2021 -- S 0540 | |
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LC001411 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2021 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- THE GREEN JUSTICE ZONE | |
ACT | |
| |
Introduced By: Senators Mack, Mendes, Acosta, Quezada, Calkin, Anderson, Bell, | |
Date Introduced: March 04, 2021 | |
Referred To: Senate Judiciary | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 42 of the General Laws entitled "STATE AFFAIRS AND |
2 | GOVERNMENT" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 17.11 |
4 | THE GREEN JUSTICE ZONE ACT |
5 | 42-17.11-1. Short title. |
6 | This act may be known and shall be cited as the "Green Justice Zone Act." |
7 | 42-17.11-2. Legislative findings. |
8 | (a) The state has an affirmative duty to ensure that Rhode Islanders have clean air and clean |
9 | water. |
10 | (b) Many communities in the state do not have clean air and clean water, creating a |
11 | widespread and severe public health crisis. This act will establish the first Green Justice Zone, a |
12 | model which may be replicated in future years to ensure that all communities throughout the state |
13 | have clean air and clean water. |
14 | 42-17.11-3. Definitions. |
15 | As used in this chapter: |
16 | (1) "Additional environmental remediation project" means the item in the list of available |
17 | environmental remediation projects which received fewer votes than the selected environmental |
18 | remediation project, but more votes than every other item in the list of available environmental |
| |
1 | remediation projects, during the most recent environmental justice referendum. |
2 | (2) "Available environmental remediation projects" means the list of environmental |
3 | remediation projects enumerated in § 42-17.11-17. |
4 | (3) "Board" means the board of the Green Justice Zone. |
5 | (4) "Census block group" means a geographic region identified as and referred to as a |
6 | "census block group" by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 census. |
7 | (5) "Census tract" means a geographic region identified as and referred to as a "census |
8 | tract" by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 census. |
9 | (6) "Chemical manufacturing plant" means a facility that produces or processes chemicals |
10 | for wholesale or retail distribution. |
11 | (7) "Chemical storage facility" means a facility that stores chemicals which are intended |
12 | for wholesale or retail distribution. |
13 | (8) "Community meetings" means the series of community meetings described in § 42- |
14 | 17.11-18. |
15 | (9) "Employment administrator" means the employment administrator appointed by the |
16 | board, as provided in § 42-17.11-11. |
17 | (10) "Environmental justice referendum" means the referendum described in § 42-17.11- |
18 | 19. |
19 | (11) "Environmental remediation workers" means workers who work on the selected |
20 | environmental remediation project or the additional environmental remediation project within the |
21 | Green Justice Zone, including employees, contractors, and subcontractors. |
22 | (12) "Fossil fuel storage facility" means a facility that stores fossil fuel for wholesale |
23 | distribution. |
24 | (13) "Green Justice Zone" means the special district encompassing the geographic area |
25 | specified in § 42-17.11-4. |
26 | (14) "Green Justice Zone permit" means the permit created in § 42-17.11-12. |
27 | (15) "Green Justice Zone permit applicant" means any corporation, business, firm, |
28 | partnership, or individual who has submitted a Green Justice Zone permit application. |
29 | (16) "Green Justice Zone permit application" means the application to receive a Green |
30 | Justice Zone permit, as described in § 42-17.11-13. |
31 | (17) "Industrial facility" means any land, any building or other improvement, and all real |
32 | and personal property which is designed to be used or routinely is used for industrial, |
33 | manufacturing, wholesale commercial product distribution, wholesale commercial product |
34 | transportation, wholesale commercial product storage, or wholesale commercial product |
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1 | warehousing purposes. Any residential building including, but not limited to, a condominium, a |
2 | single family housing unit, a multifamily housing unit, an apartment complex, a public housing |
3 | project, and a residential shelter shall not be considered to be an Industrial facility for the purposes |
4 | of this chapter. Any building with the primary purpose or use of providing medical treatment, |
5 | healthcare, medicine, pharmaceutical drugs, physical therapy, massage therapy, psychiatry, or |
6 | psychotherapy to patients shall not be considered to be an industrial facility for the purposes of this |
7 | chapter. Any educational facility, including a school, university, tutoring center, or continuing |
8 | education center shall not be considered to be an industrial facility for the purposes of this chapter. |
9 | Any gym, recreational center, park, museum, gallery, or library shall not be considered to be an |
10 | Industrial Facility for the purposes of this chapter. Any retail store shall not be considered to be an |
11 | Industrial Facility for the purposes of this chapter. Any restaurant, grocery store, convenience store, |
12 | food pantry, or gas station shall not be considered to be an industrial facility for the purpose of this |
13 | chapter. Any place of religious worship or observance including, but not limited to, a mosque, |
14 | synagogue, temple, or church shall not be considered to be an Industrial facility for the purpose of |
15 | this chapter. Any building designed for the purpose of transporting, shipping, or receiving solar |
16 | panels, solar panel components, wind turbines, wind turbine components, electric rechargeable |
17 | batteries, electric rechargeable battery components, or any other item or product related to |
18 | renewable energy production or storage shall not be considered to be an industrial facility for the |
19 | purpose of this chapter. Any land, any building or other improvement, and all real and personal |
20 | property shall be considered to be an industrial facility if it is used as: |
21 | (i) An electric power plant that produces electricity by combusting any fossil fuel; |
22 | (ii) A waste storage facility; |
23 | (iii) A toxic material storage facility; |
24 | (iv) A fossil fuel storage facility, excluding gas stations which sell gas only at the retail |
25 | level for use in automobiles, and excluding facilities that store fossil fuels that are used exclusively |
26 | for transporting wholesale goods, including, but not limited to, into the Port of Providence and out |
27 | of the Port of Providence; |
28 | (v) A fossil fuel production facility; |
29 | (vi) A fossil fuel refinery; |
30 | (vii) A chemical manufacturing plant; |
31 | (viii) A chemical storage facility; |
32 | (ix) A commercial manufacturing facility; |
33 | (x) A scrap metal storage facility; |
34 | (xi) A scrap metal processing facility; |
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1 | (xii) A cement, concrete, or asphalt storage facility; |
2 | (xiii) A cement, concrete, or asphalt processing facility; |
3 | (xiv) A cement, concrete, or asphalt production facility; |
4 | (xv) An incinerator, including, but not limited to, a medical waste incinerator; |
5 | (xvi) A resource recovery facility; |
6 | (xvii) A combustor; |
7 | (xviii) A transfer station or other solid waste facility; |
8 | (xviv) A landfill, including, but not limited to, a landfill that accepts ash, construction |
9 | debris, demolition debris, or solid waste; or |
10 | (xvv) A recycling facility capable of receiving twenty (20) tons or more of recyclable |
11 | material per day. |
12 | (18) "Office of employee benefits" means the office of employee benefits of the state of |
13 | Rhode Island. |
14 | (19) "Selected environmental remediation project" means the item in the list of available |
15 | environmental remediation projects which received the most votes during the most recent |
16 | environmental justice referendum. |
17 | (20) "Treasurer" means the treasurer appointed by the board, as provided in § 42-17.11-11. |
18 | (21) "Zone resident" means any registered voter living within the Green Justice Zone. |
19 | 42-17.11-4. Establishment of the Green Justice Zone. |
20 | (a) It is hereby created a special district to be known as the Green Justice Zone. |
21 | (b) The area encompassed by the following Census Block Groups from the 2010 census, |
22 | and no others, shall collectively constitute the Green Justice Zone: |
23 | (1) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
24 | (2) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
25 | (3) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
26 | (4) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 4, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
27 | (5) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
28 | (6) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
29 | (7) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
30 | (8) Census Tract 4, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
31 | (9) Census Tract 4, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
32 | (10) Census Tract 4, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
33 | (11) Census Tract 4, Block Group 4, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
34 | (12) Census Tract 5, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
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1 | (13) Census Tract 5, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
2 | (14) Census Tract 5, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
3 | (15) Census Tract 6, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
4 | (16) Census Tract 6, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
5 | (17) Census Tract 7, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
6 | (18) Census Tract 7, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; and |
7 | (19) Census Tract 7, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island. |
8 | 42-17.11-5. Green Justice Zone board. |
9 | (a) The board of the Green Justice Zone shall consist of five (5) board members. |
10 | (b) All functions, services, and duties of the Green Justice Zone shall be carried out by the |
11 | board, including: |
12 | (1) With regard to the operations, maintenance, and management of the Green Justice Zone |
13 | program; and |
14 | (2) With regard to the employees employed to complete work related to the Green Justice |
15 | Zone program. |
16 | (c) Three (3) members of the board shall constitute a quorum and a vote of three (3) |
17 | members shall be necessary for any action taken by the board. |
18 | (d) All meetings of the board shall be subject to chapter 46 of title 42 (the "open meetings |
19 | act"). |
20 | 42-17.11-6. Election of the Green Justice Zone board. |
21 | (a) Five (5) months after the enactment of this chapter, and every two (2) years thereafter, |
22 | there shall be an election by ballot, organized by the secretary of state, to elect the board of the |
23 | Green Justice Zone. The five (5) candidates who receive the highest number of votes in an election |
24 | shall be elected to the board. |
25 | (b) All registered voters who reside within the Green Justice Zone shall be eligible to vote |
26 | in an election to elect the board of the Green Justice Zone. |
27 | (c) Only registered voters who reside within the Green Justice Zone shall be eligible to vote |
28 | in an election to elect the board of the Green Justice Zone. |
29 | (d) No individual shall be eligible to be a board member of the Green Justice Zone unless |
30 | they have been a resident of the Green Justice Zone for the past five (5) years, continuously. |
31 | (e) A board member of the Green Justice Zone shall, at all times, be a resident of the Green |
32 | Justice Zone for the entirety of the time that they serve as a board member. |
33 | (f) Board members shall receive an annual salary equivalent to one hundred forty percent |
