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1 | ARTICLE 3 | |
2 | RELATING TO GOVERNMENT REFORM AND REORGANIZATION | |
3 | SECTION 1. This section shall serve as a joint resolution required pursuant to R.I. Const., | |
4 | Art. XIV, Sec. I. | |
5 | J O I N T R E S O L U T I O N | |
6 | TO APPROVE AND PUBLISH AND SUBMIT TO THE ELECTORS A PROPOSITION OF | |
7 | AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
8 | RESOLVED, that a majority of the members elected to each house of the General | |
9 | Assembly voting therefor, the following amendment to the Constitution of the State of Rhode Island | |
10 | be proposed to the qualified electors of the State for their approval in accordance with the provisions | |
11 | of Article XIV of the Constitution, and that it take the place of Article IX, Section 14, which is | |
12 | hereby amended to read as follows: | |
13 | ARTICLE IX – OF THE EXECUTIVE POWER | |
14 | Section 14. Veto power of governor -- Veto overrides by general assembly – Acts effective | |
15 | without action by governor. | |
16 | Every bill, resolution, or vote (except such as relate to adjournment, the organization or | |
17 | conduct of either or both houses of the general assembly, and resolutions proposing amendment to | |
18 | the Constitution) which shall have passed both houses of the general assembly shall be presented | |
19 | to the governor. If the governor approve it the governor shall sign it, and thereupon it shall become | |
20 | operative, but if the governor does not approve it the governor shall return it, accompanied by the | |
21 | governor's objections in writing to the house in which it originated, which shall enter the governor's | |
22 | objections in full upon its journal and proceed to reconsider it. If, after such reconsideration, | |
23 | three‑fifths of the members present and voting in (except for any bill addressing appropriation of | |
24 | money, two-thirds of the members elected to) that house shall vote to pass the measure, it shall be | |
25 | sent with the objections, to the other house, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and if | |
26 | approved by three‑fifths of the members present and voting in (except for any bill addressing | |
27 | appropriation of money, two‑thirds of the members elected to) that house, it shall become operative | |
28 | in the same manner as if the governor had approved it, but in such cases the votes of both houses | |
29 | shall be determined by ayes and nays and the names of the members voting for and against the | |
30 | measure shall be entered upon the journal of each house, respectively. If the measure shall not be | |
31 | returned by the governor within six days (Sundays excepted) after it shall have been presented to | |
32 | the governor the same shall become operative unless the general assembly, by adjournment, | |
33 | prevents its return, in which case it shall become operative unless transmitted by the governor to | |
34 | the secretary of state, with the governor's disapproval in writing within ten days after such | |
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1 | adjournment. | |
2 | If any bill presented to the governor shall address appropriation of money, the governor | |
3 | may: | |
4 | (a) Approve or disapprove the entire bill in like manner as the passage of other bills set | |
5 | forth in this section; or | |
6 | (b) Reduce or eliminate any sum or sums of money appropriated in the bill while approving | |
7 | other portions of the bill, in which case the portions of the bill approved by the governor shall | |
8 | become law, and each reduced or eliminated sum of money shall also become law unless the general | |
9 | assembly reconsiders and separately and individually passes the original sum according to the rules | |
10 | and limitations prescribed in this section for the passage of other bills over the governor’s veto; | |
11 | and/or | |
12 | (c) Disapprove one or more items or parts of items of the bill (other than sum or sums of | |
13 | money described in the immediately preceding paragraph (b) of this section), in which case the | |
14 | portions of the bill approved by the governor shall become law, and each item or part of an item | |
15 | disapproved by the governor shall not become law unless the general assembly reconsiders and | |
16 | separately and individually passes the original version of the item or part of an item according to | |
17 | the rules and limitations prescribed in this section for the passage of other bills over the governor’s | |
18 | veto, provided: | |
19 | (1) That in approving the bill in part, the governor may not create: | |
20 | (i) a new word by rejecting individual letters in the words; or | |
21 | (ii) a new sentence by combining parts of two or more sentences; and | |
22 | (2) Further, that to the extent an item or part of an item disapproved by the governor | |
23 | constitutes a condition, including but not limited to directing or restricting the use, of an | |
24 | appropriation, the sum corresponding to the specific item of appropriation to which the disapproved | |
25 | condition applies shall not be reduced but shall remain as part of the appropriated funds. | |
26 | RESOLVED, that this proposition of amendment shall be submitted to qualified electors | |
27 | for their approval or rejection at the next statewide general election. The voting places in the several | |
28 | cities and towns shall be kept open during the hours required by law for voting therein for general | |
29 | officers of the state; and be it further | |
30 | RESOLVED, that the secretary of state shall cause this proposition of amendment to be | |
31 | published in the newspapers of the state prior to the date of the meetings of qualified electors; and | |
32 | this proposition of amendment shall be inserted in notices to be issued prior to the meetings of | |
33 | qualified electors for the purpose of warning the town, ward, or district meetings, and this | |
34 | proposition of amendment shall be read by the town, ward, or district meetings to be held as | |
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1 | aforesaid; and be it further | |
2 | RESOLVED, that the town, ward, and district meetings to be held as aforesaid shall be | |
3 | warned, and the list of voters shall be canvassed and made up, and the town, ward, and district | |
4 | meetings shall be conducted in the same manner as now provided by law for the town, ward, and | |
5 | district meetings for the election of general officers of the state; and be it further | |
6 | RESOLVED, that upon approval by the qualified electors, this proposition of amendment | |
7 | shall take effect and amend Section 14 of Article IX of the Constitution of the state on January 1, | |
8 | 2027. | |
9 | SECTION 2. Section 23-24.12-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-24.12 entitled “Proper | |
10 | Management of Unused Paint” is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
11 | 23-24.12-3. Establishment of paint stewardship program. | |
12 | (a) On or before March 1, 2014, each producer shall join the representative organization | |
13 | and such representative organization shall submit a plan for the establishment of a paint stewardship | |
14 | program to the department for approval. The program shall minimize the public sector involvement | |
15 | in the management of post-consumer paint by reducing the generation of post-consumer paint, | |
16 | negotiating agreements to collect, transport, reuse, recycle, and/or burn for energy recovery at an | |
17 | appropriately licensed facility post-consumer paint using environmentally sound management | |
18 | practices. | |
19 | (b) The program shall also provide for convenient and available state-wide collection of | |
20 | post-consumer paint that, at a minimum, provides for collection rates and convenience greater than | |
21 | the collection programs available to consumers prior to such paint stewardship program; propose a | |
22 | paint stewardship assessment; include a funding mechanism that requires each producer who | |
23 | participates in the representative organization to remit to the representative organization payment | |
24 | of the paint stewardship assessment for each container of architectural paint sold within the state; | |
25 | include an education and outreach program to help ensure the success of the program; and, work | |
26 | with the department and Rhode Island commerce corporation to identify ways in which the state | |
27 | can motivate local infrastructure investment, business development and job creation related to the | |
28 | collection, transportation and processing of post-consumer paint. | |
29 | (c) The plan submitted to the department pursuant to this section shall: | |
30 | (1) Identify each producer participating in the paint stewardship program and the brands of | |
31 | architectural paint sold in this state covered by the program; | |
32 | (2) Identify how the representative organization will provide convenient, statewide | |
33 | accessibility to the program; | |
34 | (3) Set forth the process by which an independent auditor will be selected and identify the | |
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1 | criteria used by the representative organization in selecting independent auditor; | |
2 | (4) Identify, in detail, the educational and outreach program that will be implemented to | |
3 | inform consumers and retailers of the program and how to participate; | |
4 | (5) Identify the methods and procedures under which the paint stewardship program will | |
5 | be coordinated with the Rhode Island resource recovery corporation; | |
6 | (6) Identify, in detail, the operational plans for interacting with retailers on the proper | |
7 | handling and management of post-consumer paint; | |
8 | (7) Include the proposed, audited paint assessment as identified in this section; | |
9 | (8) Include the targeted annual collection rate; | |
10 | (9) Include a description of the intended treatment, storage, transportation and disposal | |
11 | options and methods for the collected post-consumer paint; and | |
12 | (10) Be accompanied by a fee in the amount of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) | |
13 | to be deposited into the environmental response fund to cover the review of said plan by the | |
14 | department. | |
15 | (d) Not later than sixty (60) days after submission of a plan pursuant to this section, the | |
16 | department shall make a determination whether to: | |
17 | (1) Approve the plan as submitted; | |
18 | (2) Approve the plan with conditions; or | |
19 | (3) Deny the plan. | |
20 | (e) Not later than three (3) months after the date the plan is approved, the representative | |
21 | organization shall implement the paint stewardship program. | |
22 | (f) On or before March 1, 2014, the representative organization shall propose a uniform | |
23 | paint stewardship assessment for all architectural paint sold in this state. Such proposed paint | |
24 | stewardship assessment shall be reviewed by an independent auditor to assure that such assessment | |
25 | is consistent with the budget of the paint stewardship program described in this section and such | |
26 | independent auditor shall recommend an amount for such paint stewardship assessment to the | |
27 | department. The department shall be responsible for the approval of such paint stewardship | |
28 | assessment based upon the independent auditor’s recommendation. If the paint stewardship | |
29 | assessment previously approved by the department pursuant to this section is proposed to be | |
30 | changed, the representative organization shall submit the new, adjusted uniform paint stewardship | |
31 | assessment to an independent auditor for review. After such review has been completed, the | |
32 | representative organization shall submit the results of said auditor’s review and a proposal to amend | |
33 | the paint stewardship assessment to the department for review. The department shall review and | |
34 | approve, in writing, the adjusted paint stewardship assessment before the new assessment can be | |
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1 | implemented. Any proposed changes to the paint stewardship assessment shall be submitted to the | |
2 | department no later than sixty (60) days prior to the date the representative organization anticipates | |
3 | the adjusted assessment to take effect. | |
4 | (g) On and after the date of implementation of the paint stewardship program pursuant to | |
5 | this section, the paint stewardship assessment shall be added to the cost of all architectural paint | |
6 | sold to retailers and distributors in this state by each producer. On and after such implementation | |
7 | date, each retailer or distributor, as applicable, shall add the amount of such paint stewardship | |
8 | assessment to the purchase price of all architectural paint sold in this state. | |
9 | (h) Any retailer may participate, on a voluntary basis, as a paint collection point pursuant | |
10 | to such paint stewardship program and in accordance with any applicable provision of law or | |
11 | regulation. | |
12 | (i) Each producer and the representative organization shall be immune from liability for | |
13 | any claim of a violation of antitrust law or unfair trade practice if such conduct is a violation of | |
14 | antitrust law, to the extent such producer or representative organization is exercising authority | |
15 | pursuant to the provisions of this section. | |
16 | (j) Not later than the implementation date of the paint stewardship program, the department | |
17 | shall list the names of participating producers the brands of architectural paint covered by such | |
18 | paint stewardship program and the cost of the approved paint stewardship assessment on its | |
19 | website. | |
20 | (k)(1) On and after the implementation date of the paint stewardship program, no producer, | |
21 | distributor or retailer shall sell or offer for sale architectural paint to any person in this state if the | |
22 | producer of such architectural paint is not a member of the representative organization. | |
23 | (2) No retailer or distributor shall be found to be in violation of the provisions of this | |
24 | section if, on the date the architectural paint was ordered from the producer or its agent, the | |
25 | producer or the subject brand of architectural paint was listed on the department’s website in | |
26 | accordance with the provisions of this section. | |
27 | (l) Producers or the representative organization shall provide retailers with educational | |
28 | materials regarding the paint stewardship assessment and paint stewardship program to be | |
29 | distributed at the point of sale to the consumer. Such materials shall include, but not be limited to, | |
30 | information regarding available end-of-life management options for architectural paint offered | |
31 | through the paint stewardship program and information that notifies consumers that a charge for | |
32 | the operation of such paint stewardship program is included in the purchase price of all architectural | |
33 | paint sold in this state. | |
34 | (m) On or before October 15, 2015, and annually thereafter, the representative organization | |
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1 | shall submit a report to the director of the department of environmental management that details | |
2 | the paint stewardship program. Said report shall include a copy of the independent audit detailed | |
3 | in subdivision (4) below. Such annual report shall include, but not be limited to: | |
4 | (1) A detailed description of the methods used to collect, transport and process post- | |
5 | consumer paint in this state; | |
6 | (2) The overall volume of post-consumer paint collected in this state; | |
7 | (3) The volume and type of post-consumer paint collected in this state by method of | |
8 | disposition, including reuse, recycling and other methods of processing or disposal; | |
