Chapter
268
2005 -- H 6598 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED
Enacted 07/14/05
A N A C T
RELATING TO MERCURY
REDUCTION AND EDUCATION
Introduced By: Representatives Ginaitt, Anguilla, and Naughton
Date Introduced: June 15,
2005
It is enacted
by the General Assembly as follows:
SECTION
1. Sections 23-24.9-7, 23-24.9-8, 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:
23-24.9-7.
Phase-out and exemptions. -- (a) No mercury-added product shall be
offered
for
final sale or use or distributed for promotional purposes in Rhode Island if
the mercury
content
of the product exceeds:
(1) One gram (1000 milligrams) for mercury-added fabricated products or two
hundred
fifty
(250) parts per million (ppm) for mercury-added formulated products, effective July
January
1, 2005
2006;
(2) One hundred (100) milligrams for mercury-added fabricated products or fifty
(50)
parts
per million (ppm) for mercury-added formulated products, effective July 1,
2007; and
(3) Ten (10) milligrams for mercury-added fabricated products or ten (10) parts
per
million
(ppm) for mercury-added formulated products, effective July 1, 2009.
(b) For a product that contains one or more mercury-added products as a
component, this
section
is applicable to each component part or parts and not to the entire product.
For example, if
an iron
has a mercury switch, the phase-out applies to the switch and not the entire
iron.
(c) For a product that contains more than one mercury-added product as a
component,
the
phase-out limits specified in subsection (a) of this section apply to each
component and not
the sum
of the mercury in all of the components. For example, for a car that contains
mercury-
added
switches and lighting, the phase-out limits would apply to each component
separately, and
not the
combined total of mercury in all of the components.
(d) (1) Fluorescent lamps and high intensity discharge (HID) lamps,
including metal
halide,
high pressure sodium, and mercury vapor types, shall be exempt from the requirements of
subsection
(a) of this section. As of January 1, 2010, the mercury content of fluorescent
bulbs
shall
either not exceed ten (10) milligrams or the manufacturer shall comply with the
exemption
requirements
pursuant to subsection (f) of this section.
(2) Specialized lighting used in the entertainment industry, such as metal
halide lights,
shall be
exempted from the requirements of section 23-24.9-7(a).
(e) A mercury-added product shall be exempt from the limits on total mercury
content
set
forth in subsection (f) of this section if the level of mercury or mercury
compounds contained
in the
product are required in order to comply with federal or state health or safety
requirements.
In order
to claim exemption under this section, the manufacturer must notify the
department, in
writing,
and provide the legal justification for the claim of exemption. In addition,
laboratory
chemical
standards shall be exempted from the requirements of subsection (a) of this
section.
(f) Manufacturers of a mercury-added product may apply to the director for an
exemption
for no more than two (2) five (5) years from the limits on total
mercury content set
forth in
subsection (a) of this section for a product or category of products.
Applications for
exemptions
must: (1) document the basis for the requested exemption or renewal of
exemption;
(2)
describe how the manufacturer will ensure that a system exists for the proper
collection,
transportation
and processing of the product(s) at the end of their useful life; and (3)
document
the
readiness of all necessary parties to perform as intended in the planned
system.
(g) The director may grant, with modifications or conditions, an exemption for
a product
or
category of products if he or she finds: (i) a system exists for the proper
collection,
transportation
and processing of the mercury-added product, including direct return of a waste
product
to the manufacturer, an industry or trade group supported collection and
recycling
system,
or other similar private or public sector efforts; and (ii) he or she finds each
of the
following
criteria are met:
(1) Use of the product is beneficial to the environment or protective of public
health or
protective
of public safety; and/or
(2) There is no technically feasible alternative to the use of mercury in the
product; and
(3) There is no comparable non-mercury-added product available at reasonable
cost.
Prior to issuing an exemption, the director shall consult with neighboring
states and
provinces
and regional organizations to promote consistency. The state shall avoid, to
the extent
feasible,
inconsistencies in the implementation of this section. Upon reapplication by
the
manufacturer
and findings by the director of continued eligibility under the criteria of
this
subsection
and of compliance by the manufacturer with the conditions of the director's
original
approval,
an exemption may be renewed one or more times and each renewal may be for a
period
of no
longer than two (2) five (5) years.
23-24.9-8.