34 | (140%) of the statewide per capita income as determined by the U.S. Census Bureau. |
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1 | (g) The board shall ensure that each board member receives health insurance and dental |
2 | insurance. |
3 | 42-17.11-7. Appointment of employees. |
4 | (a) The board shall appoint an employment administrator who shall be the appointing |
5 | authority for all employees of the board. The board may dismiss an employment administrator at |
6 | any time and for any lawful reason. |
7 | (b) The employment administrator may hire employees and contractors to carry out tasks |
8 | pertaining to the mission, purpose, and duties of the Green Justice Zone or to perform |
9 | administrative or custodial tasks for the Green Justice Zone. The employment administrator may |
10 | dismiss employees and contractors. |
11 | (c) The board may dismiss an employment administrator at any time and for any lawful |
12 | reason. |
13 | (d) The employment administrator shall make all feasible, appropriate, and lawful efforts |
14 | to ensure diversity among the employees of the board, including with regard to race, color, national |
15 | origin, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, marital status, military status |
16 | as a veteran with an honorable discharge or an honorable or general administrative discharge, |
17 | service member in the armed forces, country of ancestral origin, disability, age, housing status, |
18 | familial status, or immigration status. |
19 | 42-17.11-8. Compensation of employees. |
20 | The employment administrator shall determine annual compensation and benefits for all |
21 | employees, contractors, and subcontractors of the board, provided that no employee, contractor, or |
22 | subcontractor earns less than one hundred forty percent (140%) of the statewide per capita income |
23 | as determined by the U.S. Census Bureau, and provided that every employee shall receive health |
24 | insurance, dental insurance, at least two (2) weeks of paid vacation time, and at least one paid sick |
25 | day off of work for every twenty (20) days in which they work more than six (6) hours. |
26 | 42-17.11-9. Powers of the board. |
27 | The board shall have the authority to enter contracts, hire employees, hire contractors, |
28 | promulgate rules and regulations, levy fines, adjudicate administrative cases, or take any other |
29 | lawful action in order to achieve any purpose of the Green Justice Zone program. The board may |
30 | delegate these powers. |
31 | 42-17.11-10. Offices of the department. |
32 | The department of administration shall furnish the board with offices in which to transact |
33 | its business and keep its records. The offices shall be open for business each day of the year, except |
34 | Sundays and legal holidays, during such hours as may be prescribed by the board. The department |
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1 | of administration shall make all feasible and appropriate efforts to ensure that the offices furnished |
2 | to the board are within the Green Justice Zone, as defined by § 42-17.11-4. |
3 | 42-17.11-11. Receipt and use of funds. |
4 | (a) The board shall have the authority to receive and expend monies from any sources, |
5 | public or private, including, but not limited to, legislative enactments, bond issues, devises, grants, |
6 | or bequests. The board is authorized to enter into any contracts necessary to obtain and expend |
7 | those funds. |
8 | (b) The board shall appoint a treasurer to receive and expend monies, and to enter into any |
9 | contracts necessary to obtain and expend funds. The treasurer shall be a full-time employee. |
10 | (c) The board may dismiss a treasurer at any time and for any lawful reason. |
11 | 42-17.11-12. Creation of Green Justice Zone permits. |
12 | (a) There is hereby created a new license called a Green Justice Zone permit. |
13 | (b) The board, and no other body, shall have the power to issue a Green Justice Zone permit. |
14 | The board may not delegate the power to issue a Green Justice Zone permit. |
15 | 42-17.11-13. Creation of Green Justice Zone permit application. |
16 | (a) The board shall create an application, called a Green Justice Zone permit application, |
17 | with which corporations, businesses, firms, partnerships, or individuals may apply for a Green |
18 | Justice Zone permit. |
19 | (b) The Green Justice Zone permit application shall require Green Justice Zone permit |
20 | applicants to: |
21 | (1) Provide the name of the corporation, business, firm, partnership, or individual |
22 | submitting the Green Justice Zone permit application; |
23 | (2) Specify the industrial facility for which the Green Justice Zone permit applicant seeks |
24 | a Green Justice Zone permit; |
25 | (3) Specify the commercial purpose of the industrial facility; and |
26 | (4) Provide the full address of the industrial facility. |
27 | (c) The Green Justice Zone permit application shall be easily and conveniently accessible |
28 | to corporations, businesses, firms, partnerships, or individuals who own industrial facilities within |
29 | the Green Justice Zone. |
30 | (d) The board shall create a system through which a Green Justice Zone permit application |
31 | can be submitted. |
32 | (e) A Green Justice Zone permit application which has been submitted to the board shall |
33 | be made publicly accessible on the website of the board no later than fourteen (14) calendar days |
34 | after the board receives the Green Justice Zone permit application. |
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1 | 42-17.11-14. Requirement to possess a Green Justice Zone permit. |
2 | After the first day of December, in the calendar year of 2022, it shall be illegal to operate |
3 | any industrial facility within the Green Justice Zone unless that industrial facility has been granted |
4 | a Green Justice Zone permit. |
5 | 42-17.11-15. Approval and denial of Green Justice Zone permits. |
6 | (a) The board shall not grant a Green Justice Zone permit for any industrial facility that is |
7 | used as: |
8 | (1) An electric power plant that produces electricity by combusting any fossil fuel; |
9 | (2) A waste storage facility; |
10 | (3) A toxic material storage facility; |
11 | (4) A fossil fuel storage facility, excluding gas stations which sell gas only at the retail |
12 | level for use in automobiles and excluding sites that store fossil fuels that are used exclusively for |
13 | transporting goods or other items into the port of Providence or out of the port of Providence; |
14 | (5) A fossil fuel production facility; |
15 | (6) A fossil fuel refinery; |
16 | (7) A chemical manufacturing plant; |
17 | (8) A chemical storage facility; |
18 | (9) A commercial manufacturing facility; |
19 | (10) A scrap metal storage facility; |
20 | (11) A scrap metal processing facility; |
21 | (12) A cement, concrete, or asphalt storage facility; |
22 | (13) A cement, concrete, or asphalt processing facility; |
23 | (14) A cement, concrete, or asphalt production facility; |
24 | (15) An incinerator, including, but not limited to, a medical waste incinerator; |
25 | (16) A resource recovery facility; |
26 | (17) A combustor; |
27 | (18) A transfer station or other solid waste facility; |
28 | (19) A landfill, including, but not limited to, a landfill that accepts ash, construction debris, |
29 | demolition debris, or solid waste; |
30 | (20) A scrap metal recycling facility capable of receiving five (5) tons or more of recyclable |
31 | material per day; or |
32 | (21) A wood recycling facility capable of receiving five (5) tons or more of recyclable |
33 | material per day. |
34 | (b) The board shall grant a Green Justice Zone permit for any industrial facility with a |
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1 | purpose or type not enumerated in § 42-17.11-15(a), within forty five (45) days of receiving the |
2 | Green Justice Zone permit application. |
3 | 42-17.11-16. Fines and Penalties. |
4 | (a) Every individual day in which any corporation, business, firm, partnership, or |
5 | individual operates an Industrial Facility which has not received a Green Justice Zone permit in the |
6 | Green Justice Zone, in violation of § 42-17.11-14, shall count as an environmental justice violation. |
7 | (b) The board shall fine any corporation, business, firm, partnership, or individual one |
8 | million (1,000,000) dollars for each environmental justice violation, no later than ten (10) days |
9 | from the day on which the Environmental Justice Violation occurred. The entirety of the money |
10 | collected from these fines shall be held in a restricted funds account to be used exclusively by the |
11 | treasurer for the selected environmental remediation project or the additional environmental |
12 | remediation project. |
13 | 42-17.11-17. Available environmental remediation projects within the Green Justice |
14 | Zone. |
15 | (a) The following items constitute the full and complete list of available environmental |
16 | remediation projects: |
17 | (1) Improving ventilation and air filtration in residential homes and residential buildings |
18 | within the Green Justice Zone; |
19 | (2) Installing photovoltaic solar panels on residential homes and residential buildings |
20 | within the Green Justice Zone; |
21 | (3) Retrofitting residential homes and residential buildings within the Green Justice Zone |
22 | to improve their energy efficiency; |
23 | (4) Replacing lead service pipes connected to residential homes and residential buildings |
24 | within the Green Justice Zone; |
25 | (5) Lead abatement in soil or paint within the Green Justice Zone; |
26 | (6) Cleaning up pollution within the Green Justice Zone; and |
27 | (7) Cultivating public green spaces within the Green Justice Zone. |
28 | 42-17.11-18. Community meetings and discussion. |
29 | (a) Between the enactment of this chapter and the zone referendum, the board shall |
30 | organize no fewer than six (6) community meetings in which zone residents shall have the |
31 | opportunity to discuss the zone referendum and the relative merits of different options within the |
32 | available environmental remediation projects. The final community meeting must take place within |
33 | eight (8) months of the enactment of this chapter. |
34 | (b) The board shall provide a clean, well-lit venue easily accessible to zone residents for |
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1 | the community meetings. The Treasurer shall pay the full and complete cost of securing the venue, |
2 | as well as any reasonable transportation expenses incurred by zone residents traveling to the venue. |
3 | (c) The board shall ensure that each community meeting has at least one translator capable |
4 | of translating between English and any other language spoken by at least ten (10) percent of the |
5 | Rhode Island population, as determined by the U.S. Census Bureau. The translator shall receive an |
6 | hourly wage that is not less than the quotient of one divided by one thousand nine hundred twenty |
7 | (1/1,920), multiplied by one hundred forty percent (140%) of the statewide per capita income, as |
8 | calculated by the U.S. Census Bureau, and not more than the quotient of one divided by one |
9 | thousand nine hundred twenty (1/1,920), multiplied by one hundred and eighty percent (180%) of |
10 | the statewide per capita income, as calculated by the U.S. Census Bureau. The Treasurer shall pay |
11 | the full and complete cost of the translator's fee. |
12 | (d) Zone residents shall not be charged for any costs related to organizing a community |
13 | meeting. |
14 | (e) Zone residents shall receive no less than twenty dollars ($20.00) and no more than |
15 | twenty-five dollars ($25.00) for each hour that they spend attending a community meeting. |
16 | (f) The board shall ensure that each community meeting includes nutritious food and clean |
17 | drinking water, freely available to all zone residents in attendance at the community meeting. |
18 | 42-17.11-19. Environmental justice referendum. |
