DEP found the Envirotech report "unacceptable," and required Hartz to address "the issues within the Remedial Investigation Sections," and submit another Remedial Investigation Report addressing the issues identified within ninety days. Of particular relevance here, this letter from DEP referenced the address site as "60 West Street."
Hartz submitted another Remedial Investigation Report in July 1996, which included data from additional soil and groundwater samples taken in May 1996. Again, the property is identified as 60 West Street. This Remedial Investigation Report indicated benzo(b)flouranthene and benzo(a)pyrnene were present in the soil in concentrations exceeding the
By letter dated August 21, 1996, the DEP informed Hartz that "[b]ased on our review of the information submitted, the Department finds that Hartz Mountain has complied with the existing requirements regarding the remedial investigation and remedial action for the listed discharges and investigated underground storage tank system. Therefore,
The letter referenced 60 West Street as the site where the tank had been removed, and specifically made "no representation regarding the environmental conditions of any other areas for the referenced property." DEP further required Hartz "to investigate this site in order to identify any areas of concern that may be contributing to the noted contamination, or alternatively, to confirm that the source of the noted contamination is off-site." It is undisputed that Hartz did not conduct this investigation.
As noted earlier, Hartz leased the warehouse property to Crompton Colors in 1991, which continuously occupied the site until 2001. During this ten-year period Crompton Colors handled and stored at the warehouse a variety of hazardous substances. The cessation of business of Crompton's warehouse operation in 2001 triggered the requirements of the Industrial Site Recovery Act (ISRA),
On August 17, 2001, Crompton filed with the DEP a General Information Notice and Expedited Review Application,
Crompton responded by submitting a Preliminary Assessment Report, a Negative Declaration Affidavit, and a revised General Information Notice listing the address as 50 West Street, but revising the lot number to reflect Lot 5.02. In the Preliminary Assessment Report, Crompton indicated that there had not been "any known discharges of hazardous substances and wastes at the site." The report noted that the site was the former location of Peerless Bindery, with the address 60 West Street. The report specifically noted that Crompton's operations involved the storage of raw materials, purchased dyes, and finished goods from other Crompton facilities in New Jersey. It also provided detailed information regarding potential areas of environmental concern, and noted that the areas where Crompton had stored hazardous materials did not have floor drains or other conduits to the underlying soil. Crompton did not disclose, however, the presence of soil and groundwater contamination that had been identified in the 1996 NFA letter.
Based on these representations, the DEP issued a letter dated February 19, 2002, informing Crompton that "no further action is necessary for the remediation of the industrial establishment . . . so long as Crompton Colors did not withhold any information from the Department."
In the brief filed in this appeal, the DEP noted that the Kiddie Kollege child care center, located in Franklin Township, Gloucester County operated on a site where mercury thermometers had been manufactured. The issue came to light in 2004, when children who used the site were found to have abnormally high levels of mercury in their urine. It was subsequently determined that the building on that site was contaminated with mercury.
In the aftermath of this incident, the DEP mapped all known child care centers and schools, drew a 500 foot radius around every child care center and school, and examined all open and closed cases within the radius to determine whether any of them could potentially affect the child care facilities.
As part of this reexamination, the DEP revisited Hartz's application and concluded that the contamination not addressed by Hartz as part of the underground storage tank removal was actually located at 50 West Street. By letter dated August 22, 2007, the DEP rescinded its 2002 NFA letter issued to Crompton. The DEP also directed Hartz and Crompton's successor, Chemtura, to submit a Remedial Investigation Workplan, pursuant to
Hartz responded by letter dated September 12, 2007, arguing that the DEP did not have grounds to re-open the case for 50 West Street, and lacked the authority to compel Hartz to conduct a vapor intrusion study at the adjacent property, 60 West Street. Hartz characterized the DEP's actions as arbitrary and capricious because the 1996 data from the underground storage tank removal did not support reopening the case. According to Hartz, the data from the 1996 underground storage tank case indicated that there was "no good faith basis to believe that either 50 West Street LLC (or Chemtura) are responsible for the groundwater contamination." Hartz also noted it did not have a copy of Crompton's IRSA filings. Hartz concluded its response by demanding an administrative hearing "to contest the reopening" of its case.
Counsel for the DEP responded to Hartz in a letter dated September 9, 2009. The DEP rejected Hartz's attempt at disassociating itself from the actions taken by Crompton by noting that they were both obligated to "remediate all contamination at the industrial establishment pursuant to the Industrial Site Recovery Act." Hartz also received copies of all communications between Crompton and the DEP concerning the remediation of the industrial establishment. The DEP further rejected Hartz's claims that another site was the source of the groundwater contamination at 50 West Street because the other site is located over one-half mile southwest of 50 West Street, and the groundwater flow is in an east/southeast direction. Finally, the DEP rejected Hartz's demand for an administrative hearing.
We will limit our discussion to Hartz's request for an administrative hearing to challenge the factual basis for the DEP's decision: (1) rescinding the NFA issued in 2002; and (2) directing Hartz to submit a Workplan, pursuant to
In
We reject the DEP's characterization of its actions here as mere requests for submission of documentation and performance of studies Hartz was required to provide and perform as part of its original application for the 2002 NFA. The rescission of the NFA is a revocation of the permission the DEP gave Hartz in 2002 to convey this property free and clear of any remedial obligations under IRSA. The administrative directives to perform environmental studies fall within the purview of
A hearing is required in which Hartz may present evidence refuting the DEP's factual underpinnings to rescind a determination made more than nine years ago and to challenge its legal obligation to conduct any further environmental studies or undertake remedial measures.
Remanded for an adjudicatory hearing before the Office of Administrative Law. We do not retain jurisdiction.