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1 September 2009 Effective Coordination and Cooperation Between Ecological Risk Assessments and Natural Resource Damage Assessments: A New Synthesis
Ronald G. Gouguet, David W. Charters, Larry F. Champagne, Mark Davis, William Desvouges, Judi L. Durda, William H. Hyatt, Rachel Jacobson, Larry Kapustka, Rose M. Longoria
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Abstract

This is 1 of 4 papers reporting on the results of an SETAC technical workshop titled “The Nexus Between Ecological Risk Assessment and Natural Resource Damage Assessment Under CERCLA: Understanding and Improving the Common Scientific Underpinnings,” held 18–22 August 2008 in Montana, USA, to examine approaches to ecological risk assessment and natural resource damage assessment in US contaminated site cleanup legislation known as the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA).

Although ecological risk assessments (ERAs) and natural resource damage assessments (NRDAs) are performed under different statutory and regulatory authorities, primarily the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), as currently practiced, the activities typically overlap. ERAs performed as part of the response process (typically by the US Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA]) should be closely coordinated with the natural resource trustees' (trustees') NRDAs. Trustees should actively participate in the early stages of the remedial investigation (RI) and work with USEPA, including the potentially responsible parties (PRPs), when appropriate, to coordinate NRDA data needs with those of the RI. Close coordination can present opportunities to avoid inefficiencies, such as unnecessary resampling or duplicate data gathering, and provide the opportunity to fulfill both process requirements with a few well-designed investigations. Early identification of opportunities for practical combined assessment can save money and time as the restoration process proceeds and facilitate a cooperative resolution of the entire site's CERCLA liability. The Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) convened an invited workshop (August 2008) to address coordination between ERA and NRDA efforts. This paper presents the findings and conclusions of the Framework Work Group, which considered technical issues common to each process, while mindful of the current legal and policy landscape, and developed recommendations for future practice.

Ronald G. Gouguet, David W. Charters, Larry F. Champagne, Mark Davis, William Desvouges, Judi L. Durda, William H. Hyatt, Rachel Jacobson, Larry Kapustka, and Rose M. Longoria "Effective Coordination and Cooperation Between Ecological Risk Assessments and Natural Resource Damage Assessments: A New Synthesis," Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management 5(4), 523-534, (1 September 2009). https://doi.org/10.1897/IEAM_2009-012.1
Received: 23 January 2009; Accepted: 1 June 2009; Published: 1 September 2009
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KEYWORDS
Assessment endpoints
CERCLA
Coordination
ecological risk assessment
natural resource damage assessment
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