Chapter
200
2005 -- H 6274 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED
Enacted 07/08/05
A N A C T
RELATING TO HIGHWAYS -- CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE OF STATE
ROADS
Introduced By:
Representative Paul E. Moura
Date Introduced: March 23,
2005
It is enacted
by the General Assembly as follows:
SECTION
1. Sections 24-8-15 and 24-8-26 of the General Laws in Chapter 24-8 entitled
"Construction
and Maintenance of State Roads" are hereby amended to read as follows:
24-8-15.
Snow and ice removal -- Notice of defects. -- (a) Every town or city
shall at its
own
expense keep state roads within its limits, respectively, sufficiently clear of
snow and ice so
the
roads shall be reasonably safe for travel as now required by law, and shall at
once notify in
writing
the director of transportation or his or her employees of any defect or want of
repair of
state
roads within its limits.
(b)(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law or state policy regarding
the removal
of
snow and ice from state maintained roads, the application of de-icing agents to
any road within
the
Scituate watershed shall, whenever possible and not precluded by the severity
of road
conditions,
be in the premixed ratio of four (4) parts sodium chloride to one part calcium
chloride,
which
de-icing mix shall be applied at the ratio of two (2) parts de-icing agent to
seven (7) parts
sand
at the rate of one hundred seventy (170) pounds per lane mile.
(2) All storage piles or areas where road de-icing agents are stored within the
Scituate
watershed
shall be adequately covered and stored on an impervious base to mitigate runoff
impacts
to ground and surface waters. The director of the department of transportation
shall
ensure
where funds allow, that all drivers, loaders and handlers of de-icing agents
within any
watershed
participate in training sessions in the proper application and control of road
de-icing
agents;
that de-icing vehicles, wherever feasible, operating within the Scituate
watershed area
equipped
with sensor devices to control the spread rate of de-icing materials in
relation to the
speed of
the vehicle.
(3) For purposes of this section the "Scituate watershed" shall mean
the total drainage
area
into the Scituate Reservoir -- an area of some 92.8 square miles in the towns
of Scituate,
Johnston,
Foster, Glocester, and Smithfield -- which because of its topography, soil
type, and
drainage
patterns acts as a collector of rain waters which replenish or regorge existing
pubic
drinking
water supplies in the Scituate Reservoir.
24-8-26.
Removal of snow and ice from bridges -- Notice of defects. -- (a) Every
town
or city
in which any bridge is located, which shall be maintained by the state under
the provisions
of this
chapter, shall at its own expense keep the bridge within its limits
sufficiently clear of snow
and ice
so that the bridge shall be reasonably safe for traveling, and shall at once
notify in writing
the
director of transportation or the director's employees of any defect or want of
repair in the
bridge.
The director of transportation shall upon the receipt of the information notify
any public
utility
using the bridge of the defect or want of repair.
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law or state policy regarding the
removal of
snow
and ice from state maintained roads, the application of de-icing agents to any
road within
the
Scituate watershed shall, whenever possible and not precluded by the severity
of road
conditions,
be in the premixed ratio of four (4) parts sodium chloride to one part calcium
chloride,
which
de-icing mix shall be applied at the ratio of two (2) parts de-icing agent to
seven (7) parts
sand at
the rate of one hundred seventy (170) pounds per lane mile.
(c) All storage piles or areas where road de-icing agents are stored within the
Scituate
watershed
shall be adequately covered and stored on an impervious base to mitigate runoff
impacts
to ground and surface waters. The director of the department of transportation
shall
ensure
where funds allow, that all drivers, loaders, and handlers of de-icing agents
within any
watershed
participate in training sessions in the proper application and control of road
de-icing
agents;
that de-icing vehicles, wherever feasible, operating within the Scituate
watershed area
equipped
with sensor devices to control the spread rate of de-icing materials in
relation to the
speed of
the vehicle.
(d) For purposes of this section the "Scituate watershed" shall mean
the total drainage
area
into the Scituate Reservoir -- an area of some 92.8 square miles in the towns
of Scituate,
Johnston,
Foster, Glocester, and Smithfield -- which because of its topography, soil
type, and
drainage
patterns acts as a collector of rain waters which replenish or regorge existing
public
drinking
water supplies in the Scituate Reservoir.