9 | (4) The total cost of implementing the program, as determined by an independent financial | |
10 | audit, as performed by an independent auditor; | |
11 | (5) An evaluation of the adequacy of the program’s funding mechanism; | |
12 | (6) Samples of all educational materials provided to consumers of architectural paint and | |
13 | participating retailers; and | |
14 | (7) A detailed list of efforts undertaken and an evaluation of the methods used to | |
15 | disseminate such materials including recommendations, if any, for how the educational component | |
16 | of the program can be improved. | |
17 | (n) The representative organization shall submit to the department an updated plan for | |
18 | review and approval every five years, with the first such updated plan due no later than December | |
19 | 31, 2026. update the plan, as needed, when there are changes proposed to the current program. A | |
20 | new plan or amendment will also be required to be submitted to the department for approval when: | |
21 | (1) There is a change to the amount of the assessment; or | |
22 | (2) There is an addition to the products covered under the program; or | |
23 | (3) There is a revision of the product stewardship organization’s goals.: or | |
24 | (4) Every four (4) years, if requested, in writing, by the department the representative | |
25 | organization shall notify the department annually, in writing, if there are no changes proposed to | |
26 | the program and the representative organization intends to continue implementation of the program | |
27 | as previously approved by the department. | |
28 | SECTION 3. Effective July 1, 2026, sections 37-24-3 and 37-24-5 of the General Laws in | |
29 | Chapter 37-24 entitled “The Green Buildings Act” are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
30 | 37-24-3. Definitions. | |
31 | For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions shall apply: | |
32 | (1) “Construction” means the process of building, altering, repairing, improving, or | |
33 | demolishing forty percent (40%) or more of any public structures, public buildings, public real | |
34 | property or other public improvements of any kind to any public structures, public buildings or | |
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1 | public real property. | |
2 | (2) “Department” means the department of administration the office of the state building | |
3 | code commissioner. | |
4 | (3) “Equivalent standard” means a high-performance green building standard, other than | |
5 | LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES, that provides an independent, third- | |
6 | party verification and certification of a rating system or measurement tool, that, when used, leads | |
7 | to outcomes equivalent to, LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES outcomes, | |
8 | in terms of green building, green infrastructure, and green site performance; current accepted | |
9 | equivalent standards include green globes, Northeast collaborative high-performance schools | |
10 | protocol; or other equivalent high-performance green building, green infrastructure, and green site | |
11 | standards accepted by the department. | |
12 | (4) “LEED” also, “LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES certified standard” | |
13 | means the current version of the U.S. Green Building Council Leadership in Energy and | |
14 | Environmental Design (LEED) green building rating standard referred to as LEED, LEED for | |
15 | Neighborhood Development, and SITES certified. SITES means the U.S. Green Building Council’s | |
16 | SITES — The Sustainable SITES Initiative. | |
17 | (5) “Public agency” means every state or municipal office, board, commission, committee, | |
18 | bureau, department, or public institution of education, or any political subdivision thereof. | |
19 | (6) “Public facility” means any public institution, public facility, public equipment, or any | |
20 | physical asset owned, including its public real-property site, leased or controlled in whole or in part | |
21 | by this state, a public agency, a municipality or a political subdivision, that is for public or | |
22 | government use. | |
23 | (7) “Public major facility project” means: | |
24 | (i) A public facility building construction project larger than ten thousand (10,000) gross | |
25 | square feet of occupied or conditioned space, and its public real-property site; or | |
26 | (ii) A public facility building renovation project larger than ten thousand (10,000) gross | |
27 | square feet of occupied or conditioned space, and its public real-property site. | |
28 | 37-24-5. Administration and reports — Green buildings advisory committee. | |
29 | (a) The department shall promulgate such regulations as are necessary to enforce this | |
30 | section by January 1, 2023. Effective July 1, 2026, the office of the state building code | |
31 | commissioner will assume responsibility for promulgating the rules and regulations regarding the | |
32 | green buildings advisory committee. The rules and regulations promulgated under title 220, chapter | |
33 | 70, subchapter 00, part 1 of the Rhode Island code of regulations will remain in full force and effect | |
34 | and shall be enforced by the department of administration until such a time as the rules and | |
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1 | regulations are properly transferred to and promulgated by the office of the state building code | |
2 | commissioner title within the Rhode Island code of regulations. | |
3 | Those regulations shall include how the department will determine whether a project | |
4 | qualifies for an exception from the LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES | |
5 | certified or equivalent high-performance green building standard, and the green building standards | |
6 | that may be imposed on projects that are granted exceptions. | |
7 | (b) The department shall monitor and document ongoing operating savings that result from | |
8 | major facility projects designed, constructed, and certified as meeting the LEED, LEED for | |
9 | Neighborhood Development, and SITES certified standard annually publish a public report of | |
10 | findings and recommended changes in policy. The report shall also include a description of projects | |
11 | that were granted exceptions from the LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, and SITES | |
12 | certified standard, the reasons for exception, and the lesser green building standards imposed. | |
13 | (c) — (f) [Deleted by P.L. 2022, ch. 204, § 1 and P.L. 2022, ch. 205, § 1.] | |
14 | (g) A green buildings advisory committee shall be created composed of nineteen (19) | |
15 | members. The advisory committee shall have eleven (11) public members and eight (8) public | |
16 | agency members. Five (5) of the public members shall be appointed by the governor; three (3) of | |
17 | the public members shall be appointed by the president of the senate; and, three (3) of the public | |
18 | members shall be appointed by the speaker of the house of representatives. | |
19 | (1) The eleven (11) public members of the advisory committee shall be composed of nine | |
20 | (9) representatives one from each of the following fields: architecture, engineering, landscape | |
21 | architecture, energy, labor through the Rhode Island AFL-CIO, general construction contracting, | |
22 | building product and building materials industries who are involved in, and have recognized | |
23 | knowledge and accomplishment in their respective professions, of high-performance green | |
24 | building standards, relating to the standards set forth in § 37-24-4; in addition to two (2) public | |
25 | members, one representing an urban municipality from Providence, Cranston, Warwick, | |
26 | Pawtucket, Woonsocket, or Newport, and one public member representing the other thirty-two (32) | |
27 | municipalities in the state in order to ensure geographic diversity. | |
28 | (2) The advisory committee shall have eight (8) public agency members representing | |
29 | personnel from affected public agencies, and cities and towns, that oversee public works projects | |
30 | and workforce development, who shall be appointed by the directors or chief executive officers of | |
31 | the respective public agencies which shall include the department of administration; the department | |
32 | of environmental management; the department of education; the department of transportation; the | |
33 | department of labor and training; the office of the state building code commissioner; the Rhode | |
34 | Island infrastructure bank, and the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns. | |
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1 | (3) The chairperson of the green buildings advisory committee shall be a public member | |
2 | chosen by the green buildings advisory committee. | |
3 | (4) Of the initial eleven (11) public members, six (6) shall serve three-year (3) terms and | |
4 | five (5) shall have two-year (2) terms. Each appointing authority shall appoint two (2) public | |
5 | members to three-year (3) terms with the remainder of the public member appointments serving | |
6 | two-year terms. Thereafter, all public members shall be appointed to three-year (3) terms. | |
7 | (h) The green buildings advisory committee shall: | |
8 | (1) Make recommendations regarding an ongoing evaluation process of the green buildings | |
9 | act to help the department and the executive climate change coordinating council implement this | |
10 | chapter; | |
11 | (2) Identify the needs, actions, and funding required to implement the requirements set | |
12 | forth in this chapter, in achieving high-performance green building projects for our public | |
13 | buildings, public structures, and our public real properties; | |
14 | (3) Establish clear, measurable targets for implementing the standards, defined in this | |
15 | chapter, for all public major facility projects including timeline, workforce needs, anticipated costs | |
16 | and other measures identified by the green buildings advisory committee and required by chapter | |
17 | 6.2 of title 42 (“2021 act on climate”); and | |
18 | (4) Identify ways to monitor and document ongoing operating savings and greenhouse gas | |
19 | emission reductions that result from public major facility projects designed, constructed and | |
20 | certified as meeting the LEED, LEED for Neighborhood Development, SITES certified standard, | |
21 | Green Globes, Northeast Collaborative for High-Performance Schools Protocol, Version 1.1 or | |
22 | above and annually publish a report to the general assembly and the executive climate change | |
23 | coordinating council of findings and recommended changes in policy. | |
24 | (i) All requests for proposals, requests for information, requests for bids, requests for | |
25 | design/build, requests for construction managers, and any requests relating to obtaining the | |
26 | professional services, pricing, and construction for major facility projects by a public agency for a | |
27 | public facility, shall include the notice of the statutory requirements of this chapter (“the green | |
28 | buildings act”). | |
29 | (j) The green buildings advisory committee shall have no responsibility for, and shall not | |
30 | develop requests for proposals, requests for information, requests for bids, requests for | |
31 | design/build, requests for construction managers, and any requests relating to obtaining the | |
32 | professional services, pricing, and construction for major facility projects by a public agency for a | |
33 | public facility; and the green buildings advisory committee shall have no responsibility for, and | |
34 | shall not select any vendors for any requests for proposals, requests for information, requests for | |
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1 | bids, requests for design/build, requests for construction managers, and any requests relating to | |
2 | obtaining the professional services, pricing, and construction for major facility projects by a public | |
3 | agency for a public facility. Nothing shall prohibit public members of the green buildings advisory | |
4 | committee from responding to, and being involved with, any submittals of requests for proposals, | |
5 | requests for information, requests for bids, requests for design/build, requests for construction | |
6 | managers, and any requests relating to obtaining the professional services, pricing, and construction | |
7 | for major facility projects by a public agency for a public facility. | |
8 | (k) The department of administration shall commission a report to analyze the costs and/or | |
9 | benefits of LEED certification compared to equivalent standards. This includes, but is not limited | |
10 | to, the impact of obtaining formal LEED certification on project budget and timeline. | |
11 | SECTION 4. Chapter 42-12 of the General Laws entitled "Department of Human Services" | |
12 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
13 | 42-12-1.6. Transfer of functions to the office of energy resources. | |
14 | (a) There is hereby transferred from the department of human services to the office of | |
15 | energy resources the administration, management, all functions and resources associated with: | |
16 | (1) The weatherization assistance program which offers weatherization grants and heating | |
17 | system upgrades using funds from the federal department of energy and the federal low-income | |
18 | home energy assistance program, and any state funded or privately funded weatherization | |
19 | assistance program of a similar nature assigned to it; | |
20 | (b) The department is authorized to offer advisory assistance to the office of energy | |
21 | resources in order to maintain continuity to eligible households. | |
22 | SECTION 5. Section 42-12-1.5 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-12 entitled "Department | |
23 | of Human Services" is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
24 | 42-12-1.5. Transfer of functions from the office of energy resources. | |
25 | (a) There is hereby transferred from the office of energy resources to the department of | |
26 | human services the administration, management, all functions and resources associated with: | |
27 | (1) The federal low-income home energy assistance program (LIHEAP), which provides | |
28 | heating assistance to eligible low-income persons and any state funded or privately funded heating | |
29 | assistance program of a similar nature assigned to it for administration; | |
30 | (2) The weatherization assistance program, which offers home weatherization grants and | |
31 | heating system upgrades to LIHEAP eligible households; and, | |
32 | (3) (2) The emergency fuel program, which provides oil deliveries to families experiencing | |
33 | a heating emergency. | |
34 | (b) The department is authorized to request advisory assistance from the office of energy | |
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1 | resources in order to maintain continuity of assistance provided to LIHEAP eligible households | |
2 | pursuant to § 39-2-1(d). | |
3 | SECTION 6. Chapter 42-17.1 of the General Laws entitled “Department of Environmental | |
4 | Management” is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
5 | 42-17.1-47. Big River Reservoir — Administration. | |
6 | The Rhode Island department of environmental management, established pursuant to | |
7 | chapter 17.1 of this title, shall administer those lands acquired for the Big River Reservoir as | |
8 | established under section 23 of chapter 133 of the Public Laws of 1964. The director of the | |
9 | department of environmental management and the director’s authorized agents, employees, and | |
10 | designees shall manage the land and natural resources of the Big River Reservoir. The lands of the | |
11 | Big River Reservoir are subject to enforcement authority of the department of environmental | |
