377 Greenwich LLC v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation

14 Misc. 3d 417
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 14 Misc. 3d 417 (377 Greenwich LLC v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
377 Greenwich LLC v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, 14 Misc. 3d 417 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Judith J. Gische, J.

Petitioner is the owner and developer of real estate located at 377 Greenwich Street, New York, New York. It brings this CPLR article 78 petition to challenge an October 5, 2005 decision by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) denying its application to participate in the Brownfield Cleanup Program (BCP). DEC opposes the petition.

As part of its opposition, DEC included affidavits from Daniel C. Walsh (DEC Chief of Region 2 Hazardous Waste Remediation Program), Dale Desoymers (DEC Director of Division of Environmental Remediation) and Timothy DeMeo (DEC Environmental Engineer with the Bureau of Spills Prevention and Response). Petitioner has separately moved to exclude these affidavits from consideration by the court. DEC opposes the motion.

The petition and the motion are consolidated for consideration and disposition in this decision.

I. The DEC Determination

The owner is in the process of constructing a luxury 80-room hotel and 100-seat restaurant at the property. In July 2004 it filed m application with the DEC to participate in the Brownfield Cleanup Program. On October 5, 2005 it received notification that its application had been denied. The denial concluded that the property did not meet che statutory definition of a “brownfield site.” The denial stated in relevant part:

“In determining whether the property constituting this application fits within the statutory definition of a brownfield, the Department reviewed your application package dated July 2004 and all supplementary materials, including the results of the supplemental investigations submitted in December 2004 and January 2005. The Department also reviewed the application materials in conjunction with the Department’s revised eligibility criteria published in March 2005. Among other things, the Department considered the past uses of the property, including use as a parking garage, a parking [419]*419lot, and as eight residential structures with some retail space. Furthermore, the Department considered that the design and finar cing for this project were approved by July 2003, prior to discovery of any contamination and prior to the passage of the brownfield statute in October 2003.
“In addition, the Department looked at the levels of contamination reported to the Department, which were, in the aggregate, relatively low; at the increase in development costs attributable to the environmental concerns in relation to the total cost of development and the value of the property; and the past uses which did not include processes which generate hazardous substances. Based on all these considerations, taken together with all the environmental data and all the statutory eligibility factors, set forth in the Brownfield Cleanup Program eligibility criteria, the Department has determined that the reuse or redevelopment of this property was not complicated by the presence or potential presence of contamination.”

The validity of this decision is now being challenged.

II. The Applicable Statutes

Effective October 7, 2003, the New York State Legislature passed the Brownfield Cleanup Program Act (BCPA). It is contained in sections 27-1401 to 27-1431 of the Environmental Conservation Law. Broadly speaking, the purpose of the legislation is to encourage the voluntary cleanup of hazardous waste sites and ultimate restoration of such sites to productive use, including restoration to the tax rolls. (Weinberg, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 17V2, ECL 27-1401 [2006 Pocket Part].) The statute provides substantial tax credits for the cleanup of real estate that is recognized as a “brownfield.” (Tax Law § 21.) It also provides for a release from future liability, if the cleanup is satisfactory. (ECL 27-1421.) The DEC is vested with the authority to implement a brownfield cleanup program, including the authority to make determinations about eligibility, approve remedial work plans and determine cleanup compliance. (See e.g. ECL 27-1407, 27-1409, 27-1411, 27-1419.)

The BCPA defines a “brownfield site” as “any real property, the redevelopment or reuse of which may be complicated by the [420]*420presence or potential presence of a contaminant.”1 (ECL 27-1405 [2].) The internal mechanism of the BCPA requires that application first be made to the DEC to participate in the program. This triggers an investigation and a public notification process. (ECL 27-1407 [5].) DEC then makes its determination whether to accept or reject the application. The statute has an express list of reasons that mandate exclusion from the program. (ECL 27-1407 [8].) The statute also has a nonexclusive list of discretionary reasons to exclude an applicant from the program. (ECL 27-1407 [9].)

Accepted applicants are required to enter into a site cleanup agreement, acceptable to the DEC, which, among other things, requires that an owner remediate the property according to a plan that must include engaging community participation and comment. (ECL 27-1409, 27-1417.) The DEC is required to oversee and determine compliance while remediation is taking place and has the ultimate authority to certify whether the remediation is eligible for the attendant benefits. (ECL 27-1409 [5], [12]; 27-1419.)

There is no express mandate in the BCPA that the DEC issue guidelines or explanatory regulations. However, in May 2004 the DEC issued a “Draft Brownfield Cleanup Program Guide” that was published for public comment. In October 2004 the DEC issued a “Draft Brownfield Cleanup Eligibility Determination Guidance” that was also published for public comment. In March 2005 the DEC issued a final Eligibility Determination Guidance (Eligibility Guidance Manual). These publications were issued pursuant to the DEC’s authority under ECL 3-0301 (2) (z). There are conceded differences between the drafts and the final version of the DEC’s publication.

III. Petitioner’s Application

The owner first submitted its application to participate in the BCP on July 1, 2004, shortly after it acquired the property on June 29, 2004. A proposed remediation work plan was thereafter submitted on July 19, 2004. On July 27, 2004, the DEC considered the application complete, subject to certain additional requirements.

Certain events, however, preceded the owner’s actual application. By the time the owner acquired the property, its predecessor in interest (the prior owner) had already taken significant [421]*421steps toward the development of the hotel project.2 The property had previously been used for many years as an unimproved parking lot.

In furtherance of the hotel project, the prior owner conducted a series of environmental assessments of the site.

In July 2003, Airtek, an environmental consultant hired by the prior owner, found that there were two 550 gallon underground unregistered storage tanks and that of three soil and groundwater samples taken, one soil sample had mercury and semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs) in concentrations exceeding recommended soil cleanup objectives in the DEC’s Technical and Administrative Guidance Memorandum No. 4046 (TAGM). The samples were also significant for what Airtek did not find.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Misc. 3d 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/377-greenwich-llc-v-new-york-state-department-of-environmental-nysupct-2006.