2024 -- H 7023 | |
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LC003426 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2024 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY | |
FOR PACKAGING | |
| |
Introduced By: Representatives Bennett, Morales, Speakman, Boylan, Kislak, | |
Date Introduced: January 05, 2024 | |
Referred To: House Environment and Natural Resources | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby |
2 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 100 |
4 | EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY FOR PACKAGING |
5 | 23-100-1. Findings -- Purpose. |
6 | (a) Towns and cities in Rhode Island bear much of the burden of recycling and disposing |
7 | of post-consumer waste; however, they have little control over sources of waste, particularly |
8 | packaging waste. |
9 | (b) Unrecyclable single-use packaging is a common contaminant in recycling loads in |
10 | Rhode Island. Recycling loads rejected from the Rhode Island resource recovery materials |
11 | recycling facility contribute to waste and recycling costs borne by towns and cities. |
12 | (c) Rhode Island’s central landfill is projected to reach capacity by 2034. Single-use |
13 | packaging makes up approximately sixteen percent (16%) of the waste buried in the landfill each |
14 | year. |
15 | (d) Single-use plastic packaging is a significant contributor to litter and ocean debris. As |
16 | of 2022, more than sixteen million tons (16,000,000 tt) of plastic waste washes into the ocean each |
17 | year. |
18 | (e) Single-use packaging has significant environmental impacts on a local and global scale, |
| |
1 | including polluting our waters, contributing to climate-damaging emissions, and creating litter. |
2 | (f) It is in the best interests of the health, safety, and welfare of residents and visitors to |
3 | Rhode Island to protect our environment and natural resources by reducing non-reusable, non- |
4 | recyclable, and toxic packaging and to achieve a more equitable relationship between packaging |
5 | producers and local governments and communities. |
6 | 23-100-2. Definitions. |
7 | As used in this chapter: |
8 | (1) "Auditor general" means the person appointed pursuant to § 22-13-1 to carry out the |
9 | duties specified in § 22-13-4. |
10 | (2) "Beverage container" means a container used to contain all drinks in liquid form and |
11 | intended for human consumption. |
12 | (3) "Bio-plastic" or "bio-plastics" means plastic produced from biological sources such as |
13 | vegetable fats and oils, polysaccharides, sugar, proteins, or other materials that are designed to be |
14 | biodegradable. |
15 | (4) "Brand" means any mark, word, name, symbol, design, device, or graphical element or |
16 | a combination thereof, including a registered or unregistered trademark, that identifies and |
17 | distinguishes a product from other products. |
18 | (5) "Department" means the Rhode Island department of environmental management. |
19 | (6) "Director" means the director of the department of environmental management. |
20 | (7) "Discarded/discards" means packaging material that has been used for its intended |
21 | purpose and is no longer needed by consumers, businesses, institutions, and other users, and can be |
22 | managed through reuse, recycling, or disposal. |
23 | (8) "Disposal" means the landfilling or incineration of packaging material. "Disposal" shall |
24 | also include energy recovery or energy generation by any means, including, but not limited to, |
25 | combustion, pyrolysis, gasification, solvolysis, thermal desorption, waste to fuel, or any other |
26 | chemical conversion process, or molecular conversion process. "Disposal" shall also include the |
27 | use of materials as landfill cover. |
28 | (9) "Environmental justice community" means any neighborhood or community which is |
29 | composed predominantly of persons of color or persons below the poverty line, that is subject to a |
30 | disproportionate burden of environmental hazards. |
31 | (10) "Inspector general" means the individual appointed pursuant to § 23-100-14. |
32 | (11) "Local government" means any municipal corporation, governmental subdivision of |
33 | the state, local government unit, special district, school, local or regional board, commission, or |
34 | authority authorized by law to plan or provide for waste management services for a specific |
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1 | geographical area. |
2 | (12) "Packaging" or "packaging material" means a discrete material or category of material, |
3 | regardless of recyclability, including, but not limited to, such material types as paper, plastic, glass, |
4 | metal, or multi-material, that is used for the containment, protection, handling, delivery, transport, |
5 | distribution, or presentation of another product that is sold, offered for sale, imported, or distributed |
6 | in the state. |
7 | "Packaging" and "packaging material" does not include: |
8 | (i) "Medical devices and packaging" which are included with products regulated as a drug, |
9 | medical device, or dietary supplement by the United States Food and Drug Administration under |
10 | the federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 21 U.S.C. Sec. 321 et seq., 21CFR §3.2, or the Dietary |
11 | Supplement Health and Education Act P.L. 103-417 (1994); |
12 | (ii) "Animal biologics", including vaccines, bacterins, antisera, diagnostic kits, and other |
13 | products or biological origin, and other covered materials regulated by the United States |
14 | Department of Agriculture under the Virus, Serum, Toxin Act, 21 U.S.C. Sec. 151-158; |
15 | (iii) Packaging regulated by the federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act |
16 | (FIFRA), 7 U.S.C. Ch.6 Sec. 136 et seq. or other applicable federal law, rule, or regulation; and |
17 | (iv) Beverage containers subject to a returnable container deposit, if applicable. |
18 | (13) "Packaging reduction organization" means the nonprofit entity or entities contracted |
19 | by the department and authorized to collect producer fees, assist producers with compliance with |
20 | the requirements of this chapter, provide technical assistance to producers, and implement the |
21 | packaging reduction and recycling program. |
22 | (14) "Packaging reduction and recycling program" or "program" means the program |
23 | implemented by the packaging reduction organization, and overseen by the department, to reduce |
24 | packaging, assess and collect information and payments from producers based on the amount of |
25 | packaging used by the producer to contain, protect, deliver, present, or distribute their products, in |
26 | order to pay for the development of packaging reduction programs including, but not limited to, |
27 | reusable and refillable packaging systems and infrastructure, reimbursements to local government |
28 | to cover the cost of packaging recycling, and investments in education and outreach. |
29 | (15) "Post-consumer recycled material" means new material produced using material |
