By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Environmental Law Intake Forms: What to Capture at Case Intake for CERCLA, RCRA, and Beyond

Environmental law matters arrive with a density of technical detail that most other practice areas never encounter. A new client walks in with a CERCLA Section 107 cost recovery demand, a site with trichloroethylene in the groundwater migrating toward a municipal well field, a consent decree compliance schedule they may be violating, and a closing on the adjacent parcel in forty-five days. If your intake captures a name, an address, and "environmental issue," you have documented almost nothing useful. You have no idea whether you are dealing with a Superfund PRP allocation, a state enforcement action, a toxic tort, or a transactional due diligence problem — and each of those requires a fundamentally different legal strategy, a different set of deadlines, and different insurance implications.

A proper environmental law intake form captures the regulatory framework, the site's contamination profile, the client's exposure posture, and the procedural status of every agency action touching the property. Here is what that form needs to include — and why each field matters for the work that follows.

Matter type: the regulatory framework determines everything

Environmental law is not one practice area — it is a collection of overlapping federal and state regimes, each with its own liability scheme, procedural rules, and enforcement mechanisms. Your intake must classify the matter before anything else because the classification drives every downstream decision:

A single site can involve three or four of these categories simultaneously. A client buying a former industrial property may need transactional due diligence, may inherit RCRA corrective action obligations, may face CERCLA contribution claims from neighboring PRPs, and may have state enforcement hanging over the parcel. Your intake must capture all applicable regulatory frameworks, not force the matter into a single box.

Client role: liability exposure varies by category

Under CERCLA's strict liability scheme, the client's role determines both their exposure and their available defenses. Your intake should classify the client as one or more of the following:

Site information: the property's regulatory identity

Every contaminated site has a regulatory history, and that history lives in databases, agency files, and recorded land documents. Your intake needs to capture the site's identifying information so you can pull its full regulatory profile:

Regulatory status: where the matter stands with the agencies

Environmental matters rarely start with a phone call to a lawyer. They start with a notice of violation, a compliance order, a 104(e) information request, or a demand letter from EPA or a state agency. By the time the client walks in, the regulatory clock is already running. Your intake must document exactly where things stand:

Contamination details: the technical core of the case

Environmental litigation and regulatory defense are driven by contamination data. Your intake form cannot just say "contaminated site" — it must capture the specifics that determine remedial cost, liability allocation, and health risk:

This technical detail may seem like it belongs in an expert report rather than an intake form. It does not. If you wait for the expert report to learn that your client's groundwater plume is migrating toward a municipal well field, you have lost weeks of response time. The intake form captures what the client already knows — or should know — about the contamination on day one. This overlaps with the kind of site-specific risk assessment that construction law attorneys conduct when environmental conditions are discovered during excavation, though the regulatory frameworks diverge sharply once contamination is confirmed. Environmental contamination also intersects with land use and zoning work — a zoning variance or site plan application for a formerly contaminated parcel triggers SEQRA or NEPA environmental review, and the contamination profile captured at intake feeds directly into the environmental impact assessment that the planning board will require.

Remediation status: where the cleanup stands

Many environmental matters arrive mid-stream. The site has been under investigation or remediation for years, sometimes decades, before the client changes counsel or a new issue surfaces. Your intake must capture the remedial posture:

Insurance: coverage that may already exist

Environmental insurance is one of the most under-investigated aspects of environmental matters. Clients frequently do not know what coverage they have — or had — and the policies involved can be worth millions:

Transaction-specific fields: when contamination meets a deal

Environmental due diligence for real estate and M&A transactions has its own set of intake requirements that layer on top of the site and contamination data:

The transactional side of environmental practice intersects with the diligence and risk allocation work that commercial litigation attorneys handle when environmental conditions surface during a deal and the parties end up in court over who bore the risk.

Key deadlines and limitations periods: time-sensitive facts practitioners must track

Environmental deadlines are notoriously complex and vary by claim type, jurisdiction, and discovery date. While the environmental law intake form captures regulatory status and compliance schedules, practitioners should also be aware of the broader limitations landscape that may apply to their matter:

These deadlines are the hardest-edged facts in any environmental matter. A cost recovery claim filed one day after the six-year CERCLA period is dead. Identifying and calendaring every applicable deadline should be among the first things an environmental attorney does after intake.

Why environmental intake demands this level of detail

Environmental law operates at the intersection of complex science, layered regulatory authority, and enormous financial exposure. A Superfund allocation can run into hundreds of millions of dollars. A toxic tort class action can involve thousands of plaintiffs. An environmental condition discovered during a real estate closing can blow up a nine-figure deal. The intake form is not administrative paperwork — it is the document that tells you whether you are dealing with a routine permit renewal or a career-defining environmental disaster, and it needs to capture enough detail on day one to tell the difference.

If you handle environmental matters as part of a broader litigation or transactional practice, the Legal Bundle includes environmental law alongside 37 other legal practice areas, each with practice-specific intake fields and client questionnaires.

Environmental law intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Matter type, client role, site information, regulatory status, contamination details, remediation stage, environmental insurance, transaction fields, and statute of limitations. Built for environmental attorneys.

View Environmental Law Forms