Chapter
05-070
2005 -- S 611 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED
Enacted 06/22/05
A N A C T
RELATING TO HEALTH
AND SAFETY -- MERCURY REDUCTION AND EDUCATION ACT
Introduced By: Senators Ruggerio, Sosnowski, Goodwin, C Levesque, and Gallo
Date
Introduced: February 10, 2005
It is enacted by the General
Assembly as follows:
SECTION
1. Sections 23-24.9-9 and 23-24.9-10 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-24.9
entitled
"Mercury Reduction and Education Act" are hereby amended to read as
follows:
23-24.9-9.
Disposal ban. -- (a) After July 1, 2005, no person shall dispose of
mercury-
added
products in a manner other than by recycling or disposal as hazardous waste.
Mercury from
mercury-added
products may not be discharged to water, wastewater treatment, and wastewater
disposal
systems except when it is done in compliance with local, state, and federal
applicable
requirements.
(b) If a formulated mercury-added product is a cosmetic or pharmaceutical
product
subject
to the regulatory requirements relating to mercury of the federal food and drug
administration,
then the product is exempt from the requirements of this section.
(c) This section shall not apply to: (1) anyone who disposes of a mercury-added
button
cell
battery; or (2) mercury-added components as contained in motor vehicles except
as provided
in subdivision
23-24.9-10(b)(2) and in accordance with such regulations as may be adopted by
the
department
in order to achieve the purposes of subdivision 23-24.9-10(b)(2); and (3) households
disposing
of lamps and products containing lamps.
23-24.9-10.
Collection of mercury-added products. -- (a) After July 1, 2005, no
mercury-added
product shall be offered for final sale or use or distribution for promotional
purposes
in Rhode Island unless the manufacturer either on its own or in concert with
other
persons
has submitted a plan for a convenient and accessible collection system for such
products
when the
consumer is finished with them and the plan has received approval of the
director.
Where a
mercury-added product is a component of another product, the collection system
must
provide
for removal and collection of the mercury-added component or collection of both
the
mercury-added
component and the product containing it.
(b) (1) This section shall not apply to the collection of mercury-added button
cell
batteries
or mercury-added lamps or products where the only mercury contained in the
product
comes
from a mercury-added button cell battery or a mercury-added lamp; and
(2) This section shall not apply to motor vehicles.
(2)
Mercury-added components in motor vehicles at end-of-life shall be collected
and
recycled
as provided in this subsection. Significant, willful failure to comply with
rules and/or
regulations
to implement the provisions of this section shall constitute, as may be
determined by
the
department, a violation of the ban established in section 23-24.9-9. No scrap
recycling
facility
or other person that receives a flattened, crushed or baled end-of-life vehicle
shall be
deemed
to be in violation of this subsection, 23-24.9-10(b)(2) and rules and
regulations pursuant
thereto
or section 23-24.9-9 if a mercury switch is found in the vehicle after its
acquisition.
For
the purposes of subsection, 23-24.9-10(b)(2) the following terms shall have the
following
meanings: (i) “Capture rate” means the annual removal, collection, and recovery
of
mercury
switches, as a percentage of the total number of mercury switches available for
removal
from
end-of-life vehicles as determined by the Department of Environmental
Management.
Capture
rate shall not include mercury switches that are inaccessible due to
significant damage to
the
motor vehicle in the area where the mercury switch is located; (ii) “Mercury
added
component”
or “Mercury switch” means a mercury-added convenience light switch assembly or
capsule
from an end-of-life motor vehicle; (iii) “Scrap recycling facility” means a
fixed location
where
machinery and equipment are utilized for processing and manufacturing scrap
metal into
prepared
grades and whose principal product is scrap iron, scrap steal, or nonferrous
metallic
scrap
for sale for remelting purposes; and (iv) “Vehicle recycler” means and
individual or entity
licensed
under the provisions of section 42-14.2-3 that engages in the business of
acquiring,
dismantling,
parts recycling from, or destroying six (6) or more end-of-life vehicles in a
calendar
year.