30 | resulting from the recovery, separation, collection and reprocessing of material that would |
31 | otherwise be disposed of or processed as waste and that was originally sold for consumption. "Post- |
32 | consumer recycled material" does not include post-industrial material or pre-consumer material, or |
33 | material generated by means of advanced recycling, chemical recycling, combustion, gasification, |
34 | incineration, pyrolysis, solvolysis, thermal desorption, waste-to-energy, waste-to-fuel, or any other |
| LC003426 - Page 3 of 21 |
1 | chemical or molecular conversion process. |
2 | (16) "Producer" means: |
3 | (i) A person or entity that manufactures or uses in commercial enterprise a product sold, |
4 | offered for sale, contained, protected, delivered, presented, or distributed in or using packaging into |
5 | the state under the brand of the manufacture; or |
6 | (ii) If subsection (16)(i) of this section does not apply, a person or entity that is not the |
7 | manufacturer of the product, but is the owner or licensee of a trademark, regardless of whether the |
8 | trademark is registered, under which a product is sold, offered for sale, contained, protected, |
9 | delivered, presented, or distributed in or using packaging; or |
10 | (iii) If subsections (16)(i) and (16)(ii) of this section do not apply, a person or entity that |
11 | imports a product that is contained, protected, delivered, or presented in packaging, into the United |
12 | States or the state for use in commercial enterprise in the state; or |
13 | (iv) An entity that manufactures or uses in a commercial enterprise, sells, offers for sale, |
14 | or distributes the packaging material in the state under the brand of the manufacturer; and |
15 | (v) "Producer" includes a franchisor of a franchise located in the state but does not include |
16 | the franchisee operating that franchise. |
17 | (17) "Product line" means a group of related products all marketed under a single brand |
18 | name that is sold by the same producer to distinguish products from each other for better usability |
19 | for customers. |
20 | (18) "Recyclable" means a product or packaging material: |
21 | (i) That can be sorted by entities that process post-consumer materials generated in the |
22 | state; |
23 | (ii) That has a consistent regional market for purchase by end users in the production of |
24 | new products; and |
25 | (iii) Which can be recycled with minimal losses of material during processing and |
26 | manufacturing. Whether a product or packaging type meets these criteria shall be determined by an |
27 | annual review process as described in § 23-100-6. |
28 | "Recyclable" does not include material processed through advanced recycling, chemical |
29 | recycling, combustion, gasification, incineration, pyrolysis, solvolysis, thermal desorption, waste- |
30 | to-energy, waste-to-fuel, or any other chemical or molecular conversion process. |
31 | (19) "Recycled" means the use of discarded packaging materials or products in the |
32 | production of a new product or packaging in place of virgin materials. Material will not be |
33 | considered "recycled" if it is used as landfill cover. "Recycled" material does not include |
34 | contaminants, residues, and other process losses. |
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1 | (20) "Recycling" means the series of activities by which material is: |
2 | (i) Collected, transported, sorted, and processed; |
3 | (ii) Used in industrial feedstocks in place of virgin materials to manufacture new products |
4 | with minimal loss of material quality and quantity, as determined through the process set forth in § |
5 | 23-100-6. "Recycling" does not include energy recovery or energy generation by any means, |
6 | including, but not limited to, advanced recycling, chemical recycling, combustion, gasification, |
7 | incineration, pyrolysis, solvolysis, thermal desorption, waste-to-energy, waste-to-fuel, or any other |
8 | chemical or molecular conversion process. It also does not include landfill disposal of discarded |
9 | material or discarded product component materials, including the use of materials as landfill cover. |
10 | (21) "Recycling rate" means the percentage of any given packaging type that is ultimately |
11 | recycled. The recycling rate for any packaging material shall be calculated as the total weight of |
12 | packaging that is recycled in a given year divided by the total weight of packaging generated. |
13 | Material losses (contaminants and residues) accruing during collection, processing and |
14 | manufacturing new products do not count as recycled and should not be in the numerator of the |
15 | equation. |
16 | (22) "Reuse" means the return of packaging back into the economic stream for use in the |
17 | same kind of application intended for the original packaging, without effectuating a change in the |
18 | original composition of the package, the identity of the product, or the components thereof. |
19 | (23) "Reuse and refill system" means a program or set of mechanisms designed to facilitate |
20 | multiple uses of packaging. Mechanisms may include, but are not limited to, deposits, incentives, |
21 | curbside collection, collection kiosks, refill stations, dishwashing facilities, and re-distribution |
22 | networks. |
23 | (24) "Reusable or refillable packaging and containers" means packaging material and |
24 | containers that are specifically designed and manufactured to maintain its shape and structure, and |
25 | be materially durable for repeated sanitizing, washing, and reuse. |
26 | (25) "Toxic substance" means a chemical or chemical class identified by a state agency, |
27 | federal agency, international intergovernmental agency, accredited research university, or other |
28 | scientific entity deemed authoritative by the department on the basis of credible scientific evidence |
29 | as being one or more of the following: |
30 | (i) A chemical or chemical class that is a carcinogen, mutagen, reproductive toxicant, |
31 | immunotoxin, neurotoxicant, or endocrine disruptor; |
32 | (ii) A chemical or chemical class that is persistent or bioaccumulative; |
33 | (iii) A chemical or chemical class that may harm the normal development of a fetus or child |
34 | or cause other developmental toxicity in humans or wildlife; |
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1 | (iv) A chemical or chemical class that may harm organs or cause other systemic toxicity; |
2 | (v) A chemical or chemical class that may have adverse air quality impacts, adverse |
3 | ecological impacts, adverse soil quality impacts, or adverse water quality impacts; or |
4 | (vi) A chemical or chemical class that the department has determined has equivalent |
5 | toxicity to the criteria listed in this definition. |
6 | (26) "Unit" means each discrete component of a package or container, including material |
7 | that is used for the containment, protection, handling, delivery, transport, distribution, and |
