AB 77, as amended, Committee on Budget. Budget Act of 2013: public resources.
(1) Existing law requires that any moneys appropriated from the Public Resources Account in the Cigarette and Tobacco Products Surtax Fund for programs to protect, restore, enhance, or maintain waterfowl habitat be transferred to the Department of Fish and Wildlife for expenditure for those same purposes.
Existing law requires that any moneys appropriated to the Department of Fish and Wildlife from the California Environmental License Plate Fund in an amount not to exceed the amount transferred to the Department of Fish and Wildlife pursuant to the above provisions be transferred to the Department of Parks and Recreation for expenditure for exclusive trust purposes that include, among other things, the acquisition, preservation, restoration, or any combination thereof, of natural areas or ecological reserves.
This bill would repeal these provisions.
(2) The Wildlife Conservation Law of 1947 authorizes the Wildlife Conservation Board to, among other things, authorize the Department of Fish and Wildlife to lease, sell, exchange, or otherwise transfer any real property, interest in real property, or option acquired by or held under the jurisdiction of the board or the department. The law also authorizes the board to authorize the department to lease degraded potential wildlife habitat real property to nonprofit organizations, local governmental agencies, or state and federal agencies if specified conditions are met. The law requires proceeds from specified transactions, including leases, entered into pursuant to these provisions to be deposited into the Wildlife Restoration Fund, except as provided.
This bill would require any moneys received in the Wildlife Restoration Fund from leases pursuant to these provisions to be expended, upon appropriation, by the Department of Fish and Wildlife for the purposes of managing, maintaining, restoring, or operating lands owned and managed by the department.
(3) The California Prompt Payment Act dictates that a state agency that fails to make a timely payment for goods or services acquired pursuant to a contract with a specified business or organization is subject to a late payment penalty. The act requires state agencies, on an annual basis within 90 calendar days following the end of each fiscal year, to provide the Director of General Services with a report on late payment penalties that were paid by the agency during the preceding fiscal year.
This bill would exclude the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection from the above-described reporting requirements.
(4) Existing law provides for the appointment of Members of the Legislature to various state boards, commissions, and similar multimember bodies.
end deleteThis bill would authorize a Member of the Legislature appointed to a state board, commission, or similar multimember body within the Natural Resources Agency to designate an alternate to serve on the board, commission, or body in the Member’s absence.
end delete(5)
end deletebegin insert(end insertbegin insert4)end insert Existing law creates the Office of Information Security in the Department of Technology, to ensure the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of state systems and applications, and to promote and protect consumer privacy to ensure the trust of the residents of the state. The office is under the direction of a director. Existing law authorizes the office to conduct, or require to be conducted, independent security assessments of any state agency, department, or office, the cost of which is required to be funded by the state agency, department, or office being assessed.
This bill would prohibit the office from requiring an independent security assessment of the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
(6)
end deletebegin insert(end insertbegin insert5)end insert Existing law requires the State Fire Marshal to issue a report identifying pipeline leak incident rate trends, reviewing current regulatory effectiveness with regard to pipeline safety, and recommending any necessary changes to the Legislature. Existing law requires a pipeline operator, within 30 days of a pipeline rupture, explosion, or fire, to file a report with the State Fire Marshal.
This bill would delete these requirements.
(7)
end deletebegin insert(end insertbegin insert6)end insert Existing law requires a generator of hazardous waste to complete, sign, and provide to certain persons a manifest containing specific information under certain circumstances when hazardous waste is to be transported and, with certain exceptions, imposes a fee on the use of the hazardous waste manifest.
This bill would, on and after January 1, 2014, eliminate the fee on the use of the manifest.
(8)
end deletebegin insert(end insertbegin insert7)end insert Existing law requires the State Board of Equalization to provide to the Legislature quarterly reports on various hazardous waste fees collected.
This bill would make conforming changes with regard to those reports.
(9)
end deletebegin insert(end insertbegin insert8)end insert Existing law requires the Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) to suspend the permit of a facility for nonpayment of facility fees if the State Board of Equalization certifies in writing specified facts.
This bill would additionally authorize DTSC to certify in writing those facts.
(10)
end deletebegin insert(9)end insert Existing law exempts from the hazardous waste facility fee a treatment facility engaged in treatment to accomplish a removal or remedial action or a corrective action in accordance with an order issued by the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
This bill would, on and after January 1, 2014, exempt from the hazardous waste facility fee a treatment facility engaged in removal or remedial actions pursuant to a removal action work plan or a remedial action plan that meets specific requirements and is authorized to operate by DTSC.
(11)
end deletebegin insert(10)end insert Existing law establishes a base rate for the 1997 reporting period for a hazardous waste facility fee at $19,761 and requires for each reporting period thereafter that the State Board of Equalization adjust the base rate annually to reflect changes in the cost of living during the prior fiscal year.