12 | management, as provided for in chapter 17.1 of this title, and as provided for in title 20 of the | |
13 | General Laws. Nothing contained herein shall be construed to affect any of the powers granted to | |
14 | the water resources board (agency) with regard to fresh water resource management pursuant to | |
15 | chapters 15 and 15.1 of title 46. | |
16 | Effective July 1, 2026, the department of environmental management will assume | |
17 | responsibility for all land use planning and for promulgating the rules and regulations regarding the | |
18 | administration of the Big River Reservoir consistent with the requirements of R.I. Gen. Laws § 37- | |
19 | 20-1. The rules and regulations promulgated under 490-RICR-00-00-5 of the Rhode Island code of | |
20 | regulations will remain in full force and effect until such a time as the rules and regulations are | |
21 | properly transferred to and promulgated by the department of environmental management's title | |
22 | within the Rhode Island code of regulations. | |
23 | SECTION 7. Section 42-17.1-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-17.1 entitled | |
24 | “Department of Environmental Management” is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
25 | 42-17.1-2. Powers and duties. | |
26 | The director of environmental management shall have the following powers and duties: | |
27 | (1) To supervise and control the protection, development, planning, and utilization of the | |
28 | natural resources of the state, such resources, including, but not limited to: water, plants, trees, soil, | |
29 | clay, sand, gravel, rocks and other minerals, air, mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, | |
30 | shellfish, and other forms of aquatic, insect, and animal life; | |
31 | (2) To exercise all functions, powers, and duties heretofore vested in the department of | |
32 | agriculture and conservation, and in each of the divisions of the department, such as the promotion | |
33 | of agriculture and animal husbandry in their several branches, including the inspection and | |
34 | suppression of contagious diseases among animals; the regulation of the marketing of farm | |
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1 | products; the inspection of orchards and nurseries; the protection of trees and shrubs from injurious | |
2 | insects and diseases; protection from forest fires; the inspection of apiaries and the suppression of | |
3 | contagious diseases among bees; the prevention of the sale of adulterated or misbranded | |
4 | agricultural seeds; promotion and encouragement of the work of farm bureaus, in cooperation with | |
5 | the University of Rhode Island, farmers’ institutes, and the various organizations established for | |
6 | the purpose of developing an interest in agriculture; together with such other agencies and activities | |
7 | as the governor and the general assembly may, from time to time, place under the control of the | |
8 | department; and as heretofore vested by such of the following chapters and sections of the general | |
9 | laws as are presently applicable to the department of environmental management and that were | |
10 | previously applicable to the department of natural resources and the department of agriculture and | |
11 | conservation or to any of its divisions: chapters 1 through 22, inclusive, as amended, in title 2 | |
12 | entitled “Agriculture and Forestry”; chapters 1 through 17, inclusive, as amended, in title 4 entitled | |
13 | “Animals and Animal Husbandry”; chapters 1 through 19, inclusive, as amended, in title 20 entitled | |
14 | “Fish and Wildlife”; chapters 1 through 32, inclusive, as amended, in title 21 entitled “Food and | |
15 | Drugs”; chapter 7 of title 23, as amended, entitled “Mosquito Abatement”; and by any other general | |
16 | or public law relating to the department of agriculture and conservation or to any of its divisions or | |
17 | bureaus; | |
18 | (3) To exercise all the functions, powers, and duties heretofore vested in the division of | |
19 | parks and recreation of the department of public works by chapters 1, 2, and 5 in title 32 entitled | |
20 | “Parks and Recreational Areas”; by chapter 22.5 of title 23, as amended, entitled “Drowning | |
21 | Prevention and Lifesaving”; and by any other general or public law relating to the division of parks | |
22 | and recreation; | |
23 | (4) To exercise all the functions, powers, and duties heretofore vested in the division of | |
24 | harbors and rivers of the department of public works, or in the department itself by such as were | |
25 | previously applicable to the division or the department, of chapters 1 through 22 and sections | |
26 | thereof, as amended, in title 46 entitled “Waters and Navigation”; and by any other general or public | |
27 | law relating to the division of harbors and rivers; | |
28 | (5) To exercise all the functions, powers, and duties heretofore vested in the department of | |
29 | health by chapters 25, 18.9, and 19.5 of title 23, as amended, entitled “Health and Safety”; and by | |
30 | chapters 12 and 16 of title 46, as amended, entitled “Waters and Navigation”; by chapters 3, 4, 5, | |
31 | 6, 7, 9, 11, 13, 18, and 19 of title 4, as amended, entitled “Animals and Animal Husbandry”; and | |
32 | those functions, powers, and duties specifically vested in the director of environmental | |
33 | management by the provisions of § 21-2-22, as amended, entitled “Inspection of Animals and | |
34 | Milk”; together with other powers and duties of the director of the department of health as are | |
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1 | incidental to, or necessary for, the performance of the functions transferred by this section; | |
2 | (6) To cooperate with the Rhode Island commerce corporation in its planning and | |
3 | promotional functions, particularly in regard to those resources relating to agriculture, fisheries, | |
4 | and recreation; | |
5 | (7) To cooperate with, advise, and guide conservation commissions of cities and towns | |
6 | created under chapter 35 of title 45 entitled “Conservation Commissions”, as enacted by chapter | |
7 | 203 of the Public Laws, 1960; | |
8 | (8) To assign or reassign, with the approval of the governor, any functions, duties, or | |
9 | powers established by this chapter to any agency within the department, except as hereinafter | |
10 | limited; | |
11 | (9) To cooperate with the water resources board and to provide to the board facilities, | |
12 | administrative support, staff services, and other services as the board shall reasonably require for | |
13 | its operation and, in cooperation with the board and the statewide planning program, to formulate | |
14 | and maintain a long-range guide plan and implementing program for development of major water- | |
15 | sources transmission systems needed to furnish water to regional and local distribution systems; | |
16 | (10) To cooperate with the solid waste management corporation and to provide to the | |
17 | corporation such facilities, administrative support, staff services, and other services within the | |
18 | department as the corporation shall reasonably require for its operation; | |
19 | (11) To provide for the maintenance of waterways and boating facilities, consistent with | |
20 | chapter 6.1 of title 46, by: (i) Establishing minimum standards for upland beneficial use and | |
21 | disposal of dredged material; (ii) Promulgating and enforcing rules for water quality, groundwater | |
22 | protection, and fish and wildlife protection pursuant to § 42-17.1-24; (iii) Planning for the upland | |
23 | beneficial use and/or disposal of dredged material in areas not under the jurisdiction of the council | |
24 | pursuant to § 46-23-6(2); (iv) Cooperating with the coastal resources management council in the | |
25 | development and implementation of comprehensive programs for dredging as provided for in §§ | |
26 | 46-23-6(1)(ii)(H) and 46-23-18.3; and (v) Monitoring dredge material management and disposal | |
27 | sites in accordance with the protocols established pursuant to § 46-6.1-5(a)(3) and the | |
28 | comprehensive program provided for in § 46-23-6(1)(ii)(H); no powers or duties granted herein | |
29 | shall be construed to abrogate the powers or duties granted to the coastal resources management | |
30 | council under chapter 23 of title 46, as amended; | |
31 | (12) To establish minimum standards, subject to the approval of the environmental | |
32 | standards board, relating to the location, design, construction, and maintenance of all sewage | |
33 | disposal systems; | |
34 | (13) To enforce, by such means as provided by law, the standards for the quality of air, and | |
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1 | water, and the design, construction, and operation of all sewage disposal systems; any order or | |
2 | notice issued by the director relating to the location, design, construction, or maintenance of a | |
3 | sewage disposal system shall be eligible for recordation under chapter 13 of title 34. The director | |
4 | shall forward the order or notice to the city or town wherein the subject property is located and the | |
5 | order or notice shall be recorded in the general index by the appropriate municipal official in the | |
6 | land evidence records in the city or town wherein the subject property is located. Any subsequent | |
7 | transferee of that property shall be responsible for complying with the requirements of the order or | |
8 | notice. Upon satisfactory completion of the requirements of the order or notice, the director shall | |
9 | provide written notice of the same, which notice shall be similarly eligible for recordation. The | |
10 | original written notice shall be forwarded to the city or town wherein the subject property is located | |
11 | and the notice of satisfactory completion shall be recorded in the general index by the appropriate | |
12 | municipal official in the land evidence records in the city or town wherein the subject property is | |
13 | located. A copy of the written notice shall be forwarded to the owner of the subject property within | |
14 | five (5) days of a request for it, and, in any event, shall be forwarded to the owner of the subject | |
15 | property within thirty (30) days after correction; | |
16 | (14) To establish minimum standards for the establishment and maintenance of salutary | |
17 | environmental conditions, including standards and methods for the assessment and the | |
18 | consideration of the cumulative effects on the environment of regulatory actions and decisions, | |
19 | which standards for consideration of cumulative effects shall provide for: (i) Evaluation of potential | |
20 | cumulative effects that could adversely affect public health and/or impair ecological functioning; | |
21 | (ii) Analysis of other matters relative to cumulative effects as the department may deem appropriate | |
22 | in fulfilling its duties, functions, and powers; which standards and methods shall only be applicable | |
23 | to ISDS systems in the town of Jamestown in areas that are dependent for water supply on private | |
24 | and public wells, unless broader use is approved by the general assembly. The department shall | |
25 | report to the general assembly not later than March 15, 2008, with regard to the development and | |
26 | application of the standards and methods in Jamestown; | |
27 | (15) To establish and enforce minimum standards for permissible types of septage, | |
28 | industrial-waste disposal sites, and waste-oil disposal sites; | |
29 | (16) To establish minimum standards, subject to the approval of the environmental | |
30 | standards board, for permissible types of refuse disposal facilities; the design, construction, | |
31 | operation, and maintenance of disposal facilities; and the location of various types of facilities; | |
32 | (17) To exercise all functions, powers, and duties necessary for the administration of | |
33 | chapter 19.1 of title 23 entitled “Rhode Island Hazardous Waste Management Act”; | |
34 | (18) To designate, in writing, any person in any department of the state government or any | |
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1 | official of a district, county, city, town, or other governmental unit, with that official’s consent, to | |
2 | enforce any rule, regulation, or order promulgated and adopted by the director under any provision | |
3 | of law; provided, however, that enforcement of powers of the coastal resources management | |
4 | council shall be assigned only to employees of the department of environmental management, | |
5 | except by mutual agreement or as otherwise provided in chapter 23 of title 46; | |
6 | (19) To issue and enforce the rules, regulations, and orders as may be necessary to carry | |
7 | out the duties assigned to the director and the department by any provision of law; and to conduct | |
8 | investigations and hearings and to issue, suspend, and revoke licenses as may be necessary to | |
9 | enforce those rules, regulations, and orders. Any license suspended under the rules, regulations, | |
10 | and/or orders shall be terminated and revoked if the conditions that led to the suspension are not | |
11 | corrected to the satisfaction of the director within two (2) years; provided that written notice is | |
12 | given by certified mail, return receipt requested, no less than sixty (60) days prior to the date of | |
13 | termination. | |
14 | Notwithstanding the provisions of § 42-35-9 to the contrary, no informal disposition of a | |
15 | contested licensing matter shall occur where resolution substantially deviates from the original | |
16 | application unless all interested parties shall be notified of the proposed resolution and provided | |
17 | with opportunity to comment upon the resolution pursuant to applicable law and any rules and | |
18 | regulations established by the director; | |
19 | (20) To enter, examine, or survey, at any reasonable time, places as the director deems | |
20 | necessary to carry out the director’s responsibilities under any provision of law subject to the | |
21 | following provisions: | |
22 | (i) For criminal investigations, the director shall, pursuant to chapter 5 of title 12, seek a | |
23 | search warrant from an official of a court authorized to issue warrants, unless a search without a | |
24 | warrant is otherwise allowed or provided by law; | |
25 | (ii)(A) All administrative inspections shall be conducted pursuant to administrative | |
26 | guidelines promulgated by the department in accordance with chapter 35 of this title; | |
27 | (B) A warrant shall not be required for administrative inspections if conducted under the | |
28 | following circumstances, in accordance with the applicable constitutional standards: | |
29 | (I) For closely regulated industries; | |
30 | (II) In situations involving open fields or conditions that are in plain view; | |
31 | (III) In emergency situations; | |
32 | (IV) In situations presenting an imminent threat to the environment or public health, safety, | |
33 | or welfare; | |
34 | (V) If the owner, operator, or agent in charge of the facility, property, site, or location | |
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1 | consents; or | |
2 | (VI) In other situations in which a warrant is not constitutionally required. | |
3 | (C) Whenever it shall be constitutionally or otherwise required by law, or whenever the | |
4 | director in the director’s discretion deems it advisable, an administrative search warrant, or its | |
5 | functional equivalent, may be obtained by the director from a neutral magistrate for the purpose of | |
6 | conducting an administrative inspection. The warrant shall be issued in accordance with the | |
7 | applicable constitutional standards for the issuance of administrative search warrants. The | |
8 | administrative standard of probable cause, not the criminal standard of probable cause, shall apply | |
9 | to applications for administrative search warrants; | |