8 | presentation of a product that is sold, offered for sale, imported, or distributed in the state, including |
9 | through Internet transactions. |
10 | (27) "Universal Product Code" or "UPC" means a standard for encoding a set of lines and |
11 | spaces that can be scanned and interpreted into numbers for product identification purposes. |
12 | "Universal product code" includes any industry-accepted barcode used for product identification |
13 | purposes in a manner similar to a UPC, including, but not limited to, a European Article Number. |
14 | 23-100-3. Packaging reduction and recycling program. |
15 | (a) This chapter establishes a packaging reduction and recycling program by which |
16 | producers who sell, offer for sale, or distribute products contained, protected, delivered, presented, |
17 | or distributed in packaging shall pay fees based on the quantity and type of packaging used in the |
18 | state. The fees shall be used to fund the administration of this program. Producers shall also be |
19 | required to make changes to the design of their products in order to meet packaging reduction and |
20 | recycling requirements. |
21 | (b) The department shall contract with a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, to act as the packaging |
22 | reduction organization, which shall collect packaging reduction, generation, and recycling |
23 | information and fee payments, as described in § 23-100-9, from participating producers. The |
24 | payments collected from producers shall be deposited into the packaging reduction fund to |
25 | reimburse local governments for the costs associated with reducing and managing packaging waste, |
26 | reimburse the department for its administration of the program, and to support eligible projects that |
27 | reduce packaging waste by investing in packaging reduction and elimination, reuse and refill |
28 | systems and programs, recycling infrastructure, and comprehensive multi-media educational |
29 | programs. |
30 | (c) No later than eighteen (18) months after the effective date of this chapter, the |
31 | department shall conduct a statewide packaging reduction, reuse, and recycling needs assessment |
32 | as described in § 23-100-8 to determine the current state of packaging reuse, recycling, and |
33 | disposal, and to identify barriers and opportunities to reduce the amount of packaging discarded |
34 | and disposed of, and to increase the reusability and recyclability of packaging. |
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1 | (d) The auditor general shall conduct an annual audit of the program, including, but not |
2 | limited to, the amount of money received; the amount of money sent to local governments; the |
3 | amount of money used to invest in reduction, recycling, and reuse programs and services by the |
4 | packaging reduction organization and any state offices; the amount of discarded packaging |
5 | generated, reduced, and recycled; any recommendations for improvement of the program. The audit |
6 | shall be a public document. |
7 | 23-100-4. Producer responsibilities and exemptions of small producers. |
8 | (a) One year after the selection of the packaging reduction organization as required by § |
9 | 23-100-5, a producer shall not sell, offer for sale, or distribute into the state a product contained, |
10 | protected, delivered, presented, or distributed in packaging unless the producer is: |
11 | (1) Registered with the packaging reduction organization; and |
12 | (2) In full compliance with all requirements of this chapter. |
13 | (b) A producer shall annually report to the packaging reduction organization: |
14 | (1) The total amount, by unit, of each type of packaging material sold, offered for sale, or |
15 | distributed for sale into the state by the producer in the prior calendar year; |
16 | (2) All information necessary for producer and the packaging reduction organization to |
17 | meet its obligations required pursuant to § 23-100-6. |
18 | (c) A producer shall annually submit a written statement, signed by the chief executive |
19 | officer, verifying the producer’s compliance with: |
20 | (1) The toxic substance reduction requirements of § 23-100-13; |
21 | (2) The packaging reduction requirements of § 23-100-11; and |
22 | (3) The packaging recycling requirements of § 23-100-12. |
23 | (d) A producer is exempt from the requirements and prohibitions of this chapter in a |
24 | calendar year in which: |
25 | (1) The producer realized less than one million dollars ($1,000,000) in total gross revenue |
26 | during the prior calendar year; or |
27 | (2) The producer sold, offered for sale, or distributed for sale products contained, protected, |
28 | delivered, presented, or distributed in or using less than one ton of packaging material in total during |
29 | the prior calendar year. |
30 | (e) A producer claiming an exemption under this section shall provide the department with |
31 | sufficient information to demonstrate that the claimant is eligible for an exemption. |
32 | 23-100-5. Selection of the packaging reduction organization. |
33 | (a) Consistent with the requirements of this section, within one year after the promulgation |
34 | of rules and regulations as required by § 23-100-15, the department shall select and enter into a |
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1 | contract with a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization to act as the packaging reduction organization in |
2 | order to operate the packaging reduction and recycling program for a period of ten (10) years. |
3 | (b) Consistent with applicable competitive bidding requirements under state purchasing |
4 | laws and following the initial adoption of rules and regulations by the department pursuant to § 23- |
5 | 100-15, the department shall issue a request for a proposal for the operation of the packaging |
6 | reduction and recycling program. The proposals shall be required to cover the ten (10) year |
7 | operation of the program by the successful bidder and shall be required to include, at a minimum, |
8 | the following information: |
9 | (1) A description of how the bidder will administer the packaging reduction and recycling |
10 | program, including the mechanisms and processes for providing assistance to producers to comply |
11 | with the reporting requirements of this chapter; |
12 | (2) The mechanisms and processes the bidder will use to compile information from |
13 | participating producers; |
14 | (3) How the bidder intends to establish and manage the packaging reduction fund, |
15 | including, but not limited to, public participation, the staffing the bidder intends to use for |
16 | management of the fund, and the plan for providing technical support to interested persons |
17 | regarding use of the funds; |
18 | (4) A financial assurance plan that ensures all funds held in the packaging reduction fund |
19 | are immediately and exclusively forfeited and transferred to or otherwise made immediately |