This bill would, instead, establish the base rate for the 2013 reporting period for that fee at $30,005, and would require the State Board of Equalization to adjust the base rate and other specified rates related to hazardous waste annually to reflect increases or decreases in the cost of living during the prior fiscal year.
(12)
end deletebegin insert(11)end insert Existing law requires a person who disposes of hazardous waste to pay a disposal fee. Existing law assesses a hazardous waste generator fee with a base rate of $2,748.
This bill would revise and recast these provisions to eliminate the disposal fee, and instead the bill would assess, on and after January 1, 2014, a generation and handling fee of $31.52 per ton of hazardous waste generated, except as specified. The bill would require the State Board of Equalization to adjust the fee schedule to reflect changes in the cost of living during the prior fiscal year.
(13)
end deletebegin insert(12)end insert Existing law provides a hazardous waste generator with a credit toward the generator fee if the generator pays an inspection fee to a Certified Unified Program Agency with jurisdiction over the facility or transfers hazardous materials offsite for recycling.
This bill would, on and after January 1, 2014, repeal those credits.
(14)
end deletebegin insert(13)end insert Existing law provides a person who applies for, or requests, specified permits, variances, or waste classification determinations with the option of paying a flat fee or entering into a reimbursement agreement to reimburse DTSC for costs incurred in processing the application or response to the request.
This bill would eliminate the flat fee option. The bill would additionally require the reimbursement agreement to provide for the reimbursement of the costs incurred by DTSC in reviewing and overseeing corrective action.
(15)
end deletebegin insert(14)end insert Existing law imposes an annual verification fee upon generators, transporters, and facility operators with more than 50 employees that possess a valid identification number issued by DTSC or the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
This bill would, on and after January 1, 2014, eliminate that fee.
(16)
end deletebegin insert(15)end insert Existing law exempts from certain reimbursement requirements an application to modify a permit for a facility’s allowable capacity for treatment or storage of hazardous waste. Existing law exempts, from fees assessed on used oil, used oil removed from a motor vehicle that is subsequently recycled by a permitted recycler.
This bill would eliminate those exemptions. Because a failure to pay this fee is a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(17)
end deletebegin insert(16)end insert Existing law exempts from the hazardous waste generator fee a person transporting, importing, or receiving certain hazardous waste imported into the state.
This bill would, on and after January 1, 2014, eliminate this exemption. Because a failure to pay this fee is a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
(18)
end deletebegin insert(17)end insert This bill would make conforming changes and delete obsolete provisions pertaining to the state’s hazardous waste programs.
(19)
end deletebegin insert(18)end insert Existing law, the Highway Safety, Traffic Reduction, Air Quality, and Port Security Bond Act of 2006, approved by the voters as Proposition 1B at the November 7, 2006, statewide general election, authorizes the issuance of $19,925,000,000 of general obligation bonds for specified purposes, including schoolbus retrofit and replacement purposes. Existing law also establishes various programs for the reduction of vehicular air pollution, including the Lower-Emission School Bus Program adopted by the State Air Resources Board. Existing law appropriates funds to the state board and requires the state board to allocate these bond funds in specified ways, including funding to local air pollution control and air quality management districts.
This bill would require funds authorized by the State Air Resources Board during or subsequent to the 2013-14 fiscal year to be allocated to local air pollution control and air quality management districts by prioritizing to retrofit or replace the most polluting schoolbuses in small local air pollution control and air quality management districts first and then medium local air pollution control and air quality management districts as defined by the state board. The bill would require each allocation to provide sufficient funding for at least one project to be implemented pursuant to the Lower-Emission School Bus Program. The bill, if a local air pollution control or air quality management district has unspent funds within 6 months of the expenditure deadline, would require the local air pollution control or air quality management district to work with the state board to transfer those funds to an alternative local air pollution control or air quality management district with existing demand.
(20)
end deletebegin insert(19)end insert Existing law requires a state agency to report annually to the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery on its progress in meeting recycled product purchasing requirements and requires the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery to provide this reported information to the Legislature in an agency-specific report.
This bill would exempt the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection from this reporting requirement and would delete the requirement that the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery provide the report to the Legislature.
(21)
end deletebegin insert(20)end insert Existing law requires the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection to submit an annual report to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee regarding emergency incidents.
This bill would delete this requirement and other obsolete reporting provisions.
(22)
end deletebegin insert(21)end insert Existing law requires the State Board of Forestry and Fire Protection to submit a report to the Legislature on the actions taken by the board relating to forest practices, as provided. Existing law requires the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection to prepare reports for the board setting forth data as to the experiments conducted by the department, and existing law requires the board to make these reports available to the Legislature.
This bill would delete the requirements that the board provide these reports to the Legislature.
