2025 -- H 5422 | |
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LC000286 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2025 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- SCHOOL WASTE RECYCLING AND REFUSE DISPOSAL | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Carson, Kislak, Fogarty, Cotter, McGaw, Donovan, | |
Date Introduced: February 12, 2025 | |
Referred To: House Education | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 16-111-1, 16-111-2, 16-111-4, 16-111-5 and 16-111-7 of the |
2 | General Laws in Chapter 16-111 entitled "School Waste Recycling and Refuse Disposal" are |
3 | hereby amended to read as follows: |
4 | 16-111-1. Definitions. |
5 | As used in this chapter. |
6 | (1) “Educational entity” or “educational entities” means all Rhode Island school districts, |
7 | including a single school district, regional school district, multiple school districts, any public or |
8 | private school grades kindergarten through twelve (K-12), any charter public school, or any career |
9 | and technical high school. |
10 | (2) "Sharing table" means a department of health-approved designated location in a school |
11 | cafeteria where students or staff can place: |
12 | (i) Unopened, prepackaged, shelf stable items including, but not limited to, granola bars, |
13 | cereal packs, crackers, and drinks; |
14 | (ii) Wrapped fruit and vegetables and fruits with a thick skin including, but not limited to, |
15 | bananas, oranges, and washed apples; provided that, the peel is intact; and |
16 | (iii) Unopened, prepackaged perishable food items; provided that, a temperature control |
17 | mechanism is in place to maintain a safe temperature for the food items. |
18 | (2)(3) “Waste audit” means an analysis of a facility’s waste stream. The audit can identify |
19 | what types of recyclable materials and waste a facility generates; how much of each category is |
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1 | recovered for recycling or discarded; and what materials can be composted. |
2 | 16-111-2. Waste audit/report. |
3 | (a) On or after January 1, 2022, and every three (3) years thereafter, every educational |
4 | entity shall coordinate and cooperate with the Rhode Island resource recovery corporation (RIRRC) |
5 | for the purpose of conducting school waste audits. These audits shall produce waste management |
6 | reports that shall be collected, maintained, and delivered to the educational entity. The waste audits |
7 | shall be performed at every educational entity. |
8 | (b) Waste audits and any reports required herein shall include guidelines and strategies on |
9 | reducing waste for each educational entity to incorporate into its food waste reduction and recycling |
10 | programs in an effort to eliminate food waste, promote recycling, and provide food to local |
11 | communities. |
12 | (c) Educational entities, using the guidelines and strategies pursuant to subsection (b), shall |
13 | design and implement a waste collection system in accordance with applicable state law for the |
14 | diversion of items including, but not limited to, paper, books, furniture, computers, office supplies, |
15 | plastic, glass, cardboard, and surplus foods. |
16 | (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any waste audit conducted pursuant to this |
17 | section shall be provided free of charge by the RIRRC. |
18 | (e) Effective January 1, 2026, and every three (3) years thereafter, educational entities shall |
19 | report the results of any waste audit conducted pursuant to this section to the commissioner of the |
20 | Rhode Island department of education who shall publish the results of the audit on the department |
21 | website. |
22 | 16-111-4. Food service — Local sources preferred. |
23 | It shall be the policy of the state, the department of education, and any educational entity |
24 | to encourage require that any request for proposal (RFP) or invitation for bid (IFB) to a food service |
25 | company (vendor) to provide food services to an educational entity encourage the use of a vendor |
26 | that purchases ten percent (10%) of the required food service product from a Rhode Island-based |
27 | food service company. In addition, it shall also be the policy of the state, the department of |
28 | education, and any educational entity, to encourage the only use of vendors who recycle organic- |
29 | waste materials at an authorized composting facility, an anaerobic digestion facility, or by another |
30 | authorized recycling method, regardless of whether the entity purchasing the services is or is not |
31 | an educational entity, or a covered entity or a covered educational institution pursuant to the |
32 | provisions of § 23-18.9-7. Any food service company that fails to comply with the provisions of |
33 | this section shall be prohibited from participating in any additional RFPs or IFBs for food service |
34 | for educational entities until such compliance is met. |
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1 | 16-111-5. Food donations by food service companies. |
2 | (a) It shall be the policy of the state, the department of education, and any educational entity |
