OGC-11: Order On Consent Enforcement Policy
Issuing Authority: Thomas S. Berkman
Title: Order on Consent Enforcement Policy
Date Issued: February 27, 2020
Latest Date Revised: August 28, 1990
I. Applicability
This Policy applies to all administrative settlements of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation's ("Department" or "DEC") enforcement actions except for Orders on Consent entered into by the Division of Law Enforcement ("DLE"). The policies and procedures set forth in this document are intended solely for the use and guidance of DEC personnel. They are not intended to create any substantive or procedural rights enforceable by any party in administrative or judicial actions with DEC or the State of New York. DEC reserves the right to act at variance with these policies and procedures at its discretion.
This Policy provides detailed guidance to Department staff on when Orders on Consent are required and the content of such Orders.1 This Policy is intended to explain necessary elements of an Order on Consent and certain elements that may be added to Orders on Consent in order to meet program goals and objectives. Implementation of this Policy will promote consistency throughout the Department.
The threshold decision as to whether to proceed administratively, civilly, or criminally in an enforcement action should be made independent of this Policy.
II. Authority for Orders on Consent
ECL Articles 3 and 71, and the State Administrative Procedures Act ("SAPA") empower and authorize the DEC Commissioner (and his/her designees) to issue Orders on Consent to resolve violations of statutes, regulations, permits, existing Orders on
Consent and Commissioner Orders After Hearing.2 Within an Order on Consent, the Commissioner is authorized to, among other things, assess penalties, require corrective or remedial actions, provide for mitigation, recover damages, and modify, suspend, or revoke permits. With certain exceptions, most notably summary abatement orders and emergency orders (see, e.g., ECL §§ 23-0305[3] and 71-1719), Orders on Consent can only be entered into after DEC has provided a Respondent with notice of the alleged violations and an opportunity to be heard and that Respondent has waived its right to a hearing.
III. Background
Orders on Consent are settlement documents and are legally enforceable and binding under the law, pursuant to various provisions of ECL Article 71, and the Navigation Law, as well as other legal authorities. Department policy discourages resolution of violations by informal agreements and commitments made to the Department by a violator because informal agreements are typically not enforceable.
An Order on Consent, governed by provisions of applicable State and federal law, constitutes ongoing enforcement until a Respondent's obligations under the Order on Consent have been fully satisfied and the Order on Consent terminates.
IV. Policy
Orders on Consent are an effective way of resolving violations of law or regulation. They avoid time consuming and resource intensive administrative hearings and/or civil litigation. Generally, Orders on Consent can be categorized as either Long Form Orders on Consent or Short Form Orders on Consent. Long Form Orders on Consent are those that are initiated and negotiated through the Office of General Counsel ("OGC"). Short Form Orders on Consent have a format which has been pre-approved by OGC for a specific program or enforcement issue and are typically utilized by program staff.
Orders on Consent should not be utilized where a minor violation can be corrected within a short period of time unless an applicable program-specific Enforcement Guidance Memorandum provides otherwise. "Minor violations" are described in program-specific guidance. In general, "Minor Violations" mean violations which do not: (i) warrant more than a de minimis penalty under applicable Departmental penalty guidance; (ii) require lengthy or extensive remediation; or (iii) compromise statutory objectives.
The Department will only agree to an Order on Consent when the Order on Consent enables the Department to achieve its enforcement objectives. If the Department's objectives cannot be achieved through an Order on Consent, the Department should proceed to litigation on the matter either administratively or judicially.
A. Purpose of an Order on Consent
- An Order on Consent is principally aimed at enforcing violations, gaining compliance, and deterring and punishing violators.
- An Order on Consent is designed to provide a bridge to compliance for noncomplying activities, and any unpermitted activities must be limited in time and scope.
- An Order on Consent is not a permit, and should not be used to bypass the legal process and protections associated with DEC's permitting system. The Department's permit issuance mechanisms were created to ensure proper environmental impact review and an opportunity for public involvement, among other things, and do not address violations of environmental law or regulation.
- An Order on Consent should not allow either the commencement or expansion of an unpermitted activity or the long-term unabated continuation of an unpermitted activity. Consequently, any new or extended activities should be addressed by an appropriate DEC-issued permit(s).
