25187
. (a) (1) The department or a unified program agency, in
accordance with subdivision (l), may issue an order requiring that
the violation be corrected and imposing an administrative penalty,
for any violation of this chapter or any permit, rule, regulation,
standard, or requirement issued or adopted pursuant to this chapter,
whenever the department or Unified Program Agency determines that a
person has violated, is in violation of, or threatens, as defined in
subdivision (e) of Section 13304 of the Water Code, to violate, this
chapter or Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section 25300), or any
permit, rule, regulation, standard, or requirement issued or adopted
pursuant to this chapter or Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section
25300).
(2) In an order proposing a penalty pursuant to this section, the
department or Unified Program Agency shall take into consideration
the nature, circumstances, extent, and gravity of the violation, the
violator's past and present efforts to prevent, abate, or clean up
conditions posing a threat to the public health or safety or the
environment, the violator's ability to pay the proposed penalty, and
the prophylactic effect that the imposition of the proposed penalty
would have on both the violator and the regulated community as a
whole.
(b) The department or a unified program agency, in accordance with
subdivision (l), may issue an order requiring corrective action
whenever the department or Unified Program Agency determines that
there is or has been a release, as defined in Chapter 6.8 (commencing
with Section 25300), of hazardous waste or constituents into the
environment from a hazardous waste facility.
(1) In the case of a release of hazardous waste or constituents
into the environment from a hazardous waste facility that is required
to obtain a permit pursuant to Article 9 (commencing with Section
25200), the department shall pursue the remedies available under this
chapter, including the issuance of an order for corrective action
pursuant to this section, before using the legal remedies available
pursuant to Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section 25300), except in
any of the following circumstances:
(A) If the person who is responsible for the release voluntarily
requests in writing that the department issue an order to that person
to take corrective action pursuant to Chapter 6.8 (commencing with
Section 25300).
(B) If the person who is responsible for the release is unable to
pay for the cost of corrective action to address the release. For
purposes of this subparagraph, the inability of a person to pay for
the cost of corrective action shall be determined in accordance with
the policies of the Environmental Protection Agency for the
implementation of Section 9605 of Title 42 of the United States Code.
(C) If the person responsible for the release is unwilling to
perform corrective action to address the release. For purposes of
this subparagraph, the unwillingness of a person to take corrective
action shall be determined in accordance with the policies of the
Environmental Protection Agency for the implementation of Section
9605 of Title 42 of the United States Code.
(D) If the release is part of a regional or multisite groundwater
contamination problem that cannot, in its entirety, be addressed
using the legal remedies available pursuant to this chapter and for
which other releases that are part of the regional or multisite
groundwater contamination problem are being addressed using the legal
remedies available pursuant to Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section
25300).
(E) If an order for corrective action has already been issued
against the person responsible for the release, or the department and
the person responsible for the release have, prior to January 1,
1996, entered into an agreement to address the required cleanup of
the release pursuant to Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section 25300).
(F) If the hazardous waste facility is owned or operated by the
federal government.
(2) The order shall include a requirement that the person take
corrective action with respect to the release of hazardous waste or
constituents, abate the effects thereof, and take any other necessary
remedial action.
(3) If the order requires corrective action at a hazardous waste
facility, the order shall require that corrective action be taken
beyond the facility boundary, where necessary to protect human health
or the environment.
(4) The order shall incorporate, as a condition of the order, any
applicable waste discharge requirements issued by the State Water
Resources Control Board or a California regional water quality
control board, and shall be consistent with all applicable water
quality control plans adopted pursuant to Section 13170 of the Water
Code and Article 3 (commencing with Section 13240) of Chapter 4 of
Division 7 of the Water Code and state policies for water quality
control adopted pursuant to Article 3 (commencing with Section 13140)
of Chapter 3 of Division 7 of the Water Code existing at the time of
the issuance of the order, to the extent that the department or
Unified Program Agency determines that those plans and policies are
not less stringent than this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant
to this chapter. The order may include any more stringent
requirement that the department or Unified Program Agency determines
is necessary or appropriate to protect water quality.
(5) Persons who are subject to an order pursuant to this
subdivision include present and prior owners, lessees, or operators
of the property where the hazardous waste is located, present or past
generators, storers, treaters, transporters, disposers, and handlers
of hazardous waste, and persons who arrange, or have arranged, by
contract or other agreement, to store, treat, transport, dispose of,
or otherwise handle hazardous waste.
(6) For purposes of this subdivision, "hazardous waste facility"
includes the entire site that is under the control of an owner or
operator engaged in the management of hazardous waste.
(c) Any order issued pursuant to this section shall be served by
personal service or certified mail and shall inform the person so
served of the right to a hearing. If the Unified Program Agency
issues the order pursuant to this section, the order shall state
whether the hearing procedure specified in paragraph (2) of
subdivision (f) may be requested by the person receiving the order.
(d) Any person served with an order pursuant to this section who
has been unable to resolve any violation or deficiency on an informal
basis with the department or Unified Program Agency may, within 15
days after service of the order, request a hearing pursuant to
subdivision (e) or (f) by filing with the department or Unified
Program Agency a notice of defense. The notice shall be filed with
the office that issued the order. A notice of defense shall be deemed
filed within the 15-day period provided by this subdivision if it is
postmarked within that 15-day period. If no notice of defense is
filed within the time limits provided by this subdivision, the order
shall become final.
(e) Any hearing requested on an order issued by the department
shall be conducted within 90 days after receipt of the notice of
defense by an administrative law judge of the Office of
Administrative Hearings of the Department of General Services in
accordance with Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 11400) of Part 1
of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, and the department
shall have all the authority granted to an agency by those
provisions.
