Court Opinion

ID: 9890645
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-10-13 20:04:30.495411+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:34:39.107811
License: Public Domain

COURT OF CHANCERY
                                   OF THE
                             STATE OF DELAWARE
  MORGAN T. ZURN                                              LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER
  VICE CHANCELLOR                                                500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400
                                                                WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734

                                   October 13, 2023

Devera B. Scott, Esquire                        Michael W. Teichman, Esquire
State of Delaware Department of Justice         Parkowski, Guerke & Swayze, P.A.
102 W. Water Street                             1105 North Market Street, 19th Floor
Dover, DE 19904                                 Wilmington, DE 19801

                                                Ryan M. Ernst, Esquire
                                                Bielli & Klauder, LLC
                                                1204 North King Street
                                                Wilmington, DE 19801

        RE: State of Delaware, Department of Natural Resources &
             Environmental Control v. Service Transport Group, Inc., et al.,
             Civil Action No. 2022-0009-MTZ

  Dear Counsel:

        Thank you for your September 12, 2023, status update describing the parties’

  efforts to agree on the timing, necessary measures, and authority for winding down

  Service Transport Group, Inc’s (“STG”) asbestos transfer station after STG failed to

  comply with its environmental regulatory obligations in the time afforded by this

  Court’s preliminary injunction. Under that three-phase preliminary injunction, if

  STG did not come into compliance within Phase Two as defined therein, “the Court

  will again enjoin the accepting of new waste at the facility until such time as the

  Court issues a final judgment resolving this matter (‘Phase Three’). During Phase
DNREC v. Service Transport Group, Inc, et al.,
Civil Action No. 2022-0009-MTZ
October 13, 2023
Page 2 of 6

Three, third party asbestos generators shall be allowed to remove their waste from

the facility.”1 We are in Phase Three.

         At the most recent hearing in this matter, STG agreed it could no longer

operate as a transfer station and requested an opportunity to present a closure plan

to DNREC and the Court.2 I tried to make two points clear: STG had not complied

with this Court’s preliminary injunction, and STG had lost the opportunity to

negotiate with customers who wished to retake their asbestos to fulfill their

regulatory obligations.3 I also asked for a few pieces of information: STG’s plan

for operations after ending transfer station operations, DNREC’s promised

“statutory authority” authorizing DNREC to bring in a contractor to clean up the

site, and DNREC’s statutory or regulatory authority to spend funds held after calling

STG’s letter of credit.4

         The terms of Phase Three set forth the consequences for not meeting the

obligations imposed in Phase Two. Based on the evidentiary record and the progress

1
    Docket Item (“D.I.”) 49 at 3–4.
2
    D.I. 100 at 49.
3
    Id. at 27–29, 49.
4
    Id. at 40–41, 43–44.
DNREC v. Service Transport Group, Inc, et al.,
Civil Action No. 2022-0009-MTZ
October 13, 2023
Page 3 of 6

the parties have made, I believe additional terms are warranted in Phase Three. It is

hereby ORDERED that STG shall:

   1. Cease accepting new asbestos.

   2. Cease preventing abatement contractors from picking up their waste.

   3. Refrain from engaging in any asbestos handling or remediation for which STG
      is not currently licensed.

   4. Certify in an affidavit that the Pacific Cargo lease has terminated and set forth
      the plan for removing its equipment.

   5. Conduct soil and air sampling as the parties agreed in the September 12
      letter. STG is not presently required to perform groundwater sampling.

STG shall keep the Court informed of its progress in the following ways:

   1. Filing weekly reports in the form requested by DNREC in the September 12
      letter. STG shall also serve such reports on DNREC at the time they are filed
      with the Court.

   2. Providing the Court notice within three business days of entering into a
      purchase and sale agreement for STG’s property. STG shall also serve any
      such notice on DNREC at the time it is provided to the Court.