Labeling required for certain products. -- (a) Mercury-added products.
- (1)
Effective
July January 1, 2005 2006, a manufacturer may not
sell at retail in this state or to a
retailer
in this state, and a retailer may not knowingly sell, a mercury-added product
unless the
item is
labeled pursuant to this subsection. The label must clearly inform the
purchaser or
consumer
that mercury is present in the item and that the item may not be disposed of or
placed in
waste
stream destined for disposal until the mercury is removed or reused, recycled
or otherwise
managed
to ensure that it does not become part of solid waste or wastewater.
Manufacturers shall
affix to
mercury-added products labels that conform to the requirements of this
subsection.
(2) The department shall adopt rules to establish standards for affixing labels
to the
product and
product package. The rules must strive for consistency shall be
consistent with
labeling
programs in other states and provide for approval of alternative compliance
plans by the
department.
The manufacturer of a mercury-added product is in compliance with the
requirements
of this subsection if the manufacturer is in compliance with the labeling
requirements
of another state. This subsection
does not apply to mercury-added lamps, mercury-
added
button cell batteries and products whose only mercury component is a mercury
button cell
battery
or a mercury added lamp.
(b) Mercury-added lamps: large use applications. - (1) A person who sells
mercury-
added
lamps to the owner or manager of an industrial, commercial or office building
or to any
person
who replaces or removes from service outdoor lamps that contain mercury shall
clearly
inform
the purchaser in writing on the invoice for the lamps or in a separate document
that the
lamps
contain mercury, a hazardous substance that is regulated by federal and state
law, and that
they may
not be placed in solid waste destined for disposal. Retail establishments that
incidentally
sell mercury-added lamps to the specified purchasers are exempt from the
requirements
of this subsection.
(2) A person who contracts with the owner or manager of an industrial,
commercial or
office
building or with a person responsible for outdoor lighting to remove from
service mercury-
added
lamps shall clearly inform in writing the person for whom the work is being
done that the
lamps
being removed from service contain mercury and what the contractor's
arrangements are
for the
management of the mercury in the removed lamps.
23-24.9-9.
Disposal ban. -- (a) After Except as otherwise provided for
in this chapter,
after
July 1, 2005 2006, 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; (2) mercury-added components as contained in motor vehicles; and (3)
households
disposing
of lamps and products containing lamps.
(d)
The restrictions on the disposal of mercury-added components in motor vehicles
shall
be as
set forth in subsection (a) of this section effective January 1, 2006, and
shall be
implemented
as provided for in subdivision
(c)(2) of this section and subdivision
23-24.9-10(b)(2).
23-24.9-10.
Collection of mercury-added products. -- (a) After July January
1, 2005
2006, 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 implemented a plan system,
after review and approval of the
director, for a the convenient and accessible
collection system for of 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. Mercury-added components in motor vehicles
shall be
collected
and recycled as provided for in subsection (b)(2) of this section.
(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.
SECTION
2. Chapter 23-24.9 of the General Laws entitled "Mercury Reduction and
Education
Act" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections:
23-24.9-10.1.
Resource recovery corporation option. -- The department and the
Rhode
Island
Resource Recovery Corporation shall establish a statewide network for the
collection of
mercury-added
products when the household consumer is finished with them. Manufacturers,
except
motor vehicle manufacturers subject to the provisions of subsection
23-24.9(10)(b)(2) of
mercury-added
products may satisfy their obligations, as set forth in subsection 23-24.9-10(a),
by
entering
into a written agreement with those agencies to support the statewide program
including,
but
not limited to, advertisement, education and/or funding through a system
established in
regulation.
23-24.9-20.1.
Effective dates for implementation. – Notwithstanding the effective
date
of
January 1, 2006, set forth in subsections 23-24.9-7(a)(1), 23-24.9-8(a), and
23-24.9-10(a), the
initial
deadline for complying with the requirements of these subsections shall be
January 1,
2006,
or ninety (90) days after the effective date of regulations adopted by the
department in
order
to effectuate the purposes of the subsections, whichever date is the later.
SECTION
3. Section 42-17.1-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-17.1 entitled
"Department
of Environmental Management" is hereby amended to read as follows:
42-17.1-2.