10 | (I) The need for, or reliance upon, an administrative warrant shall not be construed as | |
11 | requiring the department to forfeit the element of surprise in its inspection efforts; | |
12 | (II) An administrative warrant issued pursuant to this subsection must be executed and | |
13 | returned within ten (10) days of its issuance date unless, upon a showing of need for additional | |
14 | time, the court orders otherwise; | |
15 | (III) An administrative warrant may authorize the review and copying of documents that | |
16 | are relevant to the purpose of the inspection. If documents must be seized for the purpose of | |
17 | copying, and the warrant authorizes the seizure, the person executing the warrant shall prepare an | |
18 | inventory of the documents taken. The time, place, and manner regarding the making of the | |
19 | inventory shall be set forth in the terms of the warrant itself, as dictated by the court. A copy of the | |
20 | inventory shall be delivered to the person from whose possession or facility the documents were | |
21 | taken. The seized documents shall be copied as soon as feasible under circumstances preserving | |
22 | their authenticity, then returned to the person from whose possession or facility the documents were | |
23 | taken; | |
24 | (IV) An administrative warrant may authorize the taking of samples of air, water, or soil | |
25 | or of materials generated, stored, or treated at the facility, property, site, or location. Upon request, | |
26 | the department shall make split samples available to the person whose facility, property, site, or | |
27 | location is being inspected; | |
28 | (V) Service of an administrative warrant may be required only to the extent provided for | |
29 | in the terms of the warrant itself, by the issuing court. | |
30 | (D) Penalties. Any willful and unjustified refusal of right of entry and inspection to | |
31 | department personnel pursuant to an administrative warrant shall constitute a contempt of court and | |
32 | shall subject the refusing party to sanctions, which in the court’s discretion may result in up to six | |
33 | (6) months’ imprisonment and/or a monetary fine of up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) per | |
34 | refusal; | |
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1 | (21) To give notice of an alleged violation of law to the person responsible therefor | |
2 | whenever the director determines that there are reasonable grounds to believe that there is a | |
3 | violation of any provision of law within the director’s jurisdiction or of any rule or regulation | |
4 | adopted pursuant to authority granted to the director. Nothing in this chapter shall limit the authority | |
5 | of the attorney general to prosecute offenders as required by law; | |
6 | (i) The notice shall provide for a time within which the alleged violation shall be remedied, | |
7 | and shall inform the person to whom it is directed that a written request for a hearing on the alleged | |
8 | violation may be filed with the director within twenty (20) days after service of the notice. The | |
9 | notice will be deemed properly served upon a person if a copy thereof is served the person | |
10 | personally; or sent by registered or certified mail to the person’s last known address; or if the person | |
11 | is served with notice by any other method of service now or hereafter authorized in a civil action | |
12 | under the laws of this state. If no written request for a hearing is made to the director within twenty | |
13 | (20) days of the service of notice, the notice shall automatically become a compliance order; | |
14 | (ii)(A) Whenever the director determines that there exists a violation of any law, rule, or | |
15 | regulation within the director’s jurisdiction that requires immediate action to protect the | |
16 | environment, the director may, without prior notice of violation or hearing, issue an immediate- | |
17 | compliance order stating the existence of the violation and the action the director deems necessary. | |
18 | The compliance order shall become effective immediately upon service or within such time as is | |
19 | specified by the director in such order. No request for a hearing on an immediate-compliance order | |
20 | may be made; | |
21 | (B) Any immediate-compliance order issued under this section without notice and prior | |
22 | hearing shall be effective for no longer than forty-five (45) days; provided, however, that for good | |
23 | cause shown, the order may be extended one additional period not exceeding forty-five (45) days; | |
24 | (iii) The director may, at the director’s discretion and for the purposes of timely and | |
25 | effective resolution and return to compliance, cite a person for alleged noncompliance through the | |
26 | issuance of an expedited citation in accordance with § 42-17.6-3(c); | |
27 | (iv) If a person upon whom a notice of violation has been served under the provisions of | |
28 | this section or if a person aggrieved by any such notice of violation requests a hearing before the | |
29 | director within twenty (20) days of the service of notice of violation, the director shall set a time | |
30 | and place for the hearing, and shall give the person requesting that hearing at least five (5) days’ | |
31 | written notice thereof. After the hearing, the director may make findings of fact and shall sustain, | |
32 | modify, or withdraw the notice of violation. If the director sustains or modifies the notice, that | |
33 | decision shall be deemed a compliance order and shall be served upon the person responsible in | |
34 | any manner provided for the service of the notice in this section; | |
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1 | (v) The compliance order shall state a time within which the violation shall be remedied, | |
2 | and the original time specified in the notice of violation shall be extended to the time set in the | |
3 | order; | |
4 | (vi) Whenever a compliance order has become effective, whether automatically where no | |
5 | hearing has been requested, where an immediate-compliance order has been issued, or upon | |
6 | decision following a hearing, the director may institute injunction proceedings in the superior court | |
7 | of the state for enforcement of the compliance order and for appropriate temporary relief, and in | |
8 | that proceeding, the correctness of a compliance order shall be presumed and the person attacking | |
9 | the order shall bear the burden of proving error in the compliance order, except that the director | |
10 | shall bear the burden of proving in the proceeding the correctness of an immediate-compliance | |
11 | order. The remedy provided for in this section shall be cumulative and not exclusive and shall be | |
12 | in addition to remedies relating to the removal or abatement of nuisances or any other remedies | |
13 | provided by law; | |
14 | (vii) Any party aggrieved by a final judgment of the superior court may, within thirty (30) | |
15 | days from the date of entry of such judgment, petition the supreme court for a writ of certiorari to | |
16 | review any questions of law. The petition shall set forth the errors claimed. Upon the filing of the | |
17 | petition with the clerk of the supreme court, the supreme court may, if it sees fit, issue its writ of | |
18 | certiorari; | |
19 | (22) To impose administrative penalties in accordance with the provisions of chapter 17.6 | |
20 | of this title and to direct that such penalties be paid into the account established by subsection (26); | |
21 | (23) The following definitions shall apply in the interpretation of the provisions of this | |
22 | chapter: | |
23 | (i) Director: The term “director” shall mean the director of environmental management of | |
24 | the state of Rhode Island or the director’s duly authorized agent; | |
25 | (ii) Person: The term “person” shall include any individual, group of individuals, firm, | |
26 | corporation, association, partnership, or private or public entity, including a district, county, city, | |
27 | town, or other governmental unit or agent thereof, and in the case of a corporation, any individual | |
28 | having active and general supervision of the properties of the corporation; | |
29 | (iii) Service: | |
30 | (A) Service upon a corporation under this section shall be deemed to include service upon | |
31 | both the corporation and upon the person having active and general supervision of the properties | |
32 | of the corporation; | |
33 | (B) For purposes of calculating the time within which a claim for a hearing is made | |
34 | pursuant to subsection (21)(i), service shall be deemed to be the date of receipt of such notice or | |
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1 | three (3) days from the date of mailing of the notice, whichever shall first occur; | |
2 | (24)(i) To conduct surveys of the present private and public camping and other recreational | |
3 | areas available and to determine the need for and location of other camping and recreational areas | |
4 | as may be deemed necessary and in the public interest of the state of Rhode Island and to report | |
5 | back its findings on an annual basis to the general assembly on or before March 1 of every year; | |
6 | (ii) Additionally, the director of the department of environmental management shall take | |
7 | additional steps, including, but not limited to, matters related to funding as may be necessary to | |
8 | establish such other additional recreational facilities and areas as are deemed to be in the public | |
9 | interest; | |
10 | (25)(i) To apply for and accept grants and bequests of funds, with the approval of the | |
11 | director of administration, from other states, interstate agencies, and independent authorities, and | |
12 | private firms, individuals, and foundations, for the purpose of carrying out the director’s lawful | |
13 | responsibilities. The funds shall be deposited with the general treasurer in a restricted receipt | |
14 | account created in the natural resources program for funds made available for that program’s | |
15 | purposes or in a restricted receipt account created in the environmental protection program for | |
16 | funds made available for that program’s purposes. All expenditures from the accounts shall be | |
17 | subject to appropriation by the general assembly, and shall be expended in accordance with the | |
18 | provisions of the grant or bequest. In the event that a donation or bequest is unspecified, or in the | |
19 | event that the trust account balance shows a surplus after the project as provided for in the grant or | |
20 | bequest has been completed, the director may utilize the appropriated unspecified or appropriated | |
21 | surplus funds for enhanced management of the department’s forest and outdoor public recreation | |
22 | areas, or other projects or programs that promote the accessibility of recreational opportunities for | |
23 | Rhode Island residents and visitors; | |
24 | (ii) The director shall submit to the house fiscal advisor and the senate fiscal advisor, by | |
25 | October 1 of each year, a detailed report on the amount of funds received and the uses made of such | |
26 | funds; | |
27 | (26) To establish fee schedules by regulation, with the approval of the governor, for the | |
28 | processing of applications and the performing of related activities in connection with the | |
29 | department’s responsibilities pursuant to subsection (12); chapter 19.1 of title 23, as it relates to | |
30 | inspections performed by the department to determine compliance with chapter 19.1 and rules and | |
31 | regulations promulgated in accordance therewith; chapter 18.9 of title 23, as it relates to inspections | |
32 | performed by the department to determine compliance with chapter 18.9 and the rules and | |
33 | regulations promulgated in accordance therewith; chapters 19.5 and 23 of title 23; chapter 12 of | |
34 | title 46, insofar as it relates to water-quality certifications and related reviews performed pursuant | |
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1 | to provisions of the federal Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.; the regulation and | |
2 | administration of underground storage tanks and all other programs administered under chapter 12 | |
3 | of title 46 and § 2-1-18 et seq., and chapter 13.1 of title 46 and chapter 13.2 of title 46, insofar as | |
4 | they relate to any reviews and related activities performed under the provisions of the Groundwater | |
5 | Protection Act; chapter 24.9 of title 23 as it relates to the regulation and administration of mercury- | |
6 | added products; and chapter 17.7 of this title, insofar as it relates to administrative appeals of all | |
7 | enforcement, permitting, and licensing matters to the administrative adjudication division for | |
8 | environmental matters. Two (2) fee ranges shall be required: for “Appeal of enforcement actions,” | |
9 | a range of fifty dollars ($50) to one hundred dollars ($100), and for “Appeal of application | |
10 | decisions,” a range of five hundred dollars ($500) to ten thousand dollars ($10,000). The monies | |
11 | from the administrative adjudication fees will be deposited as general revenues and the amounts | |
12 | appropriated shall be used for the costs associated with operating the administrative adjudication | |
13 | division. | |
14 | There is hereby established an account within the general fund to be called the water and | |
15 | air protection program. The account shall consist of sums appropriated for water and air pollution | |
16 | control and waste-monitoring programs and the state controller is hereby authorized and directed | |
17 | to draw his or her orders upon the general treasurer for the payment of the sums, or portions thereof, | |
18 | as may be required, from time to time, upon receipt by him or her of properly authenticated | |
19 | vouchers. All amounts collected under the authority of this subsection (26) for the sewage-disposal- | |
20 | system program and freshwater wetlands program will be deposited as general revenues and the | |
21 | amounts appropriated shall be used for the purposes of administering and operating the programs. | |
22 | The director shall submit to the house fiscal advisor and the senate fiscal advisor by January 15 of | |
23 | each year a detailed report on the amount of funds obtained from fines and fees and the uses made | |
24 | of the funds; | |
25 | (27) To establish and maintain a list or inventory of areas within the state worthy of special | |
26 | designation as “scenic” to include, but not be limited to, certain state roads or highways, scenic | |
27 | vistas, and scenic areas, and to make the list available to the public; | |
28 | (28) To establish and maintain an inventory of all interests in land held by public and | |
29 | private land trust and to exercise all powers vested herein to ensure the preservation of all identified | |
30 | lands; | |
31 | (i) The director may promulgate and enforce rules and regulations to provide for the orderly | |
32 | and consistent protection, management, continuity of ownership and purpose, and centralized | |
33 | records-keeping for lands, water, and open spaces owned in fee or controlled in full or in part | |
34 | through other interests, rights, or devices such as conservation easements or restrictions, by private | |
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1 | and public land trusts in Rhode Island. The director may charge a reasonable fee for filing of each | |
2 | document submitted by a land trust; | |
3 | (ii) The term “public land trust” means any public instrumentality created by a Rhode | |
4 | Island municipality for the purposes stated herein and financed by means of public funds collected | |
5 | and appropriated by the municipality. The term “private land trust” means any group of five (5) or | |
6 | more private citizens of Rhode Island who shall incorporate under the laws of Rhode Island as a | |