20 | available to the department if the packaging reduction organization contract with the department is |
21 | terminated by the department, or expires; |
22 | (5) A proposed budget outlining the anticipated costs of operating the producer |
23 | responsibility program, including identification of any start-up costs that will not be ongoing and a |
24 | description of the method by which the bidder intends to determine and collect producer payments |
25 | during the initial startup period; |
26 | (6) A certification that the bidder will not share, except with the department, information |
27 | provided to the bidder by a producer that is proprietary information and that is identified by the |
28 | producer as proprietary information. The certification shall include a description of the methods by |
29 | which the bidder intends to ensure the confidentiality of such information; and |
30 | (7) Any other additional information required by the department. |
31 | (c) If, at the close of the competitive bidding process set forth in this section, the department |
32 | determines that no bidder has submitted, in accordance with this section, a proposal that meets the |
33 | requirements of this section, the department shall run the program by itself or a designated state |
34 | public body. |
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1 | 23-100-6. Responsibilities of the packaging reduction organization. |
2 | (a) The packaging reduction organization shall: |
3 | (1) Register all producers; |
4 | (2) Collect and compile data from producers as required by § 23-100-4; |
5 | (3) Collect fees due from producers as required by § 23-100-9; |
6 | (4) Reimburse the department and the auditor general for the costs associated with |
7 | conducting the needs assessment required by § 23-100-8; |
8 | (5) Distribute funds to reimburse local governments and private companies for the costs |
9 | associated with the implementation of reduction and refill and reuse programs, collection, |
10 | transportation, and recycling of packaging materials as required by § 23-100-10; |
11 | (6) Make recommendations to the department regarding investments toward packaging |
12 | reduction, reuse, and recycling as required by § 23-100-10; and |
13 | (7) Offer technical support to participating producers, with an emphasis on support to small |
14 | businesses, to assist them with compliance with the requirements of this chapter, including |
15 | information about procuring affordable alternatives to non-compliant packaging and reducing |
16 | packaging. |
17 | (b) Annually, the packaging reduction organization shall submit a report to the department |
18 | that, at a minimum, shall include the following information: |
19 | (1) Contract information for the packaging reduction organization; |
20 | (2) A list of all participating producers, brand(s), and products identified by the Universal |
21 | Product Code (UPC) that the producer sells, offers for sale, or distributes into the state that are |
22 | contained, protected, delivered, presented, or distributed in or using packaging; |
23 | (3) The total amount, by both weight and number of units of each type of packaging |
24 | material used to contain, protect, handle, deliver, transport, distribute, or present products sold, |
25 | offered for sale, or distributed into the state by each individual producer during the prior calendar |
26 | year; |
27 | (4) The total amount, by both weight and number of units, of each type of packaging |
28 | material used to contain, protect, handle, deliver, transport, distribute, or present products sold, |
29 | offered for sale, or distributed into the state by all producers during the prior calendar year. |
30 | (5) A complete accounting of all payments made to and by the packaging reduction |
31 | organization during the prior calendar year; |
32 | (6) A list of producers believed to be out of compliance with the requirements of this |
33 | chapter, and the reason the packaging reduction organization believes the producer to be out of |
34 | compliance. Information on non-compliant companies shall be provided to the attorney general’s |
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1 | office in a timely fashion and for possible enforcement action by that office; |
2 | (7) A description of the educational and outreach efforts made by the packaging reduction |
3 | organization in the prior calendar year, and how those efforts were designed to reduce packaging |
4 | waste, and increase reuse and recycling of packaging materials; |
5 | (8) An assessment of whether the fee structure adopted by the department pursuant to § 23- |
6 | 100-9 has been effective in incentivizing improvements to the design of packaging material, |
7 | including actual reduction of packaging, increases in reusable and refillable packaging, recycling |
8 | rates for packaging materials, and decreases in the amount of packaging; |
9 | (9) A description of the reimbursements and expenditures made pursuant to § 23-100-10; |
10 | and |
11 | (10) Any additional information required by the department. |
12 | (c) The packaging reduction organization shall conduct an annual review process to |
13 | determine whether products and packaging materials are recyclable. This review shall be conducted |
14 | in consultation with representatives of end markets, including recycled commodities brokers and |
15 | manufacturers who purchase post-consumer material for use in manufacturing new products. For |
16 | the purposes of calculating producer payments and municipal reimbursements in accordance with |
17 | this chapter, this annual process shall include a transitional period between the date the |
18 | determination is finalized and the date it goes into effect. |
19 | (d) The packaging reduction organization shall conduct public outreach and provide |
20 | consumers with educational and informational materials related to reducing the amount of |
21 | packaging discarded, recycled, and disposed of in the state. The outreach and education shall, at a |
22 | minimum, include: |
23 | (1) A description of the environmental, social, economic, and environmental justice impact |
24 | associated with improper disposal of packaging materials; |
25 | (2) At least three (3) public hearings in geographically diverse parts of the state each year, |
26 | to solicit public input on the implementation and effectiveness of this chapter and suggested |
27 | improvements; |
28 | (3) Information regarding the management of discarded packaging including reuse, |
29 | recycling, composting, and disposal by landfilling and incineration; |
30 | (4) The location and availability of curbside and drop-off collection opportunities for |
31 | packaging waste, including deposit and take-back programs; |
32 | (5) Description of the environmental, social, economic, and environmental justice impact |
33 | associated with failure to reuse or recycle packaging materials; |
34 | (6) Information regarding municipal reimbursement for the costs associated with |
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1 | packaging reuse, recycling, and disposal; and |
