ARTICLE 30 SUBSTITUTE A
RELATING TO BAYS, RIVERS, AND WATERSHED
COORDINATION TEAM
SECTION 1. Title 46 of the General Laws entitled
"Waters and Navigation” is hereby amended by adding thereto the following
chapter:
CHAPTER 12.11
UNIFORM SEPTAGE DISPOSAL FEE
46-12.11-1. Legislative
findings. – The general assembly hereby finds and declares as
follows:
(1) The bays, rivers, and
associated watersheds of Rhode Island are unique and unparalleled natural
resources that provide significant cultural, ecological, and economic benefit
to the state, and it is in the best interest of the state and its citizens to
preserve, protect, and restore our bays, rivers, and associated watersheds.
(2) The formation of the
Rhode Island Bays, Rivers, and Watersheds Coordination Team, pursuant to
chapter 46-31 of the general laws, provides for the coordination of the
functions, programs, and regulations that affect the bays, rivers, and
watersheds and serves as the most effective way to transcend the limited
responsibilities and jurisdictions of each agency, to address complex issues
using an ecosystem-based approach, and to provide for continuity over time.
(3) Discharges of wastewater
from wastewater treatment facilities, despite the fact that these discharges
are carefully regulated and monitored, are known sources of pollution that
affect the water quality of the bays, rivers, and associated watersheds of
Rhode Island.
(4) Wastewater treatment
facilities collect wastewater both from users of sewer systems, who pay fees
for the utilization of the systems, and from septage transporters, who collect
septage from users of onsite sewage disposal systems.
(5) All persons or entities
generating pollutants that affect Rhode Island’s bays, rivers and watersheds,
including those who utilize onsite sewage disposal systems, should be required
to contribute to the costs of providing effective pollution control, mitigating
environmental degradation of ecosystems, restoring impaired ecosystems, and
monitoring the environment to characterize the impacts of the pollutant
loadings, including changes that may occur as the level of treatment is
improved.
46-12.11-2. Definitions – As
used in this chapter, unless the context shall clearly indicate otherwise:
(1) “Director” shall mean the
director of the department of environmental management.
(2) “Disposal facility” shall
mean any wastewater treatment facility, or portion thereof , or any other
facility that receives septage from septage transporters, pursuant to
authorization by the department of environmental management.
(3) “Disposal facility
operator” shall mean the person responsible for operating the disposal
facility, who has authority to charge fees for the receipt of septage.
(4) “Person” shall mean an
individual, trust, firm, joint stock company, corporation (including a
government corporation), partnership, association, the Federal government, or
any agency or subdivision thereof, a state, municipality, commission, political
subdivision of a state, or any interstate body.
(5) “Septage” shall mean any
solid, liquid or semi-solid removed from a septic tank, cesspool, privy,
domestic or other wastewater holding tank, or similar onsite sewage disposal
system.
(6) “Septage transporter”
shall mean any person lawfully authorized to transport septage.
46-12.11-3. Uniform septage
disposal fee created. – There is hereby created and
established a uniform septage disposal fee.
46-12.11-4. Assessment,
collection, and deposit of fee. -- (a) Effective July 1, 2007,
a uniform septage disposal fee in the amount of one dollar ($1.00) per every
hundred gallons of septage, as defined by the director pursuant to subsection
(d) of this section, shall be imposed on the disposal of septage at all
disposal facilities in the state.
(b) The fee shall be assessed
by the disposal facility operator based on the volume of septage delivered by
the septage transporter. The septage
transporter shall be liable for the fee until it has been paid to the state,
except that payment to the applicable disposal facility is sufficient to
relieve the septage transporter from further liability for the fee.
(c) The fees collected by the
disposal facility operator shall be remitted four times per year to the state on
a schedule prescribed by the director in regulation. All fees collected pursuant to this chapter shall be deposited in
the Bays, Rivers & Watersheds Fund, established pursuant to section
46-31-12.1 of the general laws, and shall be dispersed according to the
purposes of that fund.
(d) The director may adopt
all necessary rules and regulations necessary for the administration and
enforcement of this chapter, including but not limited to, defining the types
of septage, e.g., residential, commercial, and industrial that are subject to
the fee.
