as I was saying......


GE Wants Superfund Declared Wrong
By H. JOSEF HEBERT= Associated Press Writer=

WASHINGTON (AP) _ The General Electric Co., confronting hundreds of millions
of dollars in cleanup costs for hazardous chemical spills, asked a federal
court Tuesday to declare the Superfund toxic waste cleanup law
unconstitutional.

In a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court, the company argued that the law
gives federal regulators ``uncontrolled authority'' to order ``intrusive''
cleanup remedies ``of unlimited scope.''

This, along with a failure to provide timely judicial review, amounts to an
unconstitutional violation of due process, the lawsuit contends.

The law is ``flatly unconstitutional on its face,'' said Laurence Tribe, the
Harvard University constitutional law expert, who is among the lawyers
representing General Electric in the suit filed against the Environmental
Protection Agency.

While the suit does not seek redress on specific Superfund claims, it comes
only weeks before the EPA is expected to announce a preliminary proposal to
clean up PCB-laced sediment in the Hudson River.

The PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, were released into the river between
1946 and 1977 by two General Electric plants on the upper Hudson River and
now are buried in sediment. As a result, a 197-mile section of the river has
been officially declared a Superfund site because of the contamination.

The EPA is widely expected to order General Electric to dredge about 35
miles of the river just north of Albany, N.Y., where most of the PCBs have
settled.

General Electric, which already has spent $160 million on studies and shore
cleanup, has argued for years that the sediment poses no health threat
because the PCBs are buried. But environmentalists contend the PCBs
contaminate fish and pose a health threat to those who eat fish caught in
the waters.

A large-scale dredging project could cost as much as $1 billion, according
to some estimates.

Noting the pending action on the Hudson River case, EPA spokesman David
Cohen called the timing of the lawsuit ``exceedingly curious.''

``They're questioning a law that has been used for over numerous years in
countless cases successfully to remove toxic wastes and threats to the
health of the American people. It has never once been challenged on
constitutional grounds,'' said Cohen.

Mark Behan, a spokesman for General Electric, said the suit ``is not about
any individual matter'' but acknowledged _ as does the legal brief filed by
the company _ that General Electric is involved in a number of potentially
expensive Superfund cases.

In addition to the Hudson River cleanup, General Electric also is involved
in Superfund projects at a former factories in Hoboken, N.J. and Milford,
N.H. All three sites are cited in the lawsuit.

The 1980 Superfund law has come under broad attack over the years as critics
charge that its provisions have spawned more litigation than cleanup.
Enacted by Congress after the Love Canal toxic waste scandal in the 1970s,
the law requires anyone responsible for past toxic waste contamination to
clean up the contamination, even if the polluter no longer operates or owns
the site.

Tribe, the attorney for GE, said the Superfund law has ``an
Alice-in-Wonderland regime of punishment'' that, even in non-emergency
cases, ``gives the EPA the power to skew the evidence, ignore other points
of view and order action without any independent review.''

AP-NY-11-28-00 1737EST

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