Environmental
The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) in Oklahoma allows the EPA to:
ASet real estate commission rates for contaminated property sales
BTake emergency cleanup action at hazardous waste sites and recover costs from potentially responsible parties (PRPs)✓ Correct
CProhibit all real estate sales in areas with environmental issues
DRegulate Oklahoma real estate licensing requirements for environmental disclosures
Explanation
CERCLA gives the EPA authority to respond to hazardous substance releases, conduct emergency cleanups, and pursue cost recovery from potentially responsible parties (PRPs) including current and past owners, generators, and transporters.
Related Oklahoma Environmental Questions
- LUST (Leaking Underground Storage Tank) sites in Oklahoma are significant real estate concerns because:
- Oklahoma's underground injection control (UIC) program regulates wells used to:
- An Oklahoma property near the former Tar Creek Superfund site in Ottawa County, one of the most contaminated Superfund sites in the US, should be evaluated for:
- Oklahoma's underground storage tank (UST) program, administered by the DEQ, requires owners of USTs to:
- An Oklahoma real estate agent who lists a property containing an abandoned oil well should advise the seller to:
- Oklahoma's Scenic Rivers Act protects certain river corridors by:
- Oklahoma's DEQ operates a Voluntary Cleanup Program (VCP) for brownfield sites that provides:
- Oklahoma DEQ's Brownfields program assists with:
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