SECTION 2. Chapter 46-31 of
the General Laws entitled "The Rhode Island Bays, Rivers, and Watersheds
Coordination Team” is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section:
46-31-12.1. Bays, Rivers and
Watersheds Fund -- (a) There is hereby established a
restricted receipt account within the Department of Environmental Management to
be called the Bays, Rivers and Watersheds Fund;
(b) The fund shall consist of
any funds which the state may from time to time appropriate, as well as money
received as gifts, grants, bequests, donations or other funds from any public
or private sources, as well as all fees collected pursuant to section
46-23-1(f)(2) for the leasing of submerged lands for transatlantic cables, and all
fees collected pursuant to chapter 46-12.11 for the disposal of septage;
(c) All funds, monies, and
fees collected pursuant to this section shall be deposited in the Bays, Rivers
and Watersheds Fund, and shall be disbursed by the Rhode Island Bays, Rivers,
and Watersheds Coordination Team consistent with the purposes and duties of the
team as set forth in chapter 46-31. All
expenditures from the fund shall be subject to appropriation by the general
assembly.
SECTION 3. Section 46-23-1 of
the General Laws in Chapter 46-23 entitled "Coastal Resources Management
Council” is hereby amended to read as follows:
46-23-1 Legislative findings.
– (a)(1) Under Article 1, § 17 of the Rhode Island
Constitution, the people shall continue to enjoy and freely exercise all the
rights of fishery, and the privileges of the shore, to which they have been
heretofore entitled under the charter and usages of this state, including but
not limited to fishing from the shore, the gathering of seaweed, leaving the
shore to swim in the sea and passage along the shore; and they shall be secure
in their rights to use and enjoyment of the natural resources of the state with
due regard for the preservation of their values; and it is the duty of the
general assembly to provide for the conservation of the air, land, water,
plant, animal, mineral and other natural resources of the state, and to adopt
all means necessary and proper by law to protect the natural environment of the
people of the state by providing adequate resource planning for the control and
regulation of the use of the natural resources of the state and for the
preservation, regeneration, and restoration of the natural environment of the
state.
(2) The general assembly
recognizes and declares that the coastal resources of Rhode Island, a rich
variety of natural, commercial, industrial, recreational, and aesthetic assets,
are of immediate and potential value to the present and future development of
this state; that unplanned or poorly planned development of this basic natural
environment has already damaged or destroyed, or has the potential of damaging
or destroying, the state's coastal resources, and has restricted the most
efficient and beneficial utilization of these resources; that it shall be the
policy of this state to preserve, protect, develop, and, where possible,
restore the coastal resources of the state for this and succeeding generations
through comprehensive and coordinated long range planning and management
designed to produce the maximum benefit for society from these coastal
resources; and that preservation and restoration of ecological systems shall be
the primary guiding principle upon which environmental alteration of coastal
resources will be measured, judged, and regulated.
(b)(1) That effective implementation
of these policies is essential to the social and economic well-being of the
people of Rhode Island because the sea and its adjacent lands are major sources
of food and public recreation, because these resources are used by and for
industry, transportation, waste disposal, and other purposes, and because the
demands made on these resources are increasing in number, magnitude, and
complexity; and that these policies are necessary to protect the public health,
safety, and general welfare. Pursuant to 16 U.S.C. § 1452 ("The Coastal
Zone Management Act"), the General Assembly hereby directs the council
(referred to as "CRMC") to exercise effectively its responsibilities
in the coastal zone through the development and implementation of management
programs to achieve wise use of the land and water resources of the coastal
zone.
(2) Furthermore, that
implementation of these policies is necessary in order to secure the rights of
the people of Rhode Island to the use and enjoyment of the natural resources of
the state with due regard for the preservation of their values, and in order to
allow the general assembly to fulfill its duty to provide for the conservation
of the air, land, water, plant, animal, mineral, and other natural resources of
the state, and to adopt all means necessary and proper by law to protect the
natural environment of the people of the state by providing adequate resource
planning for the control and regulation of the use of the natural resources of
the state and for the preservation, regeneration, and restoration of the
natural environment of the state.
(c) That these policies can
best be achieved through the creation of a coastal resources management council
as the principal mechanism for management of the state's coastal resources.
