(1) (a) Moneys in the petroleum storage tank fund, created pursuant to section 8-20.5-103 and referred to in this section as the fund, may be used by certain
owners and operators of aboveground storage tanks. Any owner or operator of an
aboveground storage tank with a capacity of at least six hundred sixty gallons and
less than forty thousand gallons shall be eligible to participate in the fund.
(b) After payment is made from the fund for remediation expenses, the
owner or operator on whose behalf the payment was made shall pay to the fund the
remediation amount or ten thousand dollars, whichever is less.
(c) After payment is made from the fund for personal injury or property
damage after a court judgment or a settlement agreed to by the attorney general's
office, or a combination of both, the owner or operator on whose behalf the
payment was made shall pay to the fund the aggregate settlement payment
amount or twenty-five thousand dollars, whichever is less.
(d) Moneys in the fund shall not be used for any remediation activity at a
location that is within a site identified by the national priorities list, or where a
response action by this state has begun pursuant to the federal Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980.
(e) If an owner or operator cannot meet the financial requirements of this
subsection (1), another approved financial assurance mechanism shall be identified
for such owner or operator to remain in substantial compliance with this section and
to be allowed to continue operation of an aboveground storage tank.
(f) The director of the division of oil and public safety, in consultation with
the petroleum storage tank committee established pursuant to section 8-20.5-104,
may establish rules that allow the payment of remediation expenses for certain
owners and operators of aboveground storage tanks from the petroleum storage
tank fund to be based on a percentage that is less than one hundred percent of the
remediation amount.
(2) The maximum amount of liability of the fund under this section shall be
three million dollars aggregate during a fiscal year for multiple occurrences
involving tanks that are the responsibility of an individual owner or operator, but in
no event shall the liability of the fund exceed two million dollars per occurrence.
For purposes of this section, an occurrence means the period of time from
identification through remediation of a leak, spill, or release of a petroleum product
from an aboveground storage tank. In the event the cost of remediation or third-party claims exceeds the amount available to pay such costs, such costs and claims
shall be paid on a pro rata basis as determined by the committee created in section
8-20.5-104. Any balance owed shall be paid as moneys become available in the
fund. Any excess costs that are not paid by the fund shall be paid by and are the
sole responsibility of the responsible owner or operator.
(3) Moneys in the fund shall be available to pay required cleanup costs and
third-party liability payments with no deductibles for the following applicants who
are deemed to bear no responsibility for the release:
(a) A current or former property owner who has never owned, operated,
leased, or managed aboveground storage tanks at the property where the release
occurred, provided such property was acquired on or before June 3, 1992, and in the
case of a preexisting release, the property owner had no reason to know that a
release had occurred prior to acquiring the property;
(b) When an orphan or abandoned aboveground storage tank is involved and
the applicant is a current or former owner, operator, or property owner who has
never operated the tank or tanks and had no reason to know that a release had
occurred prior to acquiring the property;
(c) A current owner or operator of aboveground storage tanks if, at the time
the owner or operator acquired such tanks, such owner or operator had no reason to
know that a release had already occurred, if such owner or operator has operated
the tanks in accordance with sections 8-20.5-202 and 8-20.5-302;
(d) Any mortgagee or holder of an evidence of debt secured by a deed of
trust who, through foreclosure of the mortgage or deed of trust or through receipt
of a deed to the property in lieu of foreclosure, acquires property on which an
aboveground storage tank is located, and such mortgage or deed of trust is dated
on or before January 1, 1993; or
(e) (I) Any mortgagee or holder of an evidence of debt secured by a deed of
trust who, through foreclosure of the mortgage or deed of trust or through receipt
of a deed to the property in lieu of foreclosure, acquires property on which an
aboveground storage tank is located, and such mortgage or deed of trust is dated
after January 1, 1993, and the mortgagee or holder of an evidence of debt secured
by a deed of trust has obtained a certificate of eligibility regarding the property in
accordance with the rules of the director of the division of oil and public safety. The
director of the division of oil and public safety shall promulgate rules necessary to
implement this program.
(II) Any mortgagee or holder of an evidence of debt as described in
subparagraph (I) of this paragraph (e) who sells the property on which an
aboveground storage tank is located in lieu of remediating such property and
transfers the certificate of eligibility to the purchaser. Such purchaser may receive
funds pursuant to this subsection (3).
(4) In lieu of seeking reimbursement directly from the fund, an owner,
operator, or current property owner who bears no responsibility for the release as
set forth in subsection (3) of this section may request that the department perform
the cleanup using moneys from the petroleum storage tank fund without further
proving eligibility for such use. In addition to any purpose provided for in section 8-20.5-103, moneys in the petroleum storage tank fund may be appropriated by the
general assembly to the department for the purpose of providing for the cleanup
authorized in this section.
(5) An owner or operator of an aboveground storage tank or a person
deemed to bear no responsibility for the release pursuant to subsection (3) of this
section shall be eligible to participate in the fund if eligibility requirements
established by the petroleum storage tank committee, created pursuant to section
8-20.5-104, are met.
(6) Aboveground storage tanks containing petroleum or other regulated
substances that are owned or operated by, or are on property owned or leased by,
an Indian tribe or the federal government or an agency or subcontractor performing
services on behalf of the federal government shall be subject to federal financial
responsibility regulations. Any financial responsibility requirements for damages
caused by such tanks are not the responsibility of the fund unless such tanks are
owned or operated by a person, other than the federal government or such agency
or subcontractor, and located on property that is leased from or otherwise occupied
pursuant to a permit or other agreement with the United States or any agency
thereof other than the department of defense or the department of energy.
(7) Nothing in this article shall create any liability for the state of Colorado
that exceeds the amount available in the fund.
(8) Subject to subsection (6) of this section, owners and operators of
aboveground storage tanks that are on fee lands may use the fund to demonstrate
compliance with the financial responsibility requirements in federal regulations if
the owners and operators have registered such tanks pursuant to section 8-20.5-102.