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CERCLA regulations for administration of the Superfund, which helps pay for cleanup of uncontrolled hazardous waste sites,?

1) make no provision for recovering Superfund expenses incurred in cleanup operations.
2) impose strict, joint and several, and retroactive liability on potentially responsible parties.
3) release from liability those owners of contaminated property who did not actually cause known contamination.
4) exempt from responsibility those sites that contaminate neighboring properties.

User Benf
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Final answer:

CERCLA regulations for the Superfund program have several provisions, including strict and joint liability for potentially responsible parties, no provision for recovering cleanup expenses, liability release for innocent landowners, and no exemption for sites contaminating neighboring properties.

Step-by-step explanation:

CERCLA regulations, also known as the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, administer the Superfund program which helps pay for the cleanup of uncontrolled hazardous waste sites. These regulations have several key provisions:

  1. Strict and joint liability: Potentially responsible parties, such as the owners or operators of the contaminated site, can be held liable for the cleanup costs. Liability is retroactive, meaning it applies even if the contamination occurred before the enactment of CERCLA.
  2. No provision for recovering Superfund expenses: The regulations do not include a specific provision for recovering the expenses incurred in cleanup operations.
  3. Liability release for innocent landowners: Owners of contaminated property who did not cause the known contamination can be released from liability.
  4. No exemption for sites contaminating neighboring properties: The regulations do not exempt sites that contaminate neighboring properties from responsibility.
User Sahid Hossen
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