BILL NUMBER: AB 430 CHAPTERED 07/01/04 CHAPTER 89 FILED WITH SECRETARY OF STATE JULY 1, 2004 APPROVED BY GOVERNOR JUNE 30, 2004 PASSED THE ASSEMBLY JUNE 28, 2004 PASSED THE SENATE JUNE 24, 2004 AMENDED IN SENATE MAY 26, 2004 AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY APRIL 21, 2003 AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY APRIL 1, 2003 INTRODUCED BY Assembly Member Dutra FEBRUARY 14, 2003 An act to amend Sections 25296.09 and 25297.1 of the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous substances, and declaring the urgency thereof, to take effect immediately. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST AB 430, Dutra. Santa Clara Valley Water District: underground tanks. (1) Existing law generally regulates the storage of hazardous substances in underground storage tanks and requires the State Water Resources Control Board to develop and implement a local oversight program for the abatement of, and oversight of the abatement of, unauthorized releases of hazardous substances from underground storage tanks by local agencies. Existing law authorizes the board to enter into an agreement with a local agency and the Santa Clara Valley Water District to implement the local oversight program in Santa Clara County until June 30, 2004. Existing law authorizes the board, if that agreement is entered into, to provide funding to the district for oversight costs incurred by the district on and after July 1, 2002, until June 30, 2004. Existing law ratifies certain actions relating to underground storage tanks taken by the district on and after January 1, 1988, until January 1, 2004, or until the effective date of an agreement between the board, a local agency, and the district, as specified. This bill would extend the date that the board is authorized to enter into an agreement to June 30, 2005. The bill would authorize the board to provide funding oversight costs incurred by the district until June 30, 2005, and would ratify those actions taken by the district until January 1, 2005, or until the effective date of that agreement. (2) The bill would declare that, due to the unique circumstances pertaining to the Santa Clara Valley Water District that the bill is intended to remedy, a general statute within the meaning of specified provisions of the California Constitution cannot be made applicable and a special statute is necessary. (3) The bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as an urgency statute. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 1. Section 25296.09 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read: 25296.09. (a) (1) If the board enters into an agreement with a local agency and the Santa Clara Valley Water District pursuant to subdivision (j) of Section 25297.1, the Santa Clara Valley Water District shall have the same authority and responsibility as a local agency for purposes of Sections 25296.10 to 25297.2, inclusive, and for purposes of Sections 25299.36, 25299.38, 25299.39.2, 25299.39.3, 25299.51, 25299.53, and 25299.57. (2) Paragraph (1) shall remain operative only until June 30, 2005. (3) The inoperation of paragraph (1) does not affect the validity of any action taken by the Santa Clara Valley Water District before June 30, 2005, and does not provide a defense for an owner, operator, or other responsible party who fails to comply with that action. (4) Nothing in this section implies that the Santa Clara Valley Water District has CUPA authority other than authority for the local oversight program in accordance with paragraph (1). (b) (1) The Legislature hereby finds and declares that, beginning in 1988, and continuing each year since that date, the Santa Clara Valley Water District has had a role in implementing the requirements of the provisions listed in subdivision (a). (2) The Legislature hereby finds and declares that the funding provided by the state to the Santa Clara Valley Water District for the work described in paragraph (1) is hereby ratified. (c) (1) Any action taken by the Santa Clara Valley Water District that a local agency is otherwise authorized to take pursuant to Sections 25296.10 to 25297.2, inclusive, and Sections 25299.36, 25299.38, 25299.39.2, 25299.39.3, 25299.51, 25299.53, and 25299.57, and that was taken by the Santa Clara Valley Water District on and after January 1, 1988, and continuing on and before January 1, 2005, or until the effective date of an agreement entered into pursuant to subdivision (j) of Section 25297.1, whichever date occurs first, is hereby ratified as having been taken pursuant to this chapter and Chapter 6.75 (commencing with Section 25299.10). However, this ratification applies only to an action that would be valid only if an agreement pursuant to subdivision (j) of Section 25297.1 had been in effect at the time of the action and that otherwise complies with applicable law. (2) This subdivision does not apply to any action taken by the Santa Clara Valley Water District that is the subject of a civil action pending on June 12, 2003. SEC. 2. Section 25297.