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POLICY
AND GUIDANCE STATEMENT
FOR THE SETTLEMENT OF CIVIL PENALTIES/ENFORCEMENT ACTIONS
Policy No. 98-04
December 3, 1998
In settling cases
in which the Commission could levy a civil penalty, the Commission shall
first require the remediation of any environmental problems resulting
from the noncompliance and shall coordinate the settlement with the affected
signatory parties. Thereafter, the Commission shall be guided by the following
principles:
- The Commission
shall continue its past policy of using settlements as the primary means
of carrying out enforcement actions.
- In completing settlement
agreements, the Commission shall strive for consistency in cases with
similar fact situations but, recognizing that each case is unique, the
Commission shall be flexible in fashioning settlement terms.
- All settlements
shall be agreed to by the alleged violator, in writing, prior to the
presentation of settlement terms to the Commission for final approval.
- All settlements
shall state that the Commission reserves the right to reinstitute a
civil penalty action against the alleged violator in the event the violator
fails to carry out the terms of the settlement agreement.
- Settlements may
be based upon monetary payments or non-monetary actions, services or
products of direct benefit to the public.
- Except in cases
involving an alternate payment schedule or non-monetary actions, a project
docket incorporating a settlement shall not be presented to the Commission
for review until the amount of the proposed settlement has been agreed
to by the project applicant and paid to the Commission. Any amounts
so paid shall be held in escrow pending approval of the docket by the
Commission. Where the approved settlement amount is less than the amount
proposed by Commission staff and tendered by the project applicant,
the overpayment shall be reimbursed to the project applicant. Where
the approved settlement amount is greater than the amount proposed by
Commission staff and tendered by the project applicant, the docket approval
shall not be effective until payment is made to the Commission of the
supplemental amount, which payment shall be made within 45 calendar
days after receipt of the approved docket by the applicant. It shall
also be a condition of such dockets that failure to tender the supplemental
payment within the 45-day period shall render the settlement and docket
approval null and void.
- In deciding whether
to settle a civil penalty case and determining the appropriate terms
therefore, including, but not limited to, those related to the amount
of any such penalty or the rate of interest applicable to settlement
amounts, the Commission and its staff should be guided, but not bound,
by the following primary and secondary considerations:
PRIMARY CONSIDERATIONS:
- Did the violation
cause serious environmental or other public harm or was there the potential
for serious harm?
- Has the violator
realized a tangible financial benefit as a result of the violation?
(If so, this should be recouped, along with any costs incurred by the
Commission.)
- Were the alleged
violator's actions willful or grossly negligent?
- What is the alleged
violator's compliance history?
SECONDARY CONSIDERATIONS:
- Is there a particular
need to deter such action by other potential violators?
- If the settlement
involves something other than or in addition to a monetary payment,
can a real and immediate environmental benefit be obtained?
- Is the violator
a public or quasi-public entity such that taxpayers ultimately must
pay the penalty or settlement amount?
- Does the violator
have the ability to pay without incurring such serious effects as bankruptcy
or plant closure resulting in the loss of employment?
- What types of settlements
were reached or penalties levied in similar cases?
- Are there any unique
factors that the Commission should consider?
- Would there be
a heavy expenditure of time and resources to fully prosecute a civil
penalties case with only a limited or uncertain prospect for success?
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