The Guardian (USA)

NSW to double penalties for worst environmen­tal crimes in wake of asbestos crisis

- Lisa Cox and Catie McLeod

Penalties for the most serious environmen­tal crimes would double and the New South Wales environmen­tal watchdog would have powers to recall potentiall­y contaminat­ed products from consumers under major changes to environmen­tal protection laws proposed by the Minns government.

The environmen­t minister, Penny Sharpe, said the government was proposing the largest set of amendments to the Environmen­t Protection Authority’s (EPA’s) powers since the regulator was establishe­d in 1991.

The legislatio­n, to be introduced to the parliament on Thursday, follows a crisis triggered after asbestos was found in mulch at the Rozelle parklands in January.

An EPA investigat­ion has since detected asbestos in mulch at 75 sites across greater Sydney.

Sharpe said the EPA’s criminal investigat­ion into the mulch had highlighte­d loopholes in the state’s environmen­tal regulation­s that needed to be fixed.

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Among the proposed reforms are a doubling of the maximum penalty for tier-1 environmen­tal offences – the most serious environmen­tal crimes – to $10m for companies and $2m for individual­s.

The penalty for tier-2 asbestos-related offences would increase to $4m for companies and $1m for individual­s.

On-the-spot fines for smaller offences would also double and the government is proposing to crack down on small-scale illegal waste dumpers with maximum penalties of $50,000 for companies and $25,000 for individual­s.

Other proposed changes include giving the EPA new powers to recall products from the market that may be contaminat­ed with harmful substances, strengthen­ing the EPA’s investigat­ion powers, and establishi­ng a public “name and shame” process to issue warnings about serious or repeat environmen­tal offenders.

“Under 12 years of conservati­ve government, penalties and regulation haven’t kept pace,” Sharpe said. “We need a tough environmen­tal cop on the beat.

“Our changes will give the EPA more power to better protect our precious places and to deter environmen­tal crime.

“The events of the past two months have shown the urgent need to reform environmen­t protection laws and increase penalties.”

Sharpe said the sweeping reforms would directly improve the protection of human health, the environmen­t and the community.

 ?? Photograph: Blake Sharp-Wiggins/The Guardian ?? ▲ Asbestos-contaminat­ed mulch being removed from a park in Sydney’s Surry Hills last week. The Minns Labor government says loopholes in environmen­tal laws need to be fixed.
Photograph: Blake Sharp-Wiggins/The Guardian ▲ Asbestos-contaminat­ed mulch being removed from a park in Sydney’s Surry Hills last week. The Minns Labor government says loopholes in environmen­tal laws need to be fixed.

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