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Description

New Compliance and Enforcement JerseyDepartment of Environmental SELF-DISCLOSURE REPORT Protection Instructions Pursuant to Departmental policy as well as proposed new rules at N.J.A.C. 7:33-1 et seq. which appeared in the New Jersey Register on August 18, 2003, a regulated entity may be eligible for a 75 to 100 percent penalty reduction for violations that it discovers, discloses and corrects. In order to self-disclose a violation, complete this form and send to: New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Compliance and Enforcement PO Box 420 Trenton, NJ 08625-0420 Attn: Self-Disclosures *You should also e-mail a copy of this form to selfdisclosure@dep.state.nj.us and keep a copy for your own files. Attach additional pages as necessary. If you have questions, the current contact for this program (as of July 2008) is Dr. Rita Thornton. For questions please call (609) 984-2081. New Compliance and Enforcement JerseyDepartment of Environmental SELF-DISCLOSURE REPORT Protection 1. Name, Address and Location of Facility Enter the name, mailing address, e-mail address (if any), phone number and location of the facility for which the regulated entity is submitting this Self-Disclosure Report. Facility Name: __________________________________________________________________ Mailing Address: ________________________________________________________________ e-mail Address ...

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New Jers ey Department of Environmental Protection
Compliance and Enforcement
  SELF-DISCLOSURE REPORT   
 Instructions  Pursuant to Departmental policy as well as proposed new rules at N.J.A.C. 7:33-1 et seq. which appeared in the New Jersey Register on August 18, 2003, a regulated entity may be eligible for a 75 to 100 percent penalty reduction for violations that it discovers, discloses and corrects.  In order to self-disclose a violation, complete this form and send to:  New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Compliance and Enforcement PO Box 420 Trenton, NJ 08625-0420 Attn: Self-Disclosures  *You should also e-mail a copy of this form to selfdisclosure@dep.state.nj.us and keep a copy for your own files. Attach additional pages as necessary. If you have questions, the current contact for this program (as of July 2008) is Dr. Rita Thornton. For questions please call (609) 984-2081.
 
 
New Jers ey Department of Environmental Protection
Compliance and Enforcement  
 SELF-DISCLOSURE REPORT  
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New Jers ey Department of Environmental Protection
Compliance and Enforcement   SELF-DISCLOSURE REPORT  
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 ______________________________________________________________________________
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New Jers ey Department of Environmental Protection
Compliance and Enforcement  
 SELF-DISCLOSURE REPORT  
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______________________________________________________________________________  
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New Jers ey Department of Environmental Protection
Compliance and Enforcement   SELF-DISCLOSURE REPORT  
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Created on 10/01/03 1:58:00 PM
   
New Jers ey Department of Environmental Protection
Compliance and Enforcement   SELF-DISCLOSURE REPORT  
Footnotes
 1 a discovery to be voluntary if the violation or the underlyingThe Department shall not consider information was discovered through a legally mandated monitoring or sampling requirement prescribed by statute, regulation, permit, administrative or judicial consent order or agreement. For example, the Department shall not consider the following to be voluntarily discovered: an air emission violation detected through a continuous emission or process monitor required by permit or regulation, or a violation of a NJPDES permit detected through required sampling or monitoring. The Department shall consider a discovery to be voluntary even if the findings were required to be reported to the Department. For example, a discharge that is discovered voluntarily but required to be reported immediately pursuant to the Spill Compensation and Control Act, N.J.S.A. 58:10-23.11(d)10 or N.J.S.A. 58:10-23.11(e), may be considered for a penalty reduction. On the other hand, an air emission violation recorded by a continuous emission or process monitor and required to be reported to the Department on periodic Excess Emission Reports shall not be considered for a penalty reduction.  2 only if it occurs prior to: independentThe Department shall consider the disclosure to be  (1) state or federal agency, a certified local health agency, or aThe discovery of the violation by a local government agency; (2) inspection, or notification of a scheduled inspection, by theThe commencement of an Department, the United States Environmental Protection Agency, a certified local health agency, or a local government agency; (3) The commencement of a judicial or administrative enforcement action by the Department, the United States Environmental Protection Agency, or a certified local health agency; (4) The issuance of a notice under the Environmental Rights Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:35A-1 et seq., filed pursuant to the citizens’ lawsuit provision of any State or Federal statute or the filing of a complaint by a third party; or (5) The reporting of the violation to the Department, the United States Environmental Protection Agency, a certified local health agency, or a local government agency by a “whistleblower” employee, rather than by one authorized to speak on behalf of the regulated entity, or by a citizen.  3 The date of discovery of the violation is the date that an officer, director, employee or agent of the regulated entity has an objectively reasonable basis for believing that a violation has, or may have, occurred. Violations must be disclosed within 21 days of discovery in order to be eligible for penalty relief.  4 a penalty reduction, the regulated entity must correct the violation in 60 days, orIn order to be eligible for in 180 days if the regulated entity is a small business.  5a repeat violation if the regulated entity responsible for the violation has beenA Tier 1 violation is identified in a previous enforcement action by the Department or certified local health agency as responsible for a violation of the same requirement of the same permit within the preceding 12 month period. If the violation does not involve a permit, a Tier 1 violation is a repeat violation if the regulated entity responsible for the violation has been identified in a previous enforcement action by the Department or certified local health agency as responsible for the same or a substantially similar violation at the same facility within the preceding 12 month period. A Tier 2 violation is a repeat violation if it meets the preceding criteria but has occurred within the preceding 36-month period.   
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