3 | to require that any request for proposal (RFP) to select a food service company (vendor) to provide |
4 | food services to an educational entity shall require the vendor to donate any unserved nonperishable |
5 | or unspoiled perishable food to local food banks or the Rhode Island Food Bank in accordance with |
6 | the recommendations from the Rhode Island department of health “The Road to End Hunger” |
7 | initiative. |
8 | (b) Vendors required to donate nonperishable and unspoiled perishable food to local food |
9 | banks or the Rhode Island Food Bank shall initially make arrangements for the provision |
10 | accommodations necessary to carry out the provisions of this section. |
11 | (c) Except for injury resulting from gross negligence or intentional misconduct in the |
12 | preparation or handling of donated food, no educational entity, person, or vendor who or that |
13 | donates food that is fit for human consumption at the time it was donated, as required by subsection |
14 | (a), shall be liable for any damage or injury resulting from the consumption of the donated food. |
15 | (d) The immunity from civil liability provided by this section applies regardless of |
16 | compliance with any laws, regulations, or ordinances regulating the packaging or labeling of food, |
17 | and regardless of compliance with any laws, regulations, or ordinances regulating the storage or |
18 | handling of the food by the donee after the donation of the food. The donation of nonperishable |
19 | food that is fit for human consumption but that has exceeded the labeled shelf life date |
20 | recommended by the manufacturer is protected pursuant to this section. The donation of perishable |
21 | food that is fit for human consumption but that has exceeded the labeled shelf life date |
22 | recommended by the manufacturer is protected pursuant to this section if the person who distributes |
23 | the food to the end recipient makes a good faith evaluation that the food to be donated is |
24 | wholesome. |
25 | (e) The local food bank or Rhode Island Food Bank that, in good faith, receives and |
26 | distributes food without charge, pursuant to subsection (a), that is fit for human consumption at the |
27 | time it was distributed is not liable for any injury or death due to the food unless the injury or death |
28 | is a direct result of the gross negligence or intentional misconduct of the organization. |
29 | (f) Vendors pursuant to subsection (a) of this section shall provide an annual report to the |
30 | Rhode Island department of education on a form prepared by the department, detailing the amount |
31 | of unserved nonperishable or unspoiled perishable food donated pursuant to subsection (a) of this |
32 | section and shall also provide information relative to any tax deduction or credit utilized by the |
33 | vendor due to donations made pursuant to this section. Information required by this subsection shall |
34 | be published on the RIDE website. Failure of any vendor to comply with the provisions of this |
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1 | section shall result in a one thousand dollar ($1,000) fine per violation and the vendor shall be |
2 | prohibited from participating in any future RFP or IFB for food service for educational entities. |
3 | 16-111-7. Rules and regulations. |
4 | The commissioner is hereby authorized directed to promulgate whatever rules and |
5 | regulations may be required to implement this chapter and shall annually provide notice to all |
6 | educational entities of the department’s school waste disposal and refuse disposal policies. The |
7 | rules and regulations required pursuant to this section shall be promulgated no later than January |
8 | 1, 2026. |
9 | SECTION 2. Chapter 16-111 of the General Laws entitled "School Waste Recycling and |
10 | Refuse Disposal" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
11 | 16-111-8. Certified environmental custodian. |
12 | Each educational entity shall require that at least one employee of the entity be certified in |
13 | the fundamentals of composting and recycling. Certification pursuant to this section may be |
14 | achieved through in-person or virtual instruction with a program approved by the commissioner. |
15 | The certification required by this section shall be administered by the department of environmental |
16 | management, in coordination with the Rhode Island resource recovery corporation, and shall be |
17 | achieved by January 1, 2027, at each educational entity. |
18 | 16-111-9. Share tables. |
19 | (a) An educational entity may do both of the following to minimize waste and to reduce |
20 | food insecurity: |
21 | (1) Provide sharing tables where food service staff, students, and faculty may return |
22 | appropriate food items and make those food items available to students during the course of a |
23 | regular school meal time. |
24 | (2) Allow the food placed on the sharing tables that is not taken by a student during the |
25 | course of a regular school meal time in accordance with subsection (a)(1) of this section to be |
26 | donated to a food bank or any other nonprofit charitable organization. |
27 | (b) Donations of food or food made available to students during the course of a regular |