2 | (7) Any other information required by the department. |
3 | (e) The public outreach and education conducted by the packaging reduction organization |
4 | shall: |
5 | (1) Utilize all available forms of media, including, but not limited to, television, radio, |
6 | print, electronic, and web-based media to provide information directly to residents in the state, in |
7 | multiple languages; |
8 | (2) Be coordinated with the various local governments in the state to incorporate electronic, |
9 | print, web-based and social media elements that individual local governments may elect to use, at |
10 | their discretion, to provide education directly to their residents; |
11 | (3) Be provided to producers for inclusion on their packaging’s label to inform consumers |
12 | about the methods to responsibly reuse, recycle, or dispose of the packaging; and |
13 | (4) Be coordinated with other similar public outreach and education programs in the state |
14 | as necessary to avoid consumer confusion and facilitate the consolidation of available resources. |
15 | (f) In addition to engaging in the public education and outreach required by this section, |
16 | the packaging reduction organization shall be authorized to provide producers and retailers with |
17 | educational materials related to the responsible reduction, reuse, recycling, or disposal of discarded |
18 | packaging. The educational and informational materials provided to the retailer under this |
19 | subsection may include, but need not be limited to, printed materials, signage, templates of |
20 | materials that can be reproduced by retailers and provided thereby to consumers at the time of a |
21 | product’s purchase, and advertising materials that promote and encourage consumers to properly |
22 | reuse, recycle, or dispose of packaging materials. |
23 | (g) The packaging reduction organization shall not spend funds on lobbying federal, state, |
24 | or local governments or the making of campaign contributions to any candidates running for office |
25 | 23-100-7. Responsibilities of the department. |
26 | (a) Beginning one year after the selection of the packaging reduction organization pursuant |
27 | to § 23-100-5, and annually thereafter, the department shall work with the packaging reduction |
28 | organization to: |
29 | (1) Calculate the amount of packaging that was generated during the prior calendar year; |
30 | (2) Calculate the recycling rate for all packaging during the prior calendar year; |
31 | (3) Calculate the recycling rate for each packaging material type during the prior calendar |
32 | year; and |
33 | (4) Develop a list of producers believed to be out of compliance with the requirements of |
34 | this chapter. |
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1 | (b) In the event that the department determines that the packaging reduction organization |
2 | no longer meets the requirements of this chapter or fails to implement and administer the |
3 | requirements of this chapter in a manner that effectuates the purposes of this chapter, the department |
4 | shall revoke its approval of the packaging reduction organization and shall select a new packaging |
5 | reduction organization to replace it, or, in the alternative, may elect to operate the program itself. |
6 | (c) The department or attorney general shall take enforcement action against all non- |
7 | compliant producers in accordance with § 23-100-16. |
8 | 23-100-8. Statewide reduction, reuse, and recycling needs assessment. |
9 | (a) Consistent with applicable competitive bidding requirements, within one year after |
10 | promulgating the rules and regulations required to implement this chapter, and every five (5) years |
11 | thereafter, the department shall issue a request for proposals to conduct a statewide packaging |
12 | reduction, reuse, and recycling needs assessment, hereinafter "needs assessment", to identify |
13 | barriers and opportunities for reducing, reusing, and recycling packaging materials. The proposals |
14 | shall include, at a minimum, a description of how the bidder will conduct the needs assessment to |
15 | evaluate the following: |
16 | (1) The current recycling rate for each type of packaging material; |
17 | (2) The amount, by weight and material type, of packaging recycled at each recycling |
18 | facility that accepts discarded packaging generated in the state; |
19 | (3) The processing capacity, market conditions, and opportunities in the state and |
20 | regionally for recyclable materials; |
21 | (4) The net cost of end-of-life management of discarded packaging in the state, including |
22 | the cost associated with the collection, transportation, sortation, recycling, landfilling, or |
23 | incineration of discarded packaging; |
24 | (5) The availability of opportunities in the recycling, and reuse system for businesses |
25 | owned by women and people of color; |
26 | (6) Current barriers affecting recycling access and availability in the state; |
27 | (7) Current barriers to the marketability of recyclable materials generated in the state; |
28 | (8) Opportunities for the creation of packaging reuse and refill programs in the state; |
29 | (9) Opportunities for the improvement of packaging recycling in the state, including the |
30 | development of end markets for recycled packaging materials; |
31 | (10) Current barriers affecting the creation and implementation of packaging reuse and |
32 | refill programs; and |
33 | (11) Consumer education needs in the state with respect to packaging waste reduction, |
34 | recycling, reducing contamination in recycling, and reuse and refill systems for packaging. |
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1 | (b) After reviewing proposals, the department shall select an applicant to perform the needs |
2 | assessment. If, at the close of the competitive bidding process, the department determines that no |
3 | applicant can successfully perform the needs assessment, the department shall perform the needs |
4 | assessment itself, or designate another state office to do it. |
5 | (c) The cost incurred by the department or designee associated with conducting the needs |
6 | assessment shall be paid for by funds from the packaging reduction and recycling fund. |
7 | (d) The department shall report the results of the study to the public, the media, state |
8 | legislature, the governor, the auditor general and the attorney general, who are all directed to |
9 | coordinate enforcement of this law. |
10 | 23-100-9. Assessment of fees. |
11 | (a) The department shall promulgate rules and regulations setting forth the manner in which |
12 | producer payments on packaging materials shall be calculated and assessed. |
13 | (b) The payments shall be calculated based on the total amount, by weight, of each type of |
14 | packaging material used to contain, protect, deliver, present, or distribute a product sold, offered |
15 | for sale, or distributed into the state by the producer in the prior calendar year. |