7 | nonbusiness corporation for the purposes stated herein, or a national organization such as the nature | |
8 | conservancy. The main purpose of either a public or a private land trust shall be the protection, | |
9 | acquisition, or control of land, water, wildlife, wildlife habitat, plants, and/or other natural features, | |
10 | areas, or open space for the purpose of managing or maintaining, or causing to be managed or | |
11 | maintained by others, the land, water, and other natural amenities in any undeveloped and relatively | |
12 | natural state in perpetuity. A private land trust must be granted exemption from federal income tax | |
13 | under Internal Revenue Code 501(c)(3) [26 U.S.C. § 501(c)(3)] within two (2) years of its | |
14 | incorporation in Rhode Island or it may not continue to function as a land trust in Rhode Island. A | |
15 | private land trust may not be incorporated for the exclusive purpose of acquiring or accepting | |
16 | property or rights in property from a single individual, family, corporation, business, partnership, | |
17 | or other entity. Membership in any private land trust must be open to any individual subscribing to | |
18 | the purposes of the land trust and agreeing to abide by its rules and regulations including payment | |
19 | of reasonable dues; | |
20 | (iii)(A) Private land trusts will, in their articles of association or their bylaws, as | |
21 | appropriate, provide for the transfer to an organization, created for the same or similar purposes, of | |
22 | the assets, lands and land rights, and interests held by the land trust in the event of termination or | |
23 | dissolution of the land trust; | |
24 | (B) All land trusts, public and private, will record in the public records, of the appropriate | |
25 | towns and cities in Rhode Island, all deeds, conservation easements, or restrictions or other interests | |
26 | and rights acquired in land and will also file copies of all such documents and current copies of | |
27 | their articles of association, their bylaws, and their annual reports with the secretary of state and | |
28 | with the director of the Rhode Island department of environmental management. The director is | |
29 | hereby directed to establish and maintain permanently a system for keeping records of all private | |
30 | and public land trust land holdings in Rhode Island; | |
31 | (29) The director will contact in writing, not less often than once every two (2) years, each | |
32 | public or private land trust to ascertain: that all lands held by the land trust are recorded with the | |
33 | director; the current status and condition of each land holding; that any funds or other assets of the | |
34 | land trust held as endowment for specific lands have been properly audited at least once within the | |
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1 | two-year (2) period; the name of the successor organization named in the public or private land | |
2 | trust’s bylaws or articles of association; and any other information the director deems essential to | |
3 | the proper and continuous protection and management of land and interests or rights in land held | |
4 | by the land trust. In the event that the director determines that a public or private land trust holding | |
5 | land or interest in land appears to have become inactive, the director shall initiate proceedings to | |
6 | effect the termination of the land trust and the transfer of its lands, assets, land rights, and land | |
7 | interests to the successor organization named in the defaulting trust’s bylaws or articles of | |
8 | association or to another organization created for the same or similar purposes. Should such a | |
9 | transfer not be possible, then the land trust, assets, and interest and rights in land will be held in | |
10 | trust by the state of Rhode Island and managed by the director for the purposes stated at the time | |
11 | of original acquisition by the trust. Any trust assets or interests other than land or rights in land | |
12 | accruing to the state under such circumstances will be held and managed as a separate fund for the | |
13 | benefit of the designated trust lands; | |
14 | (30) Consistent with federal standards, issue and enforce such rules, regulations, and orders | |
15 | as may be necessary to establish requirements for maintaining evidence of financial responsibility | |
16 | for taking corrective action and compensating third parties for bodily injury and property damage | |
17 | caused by sudden and non-sudden accidental releases arising from operating underground storage | |
18 | tanks; | |
19 | (31) To enforce, by such means as provided by law, the standards for the quality of air, and | |
20 | water, and the location, design, construction, and operation of all underground storage facilities | |
21 | used for storing petroleum products or hazardous materials; any order or notice issued by the | |
22 | director relating to the location, design, construction, operation, or maintenance of an underground | |
23 | storage facility used for storing petroleum products or hazardous materials shall be eligible for | |
24 | recordation under chapter 13 of title 34. The director shall forward the order or notice to the city or | |
25 | town wherein the subject facility is located, and the order or notice shall be recorded in the general | |
26 | index by the appropriate municipal officer in the land evidence records in the city or town wherein | |
27 | the subject facility is located. Any subsequent transferee of that facility shall be responsible for | |
28 | complying with the requirements of the order or notice. Upon satisfactory completion of the | |
29 | requirements of the order or notice, the director shall provide written notice of the same, which | |
30 | notice shall be eligible for recordation. The original, written notice shall be forwarded to the city | |
31 | or town wherein the subject facility is located, and the notice of satisfactory completion shall be | |
32 | recorded in the general index by the appropriate municipal official in the land evidence records in | |
33 | the city or town wherein the subject facility is located. A copy of the written notice shall be | |
34 | forwarded to the owner of the subject facility within five (5) days of a request for it, and, in any | |
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1 | event, shall be forwarded to the owner of the subject facility within thirty (30) days after correction; | |
2 | (32) To manage and disburse any and all funds collected pursuant to § 46-12.9-4, in | |
3 | accordance with § 46-12.9-5, and other provisions of the Rhode Island Underground Storage Tank | |
4 | Financial Responsibility Act, as amended; | |
5 | (33) To support, facilitate, and assist the Rhode Island Natural History Survey, as | |
6 | appropriate and/or as necessary, in order to accomplish the important public purposes of the survey | |
7 | in gathering and maintaining data on Rhode Island natural history; making public presentations and | |
8 | reports on natural history topics; ranking species and natural communities; monitoring rare species | |
9 | and communities; consulting on open-space acquisitions and management plans; reviewing | |
10 | proposed federal and state actions and regulations with regard to their potential impact on natural | |
11 | communities; and seeking outside funding for wildlife management, land management, and | |
12 | research; | |
13 | (34) To promote the effective stewardship of lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams including, | |
14 | but not limited to, collaboration with watershed organizations and associations of lakefront property | |
15 | owners on planning and management actions that will prevent and mitigate water quality | |
16 | degradation, reduce the loss of native habitat due to infestation of non-native species, abate | |
17 | nuisance conditions that result from excessive growth of algal or non-native plant species as well | |
18 | as promote healthy freshwater riverine ecosystems; | |
19 | (35) In implementing the programs established pursuant to this chapter, to identify critical | |
20 | areas for improving service to customers doing business with the department, and to develop and | |
21 | implement strategies to improve performance and effectiveness in those areas. Key aspects of a | |
22 | customer-service program shall include, but not necessarily be limited to, the following | |
23 | components: | |
24 | (i) Maintenance of an organizational unit within the department with the express purpose | |
25 | of providing technical assistance to customers and helping customers comply with environmental | |
26 | regulations and requirements; | |
27 | (ii) Maintenance of an employee training program to promote customer service across the | |
28 | department; | |
29 | (iii) Implementation of a continuous business process evaluation and improvement effort, | |
30 | including process reviews to encourage development of quality proposals; ensure timely and | |
31 | predictable reviews; and result in effective decisions and consistent follow up and implementation | |
32 | throughout the department; and publish an annual report on such efforts; | |
33 | (iv) Creation of a centralized location for the acceptance of permit applications and other | |
34 | submissions to the department; | |
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1 | (v) Maintenance of a process to promote, organize, and facilitate meetings prior to the | |
2 | submission of applications or other proposals in order to inform the applicant on options and | |
3 | opportunities to minimize environmental impact; improve the potential for sustainable | |
4 | environmental compliance; and support an effective and efficient review and decision-making | |
5 | process on permit applications related to the proposed project; | |
6 | (vi) Development of single permits under multiple authorities otherwise provided in state | |
7 | law to support comprehensive and coordinated reviews of proposed projects. The director may | |
8 | address and resolve conflicting or redundant process requirements in order to achieve an effective | |
9 | and efficient review process that meets environmental objectives; and | |
10 | (vii) Exploration of the use of performance-based regulations coupled with adequate | |
11 | inspection and oversight, as an alternative to requiring applications or submissions for approval | |
12 | prior to initiation of projects; | |
13 | (36) To formulate and promulgate regulations requiring any dock or pier longer than | |
14 | twenty feet (20′) and located on a freshwater lake or pond to be equipped with reflective materials, | |
15 | on all sides facing the water, of an appropriate width and luminosity such that it can be seen by | |
16 | operators of watercraft; | |
17 | (37) To temporarily waive any control or prohibition respecting the use of a fuel or fuel | |
18 | additive required or regulated by the department if the director finds that: | |
19 | (i) Extreme or unusual fuel or fuel additive supply circumstances exist in the state or the | |
20 | New England region that prevent the distribution of an adequate supply of the fuel or fuel additive | |
21 | to consumers; | |
22 | (ii) Extreme or unusual fuel or fuel additive supply circumstances are the result of a natural | |
23 | disaster, an act of God, a pipeline or refinery equipment failure, or another event that could not | |
24 | reasonably have been foreseen; and | |
25 | (iii) It is in the public interest to grant the waiver. | |
26 | Any temporary waiver shall be made in writing and shall be effective for twenty (20) | |
27 | calendar days; provided, that the director may renew the temporary waiver, in writing, if it is | |
28 | deemed necessary; and | |
29 | (38)(i) To designate by rule certain waters of the state as shellfish or marine life project | |
30 | management areas for the purpose of enhancing the cultivation and growth of marine species, | |
31 | managing the harvest of marine species, facilitating the conduct by the department of experiments | |
32 | in planting, cultivating, propagating, managing, and developing any and all kinds of marine life, | |
33 | and any other related purpose. | |
34 | (ii) Any such designation shall be by reference to fixed landmarks and include an explicit | |
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1 | description of the area to be designated. | |
2 | (iii) Once so designated, the director may adopt rules and regulations addressing | |
3 | restrictions on the quantities, types, or sizes of marine species that may be taken in any individual | |
4 | management area, the times during which marine species may be taken, the manner or manners in | |
5 | that marine species may be taken, the closure of such area to the taking of marine species, or any | |
6 | other specific restrictions as may be deemed necessary. Such rules shall be exempt from the | |
7 | requirements of §§ 42-35-2.7, 42-35-2.8, and 42-35-2.9. | |
8 | (iv) The director, upon the designation of a management area, may place any stakes, | |
9 | bounds, buoys, or markers with the words “Rhode Island department of environmental | |
10 | management” plainly marked on them, as will approximate the management area. Failure to place | |
11 | or maintain the stakes, bounds, buoys, or markers shall not be admissible in any judicial or | |
12 | administrative proceeding. | |
13 | (v) Nothing in this section shall prevent the director from implementing emergency rules | |
14 | pursuant to § 42-35-2.10. | |
15 | (39) To enter into agreements with such departments, divisions, agencies, or boards of the | |
16 | state to regulate, manage, or perform related functions on any lands or waters acquired under the | |
17 | provisions of the Big River — Wood River Reservoir Site Acquisition Act (P.L. of 1964, chapter | |
18 | 133). | |
19 | SECTION 8. Sections 42-64.20-5 and 42-64.20-10 of the General Laws in Chapter 42- | |
20 | 64.20 entitled “Rebuild Rhode Island Tax Credit Act” are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
21 | 42-64.20-5. Tax credits. | |
22 | (a) An applicant meeting the requirements of this chapter may be allowed a credit as set | |
23 | forth hereinafter against taxes imposed upon such person under applicable provisions of title 44 of | |
24 | the general laws for a qualified development project. | |
25 | (b) To be eligible as a qualified development project entitled to tax credits, an applicant’s | |
26 | chief executive officer or equivalent officer shall demonstrate to the commerce corporation, at the | |
27 | time of application, that: | |
28 | (1) The applicant has committed a capital investment or owner equity of not less than | |
29 | twenty percent (20%) of the total project cost; | |
30 | (2) There is a project financing gap in which after taking into account all available private | |
31 | and public funding sources, the project is not likely to be accomplished by private enterprise | |
32 | without the tax credits described in this chapter; and | |
33 | (3) The project fulfills the state’s policy and planning objectives and priorities in that: | |
34 | (i) The applicant will, at the discretion of the commerce corporation, obtain a tax | |
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1 | stabilization agreement from the municipality in which the real estate project is located on such | |
2 | terms as the commerce corporation deems acceptable; | |
3 | (ii) It (A) Is a commercial development consisting of at least 25,000 square feet occupied | |
4 | by at least one business employing at least 25 full-time employees after construction or such | |
5 | additional full-time employees as the commerce corporation may determine; (B) Is a multi-family | |
6 | residential development in a new, adaptive reuse, certified historic structure, or recognized | |
7 | historical structure consisting of at least 20,000 square feet and having at least 20 residential units | |