19 | (a) The secretary of state shall organize and conduct a referendum by ballot, which shall |
20 | be known as the environmental justice referendum, to take place fourteen (14) days after the final |
21 | community meeting. |
22 | (b) Zone residents shall be permitted to cast an in-person ballot, cast an absentee ballot, or |
23 | cast a mail-in ballot in the environmental justice referendum, and shall not be required to provide |
24 | a reason for casting an in-person ballot, casting an absentee ballot, or casting a mail-in ballot. |
25 | (c) Only zone residents shall be eligible to vote in the environmental justice referendum. |
26 | (d) The environmental justice referendum ballot shall present the full list of available |
27 | environmental remediation projects from which each voter shall select exactly one. |
28 | (e) The total number of votes earned by each item on the list of available environmental |
29 | remediation projects during the referendum shall be made publicly available within ten (10) days |
30 | of the environmental justice referendum. |
31 | 42-17.11-20. Implementation of environmental remediation projects. |
32 | (a) The selected environmental remediation project shall be implemented by the board as |
33 | promptly as possible after the environmental justice referendum. |
34 | (b) The treasurer shall pay the complete costs of completing the selected environmental |
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1 | remediation project and, if applicable, the additional environmental remediation project. |
2 | (c) If, after fully completing the selected environmental remediation project, the treasurer |
3 | has remaining funds earmarked for the Green Justice Zone program, the treasurer shall use the |
4 | remaining funds to implement or partially implement the additional environmental remediation |
5 | project. None of the environmental remediation projects enumerated in §§ 42-17.11-17(a)(1) |
6 | through 42-17.11-17(a)(4), inclusive, shall be considered complete unless they have been offered |
7 | to every residential home owner and every residential building owner within the Green Justice |
8 | Zone. |
9 | (d) In order to implement the selected environmental remediation project or the additional |
10 | environmental remediation project, the employment administrator may hire environmental |
11 | remediation workers. |
12 | 42-17.11-21. Labor standards. |
13 | (a) The employment administrator shall ensure that all environmental remediation workers, |
14 | including contractors, subcontractors, and employees of the board, receive an hourly wage that is |
15 | not less than the equivalent of one divided by one thousand nine hundred twenty (1/1,920), |
16 | multiplied by one hundred forty percent (140%) of the statewide per capita income, as calculated |
17 | by the U.S. Census Bureau, and not more than the equivalent of one divided by one thousand nine |
18 | hundred twenty (1/1,920), multiplied by one hundred eighty percent (180%) of the statewide per |
19 | capita income, as calculated by the U.S. Census Bureau. |
20 | (a) The employment administrator shall ensure that all environmental remediation workers |
21 | receive health insurance, dental insurance, and at least one paid sick day off of work for every |
22 | twenty (20) days in which they work more than four (4) hours. |
23 | (b) The board must provide all environmental remediation workers with at least one total |
24 | hour of paid time off each day, provided that the environmental remediation worker is working |
25 | more than five (5) hours in that day. The one hour may be divided into separate segments. |
26 | (c) The employment administrator shall establish a detailed and generous worker |
27 | compensation plan to fairly compensate all environmental remediation workers who are injured |
28 | while working, provided that they were injured while engaging in activities that they could be |
29 | reasonably expected to engage in, in furtherance of the work that they were hired by the |
30 | employment administrator to complete. The worker compensation plan shall apply identically to |
31 | employees of the board, contractors, and subcontractors. |
32 | 42-17.11-22. Employment prioritization. |
33 | (a) When hiring employees, hiring contractors, awarding contracts, designing project labor |
34 | agreements, promulgating rules and regulations, and enforcing rules and regulations, the housing |
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1 | jobs department shall: |
2 | (1) Prioritize, to the greatest extent feasible, lawful, and appropriate, in the judgment of the |
3 | board, providing employment to workers who are enrolled in or who were enrolled in the Just |
4 | Transition Program administered by the department of labor and training, pursuant to § 42-16.1- |
5 | 21; |
6 | (2) Prioritize, to the greatest extent feasible, lawful, and appropriate, in the judgment of the |
7 | board, hiring individuals who are zone residents; and |
8 | (3) Maximize, to the greatest extent feasible, lawful, and appropriate, racial and gender |
9 | equity within the hiring processes for projects involving the Green Justice Zone program. |
10 | (b) Contractors, subcontractors, firms, corporations, partnerships, and all other entities |
11 | working under contract with the board shall, at all times, make good faith efforts to promote |
12 | workforce diversity for projects involving the Green Justice Zone program, including with regard |
13 | to race and gender. If the board determines that a contractor, subcontractor, firm, corporation, |
14 | partnership, or other entity is not making good faith efforts to achieve workforce diversity, the |
15 | director may prohibit that entity from bidding on contracts or being awarded contracts involving |
16 | the Green Justice Zone program for two (2) years. |
17 | 42-17.11-23. Consent required. |
18 | The board shall not perform any environmental remediation project on a residential home |
19 | without that homeowner's informed consent, nor shall the board change or modify a residential |
20 | home, install anything on a residential home, or remove anything from a residential home as part |
21 | of an environmental remediation project without obtaining the homeowner's informed consent. |
22 | 42-17.11-24. Severability. |
23 | (a) If any provision of this chapter is held invalid, the remainder of this chapter shall not |
24 | be affected thereby. |
25 | (b) If the application of any provision of this chapter to any person or circumstance is held |
26 | invalid, the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected |
27 | thereby. |
28 | SECTION 2. Sections 23-23-2, 23-23-3, 23-23-5, 23-23-5.2, 23-23-14 and 23-23-15 of the |
29 | General Laws in Chapter 23-23 entitled "Air Pollution" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
30 | 23-23-2. Declaration of policy. |
31 | It is declared to be the public policy in the state of Rhode Island to preserve, protect, and |
32 | improve the air resources of the state to promote the public health, welfare, and safety, to prevent |
33 | injury or detriment to human, plant, and animal life, physical property and other resources, and to |
34 | foster the comfort and convenience of the state's inhabitants. The director is authorized to exercise |
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1 | all powers, direct or incidental, necessary to improve the air quality and reduce airborne pollution, |
2 | including to carry out the purposes of this chapter to assure that the state of Rhode Island complies |
3 | with and exceeds the requirements of the federal Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 7401 et seq., and |
4 | retains maximum control under this chapter, and receives all desired federal grants, aid, and other |
5 | benefits. |
6 | 23-23-3. Definitions. |
7 | As used in this chapter, the following terms shall, where the context permits, be construed |
8 | as follows: |
9 | (1) "Air contaminant" means soot, cinders, ashes, any dust, fumes, gas, mist, smoke, vapor, |
10 | odor, toxic or radioactive material, particulate matter, or any combination of these. |
11 | (2) "Air pollution" means presence in the outdoor atmosphere of one or more air |
12 | contaminants in sufficient quantities that either alone or in connection with other emissions by |
13 | reason of their concentration and duration, may be injurious to human, plant, or animal life or cause |
14 | damage to property or unreasonably interfere with the enjoyment of life and property. |
15 | (3) "Chemical manufacturing plant" means a facility that produces or processes chemicals |
16 | for wholesale or retail distribution. |
17 | (4) "Chemical storage facility" means a facility that stores chemicals which are intended |
18 | for wholesale or retail distribution. |
19 | (3)(5) "Director" means the director of environmental management or any subordinate or |
20 | subordinates to whom he or she has delegated the powers and duties vested in him or her by this |
21 | chapter. |
22 | (4)(6) "Extremely toxic air contaminant" means any air contaminant that has been |
23 | classified as a potential carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), |
24 | Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Occupational Safety and Health Administration |
25 | (OSHA), National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), American Conference of |
26 | Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH), or the National Toxicology Program (NTP); or any |
27 | air contaminant that induces mutagenic or teratogenic effects; or any air contaminant that, when |
28 | inhaled, has caused significant chronic adverse effects in test animals; or any air contaminant |
29 | having an acute toxicity of: |
30 | (i) LD50 (oral) less than 500mg/kg; |
31 | (ii) LD50 (inhalation) less than 2000ppm; or |
32 | (iii) LD50 (dermal) less than 1000mg/kg; |
33 | and/or has been adopted by the director pursuant to the provisions of chapter 35 of title 42. |
34 | In addition to the above, it may also include any hazardous air pollutant as defined in § 112(b) of |
| LC001411 - Page 13 of 38 |
1 | the federal Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 7412(b). |
2 | (7) "Fossil fuel storage facility" means a facility that stores fossil fuel for wholesale |
3 | distribution. |
4 | (8) "Fossil fuel" means fuel composed of or derived from coal, petroleum, oil, natural gas, |
5 | oil shales, bitumen, or tar sands. |
6 | (5)(9) "Motor vehicle" means every vehicle that is self-propelled and every vehicle that is |
7 | propelled by electric power obtained from overhead trolley wires, but not operated upon rails, |
8 | except vehicles moved exclusively by human power and motorized wheelchairs. |
9 | (6)(10) "Open fire" means any fire from which the products of combustion are emitted |
10 | directly into the open air without passing through a stack or chimney. |
11 | (7)(11) "Person" means an individual, trust, firm, joint stock company, corporation |
12 | (including a quasi-governmental corporation), partnership, association, syndicate, municipality, |
13 | municipal or state agency, fire district, club, non-profit agency or any subdivision, commission, |
14 | department, bureau, agency, or department of state or federal government (including quasi- |
15 | government corporation), or of any interstate body. |
16 | (12) "Polluting Facility" means: |
17 | (i) An electric power plant that produces electricity by combusting any fossil fuel; |
18 | (ii) A waste storage facility; |
19 | (iii) A toxic material storage facility; |
20 | (iv) A fossil fuel storage facility, excluding gas stations which sell gas only at the retail |
21 | level for use in automobiles and excluding sites that store fossil fuels that are used exclusively for |
22 | transporting goods or other items into the Port of Providence or out of the Port of Providence; |
23 | (v) A fossil fuel production facility; |
24 | (vi) A fossil fuel refinery; |
25 | (vii) A chemical manufacturing plant; |
26 | (viii) A chemical storage facility; |
27 | (ix) A commercial manufacturing facility; |
28 | (x) A scrap metal storage facility; |