16 | (c) The list of packaging material types for which there is a specific fee shall include, at a |
17 | minimum, the following material types: |
18 | (1) Polyethylene terephthalate (PET or PETE); |
19 | (2) High density polyethylene (HDPE); |
20 | (3) Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC); |
21 | (4) Low density polyethylene (LDPE); |
22 | (5) Polypropylene (PP); |
23 | (6) Polystyrene (PS) including expanded polystyrene; |
24 | (7) Other plastic resin types not specifically identified here; |
25 | (8) Bio-plastics; |
26 | (9) Paper; |
27 | (10) Cardboard; |
28 | (11) Wood; |
29 | (12) Glass; |
30 | (13) Bi-metal, steel and other ferrous metals; |
31 | (14) Aluminum and other non-ferrous metals; |
32 | (15) Mixed materials including laminates and packaging containing more than one of the |
33 | above materials; and |
34 | (16) Any other material used for consumer packaging. |
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1 | (d) The fees shall be designed to cover, at a minimum, the total cost associated with: |
2 | (1) The collection, transportation, and management of each type of packaging material used |
3 | to contain, protect, deliver, present, or distribute products sold, offered for sale, or distributed into |
4 | the state by all producers; |
5 | (2) The department’s and other state agencies’ administration of this chapter; |
6 | (3) The packaging reduction organization’s administration of the packaging reduction and |
7 | recycling program; |
8 | (4) The cost associated with the development of the statewide packaging reduction, reuse, |
9 | and recycling needs assessment pursuant to § 23-100-8; and |
10 | (5) Any other factors determined by the department. |
11 | (e) The fees adopted under this section shall delineate criteria to be used to initially |
12 | establish and subsequently adjust producer payments in a manner that incentivizes: |
13 | (1) A reduction in the total packaging as measured by weight used by producers, and |
14 | discarded by consumers, businesses, institutions, and other users. Weight reductions shall not be |
15 | achieved by substituting plastic for other materials types; |
16 | (2) An increase in the proportion of a producer’s total packaging that is managed within a |
17 | reuse and refill system; |
18 | (3) An increase in the proportion of a producer’s total packaging that is deemed recyclable |
19 | as determined by an annual review process as described in § 23-100-6; |
20 | (4) An increase in the proportion of a producer’s total packaging that is ultimately recycled; |
21 | (5) A reduction in toxic components in packaging materials; and |
22 | (6) A reduction in litter from packaging materials. |
23 | (f) There shall be no fee assessed on packaging that is designed for reuse and refill and |
24 | contained within a reuse or refill system. |
25 | (g) The department shall update and revise the fees every three (3) years. |
26 | 23-100-10. Packaging reduction fund. |
27 | (a) There is hereby established a separate, non-lapsing, interest-bearing fund to be known |
28 | as the packaging reduction fund, which will be managed by the packaging reduction organization |
29 | with oversight from the department. |
30 | (b) The packaging reduction organization shall deposit into the fund all payments received |
31 | from producers in accordance with § 23-100-9, and all penalties collected pursuant to § 23-100-16. |
32 | (c) Beginning one year after the first payment of fees by producers pursuant to § 23-100- |
33 | 9, and annually thereafter, the packaging reduction organization shall: |
34 | (1) Retain a portion of the fees deposited into the packaging reduction fund to cover the |
| LC003426 - Page 14 of 21 |
1 | costs associated with its administration of the packaging reduction and recycling program; and |
2 | (2) Reimburse the department, the office of the inspector general, the office of attorney |
3 | general, the auditor general and all other state entities for the costs associated with administering |
4 | and enforcing the requirements of this chapter and its implementation rules and regulations. This |
5 | reimbursement shall include costs associated with performing, revising, and updating the statewide |
6 | packaging reduction, reuse, and recycling needs assessment required by § 23-100-8. This |
7 | reimbursement shall also cover any costs incurred by the department in adopting and revising rules |
8 | and regulations as well as administering and enforcing the requirements of this chapter. |
9 | (d) Beginning one year after the first payments of fees by producers pursuant to § 23-100- |
10 | 9, and annually thereafter, the packaging reduction organization shall distribute money from the |
11 | packaging reduction fund to reimburse local governments for the costs incurred for the |
12 | management, reduction, and recycling of packaging waste, as long as the local government |
13 | provides recycling services to all residents, businesses, schools, and institutions in their jurisdiction. |
14 | Local governments that contract with private haulers and recyclers to handle the management, |
15 | reduction, and recycling of packaging waste are eligible for reimbursement, as long as the private |
16 | hauler or recycler provides recycling services to all residents, businesses, schools, and institutions |
17 | within the local government’s jurisdiction. Nothing in this subsection shall be interpreted as |
18 | allowing for the reimbursement of costs associated with the disposal of packaging. |
19 | (e) Beginning one year after the first payment of fees by producers pursuant to § 23-100- |
20 | 9, and annually thereafter, the packaging reduction organization shall make all remaining funds |
21 | following the reimbursement and distributions required by subsections (c) and (d) of this section, |
22 | available for projects and programs that will help achieve the packaging reduction requirements of |
23 | § 23-100-11, and the packaging recycling requirements of § 23-100-12. Annually, the money |
24 | allocated for projects and programs under this subsection shall be at least fifty percent (50%) of the |
25 | money provided to local governments pursuant to subsection (d) of this section. |
26 | (1) Funds may be used for investment in collection systems, transportation systems, reuse |
27 | systems, washing systems, redistribution systems, technology for tracking and data collection, |
28 | capital expenditures on new and emerging technology focused on reusable and refillable packaging, |
29 | as well as equipment, and facilities, and other projects determined by the department to facilitate |
30 | the goals and objectives of this chapter. |
31 | (2) Funds may also be used for investment in public outreach and education in ways that |
32 | increase access and participation in packaging reduction, reuse, refill, and recycling systems |
33 | throughout the state. |
34 | (3) The packaging reduction organization shall prioritize investments for projects and |
| LC003426 - Page 15 of 21 |
