RELATING TO TOWNS AND CITIES
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Introduced By: Representatives Malik, Iwuc, Munschy, Anguilla, and Winfield |
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Date Introduced: February 05, 2002 |
It is enacted
by the General Assembly as follows:
SECTION
1. Title 45 of the General Laws entitled "Towns and Cities" is hereby amended
by adding thereto the following chapter:
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT DISTRICTS
45-61-1. Short title. -- This chapter shall be known and
may be cited as the "Rhode Island Stormwater Management and Utility
District Act of 2002."
45-61-2. Legislative
findings. -- The
general assembly hereby recognizes and declares that:
The general
assembly finds that stormwater, when not properly controlled and treated,
causes pollution of the waters of the state, threatens public health, and
damages property. Stormwater carries
pollutants and other material from the land - such as human and animal waste,
oil, gasoline, grease, fertilizers, nutrients, and sediments - into rivers,
streams, ponds, coves, drinking water aquifers, and Narragansett Bay. Stormwater reaches the state's waters by
streets, roads, lawns, and other means.
As a result, public use of the natural resources of state for drinking
water, swimming, fishing, shellfishing, and other forms of recreation is limited
and in some cases prohibited.
The general
assembly further finds that inattention to stormwater management results in
erosion of soils and destruction of both public and private property, thereby
putting public safety at risk and harming property values and uses, including
agriculture and industry. Therefore, to
help alleviate existing and future degradation of the state's waters and the
associated risks to public health and safety, and to comply with state and
federal stormwater management requirements, stormwater conveyance systems must
be maintained and improved. The state
of Rhode Island is delegated by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency to implement "Phase II" stormwater management regulations,
which require municipalities and other persons to increase their capacity to control
stormwater. The Department of
Environmental Management's Pollution Discharge Elimination System program has
promulgated these regulations.
45-61-3. Declaration of
purpose. -- The
purpose of this chapter is to authorize the cities and towns of the state to
adopt ordinances creating stormwater management districts (SMD), the boundaries
of which may include all or part of a city or town, as specified by such
ordinance. Such ordinances shall be
designated to eliminate and prevent the contamination of the state's waters and
to operate and maintain existing stormwater conveyance systems.
45-61-4. Powers of
councils. -- The
city or town council of any city or town in the state, by itself or with other
cities and towns, pursuant to chapter 45-43, and in accordance with the
purposes of this chapter, are hereby authorized to adopt ordinances creating
stormwater management districts, which will be empowered, pursuant to such
ordinance, to:
(1) establish
a fee system and raise funds for administration and operation of the
district. The fee system shall be
reasonable and equitable so that each contributor of runoff to the system shall pay to the extent to which runoff is
contributed; and the state shall be exempted from the fee system. However, the state Department of
Transportation shall cooperate with the municipalities in the planning and
implementation of wastewater management ordinances, including the providing of
funds, if available, to match the fees collected by the municipalities
annually.
(2) prepare long
range stormwater management master plans;
(3) implement
a stormwater management district in accordance with regulations and model
ordinances promulgated under this chapter;
(4) retrofit
existing structures to improve water quality or alleviate downstream flooding
or erosion;
(5) properly
maintain existing structures within the district;
(6) borrow
for capital improvement projects by issuing bonds or notes of the city or town;
(7) hire
personnel to carry out the functions of the districts;
(8) receive
grants, loans or funding from state and federal water quality programs;
(9) grant
credits to property owners who maintain retention and detention basins or other
filtration structures on their property;
(10) make
grants for implementation of stormwater management district plans;
(11)
purchase, acquire, sell, transfer, or lease real or personal property;
(12) impose
liens;
(13) levy
fines and sanctions for noncompliance;
(14) provide
for an appeals process;
(15) contract
for services in order to carry out the function of the district.
SECTION
2. This act shall take effect upon passage.