- An Order on Consent must not restrict, limit or delay the release of information concerning the Order on Consent or copies of the Order on Consent after its execution.
B. "Long Form" and "Short Form" Orders on Consent
"Long Form" Orders on Consent are those that are initiated and negotiated by the Office of General Counsel (OGC).
"Short Form" Orders on Consent (e.g., expedited enforcement) are orders where a set format or template has been prepared and pre-approved by OGC for use by a specific DEC program or for a particular enforcement issue, and are typically utilized by program staff who insert facts demonstrating a violation's existence. No Short Form Order on Consent should be sent to a Respondent until at least one DEC attorney having enforcement responsibilities has reviewed the template used for that Short Form Order on Consent. Short Form Orders on Consent may require payable penalties not to exceed $10,000, with an additional $10,000 suspended, and may authorize remedial actions not to exceed six (6) months in duration.
If staff are unable to obtain an executed "Short Form" Order on Consent from a Respondent, OGC can then escalate enforcement with the use of either another "Short Form" Order on Consent (with raised penalty provisions) or a "Long Form" Order on Consent. In limited situations, Short Form Orders on Consent may be used to address violations that have been designated pursuant to an EPA enforcement policy. Short Form Orders on Consent may only be used in these situations if the Region confirms with the appropriate Central Office program enforcement staff and attorney that the Short Form Order on Consent properly serves to address action for the violation.
Regional Directors and Regional Attorneys must implement processes for issuance, execution, and tracking of Short Form Orders on Consent handled out of their regional offices in compliance with Department policies and the ECL, including compliance with ECL §3-0311. Regional staff will follow the processes established by their respective Regional Directors and Regional Attorneys for use of Short Form Orders on Consent. Within thirty days of final execution of a Short Form Order on Consent, copies of the Order on Consent, and transmittal letter shall be sent to OGC in Albany.6 For Short Form Orders on Consent issued from Central Office, Division Directors and the OGC will be responsible for issuance, execution, and tracking of Short Form Orders on Consent in compliance with Department policies and the ECL, including ECL §3-0311.
V. Necessary Elements for an Order on Consent
The contents of each Order on Consent7 will vary depending upon the regulatory program involved,8 other Enforcement Directives, and Department or EPA enforcement protocols and agreements. In addition to any program specific elements, each of the following elements must be set forth in an Order on Consent:
- Penalties - The Order on Consent must include penalties consistent with the Department's policies and relevant Enforcement Directives.9 If an enforcement action has been referred to OGC, corresponding Department files shall contain a penalty calculation work sheet evaluating the economic benefit obtained by the violator and any gravity components determined by the Department. In addition, if the final assessed penalty in a matter involving violation of a federally delegated, approved or authorized program differs significantly from staff's recommended penalty, the penalty calculation work sheet shall contain an explanation and rationale for the difference in amounts.10 Penalty calculation sheets used to develop penalties for an Order on Consent are confidential intra-agency documents that should not be shared with Respondents and are exempt from FOIL until the Order has been signed by all necessary parties.
- The Order on Consent shall contain language that the penalty shall be made payable to the "New York State Department of Environmental Conservation." Additionally, if the penalty will be deposited into a specific fund11 or account, such fund or account should be referenced in the penalty clauses of the Order on Consent, and language should be added indicating that payment must be made to that fund or account.
- All Orders on Consent with a penalty payment, must include the following language:
"The civil penalty shall be paid within xx days of the Department's execution of this Order [or at the time of execution of this Order], by electronic payment at http://www.dec.ny.gov/about/61016.html#On-Line or by check made payable to the order of: "New York State Department of Environmental Conservation," with the enclosed invoice and the Case Number of this Order on Consent written in the memo section of the check, which shall be sent to: Department of Environmental Conservation, Division of Management and Budget Services, 625 Broadway, 10th Floor, Albany, NY 12233-4900.
The Order on Consent, along with any applicable submissions shall be sent to the Department of Environmental Conservation, Office of General Counsel, [applicable Central Office or Regional Office address], attention: [applicable contact person]."
- All Orders on Consent with a penalty payment, must include the following language:
- Orders on Consent without a payable penalty must be approved by the General Counsel. Such request must be accompanied by a detailed summary explaining why a penalty should not be assessed.
