Texas Administrative Code
Title 30 - ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
Part 1 - TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
Chapter 70 - ENFORCEMENT
Subchapter A - ENFORCEMENT GENERALLY
Section 70.11 - Findings Agreed Orders
Universal Citation: 30 TX Admin Code § 70.11
Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
(a) A findings agreed order is an enforcement order that is drafted with findings of fact and conclusions of law.
(b) An agreed order may be drafted as a findings order when any of the following six criteria are satisfied:
(1) absence of management
practices designed to ensure compliance;
(2) a violation of a commission issued
enforcement order or court order;
(3) a violation contained in the agreed order
involves an emission or discharge of contaminants to the environment or other
actions meeting one or more of the following criteria:
(A) people have been exposed to pollutants
which exceed levels that are protective;
(B) environmental receptors have been exposed
to pollutants which exceed levels that are protective;
(C) unauthorized diversion, taking, or
storage of state water or an unauthorized change in flood elevation of a stream
which deprives others of water, severely affects aquatic life, or results in a
safety hazard, property damage, or economic loss; or
(D) unauthorized emissions which are
excessive emissions events, as set out in §
101.222(a) of
this title (relating to Demonstrations);
(4) the respondent has been the subject of
any of the following repeated enforcement actions (Notice of Violation,
enforcement order, judgment) over the prior five-year period from the Notice of
Enforcement date:
(A) three repeated
enforcement actions for the same violation as contained in the current agreed
order or a substantial history of the same violation entity-wide;
(B) three repeated enforcement actions for
the same violations or substantial history of the same violation as contained
in the current agreed order by the same respondent who is required to be
registered, certified, or licensed by TCEQ prior to performing certain
activities;
(C) two prior
enforcement orders having the same general cause for nuisance
violations;
(5)
regardless of specific violations, a respondent has demonstrated a pattern of
non-compliance with environmental laws; or
(6) indifference to legal duty.
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