29 | (xi) A scrap metal processing facility; |
30 | (xii) A cement, concrete, or asphalt storage facility; |
31 | (xiii) A cement, concrete, or asphalt processing facility; |
32 | (xiv) A cement, concrete, or asphalt production facility; |
33 | (xv) An incinerator, including, but not limited to, a medical waste incinerator; |
34 | (xvi) A resource recovery facility; |
| LC001411 - Page 14 of 38 |
1 | (xvii) A combustor; |
2 | (xviii) A transfer station or other solid waste facility; |
3 | (xix) A landfill, including, but not limited to, a landfill that accepts ash, construction debris, |
4 | demolition debris, or solid waste; |
5 | (xx) A scrap metal recycling facility capable of receiving five (5) tons or more of recyclable |
6 | material per day; or |
7 | (xxi) A wood recycling facility capable of receiving five (5) tons or more of recyclable |
8 | material per day. |
9 | (8)(13) "Manufactured, unwashed sand" means product resulting from the mechanical |
10 | crushing of rock, boulders, or large cobblestones that has a gradation of fifty percent (50%) or more |
11 | of coarse fraction passing the No. 4 sieve as referenced in the Standard Practice for Classification |
12 | of Soils for Engineering Purposes (Unified Soil Classification System) and American Society of |
13 | Testing and Materials Designations D-2487-06 which has not been subject to a mechanical process |
14 | (using water) that is designed to substantially remove fine fractions passing the No. 200 sieve. |
15 | 23-23-5. Powers and duties of the director. |
16 | In addition to the other powers and duties granted in this chapter, the director shall have |
17 | and may exercise the following powers and duties: |
18 | (1) To exercise general supervision of the administration and enforcement of this chapter |
19 | and all rules and regulations and orders promulgated under this chapter; |
20 | (2) To develop comprehensive programs, for the prevention, control, and abatement of new |
21 | or existing pollution of the air resources of this state on the basis of air quality standards adopted |
22 | by the environmental standards board; |
23 | (3) To advise, consult, and cooperate with the cities and towns and other agencies of the |
24 | state, federal government, and other states and interstate agencies, and with effective groups in |
25 | industries in furthering the purposes of this chapter; |
26 | (4) To promulgate standards of air quality adopted by the environmental standards board; |
27 | (5) To hold hearings, to issue notices of hearings and subpoenas requiring the attendance |
28 | of witnesses and the production of evidence, and to administer oaths and to take testimony as he or |
29 | she may deem necessary; |
30 | (6) To encourage and conduct studies and research on air pollution and to collect and |
31 | disseminate this information; |
32 | (7) To enter at all reasonable times in or upon any private or public property, except private |
33 | residences, and to detain and inspect any motor vehicle for the purpose of inspecting or |
34 | investigating any condition which the director shall believe to be either an air pollution source or |
| LC001411 - Page 15 of 38 |
1 | in violation of any of the rules or regulations or orders promulgated under this chapter; |
2 | (8) To issue, modify, amend, or revoke any orders prohibiting or abating air pollution in |
3 | accordance with the purposes of this chapter and the rules and regulations promulgated under this |
4 | chapter. In making the orders authorized by this chapter, the director shall consider all relevant |
5 | factors including, but not limited to, population density, air pollution levels, and the character and |
6 | degree of injury to health or physical property; |
7 | (9) To accept, receive, and administer grants or other funds or gifts for the purpose of |
8 | carrying out any of the functions of this chapter including any moneys given under any federal law |
9 | to the state for air pollution control activities, surveys, or programs; |
10 | (10) To require the prior submission and approval of plans, specifications, and other data |
11 | relative to the construction, installation, and modification of air pollution control systems, devices, |
12 | or any of its parts, and to inspect the installations, maintenance and modifications to insure |
13 | compliance with the approved plans and to require approval to operate the system; |
14 | (11) To require the prior submission and approval of plans, specifications, and other data |
15 | relative to the construction, installation, maintenance or modification of any machine, equipment, |
16 | device, article, or facility capable of becoming a source of air pollution, subject to the promulgation |
17 | of rules and regulations under this chapter defining the classes and types of machines, equipment, |
18 | devices, articles, or facilities subject to this approval; |
19 | (12) To make, issue, and amend rules and regulations consistent with this chapter for the |
20 | prevention, control, abatement, and limitation of air pollution, and the enforcement of orders issued |
21 | under this chapter. Those rules and regulations for the control of pollution need not be uniform |
22 | throughout the state. The director may prohibit emissions, discharges and/or releases from specific |
23 | persons, machines, facilities, devices, or any other sources of air contaminants and may also require |
24 | specific control technology. In addition, the director may regulate the emission characteristics of |
25 | all fuels used by stationary and mobile sources of air contaminants, provided, the specific control |
26 | technology and regulations emission characteristics of fuels shall not be more less stringent than |
27 | the mandatory standards established by federal law or regulation, unless it can be shown that the |
28 | control technology and emission characteristics of fuels are needed for the attainment or |
29 | maintenance of air quality standards. Variations of the standards may be based on considerations |
30 | of population density, meteorological conditions, contaminant emissions, air quality, land |
31 | development plans, and any other factors that may be relevant to the protection of the air resources |
32 | of the state; |
33 | (13) To consult the board on the policies and plans for the control and prevention of air |
34 | pollution; The director may regulate the emission characteristics of all fuels used by mobile sources |
| LC001411 - Page 16 of 38 |
1 | of air contaminants, provided that those regulations are consistent with the federal law and federal |
2 | regulation. Variations of the standards may be based on considerations of population density, |
3 | meteorological conditions, contaminant emissions, air quality, land development plans, and any |
4 | other factors that may be relevant to the protection of the air resources of the state; |
5 | (14) To exercise all incidental powers necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter; |
6 | (15) To require that an approval to operate be obtained for any machine, equipment, device, |
7 | article, or facility, or any source which is emitting any extremely toxic air contaminant of any air |
8 | contaminant, subject to the promulgation of rules and regulations under this chapter defining the |
9 | categories and capacities of machines, equipment, devices, articles, or facilities subject to this |
10 | permission. Such regulations need not be uniform across the state. Any approval issued may set |
11 | forth inspection, monitoring, compliance certification and reporting requirements to assure |
12 | compliance with approval terms and conditions; |
13 | (16) To require any person who owns or operates any machine, equipment, device, article, |
14 | or facility which has the potential to emit any air contaminant, or which is emitting any extremely |
15 | toxic air contaminant, to install, maintain, and use air pollution emission monitoring devices and to |
16 | submit periodic reports on the nature and amounts of air contaminant emission from the machine, |
17 | equipment, device, article, or facility; |
18 | (17) To require, as a condition, to the grant of any approval, license, or permit required by |
19 | this chapter, that the person applying for an approval, license, or permit, first pay to the director a |
20 | reasonable fee based on the costs of reviewing and acting upon the application and based on the |
21 | costs of implementing and enforcing the terms of the approval, license, or permit; |
22 | (18) In addition, the director shall collect an annual operating fee from sources subject to |
23 | the requirements of an approval to operate under this chapter and subject to the requirements of |
24 | title V of the Clean Air Amendments of 1990, 42 U.S.C. § 7661 et seq. The fee shall be calculated |
25 | by the director on a weight basis for pollutants actually emitted, after controls. This operating fee |
26 | shall be determined by regulation and shall be consistent with the fee required under 42 U.S.C. § |
27 | 7661a(b)(3)(B). The operating fees collected shall not be in excess of the amount needed to cover |
28 | all reasonable (direct and indirect) costs required to develop and administer an operating permit |
29 | program pursuant to the requirements of title V, of the Clean Air Act amendments of 1990; |
30 | (19) No person shall operate any machine, facility, or device which is subject to approval |
31 | or permit by the department without an approval or permit of the department. No source may |
32 | operate after an approval or permit has been denied. Any approval or permit issued under this |
33 | section may be suspended, revoked or amended by the director at any time upon a showing, after |
34 | notice and hearing, that the permittee has failed to comply with the provisions of this chapter, rules |
| LC001411 - Page 17 of 38 |
1 | and regulations promulgated by the director pursuant to this chapter, or the terms and conditions of |
2 | the approval or permit, or upon a showing, after notice and hearing, that the continued operation of |
3 | the approved or permitted source constitutes a threat to the health and safety of the public or to the |
4 | environment. In any proceeding for revocation, suspension, or amendment of an approval or permit |
5 | pursuant to this subsection, the director will provide the affected party with the opportunity for an |
6 | adequate hearing. No revocation, annulment, or withdrawal of any approval or permit is lawful |
7 | unless, the agency sent notice by mail to the permittee or possessor of an approval of the facts or |
8 | conduct or violation which warrant the action, and the permittee or possessor of an approval is |
9 | given an opportunity at hearing to show compliance with all lawful requirements for the retention |
10 | of the license. If the agency finds that public health, safety, or welfare imperatively requires |
11 | emergency action, and incorporates a finding to that effect in its order, summary suspension of |
12 | approval or permit may be ordered pending proceedings for revocation or other action. These |
13 | proceedings shall be promptly instituted and determined; |
14 | (20) No approval or permit required under this chapter shall be issued by the director if the |
15 | approval or permit contains provisions that are determined by the administrator of the |
16 | Environmental Protection Agency not to be in compliance with the requirements of the federal |
17 | Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C § 7401 et seq.). The administrator of the EPA shall provide a statement |
18 | of the reasons for the objection to the director. A copy of the objection and statement shall be |
19 | provided to the applicant. The director shall withhold the issuance of the approval or permit until |
20 | the applicant has successfully satisfied the concerns of the administrator of EPA or his or her |
21 | designee; |
22 | (21) The department may establish a small business stationary source technical and |
23 | environmental compliance assistance program. The department may use general revenue funding |