(A)
Manufacturers of motor vehicles sold in Rhode Island that contain mercury
switches
shall,
individually or collectively, establish and implement a collection program for
mercury
switches
to achieve a capture rate of not less than fifty percent (50%) for calendar
year 2006, and
not
less than seventy percent (70%) for calendar year 2007 and each calendar year
thereafter
through
calendar year 2017. The collection program shall be subject to the following
requirements:
(i)
On or before September 1, 2005, manufacturers of motor vehicles subject to the
collection
program requirement shall submit to the department a plan setting forth a
proposed
collection
program. At a minimum, the plan shall:
(I)
Explain how capture rate requirements are anticipated to be met through
implementation
of the plan;
(II)
Ensure that mercury switches collected are managed in accordance with the
universal
waste
rules adopted by the department;
(III)
Provide the department and scrap recycling facilities and vehicle recyclers
with
information,
training and other technical assistance required to facilitate removal and
recycling of
mercury
switches in accordance with the universal waste rules;
(IV)
Make available to the public information concerning services to remove mercury
switches
in motor vehicles;
(V)
The proposed collection program plan shall be subject to the review and
approval of
the
department, which may require adjustments or modifications to the plan.
(ii)
By January 1, 2006, manufacturers of motor vehicles subject to the collection
program
requirement shall implement a collection program plan approved by the
department; and
(iii)
For the calendar quarter ending March 31, 2006, and each calendar quarter
thereafter,
not
later than forty-five (45) days following the close of the calendar quarter,
manufacturers of
motor
vehicles subject to the collection program requirement shall provide quarterly
implementation
reports to the department, which reports shall include the number of mercury
switches
collected and the amount of mercury collected and recycled through the
collection
program.
The report shall further include, but not be limited to: a detailed description
and
documentation
of the capture rate.
(B)
In the event that the program set forth in subsection 23-24.9-10(b)(2)(A), does
not
achieve
the specified capture rates for any calendar year, the department shall
develop, issue,
administer
and enforce regulation compelling the manufacturers of motor vehicles sold in
Rhode
Island
that contain mercury switches to undertake a collection program as set forth in
this
subsection,
23-24.9-10(b)(2)(B). Provided, however, that if the department shall determine
that
the
failure to achieve the required capture rate in any year was the result of a
force-majeure, the
department
may extend the program established pursuant to subsection 23-24.9-10(b)(2)(A)
for a
period
of not less than one calendar quarter and not greater than the number of whole
calendar
quarters
equal to the number of calendar quarters affected by the force-majeure and
shall
substitute
the capture rates achieved in such calendar quarter(s) for the captures rates achieved
in
the
calendar quarter(s) affected by the force-majeure; the department shall
recalculate the annual
capture
rate for the year affected by the force-majeure using the substitute calendar
quarter(s) to
determine
whether the annual capture rate requirements set forth in subsection 23-24.9-
10(b)(2)(A)
were met. The total cost of the removal, replacement, collection and recovery
system
for
mercury switches, under this subsection, 23-24.9-10(b)(2)(B), shall be borne by
the
manufacturer
or manufacturers. The total cost shall include, but not be limited to, the
following:
(i)
A minimum of three dollars ($3.00) for each mercury switch removed by a vehicle
recycler
or by a scrap recycling facility, as partial compensation for the labor and
other costs
incurred
in the removal of the mercury switch, to be paid to the vehicle recycler or the
scrap
recycling
facility that removed the switch;
(ii)
One dollar ($1.00) for each mercury switch removed by a vehicle recycler or by
a
scrap
recycling facility to be paid to the department as partial compensation to the
department for
costs
incurred in administering and enforcing the provisions of this subchapter and
providing
services
related thereto which may include but shall not be limited to:
Training;
Packaging
in which to transport mercury switches to recycling, storage or
disposal
facilities;
Shipping
of mercury switches to recycling, storage or disposal facilities;
Recycling,
storage or disposal of the mercury switches;
Public
education materials and presentations; and
Maintenance
of appropriate systems and procedures to protect the environment
from
mercury contamination.
(3)
The provisions of subsection 23-24.9-10(b)(2) shall satisfy collection programs
and
disposal
requirements for mercury switches for all motor vehicles sold in the state.
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC01799/SUB A
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