1 | programs that will directly benefit environmental justice communities, including, but not limited |
2 | to, communities that are home to a landfill, incinerator, transfer station, or waste-to-energy facility. |
3 | (4) Any investments made pursuant to this subsection shall be approved by the department. |
4 | The department shall approve or deny proposed investments within ninety (90) days of receipt of |
5 | a proposal from the packaging reduction organization. The investments may be approved, at the |
6 | discretion of the department, as long as the proposed investment shall, at a minimum: |
7 | (i) Increase the transition of packaging from non-reusable to reduced, reusable or refillable |
8 | packaging; |
9 | (ii) Increase access to reuse and refill infrastructure in the state; |
10 | (iii) Increase the capacity of reuse and refill infrastructure in the state; |
11 | (iv) Provide reuse and refill instructions that are, to the extent practicable, consistent |
12 | statewide, easy to understand, translated into various commonly used languages, and easily |
13 | accessible; or |
14 | (v) Provide for outreach and education that are coordinated across programs or regions to |
15 | avoid confusion for residents and developed in consultation with local government and the public. |
16 | 23-100-11. Packaging reduction requirements. |
17 | (a) Each individual producer is required to meet the packaging reduction requirements |
18 | contained in this section as follows: |
19 | (1) Beginning two (2) years after a producer first registers with the packaging reduction |
20 | organization, a producer shall reduce the amount of packaging used to contain, protect, deliver, |
21 | present, or distribute the products they sell, offer for sale, or distribute for sale into the state, by ten |
22 | percent (10%) by weight. |
23 | (2) Beginning four (4) years after a producer first registers with the packaging reduction |
24 | organization, a producer shall reduce the amount of packaging used to contain, protect, deliver, |
25 | present, or distribute the products they sell, offer for sale, or distribute for sale into the state, by |
26 | twenty percent (20%) by weight. |
27 | (3) Beginning six (6) years after a producer first registers with the packaging reduction |
28 | organization, a producer shall reduce the amount of packaging used to contain, protect, deliver, |
29 | present, or distribute the products they sell, offer for sale, or distribute for sale into the state, by |
30 | thirty percent (30%) by weight. |
31 | (4) Beginning eight (8) years after a producer first registers with the packaging reduction |
32 | organization, a producer shall reduce the amount of packaging used to contain, protect, deliver, |
33 | present, or distribute the products they sell, offer for sale, or distribute for sale into the state, by |
34 | forty percent (40%) by weight. |
| LC003426 - Page 16 of 21 |
1 | (5) Beginning ten (10) years after a producer first registers with the packaging reduction |
2 | organization, a producer shall reduce the amount of packaging used to contain, protect, deliver, |
3 | present, or distribute the products they sell, offer for sale, or distribute for sale into the state, by |
4 | fifty percent (50%) by weight. |
5 | (b) The reductions required by this section shall be measured against the total amount of |
6 | packaging the producer used to contain, protect, deliver, present, or distribute the products they |
7 | sold, offered for sale, or distributed for sale, during the first year they registered with the packaging |
8 | reduction organization. |
9 | (c) These reductions required by this section may be achieved by using the following |
10 | strategies: |
11 | (1) Elimination of packaging components; |
12 | (2) Reduction of packaging components; |
13 | (3) Using reuse and refill systems; and |
14 | (4) Packaging rightsizing, light weighting, and optimization. |
15 | (d) The reductions required by this subsection shall not be achieved by substituting plastic |
16 | for other materials. |
17 | (e) In the case of a producer that enters the market with fifty percent (50%) or more by |
18 | weight of its packaging being reusable and contained within a reuse and refill system, that producer |
19 | may apply to the department for a waiver from the packaging reduction requirements. |
20 | 23-100-12. Packaging recycling requirements. |
21 | (a) Each individual producer is required to meet the packaging recycling requirements |
22 | contained in this section. |
23 | (b) A producer is required to ensure that the packaging used to contain, protect, deliver, |
24 | present, or distribute the products they sell, offer for sale, or distribute into the state, is made of a |
25 | material that meets the following recycling rates: |
26 | (1) Not less than thirty percent (30%) within five (5) years after the effective date of this |
27 | chapter; |
28 | (2) Not less than fifty percent (50%) within eight (8) years after the effective date of this |
29 | chapter; and |
30 | (3) Not less than seventy percent (70%) within twelve (12) years after the effective date of |
31 | this chapter. |
32 | (c) The requirements of subsection (b) of this section shall not apply to reusable or refillable |
33 | packaging or containers. |
34 | 23-100-13. Toxic reduction requirements. |
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1 | (a) Beginning three (3) years after the promulgation of rules and regulations pursuant to § |
2 | 23-100-15, and every three (3) years thereafter, the department shall designate at least ten (10) toxic |
3 | substances or families of toxic substances that may no longer be sold, offered for sale, distributed |
4 | for sale, or distributed for use in packaging in this state unless it determines there are not ten (10) |
5 | chemicals that meet the definition of toxic substances. If the department determines there are not |
6 | ten (10) toxic substances that meet such a definition, it shall publish a detailed statement of its |
7 | findings and conclusions supporting such determination. |
8 | (b) Within one hundred eighty (180) days of designating a toxic substance, the department |
9 | shall adopt rules and regulations to prohibit the newly designated toxic substance in packaging, |
10 | with an effective date no later than two (2) years after such designation. |
11 | (c) Any producer that violates this section shall be subject to a fine for each violation not |
12 | to exceed fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) per violation. For the purposes of this section, each |
13 | product line that is sold, offered for sale, or distributed to consumers, via retail commerce, in the |
14 | state, including through an Internet transaction shall be considered a violation. |
15 | 23-100-14. Establishment of the office of inspector general. |
16 | (a) The director of the department shall establish and appoint a standalone independent |
17 | inspector general within the department. The inspector general shall administratively report to the |
18 | director of the department. The inspector general shall evaluate the programs created by this chapter |