Powers and duties. -- The director of environmental management shall
have
the
following powers and duties:
(a) To supervise and control the protection, development, planning, and
utilization of the
natural
resources of the state, such resources, including but not limited to, water,
plants, trees,
soil,
clay, sand, gravel, rocks and other minerals, air, mammals, birds, reptiles,
amphibians, fish,
shellfish,
and other forms of aquatic, insect, and animal life;
(b) To exercise all functions, powers, and duties heretofore vested in the
department of
agriculture
and conservation, and in each of the divisions of the department, such as the
promotion
of agriculture and animal husbandry in their several branches, including the
inspection
and
suppression of contagious diseases among animals, the regulation of the
marketing of farm
products,
the inspection of orchards and nurseries, the protection of trees and shrubs
from
injurious
insects and diseases, protection from forest fires, the inspection of apiaries
and the
suppression
of contagious diseases among bees, prevention of the sale of adulterated or
misbranded
agricultural seeds, promotion and encouragement of the work of farm bureaus in
cooperation
with the University of Rhode Island, farmers' institutes and the various
organizations
established
for the purpose of developing an interest in agriculture, together with such
other
agencies
and activities as the governor and the general assembly may from time to time
place
under
the control of the department, and as heretofore vested by such of the
following chapters
and
sections of the general laws as are presently applicable to the department of
environmental
management
and which were previously applicable to the department of natural resources and
the
department
of agriculture and conservation or to any of its divisions: chapters 1 through
22,
inclusive,
as amended, in title 2 entitled "Agriculture and Forestry;" chapters
1 through 17,
inclusive,
as amended, in title 4 entitled "Animals and Animal Husbandry;"
chapters 1 through
19,
inclusive, as amended, in title 20 entitled "Fish and Wildlife;"
chapters 1 through 32,
inclusive,
as amended, in title 21 entitled "Food and Drugs;" chapter 7 of title
23 as amended,
entitled
"Mosquito Abatement;" and by any other general or public law relating
to the department
of
agriculture and conservation or to any of its divisions or bureaus;
(c) To exercise all the functions, powers, and duties heretofore vested in the
division of
parks
and recreation of the department of public works by chapters 1, 2, and 5 in
title 32 entitled
"Parks
and Recreational Areas;" by chapter 22.5 of title 23, as amended, entitled
"Drowning
Prevention
and Lifesaving;" and by any other general or public law relating to the
division of
parks
and recreation;
(d) To exercise all the functions, powers, and duties heretofore vested in the
division of
harbors
and rivers of the department of public works, or in the department itself by
such as were
previously
applicable to the division or the department, of chapters 1 through 22 and
sections
thereof,
as amended, in title 46 entitled "Waters and Navigation"; and by any
other general or
public
law relating to the division of harbors and rivers;
(e) To exercise all the functions, powers and duties heretofore vested in the
department
of
health by chapters 25, 18.9, and 19.5 of title 23, as amended, entitled
"Health and Safety;" and
by
chapters 12 and 16 of title 46, as amended, entitled "Waters and
Navigation"; by chapters 3, 4,
5, 6, 7,
9, 11, 13, 18, and 19 of title 4, as amended, entitled "Animals and Animal
Husbandry;"
and
those functions, powers, and duties specifically vested in the director of
environmental
management
by the provisions of section 21-2-22, as amended, entitled "Inspection of
Animals
and
Milk;" together with other powers and duties of the director of the
department of health as are
incidental
to or necessary for the performance of the functions transferred by this
section;
(f) To cooperate with the Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation in its
planning
and promotional functions, particularly in regard to those resources relating
to
agriculture,
fisheries, and recreation;
(g) To cooperate with, advise, and guide conservation commissions of cities and
towns
created
under chapter 35 of title 45 entitled "Conservation Commissions", as
enacted by chapter
203 of
the Public Laws, 1960;
(h) To assign or reassign, with the approval of the governor, any functions,
duties, or
powers
established by this chapter to any agency within the department, except as
hereinafter
limited;
(i) To cooperate with the water resources board and to provide to the board
facilities,
administrative
support, staff services, and such other services as the board shall reasonably
require
for its operation and, in cooperation with the board and the statewide planning
program to
formulate
and maintain a long range guide plan and implementing program for development
of
major
water sources transmissions systems needed to furnish water to regional and
local
distribution
systems;
