South Dakota Code § 34A-15-6.1

State brownfields revitalization and economic development program--Liability for costs of a response action or remediation--Limitation
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
Notwithstanding the provisions of §
34A-15-6
, a lender
-
owner is not liable for environmental, response, cleanup, or remediation costs at a brownfields site approved by the Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources for participation in the state brownfields revitalization and economic development program unless:
(1) The lender
-
owner, its employees, or agents directly cause an immediate release or directly exacerbate a release of the regulated substances on or from the property or directly violate any environmental statute or regulation; or
(2) The lender
-
owner, its employees, or agents knowingly and willfully compelled the borrower to:
(a) Perform an action that caused an immediate release of regulated substances in excess of reportable quantities; or
(b) Violate any environmental statute or regulation.
Liability pursuant to this section is limited to the cost for a response action or remediation that is directly attributable to the lender
-
owner's activities set forth in subdivisions (1) and (2) of this section. Liability arises only if the lender
-
owner's actions were the proximate cause of the release or violation. Ownership or control of the property pursuant to a security interest during or after foreclosure does not by itself result in liability. No lender
-
owner is liable for any response action or remediation if the response action or remediation arises solely from a release of regulated substances in excess of reportable quantities that occurred before or commences before and continues after foreclosure. However, the lender
-
owner is responsible for the portion of the response action or remediation that is directly attributable to the lender
-
owner's aggravation of a release. A release of regulated substances in excess of reportable quantities discovered in the course of conducting environmental due diligence is presumed to be a prior or continuing release on the property.

‹ Prev All South Dakota sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.