- Orders on Consent shall contain the following language "This Order shall be in full settlement of all claims for civil and administrative penalties that have been or could be asserted by the Department against Respondent, their trustees, officers, employees, successors and assigns for the violations expressly noted in this Order."
- The Order on Consent shall contain language that the penalty shall be made payable to the "New York State Department of Environmental Conservation." Additionally, if the penalty will be deposited into a specific fund11 or account, such fund or account should be referenced in the penalty clauses of the Order on Consent, and language should be added indicating that payment must be made to that fund or account.
- Admission Clauses12 - All Orders on Consent13 must include a finding that the Respondent has violated an applicable provision of law, unless the General Counsel's approval is obtained in a specific case to allow a Respondent to either deny or not admit to a violation. The admission clause may either state the Respondent "admits to the violation" or that the Respondent "is in violation of" or "violated" a requirement.
- Violations Addressed - The Order on Consent must state with specificity which violations are addressed and released by the Order on Consent, and that the scope of the Order on Consent is limited to the relief related to those violations. Such statement shall list each individual violation, or categories of violations, addressed by the Order on Consent.
- Recital language - The Order on Consent must set forth the violations and the elements supporting each violation. An itemized list of the violations may be appended to the Order on Consent or set forth in the body of the Order on Consent. The list of violations must specifically state the legal provision(s) violated and facts that establish each element of the stated violation(s).
- The following language must be set forth in the Order: "This Order shall not be construed as being in settlement of events regarding which the Department lacks knowledge, or which occur after the effective date of this Order."
- Effective Date and Termination Clauses - All Orders on Consent must contain clauses stating: (1) that the Order on Consent is effective when signed by the Department or within a specific time after the Department executes the Order on Consent, and (2) that the Order on Consent will terminate when all requirements imposed by the Order on Consent are approved by the Department.
- With limited exceptions14, Orders on Consent must contain the following paragraph:
"This Order on Consent is not a permit, or a modification of any permit, under any federal, State, or local laws or regulations.
Unless otherwise allowed by statute or regulation, Respondent is responsible for achieving and maintaining complete compliance with all applicable federal, State, and local laws, regulations, and permits. Respondent's compliance with this Order on Consent shall be no defense to any action commenced pursuant to any laws, regulations, or permits, except as set forth herein."
- Default of Payment Clause - All Orders on Consent that require a payable penalty due after the effective date of the Order, stipulated, or suspended penalties must contain the following clause:
"The penalty assessed in the Order on Consent constitutes a debt owed to the State of New York. Failure to pay the assessed penalty, or any part thereof, in accordance with the schedule contained in the Order on Consent, may result in referral to the New York State Attorney General for collection of the entire amount owed (including the assessment of interest,15 and a charge to cover the cost of collecting the debt), or referral to the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, which may offset by the penalty amount any tax refund or other monies that may be owed to you by the State of New York. Any suspended and/or stipulated penalty provided for in this Order on Consent will constitute a debt owed to the State of New York when and if such penalty becomes due."
- Modifications and Extensions of Orders on Consent - The Order on Consent must include language that no change or modification shall be effective except as may be specifically set forth in writing by the Department. All modification requests must be submitted in writing to the Commissioner or his/her designee as set forth in the Order on Consent and include the Case number and the named Respondent. All approved modifications must be appended to the original Order on Consent and the modifications must be added to any case tracking system used by OGC.
- Modifications to an Order on Consent compliance schedule of 6 months or longer, or any substantial changes to any provision of an Order on Consent must be signed by both the Respondent and the Commissioner or his/her designee. The Commissioner's designee shall be the Regional Director, or any other persons or titles so designated by the Commissioner in writing.
- Modifications to an Order on Consent compliance schedule that can be completed within 6 months or less may be either accepted or rejected in writing by the Department staff or attorney.
- All modification requests must be submitted to the Department prior to the milestone date required in the original Order on Consent and with an explanation of the good cause for the extension and a justification for the requested extended timeframe or change to an Order on Consent requirement.
- The assessment of additional penalties including the collection of a suspended and stipulated penalty will be evaluated by Department staff upon review of the request for modification.