(j) To cooperate with the solid waste management corporation and to provide to
the
corporation
such facilities, administrative support, staff services and such other services
within
the
department as the corporation shall reasonably require for its operation;
(k) To provide for the maintenance of waterways and boating facilities,
consistent with
chapter
6.1 of title 46, by: (1) establishing minimum standards for upland beneficial
use and
disposal
of dredged material; (2) promulgating and enforcing rules for water quality,
ground
water
protection, and fish and wildlife protection pursuant to section 42-17.1-24;
(3) planning for
the
upland beneficial use and/or disposal of dredged material in areas not under
the jurisdiction of
the
council pursuant to section 46-23-6(2); and (4) cooperating with the coastal
resources
management
council in the development and implementation of comprehensive programs for
dredging
as provided for in sections 46-23-6(1)(ii)(H) and 46-23-18.3; and (5) monitoring
dredge
material
management and disposal sites in accordance with the protocols established
pursuant to
section
46-6.1-5(3) and the comprehensive program provided for in section
46-23-6(1)(ii)(H); no
powers or
duties granted herein shall be construed to abrogate the powers or duties
granted to the
coastal
resources management council under chapter 23 of title 46, as amended;
(l) To establish minimum standards, subject to the approval of the environmental
standards
board, relating to the location, design, construction and maintenance of all
sewage
disposal
systems;
(m) To enforce, by such means as provided by law, the standards for the quality
of air,
and
water, and the design, construction and operation of all sewage disposal
systems; any order or
notice
issued by the director relating to the location, design, construction or
maintenance of a
sewage
disposal system shall be eligible for recordation under chapter 13 of title 34.
The director
shall
forward the order or notice to the city or town wherein the subject property is
located and
the
order or notice shall be recorded in the general index by the appropriate
municipal official in
the land
evidence records in the city or town wherein the subject property is located.
Any
subsequent
transferee of that property shall be responsible for complying with the
requirements of
the
order or notice. Upon satisfactory completion of the requirements of the order
or notice, the
director
shall provide written notice of the same, which notice shall be similarly
eligible for
recordation.
The original written notice shall be forwarded to the city or town wherein the
subject
property
is located and the notice of satisfactory completion shall be recorded in the
general index
by the
appropriate municipal official in the land evidence records in the city or town
wherein the
subject
property is located. A copy of the written notice shall be forwarded to the
owner of the
subject
property within five (5) days of a request for it, and, in any event, shall be
forwarded to
the
owner of the subject property within thirty (30) days after correction;
(n) To establish minimum standards for the establishment and maintenance of
salutary
environmental
conditions;
(o) To establish and enforce minimum standards for permissible types of
septage,
industrial
waste disposal sites and waste oil disposal sites;
(p) To establish minimum standards subject to the approval of the environmental
standards
board for permissible types of refuse disposal facilities, the design,
construction,
operation,
and maintenance of disposal facilities; and the location of various types of
facilities;
(q) To exercise all functions, powers, and duties necessary for the administration
of
chapter
19.1 of title 23 entitled "Rhode Island Hazardous Waste Management
Act.";
(r) To designate in writing any person in any department of the state
government or any
official
of a district, county, city, town, or other governmental unit, with that
official's consent, to
enforce
any rule, regulation, or order promulgated and adopted by the director under
any
provision
of law, provided, however, that enforcement of powers of the coastal resources
management
council shall be assigned only to employees of the department of environmental
management,
except by mutual agreement or as otherwise provided in chapter 23 of title 46.
(s) To issue and enforce such rules, regulations, and orders as may be
necessary to carry
out the
duties assigned to the director and the department by any provision of law; and
to conduct
such
investigations and hearings and to issue, suspend, and revoke such licenses as
may be
necessary
to enforce those rules, regulations, and orders;
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 42-35-9 to the contrary, no
informal
disposition
of a contested licensing matter shall occur where resolution substantially
deviates
from the
original application unless all interested parties shall be notified of said
proposed
resolution
and provided with opportunity to comment upon said resolution pursuant to
applicable
law and
any rules and regulations established by the director.