19 | on an annual basis to ensure it is properly functioning, and the producers are following the |
20 | requirements of this chapter. |
21 | (b) The director, the inspector general or designees, shall have the authority to investigate |
22 | the compliance of producers with all provisions of this chapter and to bring enforcement violations |
23 | against non-compliant producers. |
24 | 23-100-15. Rulemaking. |
25 | (a) The department may promulgate rules and regulations as necessary to implement, |
26 | administer, and enforce this chapter. All initial rules and regulations developed to implement the |
27 | provisions of this chapter shall be promulgated no later than one year after the effective date of this |
28 | chapter. |
29 | (b) The department shall solicit input from the public regarding any draft rules or |
30 | regulations to implement this chapter, solicit public comment on draft rules or regulations for a |
31 | period of at least ninety (90) days, and hold a public hearing on the draft rules or regulations. |
32 | (c) The rules and regulations adopted by the department pursuant to this chapter shall |
33 | include, at a minimum: |
34 | (1) A process for contracting with the packaging reduction organization pursuant to the |
| LC003426 - Page 18 of 21 |
1 | requirements of § 23-100-5; |
2 | (2) A process for annually determining a schedule of producer fees and payment collections |
3 | pursuant to the requirements of § 23-100-9; |
4 | (3) A process for collecting all necessary information to ensure producer compliance with |
5 | the requirements of this chapter; |
6 | (4) A process for evaluating whether a producer is in compliance with the packaging |
7 | reduction requirements of § 23-100-11; |
8 | (5) A process for evaluating whether a producer is in compliance with the packaging |
9 | recycling requirements of § 23-100-12; |
10 | (6) A process for evaluating whether a producer is in compliance with the toxic packaging |
11 | reduction requirements of § 23-100-13; |
12 | (7) A process for determining on an annual basis the types of packaging material that are |
13 | recyclable; |
14 | (8) A process for the assessment of the packaging reduction organization and the packaging |
15 | reduction and recycling program; |
16 | (9) Requirements for the packaging reduction organization to conduct a representative |
17 | audit of recyclable material processed and sold by facilities that process recyclable material |
18 | generated in the state and of municipal solid waste disposed of in the state; |
19 | (10) A process for establishing and enforcing penalties for all violations of the requirements |
20 | of this chapter; |
21 | (11) A process for determining new toxic substances in packaging pursuant to § 23-100- |
22 | 13; |
23 | (12) A process for how the department will oversee and monitor the packaging reduction |
24 | organization’s management of the packaging reduction fund, including a process for submitting |
25 | and reviewing proposals from the packaging reduction organization regarding investments in |
26 | projects and programs that will help achieve the packaging reduction requirements of § 23-100-11, |
27 | and the packaging recycling requirements of § 23-100-12; and |
28 | (13) A process for determining whether information is proprietary information and |
29 | therefore, shall be handled as confidential information. |
30 | 23-100-16. Penalties and enforcement. |
31 | (a) Failure to comply with the requirements of this chapter by either the packaging |
32 | reduction organization or an individual producer shall subject the violators to penalties. The |
33 | department, inspector general, and the office of the attorney general, may conduct investigations, |
34 | including inspecting operations, facilities, and records of producers and the packaging reduction |
| LC003426 - Page 19 of 21 |
1 | organization, and by performing audits of producers and the packaging reduction organization, to |
2 | determine whether entities are complying with the requirements of this chapter. |
3 | (b) The department, the inspector general, or the office of the attorney general, shall notify |
4 | the packaging reduction organization and producers of any conduct or practice that does not comply |
5 | with the requirements of this chapter and of any inconsistencies identified in an audit. |
6 | (c) The department, the inspector general, or the office of the attorney general, may issue |
7 | a notice of violation to, and impose an administrative civil penalty not to exceed one hundred |
8 | thousand dollars ($100,000) per day per violation on, any entity not in compliance with this chapter |
9 | or any of the rules and regulations the department adopts to implement this chapter. For the |
10 | purposes of this section, each product line that is sold, offered for sale, or distributed to consumers, |
11 | via retail commerce, in the state, including through an Internet transaction, shall be considered a |
12 | violation. |
13 | (d) Any funds collected under this section shall be deposited into the packaging reduction |
14 | fund. |
15 | 23-100-17. Enforcement by action in superior court. |
16 | (a) The provisions of this chapter may be enforced by means of an action in the superior |
17 | court seeking either enforcement of civil penalties, injunctive relief, a declaratory judgment, a writ |
18 | of mandamus, or any combination thereof. No such action may be commenced without the plaintiff |
19 | providing written notice of the violations of this chapter to defendants at least sixty (60) days prior |
20 | to filing a legal action in superior court. |
21 | (b) All persons shall have standing to commence enforcement actions for equitable relief. |
22 | (c) Reasonable attorneys’ fees shall be recoverable by all substantially prevailing plaintiffs |
23 | who seek equitable relief under this section. |
24 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC003426 - Page 20 of 21 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY -- EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY | |
FOR PACKAGING | |
*** | |
1 | This act would establish the packaging reduction and recycling program. The department |
2 | of environmental management (DEM) would be responsible for selection of an organization to |
3 | administer the program. The program over a multi-year basis would require reduction in the amount |
4 | of packaging material used for products. Additionally, this act would create a new position of |
5 | inspector general within DEM. Administrative penalties not to exceed one hundred thousand |
6 | dollars ($100,000) per day could be imposed for violations. A civil action for equitable relief for |
7 | any violation could be pursued by any person. Reasonable attorney fees would be recoverable for |
8 | a substantially prevailing party seeking equitable relief for a violation of the provisions of this |
9 | chapter. |
10 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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