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read: 25297.1. (a) In addition to the authority granted to the board pursuant to Division 7 (commencing with Section 13000) of the Water Code and to the department pursuant to Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section 25300), the board, in cooperation with the department, shall develop and implement a local oversight program for the abatement of, and oversight of the abatement of, unauthorized releases of hazardous substances from underground storage tanks by local agencies. In implementing the local oversight program, the agreement specified in subdivision (b) shall be between the board and the local agency. The board shall select local agencies for participation in the program from among those local agencies that apply to the board, giving first priority to those local agencies that have demonstrated prior experience in cleanup, abatement, or other actions necessary to remedy the effects of unauthorized releases of hazardous substances from underground storage tanks. The board shall select only those local agencies that have implemented this chapter and that, except as provided in Section 25404.5, have begun to collect and transmit to the board the surcharge or fees pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 25287. (b) In implementing the local oversight program described in subdivision (a), the board may enter into an agreement with any local agency to perform, or cause to be performed, any cleanup, abatement, or other action necessary to remedy the effects of a release of hazardous substances from an underground storage tank with respect to which the local agency has enforcement authority pursuant to this section. The board may not enter into an agreement with a local agency for soil contamination cleanup or for groundwater contamination cleanup unless the board determines that the local agency has a demonstrated capability to oversee or perform the cleanup. The implementation of the cleanup, abatement, or other action shall be consistent with procedures adopted by the board pursuant to subdivision (d) and shall be based upon cleanup standards specified by the board or regional board. (c) The board shall provide funding to a local agency that enters into an agreement pursuant to subdivision (b) for the reasonable costs incurred by the local agency in overseeing any cleanup, abatement, or other action taken by a responsible party to remedy the effects of unauthorized releases from underground storage tanks. (d) The board shall adopt administrative and technical procedures, as part of the state policy for water quality control adopted pursuant to Section 13140 of the Water Code, for cleanup and abatement actions taken pursuant to this section. The procedures shall include, but not be limited to, all of the following: (1) Guidelines as to which sites may be assigned to the local agency. (2) The content of the agreements which may be entered into by the board and the local agency. (3) Procedures by which a responsible party may petition the board or a regional board for review, pursuant to Article 2 (commencing with Section 13320) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of the Water Code, or pursuant to Chapter 9.2 (commencing with Section 2250) of Division 3 of Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations, or any successor regulation, as applicable, of actions or decisions of the local agency in implementing the cleanup, abatement, or other action. (4) Protocols for assessing and recovering money from responsible parties for any reasonable and necessary costs incurred by the local agency in implementing this section, as specified in subdivision (i), unless the cleanup or abatement action is subject to subdivision (d) of Section 25296.10. (5) Quantifiable measures to evaluate the outcome of a pilot program established pursuant to this section. (e) Any agreement between the regional board and a local agency to carry out a local oversight program pursuant to this section shall require both of the following: (1) The local agency shall establish and maintain accurate accounting records of all costs it incurs pursuant to this section and shall periodically make these records available to the board. The Controller may annually audit these records to verify the hourly oversight costs charged by a local agency. The board shall reimburse the Controller for the cost of the audits of a local agency's records conducted pursuant to this section. (2) The board and the department shall make reasonable efforts to recover costs incurred pursuant to this section from responsible parties, and may pursue any available legal remedy for this purpose. (f) The board shall develop a system for maintaining a database for tracking expenditures of funds pursuant to this section, and shall make this data available to the Legislature upon request. (g) (1) Sections 25355.5 and 25356 do not apply to expenditures from the Hazardous Substance Cleanup Fund for oversight of abatement of releases from underground storage tanks as part of the local oversight program established pursuant to this section. (2) A local agency that enters into an agreement pursuant to subdivision (b) shall notify the responsible party, for any site subject to a cleanup, abatement, or other action taken pursuant to the local oversight program established pursuant to this section, that the responsible party is liable for not more than 150 percent of the total amount of site-specific oversight costs actually incurred by the local agency. (h) Any aggrieved person may petition the board or regional board for review of the action or failure to act of a local agency that enters into an agreement pursuant to subdivision (b), at a site subject to cleanup, abatement, or other action conducted as part of the local oversight program established pursuant to this section, in accordance with the procedures adopted by the board or regional board pursuant to subdivision (d). (i) (1) For purposes of this section, site-specific oversight costs include only the costs of the following activities, when carried out by the staff of a local agency or the local agency's authorized representative, that are either technical