(t) To enter, examine or survey at any reasonable time such places as the
director deems
necessary
to carry out his or her responsibilities under any provision of law subject to
the
following
provisions:
(1) For criminal investigations, the director shall, pursuant to chapter 5 of
title 12, seek a
search
warrant from an official of a court authorized to issue warrants, unless a
search without a
warrant
is otherwise allowed or provided by law;
(2) (A) All administrative inspections shall be conducted pursuant to administrative
guidelines
promulgated by the department in accordance with chapter 35 of title 42.
(B) A warrant shall not be required for administrative inspections if conducted
under the
following
circumstances, in accordance with the applicable constitutional standards:
(i) For closely regulated industries;
(ii) In situations involving open fields or conditions that are in plain view;
(iii) In emergency situations;
(iv) In situations presenting an imminent threat to the environment or public
health,
safety
or welfare;
(v) If the owner, operator, or agent in charge of the facility, property, site
or location
consents;
or
(vi) In other situations in which a warrant is not constitutionally required.
(C) Whenever it shall be constitutionally or otherwise required by law, or
whenever the
director
in his or her discretion deems it advisable, an administrative search warrant,
or its
functional
equivalent, may be obtained by the director from a neutral magistrate for the
purpose
of
conducting an administrative inspection. The warrant shall be issued in
accordance with the
applicable
constitutional standards for the issuance of administrative search warrants.
The
administrative
standard of probable cause, not the criminal standard of probable cause, shall
apply to
applications for administrative search warrants.
(i) The need for, or reliance upon, an administrative warrant shall not be
construed as
requiring
the department to forfeit the element of surprise in its inspection efforts.
(ii) An administrative warrant issued pursuant to this subsection must be
executed and
returned
within ten (10) days of its issuance date unless, upon a showing of need for
additional
time,
the court orders otherwise.
(iii) An administrative warrant may authorize the review and copying of
documents that
are
relevant to the purpose of the inspection. If documents must be seized for the
purpose of
copying,
and the warrant authorizes such seizure, the person executing the warrant shall
prepare
an
inventory of the documents taken. The time, place and manner regarding the
making of the
inventory
shall be set forth in the terms of the warrant itself, as dictated by the
court. A copy of
the
inventory shall be delivered to the person from whose possession or facility
the documents
were
taken. The seized documents shall be copied as soon as feasible under
circumstances
preserving
their authenticity, then returned to the person from whose possession or
facility the
documents
were taken.
(iv) An administrative warrant may authorize the taking of samples of air,
water or soil
or of
materials generated, stored or treated at the facility, property, site or location.
Upon request,
the
department shall make split samples available to the person whose facility,
property, site or
location
is being inspected.
(v) Service of an administrative warrant may be required only to the extent
provided for
in the terms
of the warrant itself, by the issuing court.
(D) Penalties. - Any willful and unjustified refusal of right of entry and
inspection to
department
personnel pursuant to an administrative warrant shall constitute a contempt of
court
and
shall subject the refusing party to sanctions, which in the courts discretion
may result in up to
six (6)
months imprisonment and/or a monetary fine of up to ten thousand dollars
($10,000) per
refusal.
(u) To give notice of an alleged violation of law to the person responsible
therefor
whenever
the director determines that there are reasonable grounds to believe that there
is a
violation
of any provision of law within his or her jurisdiction or of any rule or
regulation adopted
pursuant
to authority granted to him or her, unless other notice and hearing procedure
is
specifically
provided by that law. Nothing in this chapter shall limit the authority of the
attorney
general
to prosecute offenders as required by law.
(1) The notice shall provide for a time within which the alleged violation
shall be
remedied,
and shall inform the person to whom it is directed that a written request for a
hearing
on the
alleged violation may be filed with the director within ten (10) days after
service of the
notice.
The notice will be deemed properly served upon a person if a copy thereof is
served him
or her
personally, or sent by registered or certified mail to his or her last known
address, or if he
or she
is served with notice by any other method of service now or hereafter
authorized in a civil
action
under the laws of this state. If no written request for a hearing is made to
the director
within
ten (10) days of the service of notice, the notice shall automatically become a
compliance
order.
(2) (A) Whenever the director determines that there exists a violation of any
law, rule, or
regulation
within his or her jurisdiction which requires immediate action to protect the
environment,
he or she may, without prior notice of violation or hearing, issue an immediate
compliance
order stating the existence of the violation and the action he or she deems
necessary.
The
compliance order shall become effective immediately upon service or within such
time as is
specified
by the director in such order. No request for a hearing on an immediate
compliance
order
may be made.