8 | in a hope community; or (C) Is a mixed-use development in a new, adaptive reuse, certified historic | |
9 | structure, or recognized historical structure consisting of at least 25,000 square feet occupied by at | |
10 | least one business, subject to further definition through rules and regulations promulgated by the | |
11 | commerce corporation; and | |
12 | (iii) Involves a total project cost of not less than $5,000,000, except for a qualified | |
13 | development project located in a hope community or redevelopment area designated under § 45- | |
14 | 32-4 in which event the commerce corporation shall have the discretion to modify the minimum | |
15 | project cost requirement. | |
16 | (4) Until July 1, 2025, pursuant to P.L. 2022 ch. 271 and P.L. 2022 ch. 272, for construction | |
17 | projects in excess of ten million dollars ($10,000,000), all construction workers shall be paid in | |
18 | accordance with the wages and benefits required pursuant to chapter 13 of title 37 with all | |
19 | contractors and subcontractors required to file certified payrolls on a monthly basis for all work | |
20 | completed in the preceding month on a uniform form prescribed by the director of labor and | |
21 | training. Failure to follow the requirements pursuant to chapter 13 of title 37 shall constitute a | |
22 | material violation and a material breach of the agreement with the state. The commerce corporation, | |
23 | in consultation with the director of labor and training and the tax administrator, shall promulgate | |
24 | such rules and regulations as are necessary to implement the enforcement of this subsection. The | |
25 | provisions of this subsection shall expire and sunset on July 1, 2025. | |
26 | (5) Notwithstanding any general or special law or rule or regulation to the contrary, for | |
27 | construction projects that have executed a tax credit agreement on or after July 1, 2025, and | |
28 | involving a budget of direct hard construction costs (as defined in § 44-33.6-2) in excess of twenty- | |
29 | five million dollars ($25,000,000), all construction workers shall be paid in accordance with the | |
30 | wages and benefits required pursuant to chapter 13 of title 37 with all contractors and | |
31 | subcontractors required to file certified payrolls on a monthly basis for all work completed in the | |
32 | preceding month on a uniform form prescribed by the director of labor and training. Failure to | |
33 | follow the requirements pursuant to chapter 13 of title 37 shall constitute a material violation and | |
34 | a material breach of the agreement with the state. The commerce corporation, in consultation with | |
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1 | the director of labor and training and the tax administrator, shall promulgate such rules and | |
2 | regulations as are necessary to implement the enforcement of this subsection. | |
3 | (c) The commerce corporation shall develop separate, streamlined application processes | |
4 | for the issuance of rebuild RI tax credits for each of the following: | |
5 | (1) Qualified development projects that involve certified historic structures; | |
6 | (2) Qualified development projects that involve recognized historical structures; | |
7 | (3) Qualified development projects that involve at least one manufacturer; and | |
8 | (4) Qualified development projects that include affordable housing or workforce housing. | |
9 | (d) Applications made for a historic structure or recognized historic structure tax credit | |
10 | under chapter 33.6 of title 44 shall be considered for tax credits under this chapter. The division of | |
11 | taxation, at the expense of the commerce corporation, shall provide communications from the | |
12 | commerce corporation to those who have applied for and are in the queue awaiting the offer of tax | |
13 | credits pursuant to chapter 33.6 of title 44 regarding their potential eligibility for the rebuild RI tax | |
14 | credit program. | |
15 | (e) Applicants (1) Who have received the notice referenced in subsection (d) above and | |
16 | who may be eligible for a tax credit pursuant to chapter 33.6 of title 44; (2) Whose application | |
17 | involves a certified historic structure or recognized historical structure; or (3) Whose project is | |
18 | occupied by at least one manufacturer shall be exempt from the requirements of subsections | |
19 | (b)(3)(ii) and (b)(3)(iii). The following procedure shall apply to such applicants: | |
20 | (i) The division of taxation shall remain responsible for determining the eligibility of an | |
21 | applicant for tax credits awarded under chapter 33.6 of title 44; | |
22 | (ii) The commerce corporation shall retain sole authority for determining the eligibility of | |
23 | an applicant for tax credits awarded under this chapter; | |
24 | (iii) The commerce corporation shall not award in excess of fifteen percent (15%) of the | |
25 | annual amount authorized in any fiscal year to applicants seeking tax credits pursuant to this | |
26 | subsection (e); and | |
27 | (iv) No tax credits shall be awarded under this chapter unless the commerce corporation | |
28 | receives confirmation from the department of labor and training that there has been compliance | |
29 | with the prevailing wage requirements set forth in subsection (b) of this section. | |
30 | (f) Maximum project credit. | |
31 | (1) For qualified development projects, the maximum tax credit allowed under this chapter | |
32 | shall be the lesser of (i) Thirty percent (30%) of the total project cost; or (ii) The amount needed to | |
33 | close a project financing gap (after taking into account all other private and public funding sources | |
34 | available to the project), as determined by the commerce corporation. | |
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1 | (2) The credit allowed pursuant to this chapter, inclusive of any sales and use tax | |
2 | exemptions allowed pursuant to this chapter, shall not exceed fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000) | |
3 | for any qualified development project under this chapter; except as provided in subsection (f)(3) of | |
4 | this section; provided however, any qualified development project that exceeds the project cap upon | |
5 | passage of this act shall be deemed not to exceed the cap, shall not be reduced, nor shall it be further | |
6 | increased. No building or qualified development project to be completed in phases or in multiple | |
7 | projects shall exceed the maximum project credit of fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000) for all | |
8 | phases or projects involved in the rehabilitation of the building. Provided, however, that for | |
9 | purposes of this subsection and no more than once in a given fiscal year, the commerce corporation | |
10 | may consider the development of land and buildings by a developer on the “I-195 land” as defined | |
11 | in § 42-64.24-3(6) as a separate, qualified development project from a qualified development | |
12 | project by a tenant or owner of a commercial condominium or similar legal interest including | |
13 | leasehold improvement, fit out, and capital investment. Such qualified development project by a | |
14 | tenant or owner of a commercial condominium or similar legal interest on the I-195 land may be | |
15 | exempted from subsection (f)(1)(i) of this section. | |
16 | (3) The credit allowed pursuant to this chapter, inclusive of any sales and use tax | |
17 | exemptions allowed pursuant to this chapter, shall not exceed twenty-five million dollars | |
18 | ($25,000,000) for the project for which the I-195 redevelopment district was authorized to enter | |
19 | into a purchase and sale agreement for parcels 42 and P4 on December 19, 2018, provided that | |
20 | project is approved for credits pursuant to this chapter by the commerce corporation. | |
21 | (4) For qualified development projects involving the development of housing and mixed | |
22 | use projects involving housing which are restricted to require at least twenty percent (20%) of the | |
23 | housing units being affordable housing or workforce housing development for residents making no | |
24 | more than between eighty percent (80%) and one hundred twenty percent (120%) of the area | |
25 | median income (AMI) shall be allowed sales and use tax exemptions of up to thirty percent (30%) | |
26 | of the maximum project credit in addition to the maximum project credit of fifteen million dollars | |
27 | ($15,000,000) pursuant to this chapter. Any sales and use tax exemptions allowed in addition to the | |
28 | maximum project credit shall be for purchases made by June 30, 2028. | |
29 | (g) Credits available under this chapter shall not exceed twenty percent (20%) of the project | |
30 | cost, provided, however, that the applicant shall be eligible for additional tax credits of not more | |
31 | than ten percent (10%) of the project cost, if the qualified development project meets any of the | |
32 | following criteria or other additional criteria determined by the commerce corporation from time | |
33 | to time in response to evolving economic or market conditions: | |
34 | (1) The project includes adaptive reuse or development of a recognized historical structure; | |
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1 | (2) The project is undertaken by or for a targeted industry; | |
2 | (3) The project is located in a transit-oriented development area; | |
3 | (4) The project includes residential development of which at least twenty percent (20%) of | |
4 | the residential units are designated as affordable housing or workforce housing; | |
5 | (5) The project includes the adaptive reuse of property subject to the requirements of the | |
6 | industrial property remediation and reuse act, § 23-19.14-1 et seq.; or | |
7 | (6) The project includes commercial facilities constructed in accordance with the minimum | |
8 | environmental and sustainability standards, as certified by the commerce corporation pursuant to | |
9 | Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design or other equivalent standards. | |
10 | (h) Maximum aggregate credits. The aggregate sum authorized pursuant to this chapter, | |
11 | inclusive of any sales and use tax exemptions allowed pursuant to this chapter, shall not exceed | |
12 | two hundred twenty-five seventy million dollars ($225,000,000) two hundred fifty million dollars | |
13 | ($250,000,000), excluding any tax credits allowed pursuant to subsection (f)(3) of this section. | |
14 | (i) Tax credits shall not be allowed under this chapter prior to the taxable year in which the | |
15 | project is placed in service. | |
16 | (j) The amount of a tax credit allowed under this chapter shall be allowable to the taxpayer | |
17 | in up to five, annual increments; no more than thirty percent (30%) and no less than fifteen percent | |
18 | (15%) of the total credits allowed to a taxpayer under this chapter may be allowable for any taxable | |
19 | year. | |
20 | (k) If the portion of the tax credit allowed under this chapter exceeds the taxpayer’s total | |
21 | tax liability for the year in which the relevant portion of the credit is allowed, the amount that | |
22 | exceeds the taxpayer’s tax liability may be carried forward for credit against the taxes imposed for | |
23 | the succeeding four (4) years, or until the full credit is used, whichever occurs first. Credits allowed | |
24 | to a partnership, a limited liability company taxed as a partnership, or multiple owners of property | |
25 | shall be passed through to the persons designated as partners, members, or owners respectively pro | |
26 | rata or pursuant to an executed agreement among persons designated as partners, members, or | |
27 | owners documenting an alternate distribution method without regard to their sharing of other tax | |
28 | or economic attributes of such entity. | |
29 | (l) The commerce corporation, in consultation with the division of taxation, shall establish, | |
30 | by regulation, the process for the assignment, transfer, or conveyance of tax credits. | |
31 | (m) For purposes of this chapter, any assignment or sales proceeds received by the taxpayer | |
32 | for its assignment or sale of the tax credits allowed pursuant to this section shall be exempt from | |
33 | taxation under title 44. If a tax credit is subsequently revoked or adjusted, the seller’s tax calculation | |
34 | for the year of revocation or adjustment shall be increased by the total amount of the sales proceeds, | |
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1 | without proration, as a modification under chapter 30 of title 44. In the event that the seller is not a | |
2 | natural person, the seller’s tax calculation under chapter 11, 13, 14, or 17 of title 44, as applicable, | |
3 | for the year of revocation, or adjustment, shall be increased by including the total amount of the | |
4 | sales proceeds without proration. | |
5 | (n) The tax credit allowed under this chapter may be used as a credit against corporate | |
6 | income taxes imposed under chapter 11, 13, 14, or 17 of title 44, or may be used as a credit against | |
7 | personal income taxes imposed under chapter 30 of title 44 for owners of pass-through entities such | |
8 | as a partnership, a limited liability company taxed as a partnership, or multiple owners of property. | |
9 | (o) In the case of a corporation, this credit is only allowed against the tax of a corporation | |
10 | included in a consolidated return that qualifies for the credit and not against the tax of other | |
11 | corporations that may join in the filing of a consolidated tax return. | |
12 | (p) Upon request of a taxpayer and subject to annual appropriation, the state shall redeem | |
13 | this credit, in whole or in part, for ninety percent (90%) of the value of the tax credit. The division | |
14 | of taxation, in consultation with the commerce corporation, shall establish by regulation a | |
15 | redemption process for tax credits. | |
16 | (q) Projects eligible to receive a tax credit under this chapter may, at the discretion of the | |
17 | commerce corporation, be exempt from sales and use taxes imposed on the purchase of the | |
18 | following classes of personal property only to the extent utilized directly and exclusively in the | |
19 | project: (1) Furniture, fixtures, and equipment, except automobiles, trucks, or other motor vehicles; | |
20 | or (2) Other materials, including construction materials and supplies, that are depreciable and have | |
21 | a useful life of one year or more and are essential to the project. | |
22 | (r) The commerce corporation shall promulgate rules and regulations for the administration | |
23 | and certification of additional tax credit under subsection (g), including criteria for the eligibility, | |
24 | evaluation, prioritization, and approval of projects that qualify for such additional tax credit. | |
25 | (s) The commerce corporation shall not have any obligation to make any award or grant | |
26 | any benefits under this chapter. | |
27 | 42-64.20-10. Sunset. | |
28 | No credits shall be authorized to be reserved pursuant to this chapter after December 31, | |
29 | 2026December 31, 2027. | |
30 | SECTION 9. Section 42-64.21-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64.21 entitled “Rhode | |
31 | Island Tax Increment Financing” is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
32 | 42-64.21-9. Sunset. | |
33 | The commerce corporation shall enter into no agreement under this chapter after December | |
34 | 31, 2026December 31, 2027. | |
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1 | SECTION 10. Section 42-64.22-15 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64.22 entitled “Tax | |
2 | Stabilization Incentive” is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
3 | 42-64.22-15. Sunset. | |
4 | The commerce corporation shall enter into no agreement under this chapter after December | |
5 | 31, 2026December 31, 2027. | |
