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Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

Too Much Waste: A Proposal For Change In The Government's Effort To Clean Up The Nation, Ian G. John Jul 1995

Too Much Waste: A Proposal For Change In The Government's Effort To Clean Up The Nation, Ian G. John

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Oregon's Wasted Effort: The Supreme Court's Inability To Adapt Its Compensatory Tax Doctrine To Solid Waste Regulations, Jeffrey J. Lamontagne Apr 1995

Oregon's Wasted Effort: The Supreme Court's Inability To Adapt Its Compensatory Tax Doctrine To Solid Waste Regulations, Jeffrey J. Lamontagne

William & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review

No abstract provided.


Achieving The Proper Balance Between The Public And Private Property Interests: Closely Tailored Legislation As A Remedy, Michelle K. Walsh Apr 1995

Achieving The Proper Balance Between The Public And Private Property Interests: Closely Tailored Legislation As A Remedy, Michelle K. Walsh

William & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review

No abstract provided.


Oil And Gas Issues Involved In Cercla Reauthorization., Joseph R. Dancy, Victoria A. Dancy Jan 1995

Oil And Gas Issues Involved In Cercla Reauthorization., Joseph R. Dancy, Victoria A. Dancy

St. Mary's Law Journal

After several decades of environmental legislation, the regulated community faces an extremely complex and costly matrix of obligations and responsibilities. For industry in general, the most expensive environmental statute enacted has been the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA). CERCLA created the Hazardous Substances Superfund (Superfund) and established retroactive liability for remediation of hazardous substance contamination. President Clinton admitted CERCLA does not work and even labelled the Superfund a “disaster.” Even though public and private entities have already spent twenty billion dollars on the CERCLA program since its inception, only around ten or twenty percent of …