program staff or their immediate supervisors: (A) Responsible party identification and notification. (B) Site visits. (C) Sampling activities. (D) Meetings with responsible parties or responsible party consultants. (E) Meetings with the regional board or with other affected agencies regarding a specific site. (F) Review of reports, workplans, preliminary assessments, remedial action plans, or postremedial monitoring. (G) Development of enforcement actions against a responsible party. (H) Issuance of a closure document. (2) The responsible party is liable for the site-specific oversight costs, calculated pursuant to paragraphs (3) and (4), incurred by a local agency, in overseeing any cleanup, abatement, or other action taken pursuant to this section to remedy an unauthorized release from an underground storage tank. (3) Notwithstanding the requirements of any other provision of law, the amount of liability of a responsible party for the oversight costs incurred by the local agency and by the board and regional boards in overseeing any action pursuant to this section shall be calculated as an amount not more than 150 percent of the total amount of the site-specific oversight costs actually incurred by the local agency and shall not include the direct or indirect costs incurred by the board or regional boards. (4) (A) The total amount of oversight costs for which a local agency may be reimbursed shall not exceed one hundred fifteen dollars ($115) per hour, multiplied by the total number of site-specific hours performed by the local agency. (B) The total amount of the costs per site for administration and technical assistance to local agencies by the board and the regional board entering into agreements pursuant to subdivision (b) shall not exceed a combined total of thirty-five dollars ($35) for each hour of site-specific oversight. The board shall base its costs on the total hours of site-specific oversight work performed by all participating local agencies. The regional board shall base its costs on the total number of hours of site-specific oversight costs attributable to the local agency that received regional board assistance. (C) The amounts specified in subparagraphs (A) and (B) are base rates for the 1990-91 fiscal year. Commencing July 1, 1991, and for each fiscal year thereafter, the board shall adjust the base rates annually to reflect increases or decreases in the cost of living during the prior fiscal year, as measured by the implicit price deflator for state and local government purchases of goods and services, as published by the United States Department of Commerce or by a successor agency of the federal government. (5) In recovering costs from responsible parties for costs incurred under this section, the local agency shall prorate any costs identifiable as startup costs over the expected number of cases that the local agency will oversee during a 10-year period. A responsible party who has been assessed startup costs for the cleanup of any unauthorized release that, as of January 1, 1991, is the subject of oversight by a local agency, shall receive an adjustment by the local agency in the form of a credit, for the purposes of cost recovery. Startup costs include all of the following expenses: (A) Small tools, safety clothing, cameras, sampling equipment, and other similar articles necessary to investigate or document pollution. (B) Office furniture. (C) Staff assistance needed to develop computer tracking of financial and site-specific records. (D) Training and setup costs for the first six months of the local agency program. (6) This subdivision does not apply to costs that are required to be recovered pursuant to Article 7.5 (commencing with Section 25385) of Chapter 6.8. (j) (1) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), the board may enter into an agreement with a local agency and the Santa Clara Valley Water District to implement the local oversight program in Santa Clara County. (2) Paragraph (1) shall remain operative only until June 30, 2005. (3) The inoperation of paragraph (1) does not affect the validity of any action taken by the Santa Clara Valley Water District before June 30, 2005, and does not provide a defense for an owner, operator, or other responsible party who fails to comply with that action. (k) If the board enters into an agreement with a local agency and the Santa Clara Valley Water District to implement the local oversight program in Santa Clara County, pursuant to subdivision (j), the board may provide funding to the Santa Clara Valley Water District pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 25299.51 for oversight costs incurred by the district on and after July 1, 2002, to June 30, 2005. SEC. 3. The Legislature finds and declares that, because of the unique circumstances applicable only to the Santa Clara Valley Water District, a statute of general applicability cannot be enacted within the meaning of subdivision (b) of Section 16 of Article IV of the California Constitution. Therefore, this special statute is necessary. SEC. 4. This act is an urgency statute necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety within the meaning of Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into immediate effect. The facts constituting the necessity are: In order to protect the health and safety of the citizens of Santa Clara County and the environment from contamination and the threat of contamination, and to continue local investigation and cleanup of groundwater pollution from unauthorized releases from petroleum underground storage tanks, it is necessary that this act take effect immediately.