Opinion esday, April 28, 1992 The Battalion Page 7 The Battalion Editorial Board DOUGLAS PILS, Editor-in-Chief BRIDGET HARROW, Managing Editor BRIAN BONEY, Opinion Editor JASON MORRIS, Night News Editor MORGAN JUDAY, Night News Editor MACK HARRISON, City Editor KARL STOLLEIS, Photo Editor SCOTT WUDEL, Sports Editor ROB NEWBERRY, Lifestyles Editor The following opinions are a consensus of The Battalion opinion staff and senior editors. Cleaned out Lawyers take money meant for environment .ICK/The Battalion sicians for six id, the Brew. In the effort to clean up toxic waste tes, lawyers were the only ones who ally cleaned up. Twelve years ago. Congress enacted a law called Superfund that empowered the Environmental Protection Agency to extract the costs of cleaning up major pollution sites from the businesses that caused the lollution. However, a new study found that 90 lercent of the money p. id by insurers on Superfund claims has gone to litigation costs jjihstead of cleanup costs. 1 Superfund was created to extend liability to any individual or company that contributed waste to dumping Show to mm page 5 rovided the con ic songs, idem dance duo, tation of Stints i," expressing^ ng High, anil- ic group tumble: and vaulted inli ngs moving wai ionics Greg Rat,f enormous amounts of detective work area or polluted site. The system was designed to force the polluters to pay the costs of cleaning jup dangerously polluted areas rather I an use government funds for the job. However, since the Superfund places blame, the system is considered 'liability based," which means lawyers will be involved. Since most Superfund sites cost as much as $30 million to clean up, court fights over who pays are practically unavoidable. Such lawsuits between government, alleged polluters, insurers and policyholders are incredibly expensive. They require st acts, the Aggs Miss TAMUJI , the Wrangle ditional countn- le type of dart- tried something ;ed their countr- etting of a 'Sfc something outo! night delivered rent in the name variety - within ig the same type >r the audience /e made things iges - which in ox, author of “1 id Muster speak the year Barbara n. >ecause it's hard lity of a f a dance act, e time to bal ably had to gut feeling as to ght entertained act of Friday Day obviously ition of the audi- > of the judges. ecessary to recreate events that can ian decades. To further complicate e suits, contracts must be interpreted in the process, and contract laws vary aetween states. The extra litigation is a waste of anpower and prolongs cleanup of the most toxic areas of the country. Only 84 of the 1,245 sites targeted under Superfund have been actually cleaned up. The study released last week by the Rand Institute for Civil Justice indicates that insurance companies spent about $1.3 billion on Superfund claims between 1986 and 1989. About $1 billion of that went to pay lawyers. The research indicates the litigation costs could pay for the cleanup of 40 polluted sites. The EPA continues to voice support for the liability system. EPA officials suggest the system is just coming into its own and cites the record-high $1.4 billion the agency received from offending polluters last year as proof. Unfortunately, the total cost of Superfund-related cleanup is estimated to be at least $60 to $90 billion, and many estimates are far higher. The EPA's data seems to run against its conclusions. The Superfund law is up for reauthorization in 1994. At that time, Congress may change the law's focus if it so chooses. Congress must take the liability out of the system. The law is inhibiting the cleanup of the most toxic sites in our country by placing the process in the hands of lawyers. Earth Day was celebrated just last week. Congress and the EPA should begin to worry about who is running the restoration of the environment. Requiring more and more litigation is not the answer to our concerns. I