(23)
end deletebegin insert(22)end insert Existing law authorizes the Department of Finance to delegate to the Department of Parks and Recreation the right to exercise the same authority granted to the Division of the State Architect and the Real Estate Services Division in the Department of General Services, to plan, design, construct, and administer contracts and professional services for legislatively approved capital outlay projects. This provision is repealed as of January 1, 2014.
This bill would extend the repeal date to January 1, 2019.
(24)
end deletebegin insert(23)end insert Existing law authorizes the Department of Parks and Recreation to enter into contracts with natural persons, corporations, partnerships, and associations for the construction, maintenance, and operation of concessions within units of the state park system. Existing law requires those concession contracts to contain certain specified provisions, including a provision that the maximum term shall be 10 years, except that a term of more than 10 years may be provided if the Director of Parks and Recreation determines that the longer term is necessary to allow the concessionaire to amortize improvements made by the concessionaire, to facilitate the full utilization of a structure that is scheduled by the department for replacement or redevelopment, or to serve the best interests of the state. Existing law prohibits, with certain exceptions, the term of a concession contract from exceeding 20 years without specific authorization by statute.
This bill would authorize the term to exceed 20 years for a concession agreement at Will Rogers State Beach executed prior to December 31, 1997, as provided, without specific authorization by statute upon approval by the director and pursuant to a determination by the director that the longer term is necessary to allow the concessionaire to amortize improvements made by the concessionaire that are anticipated to exceed $1,500,000 in capital improvements. The bill would prohibit the extension of the term from exceeding 15 years.
(25)
end deletebegin insert(24)end insert Existing law, the California Clean Water, Clean Air, and Safe Neighborhood Parks, and Coastal Protection Act of 2002, approved by the voters as Proposition 40 at the March 5, 2002, statewide primary election, authorizes the issuance of bonds in the amount of $2,600,000,000, for the purpose of financing a program for the acquisition, development, restoration, protection, rehabilitation, stabilization, reconstruction, preservation, and interpretation of park, coastal, agricultural land, air, and historical resources, as specified.
Proposition 40 requires that a specified sum from the proceeds of bonds issued and sold under its provisions, which is available upon appropriation by the Legislature, be allocated to the State Air Resources Board for grants to air pollution control and air quality management districts pursuant to the Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality Standards Attainment Program for projects that reduce air pollution that affects air quality in state and local park and recreation areas.
This bill would require that allocations of these funds to the Lower-Emission School Bus Program be prioritized to retrofit or replace the most polluting schoolbuses in small local air quality management districts first and then to medium local air quality management districts as defined by the state board. The bill would require that each allocation for this purpose provide enough funding for at least one project to be implemented pursuant to the Lower-Emission School Bus Program. The bill, if a local air quality management district has unspent funds within 6 months of the expenditure deadline, would require the local air quality management district to work with the state board to transfer funds to an alternative local air quality management district with existing demand.
(26)
end deletebegin insert(25)end insert Existing law, the California Beverage Container Recycling and Litter Reduction Act, requires a distributor to pay a redemption payment for every beverage container sold or offered for sale in the state to the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery. The act requires that every convenience zone be served by at least one certified recycling center and the department is required to certify recycling centers and processors for purposes of the act. The Director of Resources Recycling and Recovery is required to adopt, by regulation, procedures for the certification of recycling centers and processors.
This bill would require the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery to review whether an application for certification as a recycling center or processor, or renewal of a certification, is complete within 30 working days of receipt and if the department deems an application complete, the department would be required to approve or deny the application no later than 60 calendar days after the date when the application was deemed complete. The bill would also require, on and after January 1, 2014, an applicant for certification as a recycling center or processor, or for renewal of a certification, to complete a precertification training program and meet all other qualification requirements prescribed by the department, which would be authorized to include requiring the applicant to obtain a passing score on an examination administered by the department.
(27)
end deletebegin insert(26)end insert Existing law specifies requirements for the reports, claims, and information required to be submitted to the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery pursuant to the act.
This bill would instead require a person otherwise subject to these requirements to use the Division of Recycling Integrated Information System (DORIIS) or other system designated by the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery for reporting, making, or claiming payments or providing other information for purposes of the act.
(28)
end deletebegin insert(27)end insert Existing law requires certified recycling centers to accept any empty beverage container from a consumer or dropoff or collection program and pay the refund value, which can be based on weight. Existing law requires the department to review and calculate the commingled rates paid for beverage containers and postfilled containers paid to curbside recycling programs, collection programs, and recycling centers.
This bill would require, on and after September 1, 2013, a certified recycling center, for beverage containers redeemed by consumers, to pay the refund value based on the applicable segregated rate. The bill would delete recycling centers from those entities for which the department is required to calculate a commingled rate.
(29)
end deletebegin insert(28)end insert Existing law provides that a violation of the act is an infraction. The act also provides that a person who, with intent to defraud, takes specified actions, is guilty of fraud, punishable as specified.