24 | to cover the cost of administering this program. The department shall have the power to give grants, |
25 | and conduct educational and/or outreach programs; |
26 | (22) To promulgate regulations to apply at the earliest to the 1993 model year and beyond, |
27 | relating to emission standards for new motor vehicles and new motor vehicle engines, warranties |
28 | for motor vehicles and motor vehicle parts, recall of motor vehicles, accreditation of motor vehicle |
29 | parts, and any other matters relating to the enforcement of these regulations, provided, the |
30 | regulations so promulgated shall not be more stringent than the mandatory standards established |
31 | by federal law or regulation, unless the regulations are needed for the attainment or maintenance |
32 | of air quality standards; |
33 | (23) Nothing in this section shall allow the department to administer an inspection and |
34 | maintenance program for automobiles without approval of the general assembly; |
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1 | (24) In addition to the powers and duties enumerated in this section, the director shall have |
2 | all appropriate power to adopt rules, regulations, procedures, programs, and standards as mandated |
3 | by the authorization of the federal Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 7401 et seq. |
4 | 23-23-5.2. Mandamus. |
5 | In the event that the director shall fail to issue the permit or deny the license then the |
6 | applicant or other interested person may petition the superior court to issue its writ of mandamus |
7 | ordering the director or some suitable person to immediately issue the license or denial. In the event |
8 | that the director shall fail to revoke a license or permit, then any interested person may petition the |
9 | superior court to issue a writ of mandamus ordering the director or some suitable person to |
10 | immediately revoke the license. |
11 | 23-23-14. Penalties. |
12 | (a) Any Except as provided in subsection (f) of this section, any person who shall violate |
13 | an order of the director or any rule, regulation, or other program requirement, or permit, or approval, |
14 | or any of the prohibitions of this chapter shall be punished by an administrative or civil penalty of |
15 | not more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) and every person shall be deemed guilty of a separate |
16 | and distinct offense for each day during which the violation shall be repeated or continued. |
17 | (b) The director or any agent or employee of the director or any person or his or her agent |
18 | who shall, except in the enforcement of this chapter or in the performance of official duties under |
19 | this chapter, disclose any information relating to secret processes or methods of manufacture or |
20 | production obtained in the course of inspecting or investigating any source or alleged source of air |
21 | pollution, or who shall violate § 23-23-13 shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished |
22 | by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars ($500). |
23 | (c) Any person obstructing, hindering, or in any way causing to be obstructed or hindered, |
24 | the director or any agent or employee of the director in the performance of their duties or who shall |
25 | refuse to permit the director or any of his or her agents entrance into any premises, buildings, or |
26 | other places belonging to or controlled by that person in the performance of his or her duties, or |
27 | who shall refuse to furnish the information requested or to make a test provided for in this chapter |
28 | shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be fined not more than five hundred dollars ($500). |
29 | (d) Any person convicted under the provisions of § 23-23-11 shall be punished by a fine |
30 | of not more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or by imprisonment of one year, or both fine and |
31 | imprisonment, and every person shall be deemed guilty of a separate and distinct offense for each |
32 | day during which the violation shall be repeated or continued. |
33 | (e) Any person who knowingly makes a false statement, representation, or certification in |
34 | any application, record, report, plan, permit, or document filed, maintained and used for purposes |
| LC001411 - Page 19 of 38 |
1 | under this chapter shall be guilty of a felony, and shall be punished by a fine of not more than ten |
2 | thousand dollars ($10,000) or by imprisonment of one year or both fine and imprisonment, and |
3 | every person shall be guilty of a separate and distinct offense for each day during which the |
4 | violation shall be repeated or continued. |
5 | (f) Any person who violates an order, rule, or regulation promulgated by the director |
6 | pursuant to § 23-23-32 shall be punished by an administrative or civil penalty of not less than ninety |
7 | thousand dollars ($90,000) and not more than one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), and every |
8 | person shall be deemed guilty of a separate and distinct offense for each day during which the |
9 | violation shall be repeated or continued. This civil penalty must be paid not more than fifteen (15) |
10 | days from the day on which the violation occurred. |
11 | 23-23-15. Variances. |
12 | (a) Upon application and after a hearing, the director may suspend the enforcement of the |
13 | whole or any part of this chapter or of any rule or regulation promulgated under this chapter in the |
14 | case of any person who shall show that the enforcement of this chapter would constitute undue |
15 | hardship on that person without a corresponding benefit or advantage obtained by it; provided, that |
16 | no suspension shall be entered deferring compliance with a requirement of this chapter or the rules |
17 | and regulations promulgated under this chapter, unless that deferral is consistent with the provisions |
18 | and procedures of the federal Clean Air Act, 42 U.S.C. § 7401 et seq. No suspension shall be |
19 | entered deferring compliance with a requirement of this chapter created by regulations pursuant to |
20 | § 23-23-32. No suspension shall be entered deferring compliance for any rule or regulation for an |
21 | Industrial Facility located within the area specified in § 23-23-32(a). |
22 | (b) In determining under what conditions and to what extent the variance may be granted, |
23 | the director shall give due recognition to the progress which the person requesting the variance |
24 | shall have made in eliminating or preventing air pollution. In this case, the director shall consider |
25 | the reasonableness of granting a variance conditioned on the person's effecting a partial abatement |
26 | of the pollution or a progressive abatement of the pollution or any other circumstances that the |
27 | director may deem reasonable. No variance shall be granted to any person applying for it who is |
28 | causing air pollution which creates a danger to public health or safety. |
29 | (c) Any variance granted under this chapter shall be granted for any period of time, not |
30 | exceeding one year, as the director shall specify, but any variance may be continued from year to |
31 | year. No variance shall be construed as to relieve the person receiving it from any liability imposed |
32 | by law for the commission or maintenance of a nuisance nor shall there be any appeal from a denial |
33 | of a variance. |
34 | (d) Notwithstanding the limitations of this section, the director may, upon application, defer |
| LC001411 - Page 20 of 38 |
1 | compliance with the whole or any part of this chapter or of any rule or regulation promulgated |
2 | under this chapter where compliance is not possible because of breakdowns or malfunctions of |
3 | equipment, acts of God, or other unavoidable casualties; provided, that this order shall not defer |
4 | compliance for more than three (3) months. |
5 | SECTION 3. Chapter 23-23 of the General Laws entitled "Air Pollution" is hereby |
6 | amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
7 | 23-23-32. Specific air contaminant regulations. |
8 | (a) No later than the first day of November in the calendar year of 2022, the director shall |
9 | adopt regulations that shall apply only to polluting facilities in the area composed of the following |
10 | census block groups from the 2010 census: |
11 | (1) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
12 | (2) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
13 | (3) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
14 | (4) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 4, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
15 | (5) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
16 | (6) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
17 | (7) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
18 | (8) Census Tract 4, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
19 | (9) Census Tract 4, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
20 | (10) Census Tract 4, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
21 | (11) Census Tract 4, Block Group 4, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
22 | (12) Census Tract 5, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
23 | (13) Census Tract 5, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
24 | (14) Census Tract 5, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
25 | (15) Census Tract 6, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
26 | (16) Census Tract 6, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
27 | (17) Census Tract 7, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
28 | (18) Census Tract 7, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; and |
29 | (19) Census Tract 7, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island. |
30 | (b) The regulations created by the director under § 23-23-32(a) shall prohibit all industrial |
31 | facilities within the area specified in § 23-23-32(a) from emitting more than one pound per year of |
32 | any of the following air pollutants: |
33 | (1) Carbon monoxide; |
34 | (2) Nitrogen dioxide; |
| LC001411 - Page 21 of 38 |
1 | (3) Sulfur dioxide; |
2 | (4) Lead; |
3 | (5) Particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to a nominal ten |
4 | micrometers, as measured by a method used by the administrator of the U.S. environmental |
5 | protection agency to measure the size of particulate matter, pursuant to 42 U.S. Code § 7602; |
6 | (6) Any air pollutant defined by the administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection |
7 | Agency as a "volatile organic compound" pursuant to 42. U.S. Code § 7412; and |
8 | (7) Any air pollutant categorized by the administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection |
9 | Agency as a "hazardous air pollutant" pursuant to 42. U.S. Code § 7412. |
10 | (c) The director shall, as appropriate, amend or revoke any licenses or permits previously |
11 | provided to any Industrial Facilities to ensure that such facilities are in compliance with the |
12 | emission limits specified in this section and any regulations promulgated thereunder. |
13 | (d) The director shall, as appropriate, amend Rhode Island's state implementation plan |
14 | under the federal Clean Air Act, 42 U.S. Code § 7401 et seq., to reflect and incorporate the emission |
15 | limits specified in this section and any regulations promulgated thereunder. |
16 | 23-23-33. Severability. |
17 | (a) If any provision of this chapter is held invalid, the remainder of this chapter shall not |
18 | be affected thereby. |
19 | (b) If the application of any provision of this chapter to any person or circumstance is held |
20 | invalid, the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected |
21 | thereby. |
22 | SECTION 4. Section 46-12-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-12 entitled "Water |
23 | Pollution" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
24 | 46-12-1. Definitions. |
25 | As used in this chapter the following terms shall, where the context permits, be construed |
26 | as follows: |
