(1) If a
release has occurred at a site where the owner or the operator cannot be identified,
after the director of the division of oil and public safety or a designee has mitigated
fire and safety hazards in accordance with section 8-20.5-208 and determined that
a release exceeds reportable quantities, the director of the division of oil and public
safety may initiate corrective action to mitigate any threat to subsurface soil,
groundwater, or surface water and develop a plan for cleanup in accordance with
subsection (3) of this section and shall recover costs pursuant to section 8-20.5-103.
(2) If the release has occurred at a site where the owner or the operator can
be identified, and after fire and safety hazards have been mitigated in accordance
with section 8-20.5-208 and the director of the division of oil and public safety has
determined that the release exceeds reportable quantities, then the owner or the
operator shall provide the director of the division of oil and public safety with a
corrective action plan to clean up subsurface soil, groundwater, and surface water
as a result of the release. In addition to the corrective action plan, the owner or
operator shall prepare a summary of the costs associated with the preferred
corrective action, taking into account economic and technological feasibility, in
accordance with the rules promulgated pursuant to section 8-20.5-104 (4)(d) and
shall submit the summary to the committee created in said section. The director of
the division of oil and public safety shall review and approve or disapprove the plan
and, if the plan is disapproved, shall provide the owner or the operator with a
statement specifying the deficiencies in the plan. The owner or the operator shall
submit a revised plan within twenty working days after receipt of the statement,
and the owner or the operator shall be given an opportunity to take necessary and
appropriate actions to clean up subsurface soils, groundwater, and surface water. If
the owner or the operator is unable or unwilling to take such necessary and
appropriate actions, the director of the division of oil and public safety may conduct
corrective action to the extent appropriate to protect subsurface soils,
groundwater, or surface water as a result of that release. Such action shall be
taken after consideration of the risks posed to the public health and shall be
determined in light of current economic and technological feasibility.
(3) After the director of the division of oil and public safety mitigates the
threat to subsurface soils, groundwater, and surface water as specified in
subsections (1) and (2) of this section, and the owner or the operator of the tank
from which petroleum has been released is identified, the owner or the operator
shall pay the required costs pursuant to the financial responsibility requirements
set forth in sections 8-20.5-206, 8-20.5-207, and 8-20.5-303, incurred in the
investigation of the release and mitigation of threats to subsurface soils,
groundwater, and surface water. The director of the division of oil and public safety
may file suit in the district court for the judicial district in which the release
occurred to recover such costs. The moneys obtained as a result of any suit brought
pursuant to this section shall be credited to the petroleum storage tank fund
created in section 8-20.5-103.
(4) The director of the division of oil and public safety may order the owner
or the operator of an underground storage tank from which a regulated substance
has been released to implement a corrective action plan approved under subsection
(2) of this section. Such order shall be served personally or by certified mail, return
receipt requested, upon the owner or the operator.
(5) If the director of the division of oil and public safety disapproves or fails
to approve the plan within thirty days after the plan's submission, the director shall
immediately provide a statement of findings of fact outlining the reasons for such
disapproval or failure to approve, including the reasons the proposed plan fails to
meet the criteria outlined in this section. The statement shall be provided by formal
notice or by certified mail to the owner or the operator within ten days after the
director's decision.
(6) The director of the division of oil and public safety may waive the
requirement for such a plan if the director determines that reasonable steps have
been taken to prevent further releases and that any previously released regulated
substance has been cleaned up to the extent appropriate to protect subsurface
soils, groundwater, or surface water as a result of that release at that specific
location. Such action shall be taken after consideration of the risks posed to the
public health and shall be determined in light of current economic and
technological feasibility.
(7) Within ten days after notification of disapproval of the plan, the owner or
the operator may file a written request with the director of the division of oil and
public safety for an informal conference regarding the disapproval. Upon receipt of
such a request, the director shall provide the owner or the operator with a written
notice of the date, time, and place of the informal conference. The executive
director of the department or a designee shall preside at the informal conference,
during which the owner or the operator and the director or the director's designee
may present information and arguments regarding the issues raised in the
statement of findings of fact.
(8) Within twenty days after the conference, the owner or operator may
resubmit a modified plan which addresses the deficiencies identified by the
department in the original plan. The department shall review the modifications to
the plan and, within twenty days, approve or disapprove the resubmitted plan. If,
after the conference, the owner, the operator, or the department determines that
the issues identified in the statement of findings of fact cannot be reasonably
resolved, the owner, the operator, or the department may request that the
committee, created in section 8-20.5-104, schedule and hold a hearing within thirty
days to resolve the issues identified in the statement of findings of fact.
(9) At any time after the receipt of the statement of findings of fact, the
owner, the operator, or the department may request, in writing, a formal hearing
before the committee created in section 8-20.5-104. Upon such request, the
committee shall meet and review the initial plan and statement of findings of fact.
(10) The committee shall recommend such plan if any current release has
been mitigated and if any regulated substance which has been released has been or
will be cleaned up to the extent appropriate to protect subsurface soils,
groundwater, or surface water as a result of the release at that specific location.
The department shall give serious consideration to the recommendation of the
committee. Such action shall be taken after consideration of the risks posed to the
public and shall be determined in light of current economic and technological
feasibility. If the committee finds that a current release has not been mitigated or
that any regulated substance which has been released will not be cleaned up to the
extent appropriate, the committee shall issue a statement of findings of fact and
recommendations to the department for revisions to the plan. Such revisions, if
approved by the department, shall be incorporated into the plan by the department,
and the revised plan shall then be approved as provided in subsection (2) of this
section.
(11) Within thirty days following mitigation and cleanup, the department shall
notify the owner or the operator, in writing, that the owner or the operator has
complied with the requirements for mitigation and cleanup as outlined in this
section.
(12) For the purpose of implementing the provisions of this section, the
department or its designee is authorized for justifiable cause:
(a) To enter the property, premises, or place where a release or suspected
release from an underground storage tank is located;
(b) To monitor or test or require the owner or the operator to monitor or test
an underground storage tank or any surrounding soils, groundwater, or surface
water where a suspected release from an underground storage tank has occurred.
A duplicate sample taken for testing shall be provided to any owner or operator
who the department reasonably believes may be responsible for the violation upon
request of such person. A duplicate copy of the analytical report pertaining to the
samples taken pursuant to this paragraph (b) shall be provided as soon as
practicable to any person the department or its designee reasonably believes may
be responsible for the violation. When such tests are performed, the department
shall notify, when possible, any person reasonably believed to be an owner or
operator.
(13) If such entry or inspection is denied, the department shall obtain, from
the district or county court for the judicial district or county in which such property,
premises, or place is located, a warrant to enter and inspect any such property,
premises, or place prior to entry and inspection. The district and county courts of
the state of Colorado are authorized to issue such warrants upon proper showing of
the need for such entry and inspection.
(14) If requested by the department or its designee, the owner or operator of
an underground storage tank shall provide any information in such owner's or
operator's possession regarding the tank.
(15) The department may consider water quality standards adopted by the
water quality control commission as guidelines for cleanup but must assure that
cleanup requirements are appropriate, in light of economic and technical feasibility
and after consideration of the risks to public health, to protect subsurface soils,
groundwater, or surface water as a result of a release at a specific location.
(16) The department shall, if necessary, negotiate and enter into memoranda
of agreement with and apply for and receive grants from the United States
environmental protection agency pursuant to the provisions of this article.