(B) Any immediate compliance order issued under this section without notice and
prior
hearing
shall be effective for no longer than forty-five (45) days, provided, however, that
for good
cause
shown the order may be extended one additional period not exceeding forty-five
(45) days.
(3) If a person upon whom a notice of violation has been served under the
provisions of
this
section or if a person aggrieved by any such notice of violation requests a
hearing before the
director
within ten (10) days of the service of notice of violation, the director shall
set a time and
place
for the hearing, and shall give the person requesting that hearing at least
five (5) days
written
notice thereof. After the hearing, the director may make findings of fact and
shall sustain,
modify,
or withdraw the notice of violation. If the director sustains or modifies the
notice, that
decision
shall be deemed a compliance order and shall be served upon the person
responsible in
any
manner provided for the service of the notice in this section.
(4) The compliance order shall state a time within which the violation shall be
remedied,
and the
original time specified in the notice of violation shall be extended to the
time set in the
order.
(5) Whenever a compliance order has become effective, whether automatically
where no
hearing
has been requested, where an immediate compliance order has been issued, or
upon
decision
following a hearing, the director may institute injunction proceedings in the
superior
court of
the state for enforcement of the compliance order and for appropriate temporary
relief,
and in
that proceeding the correctness of a compliance order shall be presumed and the
person
attacking
the order shall bear the burden of proving error in the compliance order,
except that the
director
shall bear the burden of proving in the proceeding the correctness of an
immediate
compliance
order. The remedy provided for in this section shall be cumulative and not
exclusive
and
shall be in addition to remedies relating to the removal or abatement of
nuisances or any
other
remedies provided by law.
(6) Any party aggrieved by a final judgment of the superior court may, within
thirty (30)
days
from the date of entry of such judgment, petition the supreme court for a writ
of certiorari to
review
any questions of law. The petition shall set forth the errors claimed. Upon the
filing of the
petition
with the clerk of the supreme court, the supreme court may, if it sees fit,
issue its writ of
certiorari;
(v) To impose administrative penalties in accordance with the provisions of
chapter 17.6
of this title
and to direct that such penalties be paid into the account established by
subsection (z)
of this
section; and
(w) The following definitions shall apply in the interpretation of the
provisions of this
chapter:
(1) Director: The term director shall mean the director of environmental
management of
the
state of Rhode Island or his or her duly authorized agent.
(2) Person: The term person shall include any individual, group of individuals,
firm,
corporation,
association, partnership or private or public entity, including a district,
county, city,
town, or
other governmental unit or agent thereof, and in the case of a corporation, any
individual
having
active and general supervision of the properties of such corporation.
(3) Service: (a) Service upon a corporation under this section shall be deemed
to include
service
upon both the corporation and upon the person having active and general
supervision of
the
properties of such corporation.
(b) For purposes of calculating the time within which a claim for a hearing is
made
pursuant
to section 42-17.1-2(u)(1) heretofore, service shall be deemed to be the date
of receipt of
such
notice or three (3) days from the date of mailing of said notice, whichever
shall first occur.
(x) (1) To conduct surveys of the present private and public camping and other
recreational
areas available and to determine the need for and location of such other
camping and
recreational
areas as may be deemed necessary and in the public interest of the state of
Rhode
Island
and to report back its findings on an annual basis to the general assembly on
or before
March 1
of every year;
(2) Additionally, the director of the department of environmental management
shall take
such
additional steps, including but not limited to, matters related to funding as
may be necessary
to
establish such other additional recreational facilities and areas as are deemed
to be in the public
interest.
(y) (1) To apply for and accept grants and bequests of funds with the approval
of the
director
of administration from other states, interstate agencies and independent
authorities, and
private
firms, individuals and foundations, for the purpose of carrying out his or her
lawful
responsibilities.
The funds shall be deposited with the general treasurer in a restricted receipt
account
created in the Natural Resources Program for funds made available for that
program's
purposes
or in a restricted receipt account created in the Environmental Protection
Program for
funds
made available for that program's purposes. All expenditures from the accounts
shall be
subject
to appropriation by the general assembly, and shall be expended in accordance
with the
provisions
of the grant or bequest. In the event that a donation or bequest is unspecified
or in the
event
that the trust account balance shows a surplus after the project as provided
for in the grant
or
bequest has been completed, the director may utilize said appropriated
unspecified or
appropriated
surplus funds for enhanced management of the department's forest and outdoor
public
recreation areas, or other projects or programs that promote the accessibility
of recreational
opportunities
for Rhode Island residents and visitors.
