
There exists no simple, single solution to contaminated sediment problems. In addition to the complexities of multiple contaminants, sediment remediation/restoration projects often involve historic source pathways, multiple PRPs, orphan shares, complex fate and transport patterns and on-going human and ecological activities. Entities involved in sediment remediation/restoration projects must also concern themselves with the lack of coordination across regulatory programs and jurisdictions.
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| The potential jurisdictional matrix includes the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, Federal Water Pollution Control Act, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, Rivers and Harbors Act, Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act, Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) the Coastal Zone Management Act and the Endangered Species Act. |
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| Sediment remediation/ restoration projects are also invariably subject to natural resource damage (NRD) claims from a variety of resource trustees. |
The National Research Council has concluded that contaminated sediments are widespread in U.S. coastal waters and have potentially far-reaching consequences to both public health and the environment. EPA estimates that over 10 percent of the sites currently identified on the National Priorities List (NPL) involve contaminated sediments and an increasingly greater number of
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sites with contaminated sediments and an increasingly greater number of sites with contaminated sediments are being added to the NPL. However, sediment issues are not limited to a handful of "mega" sites. Regulatory and enforcement initiatives are focusing on sediment impact and ecological risk at some of the "smaller" sites. Multiple |
| regulatory programs are beginning to make a coordinated effort to increase attention to sediment impact at all sites - coastal and upland - across the country. The number of sediment sites and the volume of sediment needing to be addressed will continue to escalate. |
As a direct result of managing and coordinating well over 150 environmental projects, de maximis has developed the broad sophistication and expertise necessary to manage and coordinate the complexities associated with the remediation/restoration of a sediment site, whether it be a stream, a river, a canal, a lake or a pond. We have worked closely with our clients, their counsel, regulators, industry-based work groups, congressional representatives and civic groups to help bridge the regulatory frameworks and advance cost-effective and scientifically sound approaches for making sediment management decisions. Significant sediment projects of note include:
Through its involvement in major projects - such as those described above, de maximis remains involved in the on-going local, state and national challenges of addressing contaminated sediment issues.
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