      While DNREC moved for contempt, I do not believe that more coercive

sanctions are warranted at this time, for the reasons discussed at argument. That

said, STG appears reluctant to accept my previous ruling that Phase Three requires
DNREC v. Service Transport Group, Inc, et al.,
Civil Action No. 2022-0009-MTZ
October 13, 2023
Page 4 of 6

it to permit customers to reclaim their asbestos.5 If STG refuses to allow any

customer to reclaim their asbestos, the sanction will be a fine of $5,000 customer per

day of refusal, payable to the Register in Chancery.

         As to the parties’ disagreement over the funds DNREC drew from STG’s

letter of credit, some background is necessary. DNREC issued STG a waste transfer

station permit pursuant to 7 Del. C. § 6003. Title 7, Regulation 1301 of the Delaware

Administrative Code obligated STG, as a permittee, to obtain and provide assurance

that “financial costs associated with closure, post-closure care, and corrective action

could be met.”6 Among other things, STG’s chosen financial assurance mechanism

“must ensure that funds will be available in a timely fashion when

needed.”7 Regulation 1301 mandates that the “mechanisms used to demonstrate

financial assurance under this section must ensure that the funds necessary to meet

the costs of closure, post-closure care, and corrective action for known releases will

5
  Id. at 10 (acknowledging that STG will not let customers pick up waste without payment);
id. at 16 (“[W]e still want an opportunity to work with these . . . recalcitrant customers . . .
.”); D.I. 101 at 3–4 (“STG has . . . elected to treat all unclaimed [asbestos] as abandoned
and remove it, and pursue such remedies as it has against abatement contractors and
generators thereafter.”).
6
    7 Del. Admin. C. §§ 1301-4.1.11.1 to -11.2.
7
    Id. § 1301-4.1.11.2.3.2.
DNREC v. Service Transport Group, Inc, et al.,
Civil Action No. 2022-0009-MTZ
October 13, 2023
Page 5 of 6

be available whenever they are needed.”8 It also mandates that the amount of funds

assured be “sufficient to cover the costs of closure, post-closure care, and corrective

action for known releases when needed.”9 STG provided a letter of credit as

financial assurance; on July 12, 2022, the bank informed DNREC that the letter of

credit would not be renewed.10 STG failed to provide alternative financial assurance

within ninety days as required, so, as authorized by Regulation 1301, DNREC drew

on the assurance funds.11

         Now that STG is in the closure process, the parties disagree as to how those

funds should be administered. Their disagreement is understandable:                the

regulations appear to be silent on how the funds should be administered once

DNREC draws on them. DNREC seeks to withhold the funds until STG’s station is

closed and all asbestos has been removed. STG wishes to have the funds released

to it incrementally to cover closure costs. I fall back on the intentions behind the

financial insurance program: to set aside sufficient funds, and to make them

available in a timely fashion when needed to meet the costs of closure. To meet

8
    Id. § 1301-4.1.11.2.4.
9
    Id. § 1301-4.1.11.2.3.1.
10
     D.I. 97, Ex. A.
11
     7 Del. Admin. C. § 1301-4.1.11.2.4.3, Condition 8.
DNREC v. Service Transport Group, Inc, et al.,
Civil Action No. 2022-0009-MTZ
October 13, 2023
Page 6 of 6

these goals, DNREC must make funds available to STG to pay for STG’s costs of

closure.

      STG shall submit a detailed closure plan to the Court, serving DNREC, within

twenty days. With that plan in place, STG’s proposal that DNREC release funds to

STG in the amount of $3,000 per trailer removed appears reasonable and compliant

with Regulation 1301.

      I hope these terms and additional guidance are sufficient to direct the prompt

and compliant closure of STG’s asbestos transfer operations. I make no comment

today on the propriety of DNREC entering STG’s site to take on the work itself, on

the hopes that such a measure will not be necessary and that opinion would be

advisory. I ask DNREC to provide this Court with thirty days’ notice before taking

any such measure.

                                                    Sincerely,

                                                    /s/ Morgan T. Zurn

                                                    Vice Chancellor

MTZ/ms

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