(2) The director shall submit to the House Fiscal Advisor and the Senate Fiscal
Advisor,
by
October 1 of each year, a detailed report on the amount of funds received and
the uses made of
such
funds.
(z) To establish fee schedules by regulation with the approval of the governor
for the
processing
of applications and the performing of related activities in connection with the
department's
responsibilities pursuant to subdivision (1) of this section, chapter 19.1 of
title 23 as
it
relates to inspections performed by the department to determine compliance with
chapter 19.1
and
rules and regulations promulgated in accordance therewith, chapter 18.9 of
title 23 as it
relates
to inspections performed by the department to determine compliance with chapter
18.9
and the
rules and regulations promulgated in accordance therewith, chapters 19.5 and 23
of title
23;
chapter 12 of title 46 insofar as it relates to water quality certifications
and related reviews
performed
pursuant to provisions of the federal Clean Water Act, the regulation and
administration
of underground storage tanks and all other programs administered under chapter
12 of
title 46 and section 2-1-18 et seq., and chapter 13.1 of title 46 and chapter
13.2 of title 46
insofar
as they relate to any reviews and related activities performed under the
provisions of the
Groundwater
Protection Act, chapter 23-24.9 as it relates to the regulation and
administration of
mercury-added
products, and chapter 17.7 of this
title insofar as it relates to administrative
appeals
of all enforcement, permitting and licensing matters to the administrative
adjudication
division
for environmental matters. Two fee ranges shall be required: for "Appeal
of enforcement
actions",
a range of fifty dollars ($50) to one hundred dollars ($100), and for
"Appeal of
application
decisions", a range of five hundred dollars ($500) to ten thousand dollars
($10,000).
The
monies from the administrative adjudication fees will be deposited as general
revenues and
the
amounts appropriated shall be used for the costs associated with operating the
administrative
adjudication
division.
There is hereby established an account within the general fund to be called the
water and
air
protection program. The account shall consist of sums appropriated for water
and air pollution
control
and waste monitoring programs and the state controller is hereby authorized and
directed
to draw
his or her orders upon the general treasurer for the payment of such sums or
such portions
thereof
as may be required from time to time upon receipt by him or her of properly
authenticated
vouchers.
All amounts collected under the authority of this subdivision for the sewage
disposal
system
program and fresh waters wetlands program will be deposited as general revenues
and the
amounts
appropriated shall be used for the purposes of administering and operating the
programs.
The
director shall submit to the house fiscal advisor and the senate fiscal advisor
by January 15 of
each
year a detailed report on the amount of funds obtained from fines and fees and
the uses made
of such
funds.
(aa) To establish and maintain a list or inventory of areas within the state
worthy of
special
designation as "scenic" to include but not be limited to certain
state roads or highways,
scenic
vistas and scenic areas, and to make the list available to the public.
(bb) To establish and maintain an inventory of all interests in land held by
public and
private
land trust and to exercise all powers vested herein to insure the preservation
of all
identified
lands.
(1) The director may promulgate and enforce rules and regulations to provide
for the
orderly
and consistent protection, management, continuity of ownership and purpose, and
centralized
records-keeping for lands, water, and open spaces owned in fee or controlled in
full or
in part
through other interests, rights, or devices such as conservation easements or
restrictions,
by
private and public land trusts in Rhode Island. The director may charge a
reasonable fee for
filing
of each document submitted by a land trust.
