Last year, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency filed a complaint against Riazzi accusing him of violating the Clean Air Act.
Authorities accused Riazzi of knowingly failing to inspect the steam plant before its renovation and knowingly failing to provide the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency of notice before work began. Riazzi also was accused of knowingly failing to wet regulated asbestos-containing material as it was removed during renovation.
MORE: Dayton Steam Plant owner to plead in EPA case, get passport for Bahamas trip
He pleaded guilty to the information pending against him for failing to thoroughly inspect for asbestos.
In 2016, paid and directed two workers to remove roofing materials on the building that contained asbestos, according to the statement of facts in Riazzi’s case.
Riazzi had no reason to believe the workers were trained to evaluate or handle asbestos and did not tell them the roof may have asbestos, according to the statement of facts in the case.
Riazzi was warned the roof contained asbestos but did not instruct them to take any specific precautions related to the materials, the statement of facts said.
RELATED: Steam Plant Dayton owner faces EPA criminal charges
The workers were scrap metal collectors and haulers who did odd jobs at the steam plant.
Riazzi’s general contractor, MV Commercial Construction (Miller-Valentine Group), had told him it would cost about $20,000 to abate the asbestos-containing roofing materials.
He paid the two workers about $5,000 to remove the materials over a weekend, according to the statement of facts.
In September 2016, Riazzi filed a civil lawsuit against MV Commercial Construction, alleging the company made false claims that potentially sparked a criminal investigation.
RELATED: $3.7 million downtown Dayton project gets back on track
Riazzi’s plea agreement hearing was Wednesday. He is scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 30.
The charge carries a maximum prison sentence of fives years and a maximum fine of $250,000. But as part of the plea agreement, prosecutors will not object to probation.
St. Peter Partners LLC, Riazzi’s company, purchased the Steam Plant in 2015 from the city of Dayton.
He renovated the building into offices and an event space that is popular place to host weddings, fundraisers, parties and public events.
About the Author