- Access for Site and Records Inspection - The Order on Consent must provide access for Department staff to any site, facility, or records owned, operated, controlled or maintained by Respondent in order for Department staff to inspect and/or perform any necessary tests, related to the requirements of the Order on Consent, during reasonable hours. An Order on Consent may state, if allowed under the applicable regulation or law, that no prior notification to Respondent of site inspections is required (see, e.g., 6 NYCRR §424.2[a] which requires proper notification to a permittee of mined land). The following language may be used:
"The Department, including its employees, agents and representatives shall have the right at all reasonable times during normal business hours on normal business days, and after proper notification to the permittee and proper identification as Department employees, agents and/or representatives, to enter and inspect any property or premises covered by a permit for the purpose of ascertaining compliance with ECL Title 27, the permit or this Subchapter. The permittee shall provide a person to accompany the Department's representative during an inspection of the permit area when notification is provided, be it written or verbal, at least 24 hours prior to such inspection."
- Natural Resource Damages - Unless an Order on Consent contains provisions for settlement of a Natural Resource Damages (NRD) claim, the Order on Consent must include a provision reserving the Department's rights to seek recovery of NRD, if applicable.
- Spill Fund Cases - Orders on Consent involving oil spills must reserve the right to seek reimbursement of any Oil Spill Fund expenditures from the New York Environmental Protection and Spill Compensation Fund and hold the Spill Fund harmless.
- Indemnification - Orders on Consent must require the Respondent to indemnify and hold the State, the Department and its employees harmless for all claims, actions, damages and costs resulting from the Respondent's fulfillment or attempted fulfillment of the provisions of the Order on Consent.
- Failure, Default and Violation of Order - The following language must be contained in an Order on Consent:
"The failure of Respondent to comply with any provision of this Order shall constitute a default and a failure to perform an obligation under this Order and shall be deemed to be a violation of both this Order and the ECL. Respondent's failure to comply fully and in timely fashion with any provision, term, or condition of this Order shall constitute a default and a failure to perform an obligation under this Order and under the ECL and shall constitute sufficient grounds for revocation of any permit, license, certification, or approval issued to the Respondent by the Department." - Reopener and Reservation of Rights - All Orders on Consent must reserve to the Department the right to require that the Respondent undertake any additional measures required to protect human health or the environment, and shall reserve the Department's rights to exercise its authorities under law to protect human health and the environment, or to otherwise require compliance with the law. Such additional reservation shall include a provision preserving the Commissioner's summary abatement power. Such provision shall state that the Order on Consent does not bar, diminish, adjudicate or in any way affect the Department's rights or authorities, except as set forth in the Order on Consent, including but not limited to, exercising summary abatement powers.
- Binding Effect - All Orders on Consent must contain a provision that states that the Order on Consent is binding on the Respondent, heirs, successors and assigns, employees, and all persons, firms, corporations acting under or for them.
- Entirety of Order - All Orders on Consent must contain the following language: "The provisions of this Order constitute the complete and entire Order issued to the Respondent, concerning resolution of the violations identified in this Order. Terms, conditions, understandings or agreements purporting to modify or vary any term hereof shall not be binding unless made in writing and subscribed by the party to be bound, pursuant to Paragraph X of this Order. No informal oral or written advice, guidance, suggestion or comment by the Department regarding any report, proposal, plan, specification, schedule, comment or statement made or submitted by the Respondent shall be construed as relieving the Respondent of his/her obligations to obtain such formal approvals as may be required by this Order."
VI. Additional Elements for an Order on Consent
A. The following elements may also be necessary in an Order on Consent, if applicable, depending on the program area violated and the circumstances of each particular case:
- 1. Remedial or Restoration Program - Requirement that the Respondent address any environmental, natural resource, or public health injury resulting from the violations through remediation or restoration.
- Compliance Schedules - Include a detailed compliance schedule that:
(i) provides enforceable milestones for the correction of all violations and leads to full regulatory compliance by a set date; (ii) requires the implementation of any other remedy, by dates certain; and (iii) requires the Respondent to submit certification or other proof of achieving compliance milestones. Complex Compliance Schedules or Compliance Schedules longer than two years in duration should require structured communication between the Respondent and DEC, such as quarterly progress reports and/or meetings, in accordance with program recommendations, and should also require enforceable milestones approximately every six months. A Compliance Schedule may be set forth in the body of an Order on Consent or in an attached Appendix.