27 | (1) "Boat" means any vessel or water craft whether moved by oars, paddles, sails, or other |
28 | power mechanism, inboard or outboard, or any other vessel or structure floating upon the water |
29 | whether or not capable of self locomotion, including house boats, barges, and similar floating |
30 | objects. |
31 | (2) "Clean Water Act" refers to the federal law enacted under 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq., and |
32 | all amendments thereto. |
33 | (3) "Chemical manufacturing plant" means a facility that produces or processes chemicals |
34 | for wholesale or retail distribution. |
| LC001411 - Page 22 of 38 |
1 | (4) "Chemical storage facility" means a facility that stores chemicals which are intended |
2 | for wholesale or retail distribution. |
3 | (3)(5)(i) "Director" means the director of the department of environmental management or |
4 | any subordinate or subordinates to whom the director has delegated the powers and duties vested |
5 | in him or her by this chapter. |
6 | (ii) Wherever reference is made in this chapter to any order of the director and the order |
7 | shall have been modified by the court, the order referred to shall be taken to be the order of the |
8 | director as so modified. |
9 | (4)(6) "Discharge" means the addition of any pollutant to the waters from any point source. |
10 | (5)(7) "Effluent limitation" means any restriction or prohibitions, established in accord |
11 | with the provisions of this chapter or under the federal Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq., |
12 | on quantities, rates, and concentrations of chemical, physical, biological, radiological, and other |
13 | constituents which are discharged into the waters. |
14 | (6)(8) "Fecal coliform bacteria" means organisms within the intestines of warm blooded |
15 | animals that indicate the presence of fecal material, and the potential presence of organisms capable |
16 | of causing disease in humans. |
17 | (9) "Fossil fuel storage facility" means a facility that stores fossil fuel for wholesale |
18 | distribution. |
19 | (10) "Fossil fuel" means fuel composed of or derived from coal, petroleum, oil, natural gas, |
20 | oil shales, bitumens, or tar sands. |
21 | (7)(11) "Groundwaters" includes all underground waters of whatever nature. |
22 | (8)(12) "Marine Sanitation Device-Type I" means a marine toilet which, under prescribed |
23 | test conditions, will produce an effluent that will not exceed a fecal coliform bacteria count of one |
24 | thousand (1,000) parts per one hundred (100) milliliters and have no visible solids. |
25 | (9)(13) "Marine Sanitation Device-Type II" means a marine toilet which, under prescribed |
26 | test conditions will produce an effluent that does not exceed a fecal coliform bacteria count of two |
27 | hundred (200) parts per one hundred (100) milliliters, and have suspended solids not greater than |
28 | one hundred and fifty (150) milligrams per liter. |
29 | (10)(14) "Marine Sanitation Device-Type III" means a marine toilet which is designed to |
30 | prevent the discharge from the boat of any treated or untreated sewage, or any waste derived from |
31 | sewage. |
32 | (11)(15) "Marine toilet" means any toilet on or within any boat as that term is defined |
33 | herein. |
34 | (12)(16) "No discharge zone" means an environmentally sensitive area of the waters of the |
| LC001411 - Page 23 of 38 |
1 | state which has been declared by the department of environmental management pursuant to the |
2 | Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq., to be an area in which any discharge of sewage is |
3 | prohibited. |
4 | (13)(17) "Person" includes an individual, trust, firm, joint stock company, corporation |
5 | (including a quasi government corporation) partnership, association, syndicate, municipality, |
6 | municipal or state agency, fire district, club, nonprofit agency, or any subdivision, commission, |
7 | department, bureau, agency, or department of state or federal government (including any quasi |
8 | government corporation) or of any interstate body. |
9 | (14)(18) "Point source" means any discernible, confined, and discrete conveyance, |
10 | including, but not limited to, any pipe, ditch, channel, tunnel, conduit, well, discrete fissure, |
11 | container, rolling stock, concentrated animal feeding operation, or vessel or other floating craft |
12 | from which pollutants are or may be discharged. This term does not include return flows from |
13 | irrigated agriculture. |
14 | (15)(19) "Pollutant" means any material or effluent which may alter the chemical, physical, |
15 | biological, or radiological characteristics and/or integrity of water, including, but not limited to, |
16 | dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator residue, sewage, garbage, sewage sludge, munitions, |
17 | chemical wastes, biological materials, radioactive materials, heat, wrecked or discarded equipment, |
18 | cellar dirt or industrial, municipal, agricultural, or other waste petroleum or petroleum products, |
19 | including but not limited to oil. |
20 | (16)(20) "Polluting" means the causing of pollution. |
21 | (17)(21) "Pollution" means the man made or man induced alteration of the chemical, |
22 | physical, biological, and radiological integrity of water. |
23 | (22) "Polluting Facility" means: |
24 | (i) An electric power plant that produces electricity by combusting any fossil fuel; |
25 | (ii) A waste storage facility; |
26 | (iii) A toxic material storage facility; |
27 | (iv) A fossil fuel storage facility, excluding gas stations which sell gas only at the retail |
28 | level for use in automobiles and excluding sites that store fossil fuels that are used exclusively for |
29 | transporting goods or other items into the Port of Providence or out of the Port of Providence; |
30 | (v) A fossil fuel production facility; |
31 | (vi) A fossil fuel refinery; |
32 | (vii) A chemical manufacturing plant; |
33 | (viii) A chemical storage facility; |
34 | (ix) A commercial manufacturing facility; |
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1 | (x) A scrap metal storage facility; |
2 | (xi) A scrap metal processing facility; |
3 | (xii) A cement, concrete, or asphalt storage facility; |
4 | (xiii) A cement, concrete, or asphalt processing facility; |
5 | (xix) A cement, concrete, or asphalt production facility; |
6 | (xx) An incinerator, including, but not limited to, a medical waste incinerator; |
7 | (xxi) A resource recovery facility; |
8 | (xxii) A combustor; |
9 | (xxiii) A transfer station or other solid waste facility; |
10 | (xxiv) A landfill, including, but not limited to, a landfill that accepts ash, construction |
11 | debris, demolition debris, or solid waste; |
12 | (xxv) A scrap metal recycling facility capable of receiving five (5) tons or more of |
13 | recyclable material per day; or |
14 | (xxvi) A wood recycling facility capable of receiving five (5) tons or more of recyclable |
15 | material per day. |
16 | (18)(23) "Publicly owned treatment works" means any facility for the treatment of |
17 | pollutants owned by the state or any political subdivision thereof, municipality, or other public |
18 | entity, including any quasi government corporation. |
19 | (19)(24) "Release" means any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, |
20 | injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing of any pollutant into a surface water or |
21 | wetland, or onto or below the land surface. |
22 | (20)(25) "Schedule of compliance" means a schedule of remedial measures including an |
23 | enforceable sequence of actions, or operations, leading to compliance with an effluent limitation or |
24 | any other limitation, prohibition, or standard. |
25 | (21)(26) "Sewage" means fecal material and human waste, or wastes from toilets and other |
26 | receptacles intended to receive or retain body waste, and any wastes, including wastes from human |
27 | households, commercial establishments, and industries, and storm water runoff, that are discharged |
28 | to or otherwise enter a publicly owned treatment works. |
29 | (22)(27) "Underground storage tank" means any one or combination of tanks (including |
30 | underground pipes connected thereto) which is used to contain an accumulation of petroleum |
31 | product or hazardous materials, and the volume of which (including the volume of the underground |
32 | pipes connected thereto) is ten percent (10%) or more beneath the surface of the ground. |
33 | (23)(28) "Waters" includes all surface waters including all waters of the territorial sea, |
34 | tidewaters, all inland waters of any river, stream, brook, pond, or lake, and wetlands, as well as all |
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1 | groundwaters. |
2 | (24)(29) "Eutrophication" means a reduction of dissolved oxygen from excessive plant |
3 | growth, chiefly algae, typically as an effect of increased nutrient loadings, to levels that impair the |
4 | viability of other aquatic life. |
5 | (25)(30) "Nutrient" means organic materials and chemicals, including especially nitrogen |
6 | and phosphorous and their compounds, that are biologically reactive and necessary for life. |
7 | SECTION 5. Chapter 46-12 of the General Laws entitled "Water Pollution" is hereby |
8 | amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
9 | 46-12-42. Specific water pollution regulations. |
10 | (a) No later than the first day of November in the calendar year of 2022, the director shall |
11 | adopt regulations that shall apply only to Polluting Facilities in the area composed of the following |
12 | census block groups from the 2010 census: |
13 | (1) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
14 | (2) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
15 | (3) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
16 | (4) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 4, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
17 | (5) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
18 | (6) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
19 | (7) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
20 | (8) Census Tract 4, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
21 | (9) Census Tract 4, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
22 | (10) Census Tract 4, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
23 | (11) Census Tract 4, Block Group 4, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
24 | (12) Census Tract 5, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
25 | (13) Census Tract 5, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
26 | (14) Census Tract 5, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
27 | (15) Census Tract 6, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
28 | (16) Census Tract 6, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
29 | (17) Census Tract 7, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
30 | (18) Census Tract 7, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; and |
31 | (19) Census Tract 7, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island. |
32 | (b) The regulations promulgated by the director under § 26-12-42(a) shall prohibit all |
33 | industrial facilities within the area specified in § 26-12-42(a) from discharging more than one |
34 | microgram per year of any of the following pollutants into the waters of the state: |
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1 | (1) Acenaphthene; |
2 | (2) Acetone; |
3 | (3) Acrolein; |
4 | (4) Acrylonitrile; |
5 | (5) Aldrin; |
6 | (6) Aluminum; |
7 | (7) Ammonia; |
8 | (8) Antimony; |
9 | (9) Arsenic; |
10 | (10)Asbestos; |
11 | (11) Benzene; |
12 | (12) Benzidine; |
13 | (13) Beryllium; |
14 | (14) Butanone; |
15 | (15) Cadmium; |
16 | (16) Carbon disulfide; |
17 | (17) Carbon tetrachloride; |
18 | (18) Chlordane; |
19 | (19) Chlorine; |
20 | (20) Chloroform; |
21 | (21) Chloromethane; |
22 | (22) Chromium |
23 | (23) Copper; |
24 | (24) Cyanide; |
25 | (25) Dichloroethane; |
26 | (26) Dieldrin; |
27 | (27) Endosulfan; |
28 | (28) Endrin; |
29 | (29) Enterococcus Bacteria; |
30 | (30) Escherichia Coli; |
31 | (31) Ethanol; |