(d) The general assembly
recognizes and declares that maintenance dredging is required to remove natural
silt accumulations; Rhode Island has not had a general maintenance dredging
policy and programs for ports, port facilities, channels, harbors, public and private
marinas and boating facilities, recreational facilities and habitat areas;
other major coastal states have maintenance dredging policies and in-water
maintenance dredge disposal sites; as a result of the lack of a general
maintenance dredging policy and program and as a result there has been (1) a
decrease in the depth of the Providence Channel from forty-four (44) feet in
1971 to twenty-four (24) feet in 1996; (2) navigational restrictions on ocean
going vessels through the state's waterways and channels; and (3) a decrease in
the number of available slips and moorings at marinas throughout the state; and
the lack of a maintenance dredging policy and programs have significant adverse
environmental and economic effects on the state and therefore it is in the best
interest of the state, the cities and towns of the state, and the citizens
thereof for the state to have a general maintenance dredging policy and
programs to resolve issues related to dredge maintenance and disposal and avoid
future significant direct and indirect adverse impact on the environment and
economy of the state.
(e) The coastal resources
management council is hereby designated as the lead state agency for purposes
of dredging in tidal waters and as such shall have the following duties and
responsibilities:
(1) To coordinate the
interest of the state with regard to dredging;
(2) To formulate and adopt a
state policy with regard to dredging which integrates those interests;
(3) To cooperate with,
negotiate, and to enter into agreements on behalf of the state with the federal
government and with other public bodies and private parties with regard to
dredging;
(4) To act as the initial and
primary point of contact for all applications to the state for dredging
projects in tidal waters;
(5) To develop, prepare,
adopt pursuant to § 46-23-11, implement, and maintain a comprehensive plan for
dredge material management; and
(6) To cooperate and
coordinate with the departments of environmental management, transportation,
administration, and health, and the economic development corporation in the
conduct of these duties and responsibilities.
(f)(1) The legislature
recognizes that under Article I, § 17, the submerged lands of the state are
impressed with a public trust and that the state is responsible for the
protection of the public's interest in these lands. The state maintains title
in fee to all soil within its boundaries that lies below the high water mark,
and it holds that land in trust for the use of the public. In benefiting the public,
the state preserves certain public rights which include but are not limited to
fishery, commerce, and navigation in these waters and the submerged lands that
they cover.
(2) Since its establishment
in 1971, the CRMC has had the authority to manage and plan for the preservation
of the coastal resources of the state including but not limited to submerged
lands. The legislature hereby declares that, in light of the unique size,
scope, and overall potential impact upon the environment of large scale filling
projects involving twenty-five (25) acres or more, any lease of tidal lands, or
any license to use those lands, is subject to approval, disapproval, or
conditional approval by the direct enactment of the general assembly by
legislative action. CRMC shall review all requests for leases, licenses to use
the land, and other authority to use the land made by any applicant prior to
presentation of the request to the general assembly, and the CRMC shall make
recommendations on the request to the general assembly. With the exception of
any and all projects to fill land of twenty-five (25) acres or more, the
general assembly hereby recognizes and declares that the CRMC is delegated the
sole and exclusive authority for the leasing of submerged and filled lands and
giving licenses for the use of that land. Accordingly, the CRMC will develop,
coordinate, and adopt a system for the leasing of submerged and filled lands,
and licenses for the use of that land, and will ensure that all leases and
licenses are consistent with the public trust. Pursuant thereto, the CRMC
shall impose a maximum fee of eighty thousand dollars ($80,000) per annum for
any transatlantic cable that makes landfall in Rhode Island. All such fees collected shall be deposited
into the Bays, Rivers and Watersheds Fund, established pursuant to § 46-31-12.1, and shall be disbursed
according to the purposes of that fund.
Nothing contained in this subsection negates, repeals, or alters the
provisions, processes, and requirements for the leasing of submerged land for
the conduct of aquaculture as set out under chapter 10 of title 20. Therefore,
nothing in this chapter shall be construed to limit or impair the authority of
the state, or any duly established agency of the state, to regulate filling or
dredging affecting tidal lands owned by the state or any other entity, and
nothing in this chapter shall be construed to limit or impair the obligation of
the applicant to obtain all applicable regulatory approvals. Specifically, and
without limiting the foregoing, nothing in this subsection negates, repeals, or
alters the provisions, processes, and requirements for water quality
certification contained in chapter 12 of this title.
(3) Definitions.
(i) "Filled land"
means portions of tidal lands which have been rendered by the acts of man to be
no longer subject to tidal action or beneath tidal waters.
(ii) "Tidal Lands"
means those lands that are below the mean high water.
(iii) "Mean high
water" means a line of contour representing the 18.6 year average as
determined by the metonic cycle and/or its equivalent as evidenced by the
records, tidal datum, and methodology of the United States coastal geodetic
survey within the national oceanic and atmospheric administration.
SECTION 4. This article shall take effect upon
passage.