6 | SECTION 11. Section 42-64.23-8 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64.23 entitled “First | |
7 | Wave Closing Fund Act” is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
8 | 42-64.23-8. Sunset. | |
9 | No financing shall be authorized to be reserved pursuant to this chapter after December 31, | |
10 | 2026December 31, 2027. | |
11 | SECTION 12. Section 42-64.24-8 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64.24 entitled “I-195 | |
12 | Redevelopment Project Fund Act” is hereby amended as follows: | |
13 | 42-64.24-8. Sunset. | |
14 | No funding, credits, or incentives shall be authorized or authorized to be reserved pursuant | |
15 | to this chapter after December 31, 2026December 31, 2027. | |
16 | SECTION 13. Section 42-64.26-12 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64.26 entitled “Stay | |
17 | Invested in RI Wavemaker Fellowship” is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
18 | 42-64.26-12. Sunset. | |
19 | No incentives or credits shall be authorized pursuant to this chapter after December 31, | |
20 | 2026December 31, 2027. | |
21 | SECTION 14. Section 42-64.27-6 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64.27 entitled “Main | |
22 | Street Rhode Island Streetscape Improvement Fund” is hereby amended as follows: | |
23 | 42-64.27-6. Sunset. | |
24 | No incentives shall be authorized pursuant to this chapter after December 31, | |
25 | 2026December 31, 2027. | |
26 | SECTION 15. Section 42-64.28-10 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-64.28 entitled | |
27 | “Innovation Initiative” is hereby amended as follows: | |
28 | 42-64.28-10. Sunset. | |
29 | No vouchers, grants, or incentives shall be authorized pursuant to this chapter after | |
30 | December 31, 2026December 31, 2027. | |
31 | SECTION 16. Chapter 42-140 of the General Laws entitled "Rhode Island Energy | |
32 | Resources Act" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
33 | 42-140-13. Energy Benchmarking and Performance Standards Program | |
34 | (a) Definitions. For the purposes of this section: | |
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1 | (1) “Department” shall mean all state departments whose directors are enumerated in R.I. | |
2 | Gen. Laws § 42-6-3 and shall additionally include the executive office of health and human | |
3 | services, the executive office of commerce, and the executive office of housing. | |
4 | (2) “Public buildings” for the purpose of this section shall mean all municipal and school | |
5 | buildings owned by a municipality that are at least 25,000 gross square feet. | |
6 | (3) “State-owned, state-occupied facilities” shall mean buildings owned by the state that | |
7 | primarily contain offices or other administrative work space for state employees and are at least | |
8 | 25,000 gross square feet. | |
9 | (b) State Facilities Energy Usage Reporting | |
10 | (1) State departments, coordinated and supported by the office of energy resources, shall | |
11 | be required to measure and report monthly energy usage by energy source for their respective state- | |
12 | owned, state-occupied facilities, as well as the gross square footage for each building. | |
13 | (2) Beginning March 31, 2029, and recurring annually thereafter, departments, coordinated | |
14 | and supported by the office of energy resources, shall report to the office energy use data by source | |
15 | for state-owned, state-occupied facilities for the preceding calendar year. No later than 180 days | |
16 | from the March 31 reporting deadline each year, the office shall compile, publish and post on its | |
17 | website each facility’s energy use data by fuel and total emissions. | |
18 | (c) State Facilities Benchmarking and Performance Standards Program | |
19 | (1) Utilizing the data due March 31, 2029, in subsection (b)(2), the office of energy | |
20 | resources shall, with consultation from departments, develop and publish performance standards | |
21 | for state-owned, state-occupied facilities by March 31, 2030 and may update the performance | |
22 | standards and any revision to the standards thereafter. The performance standards published must | |
23 | include: | |
24 | (i) An annualized emissions standard based on energy usage for each state-owned, state- | |
25 | occupied facility as necessary, to achieve by specified dates; | |
26 | (ii) A schedule for compliance terminating in 2050; and | |
27 | (iii) The cost-benefit analysis used to determine which state-owned, state-occupied | |
28 | facilities are assigned performance standards, as set forth in subsection (c)(2) below. | |
29 | (2) The performance standards shall be determined by evaluating: | |
30 | (i) The total amount of emissions reductions that could be achieved while maintaining state | |
31 | operations; | |
32 | (ii) The relative contribution of the emissions reductions to decadal targets established by | |
33 | R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-6.2-2 compared to other strategies, programs, and actions established by the | |
34 | executive climate change coordinating council in its plan due December 31, 2025, in accordance | |
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1 | with subsection (2)(i) of R.I. Gen. Laws § 42-6.2-2; and | |
2 | (iii) The fiscal impacts of achieving the performance standards. | |
3 | (3) The departments shall meet the performance standards set in accordance with | |
4 | subsection (c)(2). No later than 90 days after each specified compliance date established in | |
5 | accordance with subsection (c)(1), the office of energy resources shall publish a performance | |
6 | standards compliance report demonstrating the status of each state-owned, state-occupied facility | |
7 | subject to a performance standard and post on its website. In the event that a state-owned, state- | |
8 | occupied facility fails to meet a performance standard, the office of energy resources shall provide | |
9 | a corrective action plan with which the state-owned, state-occupied facility shall comply within 90 | |
10 | days of the compliance deadline. | |
11 | (4) Subsections (c)(1), (c)(2), and (c)(3) shall not apply to state-owned, state-occupied | |
12 | facilities which the office and department of administration determine are not suitable candidates | |
13 | for achieving greenhouse gas emission reductions due to economic infeasibility or unique | |
14 | operational or physical limitations. Any such determinations shall be published in addition to the | |
15 | standards required in subsection (c)(2) and posted on the office’s website. | |
16 | (d) Voluntary Energy Benchmarking Program for Public Buildings | |
17 | (i) The office of energy resources shall provide technical and financial assistance to | |
18 | municipalities for a voluntary public buildings energy benchmarking program of public buildings | |
19 | on municipal properties in which buildings are greater than twenty-five thousand (25,000) square | |
20 | feet. | |
21 | (ii) The office of energy resources shall maintain a website that tracks its implementation | |
22 | of the voluntary public buildings energy benchmarking program. The office shall submit to the | |
23 | Governor and General Assembly by May 1, 2028, and annually thereafter a progress report on the | |
24 | voluntary public buildings energy benchmarking program. | |
25 | SECTION 17. Section 42-140-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-140 entitled “Rhode | |
26 | Island Energy Resources Act” is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
27 | 42-140-3. Purposes. | |
28 | The purposes of the office shall be to: | |
29 | (1) Develop and put into effect plans and programs to promote, encourage, and assist the | |
30 | provision of energy resources for Rhode Island in a manner that enhances economic well-being, | |
31 | social equity, and environmental quality; | |
32 | (2) Monitor, forecast, and report on energy use, energy prices, and energy demand and | |
33 | supply forecasts, and make findings and recommendations with regard to energy supply diversity, | |
34 | reliability, and procurement, including least-cost procurement; | |
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1 | (3) Develop and to put into effect plans and programs to promote, encourage, and assist | |
2 | the efficient and productive use of energy resources in Rhode Island, and to coordinate energy | |
3 | programs for natural gas, electricity, and heating oil to maximize the aggregate benefits of | |
4 | conservation and efficiency of investments; | |
5 | (4) Monitor and report technological developments that may result in new and/or improved | |
6 | sources of energy supply, increased energy efficiency, and reduced environmental impacts from | |
7 | energy supply, transmission, and distribution; | |
8 | (5) Administer the programs, duties, and responsibilities heretofore exercised by the state | |
9 | energy office, except as these may be assigned by executive order or the general laws to other | |
10 | departments and agencies of state government; | |
11 | (6) Develop, recommend, and, as appropriate, implement integrated and/or comprehensive | |
12 | strategies, including at regional and federal levels, to secure Rhode Island’s interest in energy | |
13 | resources, their supply and efficient use, and as necessary to interact with persons, private sector, | |
14 | nonprofit, regional, federal entities and departments and agencies of other states to effectuate this | |
15 | purpose; | |
16 | (7) Cooperate with agencies, departments, corporations, and entities of the state and of | |
17 | political subdivisions of the state in achieving its purposes; | |
18 | (8) Cooperate with and assist the state planning council and the division of state planning | |
19 | in developing, maintaining, and implementing state guide plan elements pertaining to energy and | |
20 | renewable energy; | |
21 | (9) Coordinate the energy efficiency, least-cost procurement, and systems reliability plans | |
22 | and programs with the energy efficiency and resources management council; | |
23 | (10) Participate in, monitor implementation of, and provide technical assistance for the | |
24 | low-income home energy assistance program enhancement plan established pursuant to § 39-1- | |
25 | 27.12; | |
26 | (11) Participate in and monitor the distributed generation standard contracts program | |
27 | pursuant to chapter 26.2 of title 39; | |
28 | (12) (11) Coordinate opportunities with and enter into contracts and/or agreements with | |
29 | the commerce corporation associated with the energy efficiency, least-cost procurement, system | |
30 | reliability, and renewable energy fund programs; | |
31 | (13) (12) Provide support and information to the division of planning and the state planning | |
32 | council in the development of a ten-year (10) Rhode Island Energy Guide Plan, which shall be | |
33 | reviewed and amended if necessary every five (5) years; | |
34 | (13) Administer the federal Weatherization Assistance Program and any state or privately | |
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1 | funded weatherization program; | |
2 | (14) Advise and provide technical assistance to state and federally funded energy programs | |
3 | to support: | |
4 | (i) The federal low-income home energy assistance program which provides heating | |
5 | assistance to eligible low-income persons and any state funded or privately funded heating | |
6 | assistance program of a similar nature assigned to it for administration; | |
7 | (ii) The weatherization assistance program which offers home weatherization grants and | |
8 | heating system upgrades to eligible persons of low-income; | |
9 | (iii) The emergency fuel program which provides oil deliveries to families experiencing a | |
10 | heating emergency; | |
11 | (iv) The energy conservation program, which offers service and programs to all sectors; | |
12 | (v) [Deleted by P.L. 2008, ch. 228, § 2, and P.L. 2008, ch. 422, § 2.] | |
13 | (15) Advise the commerce corporation in the development of standards and rules for the | |
14 | solicitation and award of renewable energy program investment funds in accordance with § 42-64- | |
15 | 13.2; | |
16 | (16) Develop, recommend, and evaluate energy programs for state facilities and operations | |
17 | in order to achieve and demonstrate the benefits of energy-efficiency, diversification of energy | |
18 | supplies, energy conservation, and demand management; and | |
19 | (17) Advise the governor and the general assembly with regard to energy resources and all | |
20 | matters relevant to achieving the purposes of the office. | |
21 | (18) Administer and implement all state energy bond referendums that are approved. | |
22 | SECTION 18. Section 44-48.3-14 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-48.3 entitled “Rhode | |
23 | Island Qualified Jobs Incentive Act of 2015” is hereby amended as follows: | |
24 | 44-48.3-14. Sunset. | |
25 | No credits shall be authorized to be reserved pursuant to this chapter after December 31, | |
26 | 2026December 31, 2027. | |
27 | SECTION 19. Chapter 46-15.1 of the General Laws entitled “Water Supply Facilities” is | |
28 | hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: | |
29 | 46-15.1-23. Transfer of powers and functions from the water resources board for big | |
30 | river reservoir administration. | |
31 | The administration of lands acquired for the Big River Reservoir, as established under | |
32 | section 23 of chapter 133 of the Public Laws of 1964, are hereby transferred to the department of | |
33 | environmental management. However, all other general authority granted to the water resource | |
34 | board in chapters 15 and 15.1 of title 46 is hereby retained by the water resource board. | |
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1 | SECTION 20. Section 46-15.1-5 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-15.1 entitled “Water | |
2 | Supply Facilities” is hereby amended to read as follows: | |
3 | 46-15.1-5. Powers. | |
4 | (a) The board shall carry out its functions and shall have the following powers: | |
5 | (1) To adopt a seal and to alter the seal from time to time; | |
6 | (2) To sue and be sued; | |
7 | (3) To purchase, hold, and dispose of real and personal property, or interests therein, and | |
8 | to lease the property as lessee or lessor; | |
9 | (4) To make or cause to be made such surveys and borings as it may deem necessary; | |
10 | (5) To engage engineering, legal, accounting, and other professional services; | |
11 | (6) To make contracts; | |
12 | (7) To employ personnel and fix their rates of compensation; | |
13 | (8) To borrow money and issue its bonds and notes as hereinafter provided; | |
14 | (9) To apply and contract for and to expend assistance from the United States or other | |
15 | sources, whether in the form of a grant or loan or otherwise; | |
16 | (10) To adopt and amend bylaws for the regulation of its affairs and the conduct of its | |
17 | business; | |
18 | (11) To invest or deposit funds in demand deposits, savings deposits, and time deposits in | |
19 | any bank or trust company which is a member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or in | |
20 | any obligations issued or guaranteed by the United States or any agency or instrumentality thereof, | |
21 | or as provided in § 35-10-11; | |
22 | (12) To establish, operate, and maintain or lease to others, or contract with others for the | |
23 | use of, such water supply facilities as may be reasonably required for the fulfillment of its purposes; | |
24 | (13) To purchase and sell water; | |
25 | (14) To exercise such other powers as may be necessary or incidental to the exercise of the | |
26 | foregoing powers or to the accomplishment of the purposes of the board; | |
27 | (15) To acquire, within the limitation of funds therefor, the sites, appurtenant marginal | |
28 | lands, dams, waters, water rights, rights of way, easements, and other property in interests in | |