- Interim Measures, Limits and Controls - Require the use of effective and appropriate controls to minimize any environmental threat or damage during the interval between the Effective Date of the Order on Consent and the date of final compliance in the Compliance Schedule. This may include the use of limited interim permit limits and/or other temporary authorizations or conditions related to statutory, regulatory or permit requirements, if appropriate, as a bridge to compliance to a permit. Any such controls should be limited in scope and time frame as much as possible, and should contain other conditions, such as reporting requirements and operational controls. Any Interim Controls may be set forth in the body of an Order on Consent or in an attached Appendix.
- Best Management Practices ("BMP") - The following language may be used to add BMPs to an Order:
"Respondent shall carry out its obligations set forth in the attached Best Management Practices ("BMP") annexed as Attachment X, which is hereby made part of this Order. Should Respondent sell, transfer, or otherwise convey the subject property or any ownership or controlling interest therein, Respondent shall impose the obligation to comply with the BMP and all other terms and conditions of the Order on the purchaser, successor, or assignor by contract. Respondent shall submit to NYSDEC a copy of any contract for sale of the premises or of a controlling interest therein, within five days of execution. Respondent and its successors and assigns shall apply for any required NYSDEC permits for future work on the site to be conducted by or on behalf of Respondent and obtain them before doing any such work, except that a NYSDEC permit under ECL Article 17 and Article 25 and the regulations promulgated thereunder shall not be required for the performance of the work described in the BMP. All required documentation shall be submitted by mail to XXX, NYSDEC, Address."
- Financial Obligations - An Order on Consent may require provision of financial undertakings, such as bonds or insurance, in circumstances where additional financial security is advisable to ensure the complete cessation and remediation of the violations.
- Force Majeure - A Long Form Order on Consent may contain a Force Majeure clause, excusing Respondent from complying with certain terms of the Order on Consent in the event of an occurrence beyond Respondent's control. Force Majeure clauses cannot be used in a Short Form Order on Consent. If a Force Majeure clause is included in a Long Form Order on Consent, the following language can be used:
"If Respondent cannot comply with a deadline or requirement of this Order on Consent, because of natural disaster, war, terrorist attack, strike, riot, judicial injunction, or other, similar unforeseeable event which was not caused by the negligence or willful misconduct of Respondent and which could not have been avoided by the Respondent through the exercise of due care, Respondent shall apply in writing to the Department within a reasonable time after obtaining knowledge of such fact and request an extension or modification of the deadline or requirement. Respondent shall include in such application the measures taken by Respondent to prevent and/or minimize any delays. Failure to give such notice constitutes a waiver of any claim that a delay is not subject to penalties. Respondent shall have the burden of proving that an event is a defense to a claim of non-compliance with this Order on Consent pursuant to this subparagraph."
- Stipulated and Suspended Penalties - Stipulated and/or suspended penalties may be used in all Orders on Consent and should be applied consistent with the Department's Civil Penalty Policy (DEE-1). The suspended portion of the penalty may not exceed 80% of the total penalty, without prior approval of the General Counsel.
- Regulatory Fees - If applicable to a case, an Order on Consent must reserve the right to collect any regulatory fees owed. However, it must be noted that regulatory fees are required and collected separate and apart from any civil penalty imposed.
- Environmental Benefit Project (EBP) Policy - An Order on Consent may contain an EBP. Pursuant to paragraph V.A. of CP-37, all Regional Attorneys and Central Office OGC Bureau Chiefs are hereby designated the authority to approve any EBP in an Order on Consent that complies with CP-37 and meet the following criteria:
- under $10,000 in value;
- will be completed in under one full year; and
- requires minimal Department oversight.
B. Remedial Orders: An Order on Consent that addresses only the investigation or remediation of a site pursuant to ECL Article 27, Title 9 (corrective action) or Article 27, Title 13 (inactive hazardous waste disposal site remedial programs) and which may address the restoration, replacement or acquisition of natural resources pursuant to an NRD settlement are remedial in nature ("Remedial Orders") and shall not be considered enforcement Orders on Consent subject to this Policy. Requirements for Remedial Orders are set forth in statutes, regulations, policy and/or guidance applicable to those program areas, and in Orders on Consent developed by OGC and the remedial programs.
