The First Department Upholds the Supreme Court’s Rejection of DEC’s Use of a “But-For” Test in Determining Eligibility under the Brownfield Program

Posted By on April 12, 2010

The First Department, in the Matter of East River Realty v. N.Y. State Department of Environmental Conservation, 2009 NY Slip Op 9381 (N.Y. App. Div., 1st Dep’t 2009), recently upheld a Supreme Court ruling that the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (“NYSDEC”) cannot use a “but-for” test in determining eligibility into its Brownfield program.  We reported on the Supreme Court’s decision in a prior post, and refer you there for a recitation of the relevant facts and reasoning of the Supreme Court.

The dispute between the applicant (East River) and NYSDEC stems from NYSDEC’s decision to not allow three properties into the Brownfield Cleanup Program after determining that they do not meet the definition of “Brownfield site”.  The definition of “Brownfield Site” is “any real property, the redevelopment or reuse of which may be complicated by the presence or potential presence of a contaminant.” ECL § 1405(2).  The NYSDEC argued that since the site was going to be redeveloped regardless of whether the owners received the tax benefits under the program, the redevelopment was not “complicated” by the presence of contamination.  The Supreme Court disagreed, stating that the NYSDEC’s reasoning was an improper “but-for” test not mandated by the statute. The NYSDEC appealed.

In a characteristically short decision setting forth no reasoning, the First Department said that there was sufficient evidence for the Supreme Court to determine that East River was eligible for inclusion into the Brownfield Cleanup Program.

About the author

James Periconi’s practice focuses almost equally on commercial property transaction counseling, on environmental regulatory matters in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), and on environmental litigation in the federal and state courts. A former Chief of Solid and Hazardous Waste Enforcement for the State DEC and an Assistant New York Attorney General prosecuting civil and criminal environmental cases, he has in private practice since 1989 had substantial experience representing defendants in governmental actions brought for remediation of Superfund and other contaminated sites, and for prosecution and defense of private cost recovery actions for such sites.

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