29 | property for reservoirs, groundwater wells, well sites, and for such pipe lines, aqueducts, pumping | |
30 | stations, filtration plants, and auxiliary structures as may be necessary or desirable for the treatment | |
31 | and distribution of water from those reservoirs, groundwater wells, and well sites. Lands acquired | |
32 | under the provisions of this section shall be acquired with the approval of the governor by purchase, | |
33 | gift, devise, or otherwise on such terms and conditions as the board shall determine, or by the | |
34 | exercise of eminent domain, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 6 of title 37, as amended, | |
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1 | insofar as those provisions are consistent with the provisions hereof; | |
2 | (16) To construct or purchase water reservoirs, wells and well sites, processing facilities, | |
3 | transmission or distribution systems, and other facilities, including existing facilities of municipal | |
4 | water agencies or departments, special water districts, or private water companies, necessary to | |
5 | accomplish the purposes of this chapter and to implement its plans and program; | |
6 | (17) To acquire the assets, assume the liabilities, or to effect the merger into itself of any | |
7 | corporation or other organization, including public or private water supply systems incorporated or | |
8 | organized under the laws of this state, which corporation or organization has as its principal | |
9 | business the establishment of water supply facilities or provision of related services, all upon such | |
10 | terms and for such consideration as the board shall deem to be appropriate; | |
11 | (18) To lease, sell, or otherwise convey any reservoir sites or other water supply or | |
12 | distribution facilities acquired, constructed, or purchased by the board to any municipal water | |
13 | agency or department or special water district or private water company, upon such terms as the | |
14 | board shall deem appropriate; | |
15 | (19) To provide for cooperative development, conservation, and use of water resources by | |
16 | the state, municipal agencies or departments, special water districts or privately owned water | |
17 | systems, the board may: | |
18 | (i) Authorize publicly or privately owned water supply agencies to build structures or | |
19 | install equipment on land owned or leased by the board. | |
20 | (ii) Enter into contracts with publicly or privately owned water supply agencies for | |
21 | operation of any facilities owned or leased by the board or operate any such facility by itself. | |
22 | (20) To enter into contracts to supply raw or processed water to publicly or privately owned | |
23 | water supply agencies, which shall be approved as to substance by the director of administration | |
24 | and as to form by the attorney general; | |
25 | (21) To review all plans and proposals for construction or installation of facilities for water | |
26 | supply in accordance with the applicable sections of chapter 15 of this title; | |
27 | (22) To make loans to publicly owned water supply agencies for acquisition, construction, | |
28 | and renovation of water supply facilities from funds which may be appropriated for this purpose | |
29 | by the general assembly, from bonds issued for this purpose, or from other funds which may | |
30 | become available to the board for this purpose; | |
31 | (23) To borrow money temporarily from the water development fund, for the purposes of | |
32 | this chapter, and to implement its plans and programs relating to reservoir development, exclusive | |
33 | of the acquisition of sites for the development of surface reservoirs, in anticipation of revenue or | |
34 | federal aid; and | |
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1 | (24) To enter into contracts and/or agreements with such departments, divisions, agencies, | |
2 | or boards of the state as are directed by the governor to regulate, manage, or perform related | |
3 | functions on any lands or waters acquired under the provisions of the Big River — Wood River | |
4 | Reservoir Site Acquisition Act (P.L. of 1964, chapter 133); and | |
5 | (2524) To compensate the departments, divisions, agencies, or boards from the water | |
6 | development fund in an amount equal to the cost of providing the functions or services as are | |
7 | directed to be performed by the governor. The compensation shall be mandatory and shall be | |
8 | provided according to procedures established by the department of administration. | |
9 | (b) The board as a body politic and corporate and public instrumentality created pursuant | |
10 | to this chapter is subject to § 46-15.1-5(1) — (25). The board as the state agency pursuant to chapter | |
11 | 15 of this title is subject to § 46-15.1-5(15) — (25). | |
12 | SECTION 21. Section 46-15.1-19.1 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-15.1 entitled | |
13 | "Water Supply Facilities" is hereby repealed: | |
14 | 46-15.1-19.1. Big River Reservoir — Administration. | |
15 | The Rhode Island water resources board, established pursuant to this chapter and chapter | |
16 | 15 of this title, shall be the only designated agency which will administer those lands acquired for | |
17 | the Big River Reservoir as established under section 23 of chapter 133 of the Public Laws of 1964. | |
18 | The director of the department of environmental management and the director’s authorized agents, | |
19 | employees, and designees shall, together with the water resources board in accordance with the Big | |
20 | River management area land use plan for the lands, protect the natural resources of the Big River | |
21 | Reservoir lands. The lands of the Big River Reservoir are subject to enforcement authority of the | |
22 | department of environmental management, as provided for in chapter 17.1 of title 42, and as | |
23 | provided for in title 20 of the General Laws. | |
24 | SECTION 22. Sections 46-31.1-1, 46-31.1-2 and 46-31.1-3 of the General Laws in Chapter | |
25 | 46-31.1 entitled “The Rhode Island Bays, Rivers and Watersheds Fund” are hereby amended to | |
26 | read as follows: | |
27 | 46-31.1-1. Legislative findings. | |
28 | The general assembly hereby finds and declares as follows: | |
29 | (1) The bays, rivers, and associated watersheds of Rhode Island are unique and unparalleled | |
30 | natural resources that provide significant cultural, ecological, and economic benefit to the state. | |
31 | (2) Pursuant to the provisions of R.I. Const., art. 1, § 17, it is the duty of the general | |
32 | assembly to provide for the conservation of the air, land, water, plant, animal, mineral, and other | |
33 | natural resources of the state; and to adopt all means necessary and proper by law to protect the | |
34 | natural environment of the people of the state by providing adequate resource planning for the | |
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1 | control and regulation of the use of the natural resources of the state; and for the preservation, | |
2 | regeneration, and restoration of the natural environment of the state. | |
3 | (3) It is in the best interest of the state and its citizens to preserve, protect, and restore our | |
4 | bays, rivers, lakes, and associated watersheds. | |
5 | (4) Sixty percent (60%) of the watershed of Narragansett Bay is within Massachusetts, | |
6 | almost all of the watershed of Mount Hope Bay is within Massachusetts, and five percent (5%) of | |
7 | the watershed of Little Narragansett Bay is within Connecticut; further, a cluster of water-related | |
8 | economic interests spans the three (3) states. | |
9 | (5) There is a need to foster effective management, preservation, restoration, and | |
10 | monitoring of the bays, rivers, lakes, and watersheds; and the promotion of sustainable economic | |
11 | development of businesses that rely directly or indirectly on the bays, rivers, and watersheds. | |
12 | 46-31.1-2. Definitions. | |
13 | As used in this chapter, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise: | |
14 | (1) “Bays” means the estuaries including Narragansett Bay, Mount Hope Bay, Greenwich | |
15 | Bay, Little Narragansett Bay, the coastal ponds, the Sakonnet River, and Rhode Island territorial | |
16 | waters that extend seaward three geographical miles from the shoreline including the area around | |
17 | Block Island. | |
18 | (2) “Coordination” means to harmonize in a common action or effort and/or to function in | |
19 | a complementary manner. | |
20 | (3) “Lake” or “pond” means a place, natural or manmade, located wholly or partly within | |
21 | the State of Rhode Island, where open standing or slowly moving water is present for at least six | |
22 | (6) months of the year. For the purposes of this chapter, “lake” or “pond” shall exclude commercial | |
23 | or industrial waterbodies created for the purpose of providing cooling water, concrete or poly-lined | |
24 | waterbodies, and construction dewatering basins. | |
25 | (34) “River” means a flowing body of water or estuary or a section, portion, or tributary | |
26 | thereof, including, but not limited to, streams, creeks, brooks, ponds, and small lakes. | |
27 | (45) “Water cluster” means an economically interconnected grouping of businesses, | |
28 | institutions, and people relying directly or indirectly on the bays, rivers, and watersheds including, | |
29 | but not limited to, the following sectors: | |
30 | (i) Recreation, tourism, and public events; | |
31 | (ii) Fisheries and aquaculture; | |
32 | (iii) Boat and ship building; | |
33 | (iv) Boating-related businesses; | |
34 | (v) Transportation; | |
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1 | (vi) Military; | |
2 | (vii) Research; and | |
3 | (viii) Technology development and education. | |
4 | (56) “Watershed” means a land area which because of its topography, soil type, and | |
5 | drainage patterns acts as a collector of raw waters which regorge or replenish rivers and existing or | |
6 | planned public water supplies. | |
7 | 46-31.1-3. Bays, Rivers and Watersheds Fund. | |
8 | (a) There is hereby established a restricted receipt account within the Department of | |
9 | Environmental Management to be called the Bays, Rivers and Watersheds Fund; | |
10 | (b) The fund shall consist of any funds which the state may from time to time appropriate, | |
11 | as well as money received as gifts, grants, bequests, donations or other funds from any public or | |
12 | private sources, as well as all fees collected pursuant to § 46-23-1(f)(2) for the leasing of submerged | |
13 | lands for transatlantic cables, and all fees collected pursuant to chapter 12.11 of this title for the | |
14 | disposal of septage; | |
15 | (c) All funds, monies, and fees collected pursuant to this section shall be deposited in the | |
16 | Bays, Rivers and Watersheds Fund, and shall be utilized by the Department of Environmental | |
17 | Management consistent with the purposes of § 46-23.2-1 entitled, “The Comprehensive Watershed | |
18 | and Marine Monitoring Act of 2004,” § 46-12 chapter 12 of title 46 entitled, “Water Pollution,” | |
19 | chapter 33 of title 46 entitled, “Freshwater Lake Management Program,” and chapter 6.2 of title 42 | |
20 | entitled “Resilient Rhode Island Act of 2014 Climate Change Coordination Council2021 Act on | |
21 | Climate.” All expenditures from the fund shall be subject to appropriation by the general assembly. | |
22 | SECTION 23. Sections 46-33-1 and 46-33-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 46-33 entitled | |
23 | “Freshwater Lake Management Program” are hereby amended to read as follows: | |
24 | 46-33-1. Definitions. | |
25 | As used in this chapter, unless the context indicates otherwise: | |
26 | (1) "Aquatic invasive species" means those invasive or non-native species that inhabit | |
27 | water resources including lakes, ponds, rivers and streams. | |
28 | (2) "Coordination" means to harmonize in a common action or effort and/or to function in | |
29 | a complementary manner. | |
30 | (3) "Department" means the Rhode Island department of environmental management. | |
31 | (4) "Invasive species" means an alien species whose introduction does or is likely to cause | |
32 | economic or environmental harm, or harm to human health. | |
33 | (5) "Lake" or "pond" means a place, natural or manmade, located wholly or partly within | |
34 | the State of Rhode Island, where open standing or slowly moving water shall be present for at least | |
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1 | six (6) months of the year. | |
2 | (6) "Lake association" means an association, club or other organization, formed and | |
3 | registered in Rhode Island, which has responsibility for stewardship and management of a | |
4 | freshwater lake or pond. | |
5 | (7) "Non-native species" means a species of plant, animal, or microbe that is: | |
6 | (i) Introduced to a country or region where it is not native; | |
7 | (ii) Is reproducing and spreading without human cultivation; and | |
8 | (iii) Is causing harm to native species or the areas in which they live. | |
9 | (8) "Rhode Island lake management fund" means the fund established by § 46-33-3. | |
10 | 46-33-2. Rhode Island lake management program – Established. | |
11 | (a) The department shall develop and implement a lake management program. The program | |
12 | shall include the following elements: | |
13 | (1) Field surveys and mapping to document the presence of aquatic invasive species in | |
14 | freshwaters; | |
15 | (2) Development and provision of guidance and technical assistance to lake associations, | |
16 | watershed organizations and municipalities interested in undertaking lake management actions; | |
17 | (3) Coordination of the implementation of lake management actions, where appropriate; | |
18 | (4) Oversight of lake management policy and program development; | |
19 | (5) Distribution of financial assistance for lake management, including control of aquatic | |
20 | invasive plants, as resources allow, including such sums as appropriated by the general assembly | |
21 | from the Bays, Rivers and Watersheds Fund established by § 46-31.1-3; and | |
22 | (6) Other activities consistent with the powers and duties assigned to the department in § | |
23 | 42-17.1-2(34). | |
24 | (b) Upon receipt of funding, the department shall establish procedures and rules for the | |
25 | distribution of lake management grants consistent with the following provisions: | |
26 | (1) Entities eligible to apply for assistance shall include lake associations, watershed | |
27 | associations, municipal governments and other nonprofit, non-governmental | |
28 | environmental and conservation organizations. | |
29 | (2) Projects involving lakes and ponds located wholly within a privately owned property | |
30 | and that lack public access to the waterbody are not eligible for assistance. | |
31 | (3) Projects involving lakes and ponds that lack public access, excepting those excluded in | |
32 | subsection (b)(2) of this section, may be eligible to apply for financial assistance provided the | |
33 | department determines that active management is necessary to protect publicly accessible | |
34 | freshwater resources. | |
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1 | (4) Projects shall be solicited through a publicly advertised process. | |
2 | (5) Projects shall require a matching contribution of funds. | |
3 | (6) Eligible projects are determined by the department to be technically sound and | |
4 | appropriate to control or mitigate an existing aquatic invasive species management, water quality | |
5 | or aquatic habitat concern. | |
6 | (7) Funding is used to design and implement specific lake management actions. | |
7 | SECTION 24. This article shall take effect upon passage, except section 1, which, upon | |
8 | approval of the voters, shall be effective on January 1, 2027; and section 3, which shall take effect | |
9 | on July 1, 2026. | |
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