NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Attorney General Kamala D. Harris and Alameda County District Attorney Nancy E. O’Malley on Thursday announced a settlement with AT&T to resolve allegations that hundreds of AT&T’s California facilities unlawfully disposed of hazardous waste and material over a nine-year period.
If approved by the court, AT&T will pay $23.8 million, including $18.8 million in civil penalties and costs.
Another $3 million will fund supplemental environmental projects furthering consumer protection and environmental enforcement in California, and AT&T will pay a minimum of $2 million to enhance its environmental compliance.
In addition, AT&T will spend an estimated $28 million over the next five years to implement the enhanced environmental compliance measures required by the settlement.
Among the affected locations listed in the settlement are two in Lake County – 2510 Old Highway 53 in Clearlake and 555 Lakeport Blvd. in Lakeport.
The settlement includes a $6,000 penalty that AT&T must pay to the Lake County District Attorney's Office.
Sites in the neighboring counties of Mendocino, Napa, Sonoma and Yolo also are among the affected locations, with the district attorney's offices in those counties to receive penalty payments of $6,000, $21,000, $45,000 and $63,000, respectively, according to the settlement documents.
The settlement and proposed judgment, filed in Alameda County Superior Court, requires approval from the court before becoming final.
“This settlement holds AT&T accountable for unlawfully dumping electronic waste,” Harris said. “The illegal disposal of hazardous waste can lead to serious environmental and health risks for California communities. AT&T will be required to implement strict compliance measures at its facilities that set an example for other companies to safeguard our communities against hazardous waste.”
This is the first enforcement action in California against a telecommunications company for its management of electronic waste.
“Today’s settlement marks a great victory for California’s ongoing efforts to ensure that hazardous waste is disposed of in a safe, legal and environmentally sustainable manner,” O’Malley said Thursday. “Whether a small local business or a huge international company, my Office will pursue all necessary legal action against entities that pollute our environment. This legal action should put others on notice that local and state agencies will continue to work together to investigate and prosecute violations against our environment.”
The civil enforcement action and proposed settlement against AT&T were filed on Thursday in Alameda County by Harris and O’Malley, and is the product of a robust investigation by the two offices together with the Department of Toxic Substances Control.
The enforcement action claims that approximately 237 AT&T warehouse and dispatch facilities throughout the state unlawfully handled and disposed of various hazardous wastes and materials over a nine-year period.
Those hazardous wastes and materials primarily consisted of electronic equipment, batteries, aerosol cans, as well as certain gels, liquids and other items used by AT&T service technicians in delivering telephone, Internet and video services to residential and business customers in California.
In 2011, inspectors from the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office Environmental Protection Division and investigators from the California Department of Toxic Substances Control conducted a series of waste inspections of dumpsters belonging to AT&T warehouse and dispatch facilities.
The inspections revealed that AT&T was routinely and systematically sending hazardous wastes to local landfills that were not permitted to receive those wastes.
There are 13 AT&T facilities in Alameda County and all 13 facilities were found to be unlawfully disposing hazardous waste.
Upon notice of the investigation, AT&T immediately agreed to cooperate and promptly implemented measures to halt the removal of regular trash until it could be inspected to remove any potentially hazardous wastes before they reached municipal landfills.
AT&T also has voluntarily dedicated additional resources toward environmental compliance and improving its hazardous and universal waste management compliance programs.
In addition to the $23.8 million settlement payment, AT&T expects to incur another $28 million over the next five years to implement enhanced environmental compliance measures required by the settlement.
For example, AT&T has implemented multiple layers of protection against electronic waste getting into its regular trash, including contractor inspections of “staging bins” before their contents are deposited in dumpsters, hundreds of unannounced dumpster inspections annually, and three independent audits over five years.
The telecom provider will be bound under the terms of a permanent injunction prohibiting similar future violations of law.