28 | school meal time pursuant to this section may include prepackaged food with the packaging still |
29 | intact and in good condition, whole uncut produce that is packaged and/or wrapped or has a thick |
30 | skin or produce providing the skin of the produce is intact before donation, unopened bags of sliced |
31 | fruit, unopened containers of milk that are immediately stored in a cooling bin maintained at forty- |
32 | one degrees Fahrenheit (41°F) or below, and perishable prepackaged food if it is placed in a proper |
33 | temperature-controlled environment. |
34 | (c) When an educational entity makes food available to students during the course of a |
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1 | regular school meal time or donates food to a food bank or any other nonprofit charitable |
2 | organization for distribution, the preparation, safety, and donation of food shall be consistent with |
3 | relevant provisions of the Rhode Island food code (216-RICR-50-10-1) and approved the |
4 | department of health. |
5 | SECTION 3. Section 23-18.9-17 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-18.9 entitled "Refuse |
6 | Disposal" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
7 | 23-18.9-17. Food waste ban. |
8 | (a) On and after January 1, 2016, each covered entity and each covered educational |
9 | institution shall ensure that the organic-waste materials that are generated by the covered entity or |
10 | at the covered educational facility are recycled at an authorized composting facility or anaerobic |
11 | digestion facility or by another authorized recycling method if: |
12 | (1) The covered entity or covered educational facility generates not less than one hundred |
13 | four (104) tons per year of organic-waste material; and |
14 | (2) The covered entity or covered educational facility is located not more than fifteen (15) |
15 | miles from an authorized composting facility or anaerobic digestion facility with available capacity |
16 | to accept such material. |
17 | (b) On and after January 1, 2018 2028, each covered educational institution shall ensure |
18 | that the all organic-waste materials that are generated at the covered educational facility are |
19 | recycled at an authorized composting facility or anaerobic digestion facility or by another |
20 | authorized recycling method if:. |
21 | (1) The covered educational facility generates not less than fifty-two (52) tons per year of |
22 | organic-waste material; and |
23 | (2) The covered entity or covered educational facility is located not more than fifteen (15) |
24 | miles from an authorized composting facility or anaerobic digestion facility with available capacity |
25 | to accept such material. |
26 | (c) The director shall grant a waiver of the requirements of subsections (a) and (b) upon a |
27 | showing that the tipping fee charged by the Rhode Island resource recovery corporation for non- |
28 | contract commercial sector waste is less than the fee charged for organic-waste material by each |
29 | composting facility or anaerobic digestion facility located within fifteen (15) miles of the covered |
30 | entity’s location. |
31 | (d)(b) On and after January 1, 2023, each educational entity (as defined in § 16-110-1) shall |
32 | ensure that the organic-waste materials that are generated by the educational entity are recycled at |
33 | an authorized composting facility or anaerobic digestion facility or by another authorized recycling |
34 | method if: |
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1 | (1) The educational entity generates not less than thirty (30) tons per year of organic-waste |
2 | material; and |
3 | (2) The educational entity is located not more than fifteen (15) miles from an authorized |
4 | composting facility or anaerobic digestion facility with available capacity to accept such material. |
5 | SECTION 4. Section 16-22-35 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-22 entitled "Curriculum |
6 | [See Title 16 Chapter 97 — the Rhode Island Board of Education Act]" is hereby amended to read |
7 | as follows: |
8 | 16-22-35. Littering prevention and recycling awareness program. |
9 | The department of elementary and secondary education shall, in collaboration with the |
10 | Rhode Island resource recovery corporation, prescribe a presentation on litter prevention, reducing |
11 | and reusing materials, and recycling awareness that shall be used to educate every public school |
12 | student including, elementary, and middle school and high school students student within the state |
13 | on a yearly basis. |
14 | SECTION 5. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC000286 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION -- SCHOOL WASTE RECYCLING AND REFUSE DISPOSAL | |
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1 | This act would amend the certain provisions relative to school waste recycling and refuse |
2 | disposal and would require reports of waste audits by educational entities and reports of program |
3 | participation by vendors. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC000286 | |
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