32 | (32)Ethylbenzene; |
33 | (33) Fluoranthene; |
34 | (34) Hexachlorobutadiene; |
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1 | (35) Hexachlorocyclopentadiene; |
2 | (36) Iron; |
3 | (37) Isophorone; |
4 | (38) Isopropyltoluene; |
5 | (39) Lead; |
6 | (40) Mercury; |
7 | (41) Methyl tert-butyl ether; |
8 | (42) Nickel; |
9 | (43) Nitrobenzene; |
10 | (44) Pentachlorophenol; |
11 | (45) Phenol; |
12 | (46) Phosphorous; |
13 | (47) Polychlorinated biphenyls; |
14 | (48) Selenium; |
15 | (49) Silver; |
16 | (50) Tetrachloroethylene; |
17 | (51) Thallium; |
18 | (52) Toluene; |
19 | (53) Toxaphene; |
20 | (54) Trichlorobenzene; |
21 | (55) Trichloroethane; |
22 | (56) Trichloroethylene; |
23 | (57) Trimethylbenzene; |
24 | (58) Vinyl chloride; |
25 | (59) Zinc; |
26 | (60) Any compound that is a type of petroleum hydrocarbon; |
27 | (61) Any compound that is a type of polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbon; |
28 | (62) Any compound that is a type of chloroalkyl ether; |
29 | (63) Any compound that is a type of nitrophenols; |
30 | (64) Any compound that is a type of nitrosamines; |
31 | (65) Any compound that is a type of hexachlorocyclohexane; |
32 | (66) Any compound that is a type of phthalate or phthalate ester; |
33 | (67) Any compound that is a type of xylene; and |
34 | (68) Any other compound classified by the administrator of the U.S. Environmental |
| LC001411 - Page 28 of 38 |
1 | Protection Agency as a "toxic pollutant" under 33 U.S. Code § 1317. |
2 | (c) The regulations promulgated by the director under § 26-12-42(a) shall prohibit all |
3 | Industrial Facilities within the area specified in § 26-12-42(a) from discharging more than one |
4 | milligram per year of any of the following pollutants into the waters of the state of Rhode Island: |
5 | (1) Oil and grease, which shall have the same meaning as the meaning assigned by the |
6 | administrator of the U.S. environmental protection agency to the term "oil and grease" in |
7 | regulations promulgated under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.; |
8 | (2) Total suspended solids, which shall have the same meaning as the meaning assigned by |
9 | the administrator of the U.S. environmental protection agency to the term "total suspended solids" |
10 | in regulations promulgated under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.; |
11 | and |
12 | (3) Biochemical oxygen demand, which shall have the same meaning as the meaning |
13 | assigned by the administrator of the U.S. environmental protection agency to the term "biochemical |
14 | oxygen demand" in regulations promulgated under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 |
15 | U.S.C. 1251 et seq. |
16 | (d) The regulations promulgated by the director under § 26-12-42(a) shall prohibit all |
17 | Industrial Facilities within the area specified in § 26-12-42(a) from discharging more than one |
18 | hundred (100) colony-forming units of fecal coliform per year into the waters of the state of Rhode |
19 | Island. |
20 | (e) The regulations promulgated by the director under § 26-12-42(a) shall prohibit all |
21 | Industrial Facilities within the area specified in § 26-12-42(a) from discharging more than one |
22 | hundred (100) colony-forming units of enterococci per year into the waters of the state of Rhode |
23 | Island. |
24 | (f) The director shall, as appropriate, amend or revoke any licenses or permits previously |
25 | provided to any Industrial Facilities to ensure that such facilities are in compliance with the |
26 | pollution discharge limits specified in this section and any regulations promulgated thereunder. |
27 | (g) The director shall, as appropriate, amend Rhode Island's state implementation plan |
28 | under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq., to reflect and incorporate |
29 | the pollution discharge limits specified in this section and any regulations promulgated thereunder. |
30 | 46-12-43. Severability. |
31 | (a) If any provision of this chapter is held invalid, the remainder of this chapter shall not |
32 | be affected thereby. |
33 | (b) If the application of any provision of this chapter to any person or circumstance is held |
34 | invalid, the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected |
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1 | thereby. |
2 | SECTION 6. Section 42-16.1-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-16.1 entitled |
3 | "Department of Labor and Training" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
4 | 42-16.1-2. Functions of director. |
5 | The director of labor and training shall: |
6 | (1) Have all the powers and duties formerly vested by law in the director of labor with |
7 | regard to factory inspectors and steam boiler inspectors, and such other duties as may be by law |
8 | conferred upon the department; |
9 | (2) Administer the labor laws of this state concerning women and children and be |
10 | responsible for satisfactory working conditions of women and children employed in industry in this |
11 | state by a division in the department which shall be known as the division of labor standards; |
12 | (3) Administer the act relating to state wage payment and wage collection; |
13 | (4) Have all of the powers and duties formerly vested in the director of the department of |
14 | labor and administer those responsibilities set forth in chapters 29 -- 38, inclusive, of title 28; |
15 | (5) Have all the powers and duties formerly vested by law in the director of employment |
16 | and training and administer those responsibilities set forth in chapters 39 -- 44, inclusive, of title |
17 | 28 and chapter 102 of title 42. |
18 | (6) Provide to the department of administration any information, records or documents they |
19 | certify as necessary to investigate suspected misclassification of employee status, wage and hour |
20 | violations, or prevailing wage violations subject to their jurisdiction, even if deemed confidential |
21 | under applicable law, provided that the confidentiality of such materials shall be maintained, to the |
22 | extent required of the releasing department by any federal or state law or regulation, by all state |
23 | departments to which the materials are released and no such information shall be publicly disclosed, |
24 | except to the extent necessary for the requesting department or agency to adjudicate a violation of |
25 | applicable law. The certification must include a representation that there is probable cause to |
26 | believe that a violation has occurred. State departments sharing this information or materials may |
27 | enter into written agreements via memorandums of understanding to ensure the safeguarding of |
28 | such released information or materials. |
29 | (7) Have the power to enter contracts, hire employees, hire contractors, promulgate rules |
30 | and regulations, levy fines, adjudicate administrative cases, or take any other lawful action in order |
31 | to administer the Just Transition Program, pursuant to § 42-16.1-21. |
32 | SECTION 7. Chapter 42-16.1 of the General Laws entitled "Department of Labor and |
33 | Training" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
34 | 42-16.1-20. Definitions. |
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1 | (a) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "Just Transition Program Zone" shall mean the |
2 | geographic area composed of the following census block groups from the 2010 census: |
3 | (1) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
4 | (2) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
5 | (3) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
6 | (4) Census Tract 1.01, Block Group 4, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
7 | (5) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
8 | (6) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
9 | (7) Census Tract 1.02, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
10 | (8) Census Tract 4, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
11 | (9) Census Tract 4, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
12 | (10) Census Tract 4, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
13 | (11) Census Tract 4, Block Group 4, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
14 | (12) Census Tract 5, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
15 | (13) Census Tract 5, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
16 | (14) Census Tract 5, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
17 | (15) Census Tract 6, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
18 | (16) Census Tract 6, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
19 | (17) Census Tract 7, Block Group 1, Providence County, Rhode Island; |
20 | (18) Census Tract 7, Block Group 2, Providence County, Rhode Island; and |
21 | (19) Census Tract 7, Block Group 3, Providence County, Rhode Island. |
22 | (b) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "polluting facilities" shall mean: |
23 | (1) An electric power plant that produces electricity by combusting any fossil fuel; |
24 | (2) A waste storage facility; |
25 | (3) A toxic material storage facility; |
26 | (4) A fossil fuel storage facility, excluding gas stations which sell gas only at the retail |
27 | level for use in automobiles and excluding sites that store fossil fuels that are used exclusively for |
28 | transporting goods or other items into the port of Providence or out of the port of Providence; |
29 | (5) A fossil fuel production facility; |
30 | (6) A fossil fuel refinery; |
31 | (7) A chemical manufacturing plant; |
32 | (8) A chemical storage facility; |
33 | (9) A commercial manufacturing facility; |
34 | (10) A scrap metal storage facility; |
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1 | (11) A scrap metal processing facility; |
2 | (12) A cement, concrete, or asphalt storage facility; |
3 | (13) A cement, concrete, or asphalt processing facility; |
4 | (14) A cement, concrete, or asphalt production facility; |
5 | (15) An incinerator, including, but not limited to, a medical waste incinerator; |
6 | (16) A resource recovery facility; |
7 | (17) A combustor; |
8 | (18) A transfer station or other solid waste facility; |
9 | (19) A landfill, including, but not limited to, a landfill that accepts ash, construction debris, |
10 | demolition debris, or solid waste; |
11 | (20) A scrap metal recycling facility capable of receiving five (5) tons or more of recyclable |
12 | material per day; or |
13 | (21) A wood recycling facility capable of receiving five (5) tons or more of recyclable |
14 | material per day. |
15 | (c) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "Just Transition Worker" shall mean: |
16 | (1) Any worker who is employed to work at, in, or with an industrial facility within the |
17 | Just Transition program zone for at least eight (8) hours per week, as determined by the director; |
18 | and |
19 | (2) Any worker who was formerly employed to work at, in, or with an industrial facility |
20 | within the Just Transition program zone for at least eight (8) hours per week, as determined by the |
21 | director, and who lost their job after the enactment of this section. |
22 | (d) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "Enrollee" shall mean a Just Transition Worker who |
23 | is enrolled in the Just Transition program. |
24 | (e) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "Just Transition Salary" shall mean the Just Transition |
25 | Salary received by enrollees, pursuant to § 42-16.1-21(i). |
26 | (f) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "chemical manufacturing plant" means a facility that |
27 | produces or processes chemicals for wholesale or retail distribution. |
28 | (g) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "chemical storage facility" means a facility that stores |
29 | chemicals which are intended for wholesale or retail distribution. |
30 | (h) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "fossil fuel storage facility" means a facility that |
31 | stores fossil fuel for wholesale distribution. |