(2) The term "public land trust" means any public instrumentality
created by a Rhode
Island municipality
for the purposes stated herein and financed by means of public funds
collected
and appropriated by the municipality. The term "private land trust"
means any group of
five (5)
or more private citizens of Rhode Island who shall incorporate under the laws
of Rhode
Island
as a nonbusiness corporation for the purposes stated herein, or a national
organization such
as the
nature conservancy. The main purpose of either a public or a private land trust
shall be the
protection,
acquisition, or control of land, water, wildlife, wildlife habitat, plants,
and/or other
natural
features, areas, or open space for the purpose of managing or maintaining, or
causing to
be
managed or maintained by others, the land, water, and other natural amenities
in any
undeveloped
and relatively natural state in perpetuity. A private land trust must be
granted
exemption
from federal income tax under Internal Revenue Code 501c(3) [26 U.S.C. section
501(c)(3)]within
two (2) years of its incorporation in Rhode Island or it may not continue to
function
as a land trust in Rhode Island. A private land trust may not be incorporated
for the
exclusive
purpose of acquiring or accepting property or rights in property from a single
individual,
family, corporation, business, partnership, or other entity. Membership in any
private
land
trust must be open to any individual subscribing to the purposes of the land
trust and
agreeing
to abide by its rules and regulations including payment of reasonable dues.
(3) (A) Private land trusts will, in their articles of association or their
by-laws, as
appropriate,
provide for the transfer to an organization created for the same or similar
purposes
the
assets, lands and land rights and interests held by the land trust in the event
of termination or
dissolution
of the land trust.
(B) All land trusts, public and private, will record in the public records of
the appropriate
towns
and cities in Rhode Island all deeds, conservation easements or restrictions or
other
interests
and rights acquired in land and will also file copies of all such documents and
current
copies
of their articles of association, their by-laws, and annual reports with the
secretary of state,
and with
the director of the Rhode Island department of environmental management. The
director
is
hereby directed to establish and maintain permanently a system for keeping
records of all
private
and public land trust land holdings in Rhode Island.
(cc) The director will contact in writing, not less often than once every two
(2) years,
each
public or private land trust to ascertain: that all lands held by the land
trust are recorded with
the
director; the current status and condition of each land holding; that any funds
or other assets
of the
land trust held as endowment for specific lands have been properly audited at
least once
within
the two (2) year period; the name of the successor organization named in the
public or
private
land trust's by-laws or articles of association; and any other information the
director
deems
essential to the proper and continuous protection and management of land and
interests or
rights
in land held by the land trust.
In the event that the director determines that a public or private land trust
holding land or
interest
in land appears to have become inactive, he or she shall initiate proceedings
to effect the
termination
of the land trust and the transfer of its lands, assets, land rights, and land
interests to
the
successor organization named in the defaulting trust's by-laws or articles of
association or to
another
organization created for the same or similar purposes. Should such a transfer
not be
possible,
then the land trust, assets, and interest and rights in land will be held in
trust by the state
of Rhode
Island and managed by the director for the purposes stated at the time of
original
acquisition
by the trust. Any trust assets or interests other than land or rights in land
accruing to
the
state under such circumstances will be held and managed as a separate fund for
the benefit of
the
designated trust lands.
(dd) Consistent with federal standards, issue and enforce such rules,
regulations and
orders
as may be necessary to establish requirements for maintaining evidence of
financial
responsibility
for taking corrective action and compensating third parties for bodily injury
and
property
damage caused by sudden and non-sudden accidental releases arising from
operating
underground
storage tanks.
(ee) To enforce, by such means as provided by law, the standards for the
quality of air,
and
water, and the location, design, construction and operation of all underground
storage
facilities
used for storing petroleum products or hazardous materials; any order or notice
issued
by the
director relating to the location, design construction, operation or
maintenance of an
underground
storage facility used for storing petroleum products or hazardous materials
shall be
eligible
for recordation under chapter 13 of title 34. The director shall forward the
order or notice
to the
city or town wherein the subject facility is located, and the order or notice
shall be recorded
in the general
index by the appropriate municipal officer in the land evidence records in the
city
or town
wherein the subject facility is located. Any subsequent transferee of that
facility shall be
responsible
for complying with the requirements of the order or notice. Upon satisfactory
completion
of the requirements of the order or notice, the director shall provide written
notice of
the
same, which notice shall be eligible for recordation. The original written
notice shall be
forwarded
to the city or town wherein the subject facility is located, and the notice of
satisfactory
completion
shall be recorded in the general index by the appropriate municipal official in
the land
evidence
records in the city or town wherein the subject facility is located. A copy of
the written
notice
shall be forwarded to the owner of the subject facility within five (5) days of
a request for
it, and,
in any event, shall be forwarded to the owner of the subject facility within
thirty (30) days
after
correction.
SECTION 4. This act shall
take effect upon passage.
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LC03500/SUB A
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