An Order on Consent that addresses violations of a Remedial Order, regulations or statutes applicable to ECL Article 27, Title 9 (corrective action); and Article 27, Title 13 (inactive hazardous waste disposal site remedial program) are enforcement Orders on Consent and are subject to all provisions of this Policy.
C. Natural Resource Damages ("NRD") Orders: NRD settlements are often addressed in Remedial Orders and Orders on Consent, e.g. when resolving Navigation Law violations stemming from a petroleum spill. However, NRD settlements may also
be addressed solely in an Order on Consent where no remediation or violation is addressed. Such NRD orders, or other legal instruments where no remediation or violation of state law is addressed, are not required to be issued in accordance with the requirements of this Policy. Regardless, any Order on Consent that addresses a settlement of a NRD claim ("NRD Orders") shall provide for the restoration, replacement or acquisition of those injured natural resources. NRD Orders shall follow the requirements of applicable state and federal law, regulation and guidance, including 42 U.S.C. 9600, et seq., 33 U.S.C. 2700, et seq., 33 U.S.C. 1251, et seq., 43 CFR Part 11, 15 CFR Part 990, Article 12 of the New York State Navigation Law and the Department's NRD Policy (CP-44).
The requirements of this Policy do not apply to NRD Orders or other legal instruments where no violation of State law is addressed.
VII. Procedures
A. Central Office attorneys will notify the appropriate Regional Attorney and Regional Program manager of any significant enforcement matters being undertaken by Central Office pertaining to a facility or Respondent located in a Region.
- 1. Regional Attorneys will notify the Bureau Chief for Regional Affairs and Litigation and the General Counsel prior to undertaking any enforcement actions that involve matters of first impression, exercise of discretion over novel issues of law or policy, or contain or may divulge highly sensitive information.
- If any case referred to a Regional Attorney involves, or provides reason to believe that violations may be occurring in more than one Region, the Regional Attorney will notify the Regional Attorney(s) for the affected Regions, as well as the Bureau Chief for Regional Affairs and Litigation and the General Counsel to determine which Region should be primarily responsible for the enforcement action.
- Prior to mailing a Draft version of an Order on Consent to a Respondent, it must be entered into FMIS as a "Order on Consent Invoice." The FMIS Invoice must be printed and served with the Order on Consent.17
- If any payment is incorrectly mailed to or received by a Regional office for payment of penalties, the Regional office must send payment along with the invoice to Management and Budget, Revenue Accounting Services to be deposited.
B. Authority for execution of an Order on Consent
- 1. Pursuant to the ECL, the Commissioner, or his/her designee, has the legal authority to execute all Orders on Consent on behalf of the Department. A list of staff delegated to execute Orders on Consent shall be maintained by the Department's Internal Control Officer and the OGC, pursuant to CP-28.
- In addition, Regional Directors are delegated the authority18 to execute routine Orders on Consent.
- The procedure for a Regional Director to sign an Order on Consent is as follows:
- All Orders on Consent will be routed through the Regional Attorney for approval.
- The Regional Attorney will recommend to the Regional Director that the Order on Consent be executed, if appropriate, by the Regional Director on behalf of the Commissioner.
- All Orders on Consent will be routed through the Regional Attorney for approval.
- After execution of a routine Order on Consent, the Regional Attorney will cause to have served on the Respondent a duplicate or conformed copy of the Order on Consent. Within thirty days, the Regional Attorney will forward a copy of the Order on Consent and transmittal letter, and a copy of any penalty payments that were received by the Regional Office to the OGC in Albany.
- Examples of non- routine20 Orders on Consent include Orders on Consent that:
- Involve unprecedented issues of statewide policy or, law;
- Conflict with an approved policy without prior General Counsel approval;
- Contain or divulge highly classified information or involve discretionary authority over important policy matters, program, environmental, social or economic circumstances;
- Relate to inactive hazardous waste disposal sites; or
- Resolve violations that were caused in, or directly caused harm in, more than one Region.
- Involve unprecedented issues of statewide policy or, law;
- The procedure for a Regional Director to sign an Order on Consent is as follows:
- The procedure for Central Office OGC staff to have an Order on Consent executed is as follows:
- The Order on Consent, including Short Form ones, will be routed through the Bureau Chief of General Enforcement, through the appropriate Deputy Counsel, then the Division Director, Assistant Commissioner or whomever is given authority to execute the Order via a Delegation of Authority.