32 | (i) For the purposes of § 42-16.1-21, "fossil fuel" means fuel composed of or derived from |
33 | coal, petroleum, oil, natural gas, oil shales, bitumen, or tar sands. |
34 | 42-16.1-21. Just transition unit established. |
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1 | (a) There shall be within the department of labor and training a "just transition unit." |
2 | (b) The just transition unit shall establish the Just Transition Program. |
3 | (c) The purposes of the Just Transition Program shall be to: |
4 | (1) Organize, coordinate, and finance job retraining for Just Transition workers in order to |
5 | equip them with the skills necessary to obtain high-paying jobs in environmentally sustainable |
6 | industries; and |
7 | (2) Compensate Just Transition workers for participating in job retraining programs and |
8 | provide them with a Just Transition salary while they search for a new job. |
9 | (d) All Just Transition workers shall be eligible to enroll in the Just Transition program. |
10 | (e) All enrollees shall be offered job training. The department of labor and training shall |
11 | pay for the full and complete cost of the job training they receive under the Just Transition program, |
12 | and enrollees shall not be charged for any portion of the training. |
13 | (f) All job training offered to a Just Transition worker under the Just Transition program |
14 | shall be designed to: |
15 | (1) Qualify a Just Transition worker for a job that provides, at least, a comparable salary |
16 | and comparable benefits to the job they previously held working at, in, or with an industrial facility |
17 | within the Just Transition program zone, as determined by the director; |
18 | (2) Qualify a Just Transition worker for employment in an environmentally sustainable |
19 | industry, as determined by the director; and |
20 | (3) Accommodate, to the greatest extent practical, the preferences of each Just Transition |
21 | worker with regard to the types of jobs for which they would like to be trained. |
22 | (g) All enrollees shall be enrolled in the Just Transition program from the date on which |
23 | they enroll in the program until exactly two (2) years from the date on which their employment at, |
24 | in, or with an Industrial Facility in the Just Transition program zone terminates. |
25 | (h) The just transition unit shall provide a Just Transition salary to all enrollees from the |
26 | date on which their employment at, in, or with an industrial facility in the Just Transition program |
27 | zone terminates until exactly two (2) years from that date, or until the date on which they begin |
28 | receiving another full-time salary from a job that is not at, in, or with an industrial facility in the |
29 | Just Transition program zone, whichever is earlier. The Just Transition salary shall consist of a |
30 | monthly payment equal to one-twelfth (1/12) of the highest annual salary that the worker received |
31 | from any job working at, in, or with an Industrial Facility in the Just Transition program zone within |
32 | the period between the enactment of this chapter and when they lost that job, as determined by the |
33 | director. Job apprenticeships shall not be considered "employment" under the terms of this |
34 | subsection, nor shall a worker be unenrolled from the program because they are participating in a |
| LC001411 - Page 33 of 38 |
1 | job apprenticeship program. |
2 | 42-16.1-22. Severability. |
3 | (a) If any provision of this chapter is held invalid, the remainder of this chapter shall not |
4 | be affected thereby. |
5 | (b) If the application of any provision of this chapter to any person or circumstance is held |
6 | invalid, the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected |
7 | thereby. |
8 | SECTION 8. Title 42 of the General Laws entitled "STATE AFFAIRS AND |
9 | GOVERNMENT" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
10 | CHAPTER 17.12 |
11 | ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE ACT |
12 | 42-17.12-1. Short title. |
13 | This act may be known and shall be cited as the "Environmental Justice Act." |
14 | 42-17.12-2. Legislative findings. |
15 | (a) The state has an affirmative duty to ensure that every resident has access to clean air |
16 | and clean water. |
17 | (b) Many communities in the state do not have clean air and clean water, creating a |
18 | widespread and severe public health crisis. |
19 | 42-17.12-3. Definitions. |
20 | As used in this chapter: |
21 | (1) "Administrator" means the administrator of the department of environmental |
22 | management. |
23 | (2) "Air pollutant" means: |
24 | (i) Anything that is considered an "air contaminant" under § 23-23-3; or |
25 | (ii) Anything that is considered an "air pollutant" under the federal Clean Air Act, pursuant |
26 | to 42 U.S. Code § 7602 et seq. |
27 | (3) "Census Tract" means a geographic region identified and referred to as a "Census Tract" |
28 | by the U.S. Census Bureau in the 2010 census. |
29 | (4) "Chemical manufacturing plant" means a facility that produces or processes chemicals |
30 | for wholesale or retail distribution. |
31 | (5) "Chemical storage facility" means a facility that stores chemicals which are intended |
32 | for wholesale or retail distribution. |
33 | (6) "Cumulative impact permit" means the permit described in § 42-17.12-5. |
34 | (7) "Cumulative impact permit applicant" means any corporation, business, firm, |
| LC001411 - Page 34 of 38 |
1 | partnership, or individual who has submitted an cumulative impact permit application |
2 | (8) "Overburdened community" means any census tract in Rhode Island that: |
3 | (i) Is at or above the seventy-fifth (75th) statewide percentile for at least three (3) of the |
4 | following Environmental Indicators on the most recent available United States environmental |
5 | protection agency's EJSCREEN assessment: |
6 | (A) PM 2.5; |
7 | (B) Ozone; |
8 | (C) NATA diesel PM; |
9 | (D) NATA cancer risk; |
10 | (E) NATA respiratory hazard index; |
11 | (F) Traffic proximity; |
12 | (G) Lead paint indicator; |
13 | (H) Superfund proximity; |
14 | (I) Risk management plan facilities proximity; |
15 | (J) Hazardous waste proximity; and |
16 | (K) Wastewater discharge indicator; and |
17 | (ii) Has a median household income, as calculated by the U.S. Census Bureau that is no |
18 | greater than eighty percent (80%) of the statewide median household income, as calculated by the |
19 | U.S. Census Bureau. |
20 | (9) "Polluting facility" means any |
21 | (i) Major stationary source of air pollution, as defined by the federal Clean Air Act, 42 U.S. |
22 | Code § 7401 et seq.; |
23 | (ii) Resource recovery facility; |
24 | (iii) Incinerator; |
25 | (iv) Sludge processing facility; |
26 | (v) Combustor; |
27 | (vi) Incinerator; |
28 | (vii) Sewage treatment plant with a capacity of more than one million (1,000,000) gallons |
29 | per day; |
30 | (viii) Transfer station or other solid waste facility; |
31 | (ix) Recycling facility capable of receiving one hundred (100) tons or more of recyclable |
32 | material per day; |
33 | (x) Scrap metal facility; |
34 | (xi) Landfill; including a landfill that accepts ash, construction debris, demolition debris, |
| LC001411 - Page 35 of 38 |
1 | or solid waste; |
2 | (xii) Medical waste incinerator; |
3 | (xiii) Concentrated animal feeding operation; or |
4 | (xiv) Chemical manufacturing plant. |
5 | 42-17.12-4. Environmental burden list. |
6 | (a) On or before January 31, 2022, the department of environmental management shall |
7 | develop, post, and maintain a complete and comprehensive list, known as the environmental burden |
8 | list, on its website of all census tracts that are overburdened communities. |
9 | (b) The department of environmental management shall update the environmental burden |
10 | list on its website at least once every year. |
11 | 42-17.12-5. Creation of the cumulative impact permit. |
12 | The department of environmental management shall create a new permit called a |
13 | cumulative impact permit. |
14 | 42-17.12-6. Requirement for a cumulative impact permit. |
15 | (a) Any corporation, business, firm, partnership or individual must receive a cumulative |
16 | impact permit from the department of environmental management for: |
17 | (1) The construction of any polluting facility; or |
18 | (2) The expansion of any existing polluting facility. |
19 | 42-17.12-7. Cumulative impact permit denial. |
20 | The department of environmental management shall deny a cumulative impact permit for |
21 | the construction of a new polluting facility or the expansion of an existing polluting facility if that |
22 | polluting facility is located within an overburdened community or within one (1) mile of an |
23 | overburdened community. |
24 | 42-17.12-8. Cumulative impact permit denial override. |
25 | (a) If no fewer than twenty-five percent (25%) of the registered voters of an overburdened |
26 | community sign a petition to the secretary of state asking them to organize a local referendum on |
27 | whether to grant a cumulative impact permit to a proposed polluting facility within that |
28 | overburdened community, the secretary of state shall organize such a referendum. Only registered |
29 | voters of any overburdened community which is located within one mile of the polluting facility |
30 | shall be permitted to vote in the local referendum. All registered voters of any overburdened |
31 | community which is within one mile of the polluting facility shall be permitted to vote in the |
32 | referendum. Before the referendum, the department of environmental management shall prepare |
33 | and issue a public report on the environmental effects and public health effects of the proposed |
34 | polluting facility. |
| LC001411 - Page 36 of 38 |
1 | (b) Notwithstanding the requirement of § 42-17.12-7, the department of environmental |
2 | management may issue a cumulative impact permit for the construction of a new polluting facility |
3 | or the expansion of an existing polluting facility that would be polluting facility located within an |
4 | overburdened community or within one mile of an overburdened community, if no fewer than sixty- |
5 | six percent (66%) of votes cast in a referendum support granting a cumulative impact permit to the |
6 | polluting facility. |
7 | 42-17.12-9. Additional conditions. |
8 | As part of issuing a cumulative impact permit, the department of environmental |
9 | management may impose conditions on the construction and operation of a polluting facility, if the |
10 | administrator determines that those conditions will protect public health. |
11 | 42-17.12-10. Cumulative Impact Permit fee. |
12 | The department of environmental management shall charge each cumulative impact permit |
13 | applicant a fee to cover the entirety of the costs associated with the implementation of this section. |
14 | 42-17.12-11. Technical guidance and regulations. |
15 | (a) The department of environmental management may issue and post on its website |
16 | technical guidance for compliance with this chapter. |
17 | (b) The department of environmental management shall adopt regulations to carry out this |
18 | chapter. |
19 | 42-17.12-12. Severability. |
20 | (a) If any provision of this chapter is held invalid, the remainder of this chapter shall not |
21 | be affected thereby. |
22 | (b) If the application of any provision of this chapter to any person or circumstance is held |
23 | invalid, the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected |
24 | thereby. |
25 | SECTION 9. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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| LC001411 - Page 37 of 38 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- THE GREEN JUSTICE ZONE | |
ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would establish the first Green Justice Zone, a model that may be replicated in |
2 | future years to ensure that all communities throughout the state have clean air and clean water. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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| LC001411 - Page 38 of 38 |