SECTION
2. Section 46-15.3-11 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-15.3 entitled "Public
Drinking
Water Supply System Protection" is hereby amended to read as follows:
46-15.3-11.
Disbursements from the funds. -- (a) Only suppliers which withdraw
water
from
wells, reservoirs, springs, or other original sources of potable water shall be
entitled to
disbursements
from the first of the two (2) mentioned funds created under section 46-15.3-10
administered
by the water resources board. From amounts available from bond proceeds held by
the
water resources board, that board shall disburse to each supplier contributing
to the fund a
proportional
amount based upon each supplier's pro rata withdrawal of water by volume from
wells,
reservoirs, springs, or other original sources of water averaged over the three
(3) calendar
years
preceding disbursement as determined by the water resources board. Suppliers
shall be
required
to expend this money as follows:
(1) Not less than fifty-five percent (55%) shall be spent for acquisition of
land or rights
in land or
physical improvements to acquired land required to protect the quality of raw
water of
the
water supply system. Expenditures for maintenance, administration, and payment
of taxes on
land
acquired under this chapter shall be included within this subdivision.
(2) Any remaining funds may be used for any eligible expenditures as defined in
section
46-15.3-4.
(b) The city of Providence shall make expenditures from amounts available in
the fund
held by
the city of Providence based on the same formula as in subdivisions (a)(1) and (a)(2)
above; provided,
however, the city of Providence shall be exempt from participating in the use
of
an
alternate deicing mixture within the Scituate watershed unless drinking water
supply sodium
levels
exceed fifteen (15) ppm (parts per million) for three (3) consecutive years or
seventeen
(17)
ppm (parts per million) for one year. The city of Providence will monitor
sodium levels and
report
sodium testing results to the Rhode Island department of health and the public on a yearly
basis.
If drinking water supply sodium levels exceed fifteen (15) ppm for three (3)
consecutive
years
or seventeen (17) ppm for one year, the city of Providence shall immediately
participate in
the
use of an alternative deicing mixture within the Scituate watershed. In
December of 2008, the
city
of Providence will provide a three (3) year report to the Rhode Island department of
environmental management,
the general assembly and the public. Every three (3) years, the city
of
Providence will submit a report to the general assembly on monitoring data for
sodium levels
within
the Scituate watershed. This report will include monitoring data from the
previous three
(3)
year period. provided, however,
that upon receipt of authenticated vouchers from the director
of
the department of transportation for expenditures made by the department in the
purchase of
deicing
agent alternatives in the removal of snow and ice from roads and bridges within
the
Scituate
watershed, pursuant to sections 24-8-15 and 24-8-26, the city of Providence
shall honor
the
vouchers.
(c) In making decisions about the expenditure of money under the provisions of
this
chapter,
suppliers shall take into account the following factors:
(1) The likelihood of development of the specific parcel proposed for
acquisition;
(2) The existing land uses, as well as the likelihood of development, in the
watershed;
(3) The potential threat to public drinking water sources posed by development
in the
watershed
including, but not limited to, the intensity of development, the types of land
uses,
proximity
to reservoirs and/or well heads, and the buffering and filtration capacity of
the natural
systems;
(4) Whether alternative protection measures are available and/or have been
attempted,
including
local land use regulations;
(5) The number of persons who presently depend on the sources for their
drinking water,
as well
as the number of persons who may depend on it in the future;
(6) The anticipated cost of the parcel proposed to be purchased, and whether
less than a
fee
interest may be acquired which would reduce the cost significantly while still
providing
protection
to the source;
(7) Other cost effectiveness considerations, including whether protection of
the source
can be
provided by the construction of physical improvements;
(8) Whether acquisition of the specific parcel, and the protection of the
watershed of
which it
is a part, is consistent with other planning considerations;
(9) Proposed management techniques for the parcel proposed to be acquired which
will
maximize
its capacity to protect the source.
(d) The costs of issuance of notes and bonds authorized by section 46-15.3-10
may be
payable
from any monies in the water quality protection funds.
SECTION 3. This act shall
take effect upon passage.
=======
LC02855/SUB A
=======