- The assigned attorney will recommend to the delegated individual that the Order on Consent be executed, if appropriate, by the delegated individual on behalf of the Commissioner.
- After execution of an Order on Consent, the assigned attorney will cause to have served on the Respondent a duplicate or conformed copy of the Order on Consent. The assigned attorney will provide a copy of the Order on Consent and transmittal letter, and a copy of any penalty payments that were inadvertently received by the assigned attorney, to the legal assistant of the General Enforcement Bureau, OGC.
- After execution of any Order on Consent negotiated, executed and processed in Central Office, the Order on Consent must be sent to the Regional Attorney of the Region(s) impacted by the Order on Consent
- The Order on Consent, including Short Form ones, will be routed through the Bureau Chief of General Enforcement, through the appropriate Deputy Counsel, then the Division Director, Assistant Commissioner or whomever is given authority to execute the Order via a Delegation of Authority.
C. Service and Post-execution of Orders on Consent Procedures
- Within thirty days of service, by mail, e-mail or hand delivery of Orders on Consent, copies of the Orders on Consent and transmittal letters shall be forwarded to OGC in Albany. Any payments that have been received within the Office of General Counsel, must be sent directly to Management and Budget, Revenue Accounting Services, in Albany.
- OGC in Albany will maintain an electronic library of all final agency Orders on Consent. When copies of final Orders on Consent are sent to Central Office, OGC will utilize the naming convention below to add each order to the library.
- OGC will utilize the following naming convention when saving an Order on Consent electronically:
- All Orders on Consent, except those identified in subpara. (b) below should be saved electronically using the following naming convention. When saving an Order on Consent electronically, filenames may not contain any punctuation other than periods and underscore characters. Underscore characters take the place of spaces and all normal punctuation. Periods separate the constituent parts of the filename into the bracketed parts shown in the format.
Format: ORDER.[CASE # with underscore character in place of hyphens].[Respondent_Name or Matter_Name].[Date of Order in YYYYMMDD Format].pdf
Example 1: ORDER.R4_20150828_104.Respondent's Name.20190101.pdf
- Inactive hazardous waste disposal sites, Brownfield Cleanup Program sites (Brownfield Cleanup Agreements), PBS facilities and similar facilities that rely on a site identification number should be electronically saved as follows:
PBS or HAZ.[Site ID #].[Respondent Name].[DATE of Order in YYYYMMDD format].pdf
Example 1: PBS.VA194845.Mom_and_Pop_Shop.20190101.pdf
Example 2: PBS.11947445.Joe_s Garage.19981231.pdf
Example 3: HAZ.11947445.ABC_Corp.20111121.pdf
- All Orders on Consent, except those identified in subpara. (b) below should be saved electronically using the following naming convention. When saving an Order on Consent electronically, filenames may not contain any punctuation other than periods and underscore characters. Underscore characters take the place of spaces and all normal punctuation. Periods separate the constituent parts of the filename into the bracketed parts shown in the format.
- After execution of all Orders on Consent, the regional offices and Central Office will post all of their respective Orders on Consent on the DEC public website.
- The execution of all Order on Consents with compliance milestones set forth in the Order should be noted in CTS or any alternative or subsequent case tracking system that may be used by OGC.
VIII. Responsibility
The Office of General Counsel oversees all Orders on Consent for the Department. Each Regional Office is responsible for commencing enforcement and seeking Orders on Consent for violations that occurred or are occurring in their region, unless Central Office agrees to commence enforcement.
IX. Related References
DEE-1: Civil Penalty Policy.
DEE-2: Order on Consent Enforcement Policy.
- Organization and Delegation Memoranda #88-13 dated Apr. 15, 1988, #93-10 dated Apr. 29, 1993, and #94-28 dated Aug. 8, 1994 (all hereby superseded).
- New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Civil Penalty Policy dated June 20, 1990, Section IV(D)(2)(a).
CP-28: Delegations of Authority.
CP-37: Environmental Benefit Projects Policy.
Delegation of Authority 17-10, Nov. 10, 2017 - To Execute Orders on Consent Pursuant to ECL Art. 27, Titles 13 and 14; and Art. Art. 56, Title5.
ECL Article 27., Title 9.
New York State Finance Law §18.
OGC 7: Staff Access to Property or Premises.