(f) Except as provided in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2), a
person requesting a hearing on an order issued by a unified program
agency may select the hearing process specified in either paragraph
(1) or (2) in the notice of defense filed with the Unified Program
Agency pursuant to subdivision (d). Within 90 days of receipt of the
notice of defense by the Unified Program Agency, the hearing shall be
conducted using one of the following procedures:
(1) An administrative law judge of the Office of Administrative
Hearings of the Department of General Services shall conduct the
hearing in accordance with Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section
11400) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
(2) (A) A hearing officer designated by the Unified Program Agency
shall conduct the hearing in accordance with Chapter 4.5 (commencing
with Section 11400) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the
Government Code, and the Unified Program Agency shall have all the
authority granted to an agency by those provisions. When a hearing is
conducted by a unified program agency pursuant to this paragraph,
the Unified Program Agency shall, within 60 days of the hearing,
issue a decision.
(B) A person requesting a hearing on an order issued by a unified
program agency may select the hearing process specified in this
paragraph in a notice of defense filed pursuant to subdivision (d)
only if the Unified Program Agency has, as of the date the order is
issued pursuant to subdivision (c), selected a designated hearing
officer and established a program for conducting a hearing in
accordance with this paragraph.
(g) The hearing decision issued pursuant to subdivision (f) shall
be effective and final upon issuance. Copies of the decision shall be
served by personal service or by certified mail upon the party
served with the order and upon other persons who appeared at the
hearing and requested a copy.
(h) Any provision of an order issued under this section, except
the imposition of an administrative penalty, shall take effect upon
issuance by the department or Unified Program Agency if the
department or Unified Program Agency finds that the violation or
violations of law associated with that provision may pose an imminent
and substantial endangerment to the public health or safety or the
environment, and a request for a hearing shall not stay the effect of
that provision of the order pending a hearing decision. However, if
the department or Unified Program Agency determines that any or all
provisions of the order are so related that the public health or
safety or the environment can be protected only by immediate
compliance with the order as a whole, then the order as a whole,
except the imposition of an administrative penalty, shall take effect
upon issuance by the department or Unified Program Agency. A request
for a hearing shall not stay the effect of the order as a whole
pending a hearing decision.
(i) A decision issued pursuant to this section may be reviewed by
the court pursuant to Section 11523 of the Government Code. In all
proceedings pursuant to this section, the court shall uphold the
decision of the department or Unified Program Agency if the decision
is based upon substantial evidence in the whole record. The filing of
a petition for writ of mandate shall not stay any action required
pursuant to this chapter or the accrual of any penalties assessed
pursuant to this chapter. This subdivision does not prohibit the
court from granting any appropriate relief within its jurisdiction.
(j) (1) All administrative penalties collected from actions
brought by the department pursuant to this section shall be placed in
a separate subaccount in the Toxic Substances Control Account and
shall be available only for transfer to the Site Remediation Account
or the Expedited Site Remediation Trust Fund and for expenditure by
the department upon appropriation by the Legislature.
(2) The administrative penalties collected from an action brought
by the department pursuant to Sections 25214.3, 25214.22.1, 25215.7,
in accordance with this section, shall be deposited in the Toxic
Substances Control Account, for expenditure by the department for
implementation and enforcement activities, upon appropriation by the
Legislature, pursuant to Section 25173.6.
(k) All administrative penalties collected from an action brought
by a unified program agency pursuant to this section shall be paid to
the Unified Program Agency that imposed the penalty, and shall be
deposited into a special account that shall be expended to fund the
activities of the Unified Program Agency in enforcing this chapter
pursuant to Section 25180.
(l) The authority granted under this section to a unified program
agency is limited to both of the following:
(1) The issuance of orders to impose penalties and to correct
violations of the requirements of this chapter and its implementing
regulations, only when the violations are violations of requirements
applicable to hazardous waste generators and persons operating
pursuant to a permit-by-rule, conditional authorization, or
conditional exemption, when the violations occur at a unified program
facility within the jurisdiction of the CUPA.
(2) The issuance of orders to require corrective action when there
has been a release of hazardous waste or constituents only when the
Unified Program Agency is authorized to do so pursuant to Section
25404.1.
(m) The CUPA shall annually submit a summary report to the
department on the status of orders issued by the unified program
agencies under this section and Section 25187.1.
(n) The CUPA shall consult with the district attorney for the
county on the development of policies to be followed in exercising
the authority delegated pursuant to this section and Section 25187.1,
as they relate to the authority of unified program agencies to issue
orders.
(o) The CUPA shall arrange to have appropriate legal
representation in administrative hearings that are conducted by an
administrative law judge of the Office of Administrative Hearings of
the Department of General Services, and when a decision issued
pursuant to this section is appealed to the superior court.
(p) The department may adopt regulations to implement this section
and paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 25187.1 as they
relate to the authority of unified program agencies to issue orders.
The regulations shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following requirements:
(1) Provisions to ensure coordinated and consistent application of
this section and Section 25187.1 when both the department and the
Unified Program Agency have or will be issuing orders under one or
both of these sections at the same facility.
(2) Provisions to ensure that the enforcement authority granted to
the unified program agencies will be exercised consistently
throughout the state.
(3) Minimum training requirements for staff of the Unified Program
Agency relative to this section and Section 25187.1.
(4) Procedures to be followed by the department to rescind the
authority granted to a unified program agency under this section and
Section 25187.1, if the department finds that the Unified Program
Agency is not exercising that authority in a manner consistent with
this chapter and Chapter 6.11 (commencing with Section 25404) and the
regulations adopted pursuant thereto.
(q) Except for an enforcement action taken pursuant to this
chapter or Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section 25300), this section
does not otherwise affect the authority of a local agency to take any
action under any other provision of law.