(a) (1) When the Secretary or his or her designee has determined that a release or imminent threat of a release of a hazardous substance as defined herein will require a remedy, the Secretary shall, within 20 days of such determination, provide public notice of that fact. The Secretary shall likewise provide public notice within 20 days after entering into negotiations for a voluntary cleanup settlement agreement with any person that agrees to perform a remedy. Such public notice shall be published in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the facility is located. Such notice shall also be provided to:
a. All elected members of the General Assembly in whose district such facility or any part thereof lies;
b. If the facility or any part thereof is located within the boundaries of any municipality, then such notice shall also be given to the governing body of all municipalities in which the facility or any part thereof lies;
c. In the event the facility or any part thereof is not located within the boundaries of a municipality, then such notice shall also be given to the governing body of the county in which the facility or any part thereof lies; and
d. The governing body of any civic, neighborhood or similar association in which the facility or any part thereof lies, provided that such association makes itself known to the Department and provides a legal mailing address.
(2) When the Secretary has reason to believe that a release or imminent threat of release will require a remedy, the Secretary shall notify the potentially responsible party with respect to the release or imminent threat of release, and provide the person with an opportunity to enter into a settlement agreement providing for a remedy consistent with regulations developed pursuant to § 9104 of this title. The Secretary may provide any person who has knowledge of a release of a hazardous substance at a facility and agrees to perform a remedy with an opportunity to enter into a settlement agreement providing for a remedy consistent with regulations developed pursuant to § 9104 of this title.
(b) The settlement agreement providing for a remedy may be in the form of a consent decree, administrative order of consent, memorandum of agreement or any other form of agreement consistent with regulations developed pursuant to § 9104 of this title. When a settlement agreement is entered into in the form of a consent decree pursuant to this chapter, it shall be filed with the Superior Court. The Secretary shall allow at least 20 days for public comment before the proposed consent decree is entered. If the Secretary deems it appropriate to effectuate the purposes of this chapter, the Secretary may choose to resolve a person's liability with the State under this section through use of settlement agreements entered into pursuant to CERCLA.
(c) A person who has resolved his or her liability to the State under this section is not liable for claims for contribution regarding matters addressed in the settlement. The settlement does not discharge any of the other potentially responsible parties, but it reduces the total potential liability of others to the State by the amount of the settlement exclusive of § 9109 of this title.
(d) The Secretary may enter into a settlement agreement that requires the Secretary to provide a specified amount of money from the Fund to help defray the costs of implementing the remedy. These funds may be provided only in circumstances where the Secretary finds it would expedite or enhance remediation or achieve equity with respect to the payment of remedial costs. The Secretary may recover the amount of public funding provided under this section from a potentially responsible party who has not entered into a settlement agreement under this section or fulfilled all obligations under the agreement. For purposes of such a cost recovery, the public funding shall be considered as remedial costs paid by the Secretary.
(e) Before conducting a remedial action, the Secretary shall:
(1) Propose a plan of remedial action based on any investigation or study conducted by or for the Secretary, the potentially responsible party, or others;
(2) Provide public notice of the proposed plan of remedial action and an opportunity to comment on the plan as well as the investigation upon which the plan of remedial action is based;
(3) Prepare a final plan of remedial action with due consideration of the comments received and any other study or investigation conducted by or for the Secretary.
(f) The proposed and final plan of remedial action and the basis for it, as well as all comments received by the Secretary, constitute the remedial decision record of the Secretary. The Secretary shall maintain a remedial decision record for a period that the Secretary deems appropriate based upon the remedy being implemented and the future use of the facility.
(g) Where the Secretary has developed a remedial decision record for a remedy and the Secretary has conducted the remedy in accordance with the record, in any action brought to recover costs, the plan of remedial action shall be presumed reasonable and necessary unless demonstrated to be arbitrary and capricious by clear and convincing evidence.
Structure Delaware Code
Chapter 91. DELAWARE HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE CLEANUP ACT
Subchapter I. General Provisions and Enforcement
§ 9102. Declaration of purpose; applicability.
§ 9104. Secretary's powers and duties.
§ 9105. Standard of liability.
§ 9106. Investigation and access.
§ 9108. Certification of completion of remedy.
§ 9110. Public hearings — Violations.
§ 9112. Public hearings — Rule making, settlement agreements and remedial actions.
§ 9113. Hazardous Substance Cleanup Fund.
§ 9115. Notice in property records.
§ 9116. Confidentiality of proprietary information.
§ 9117. Environmental liens [For application of this section, see 79 Del. Laws, c. 69, § 5].