This bill would additionally provide that a person who violates a regulation adopted pursuant to the act is guilty of an infraction. The bill would instead specify that a person who, with intent to defraud, takes those actions knowingly is guilty of a crime, punishable as specified.
(30)
end deletebegin insert(29)end insert Because a violation of the act is a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program by creating new crimes with regard to the submission of information to the department, the payment of refund values, and the violation of a regulation.
(31)
end deletebegin insert(30)end insert The California Constitution establishes the Public Utilities Commission, with jurisdiction over all public utilities, as defined. The Reliable Electric Service Investments Act required the Public Utilities Commission to require the state’s 3 largest electrical corporations, until January 1, 2012, to identify a separate electrical rate component, commonly referred to as the “public goods charge,” to collect specified amounts to fund energy efficiency, renewable energy, and research, development, and demonstration programs that enhance system reliability and provide in-state benefits. Existing decisions of the Public Utilities Commission institute an Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) to fund renewable energy and research, development, and demonstration programs.
Existing law creates in the State Treasury the Electric Program Investment Charge Fund to be administered by the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission and requires moneys received by the Public Utilities Commission for those programs the Public Utilities Commission has determined should be administered by the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission to be forwarded by the Public Utilities Commission to the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission at least quarterly for deposit in the fund.
This bill would require the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, in administering moneys in the fund for research, development, and demonstration programs, to develop and administer the EPIC program for the purpose of awarding funds to projects that may lead to technological advancement and breakthroughs to overcome barriers that prevent the achievement of the state’s statutory energy goals and that may result in a portfolio of projects that is strategically focused and sufficiently narrow to make advancement on the most significant technological challenges. The bill would require the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, no later than April 30 of each year, to prepare and submit to the Legislature an annual report regarding the EPIC program.
This bill would prohibit the Public Utilities Commission from requiring the collection of moneys pursuant to a specified decision and any amendments to that decision in an annual amount greater than the amount set forth in that decision of the Public Utilities Commission.
(32)
end deletebegin insert(31)end insert Existing law establishes the Emerging Renewable Resources Account, a continuously appropriated account, within the Renewable Resource Trust Fund for specified purposes related to renewable energy.
This bill would additionally authorize the use of the moneys in the account for the purposes of funding the New Solar Homes Partnership. Because the bill would expand the purposes of a continuously appropriated account, the bill would make an appropriation.
(33)
end deletebegin insert(32)end insert Existing law defines a PACE program as a program that is financed by a PACE bond. Existing law requires the California Alternative Energy and Advanced Transportation Financing Authority to develop and administer a PACE Reserve program to reduce the overall costs to property owners of a Property Assessed Clean Energy bond, or PACE bond, issued by an applicant that has established a Property Assessed Clean Energy program, or PACE program, by providing a reserve of no more than 10% of the initial amount of the PACE bond. Existing law, in 2010, appropriates, until January 1, 2015, $50 million from the Renewable Resource Trust Fund for the above purpose.
This bill would additionally require the authority to develop and administer a PACE risk mitigation program for PACE loans to increase their acceptance in the marketplace and protect against the risk of default and foreclosure. The bill would additionally include a PACE loan program as a PACE program. Because this bill would expand the use of the moneys appropriated by existing law, this bill would make an appropriation.
(34)
end deletebegin insert(33)end insert Existing law requires the Department of Fish and Wildlife to regulate the protection of marine plants and animals in marine protected areas, as defined.
Existing law establishes the Ocean Protection Council in state government, and prescribes the membership, terms of office, and functions and duties of the council.
This bill would require that, commencing on July 1, 2013, the Ocean Protection Council assume responsibility for the direction of policy of marine protected areas.
(35)
end deletebegin insert(34)end insert Existing law requires that at the Ocean Protection Council’s first meeting in a calendar year, the council elect a chair from among its voting members.
This bill would delete that requirement and would instead require that the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency serve as the chairperson of the Ocean Protection Council, and that the Secretary for Environmental Protection serve as the vice chairperson of the council. The bill would require that the Assistant Secretary for Coastal Matters at the Natural Resources Agency be designated as the Deputy Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency for Ocean and Coastal Policy, and would require the deputy secretary to also serve as the executive director for the council.
(36)
end deletebegin insert(35)end insert Existing law authorizes the Legislature to make appropriations directly to the State Coastal Conservancy for expenditures authorized by the council for specified purposes related to the regulation of coastal development and protection.
This bill would instead authorize the Legislature to make those appropriations directly to the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency for those expenditures authorized by the council for specified purposes related to the regulation of coastal development and protection. The bill would also require that any bond funds received by the State Coastal Conservancy, on or before July 1, 2013, authorized to fund Ocean Protection Council’s programs be transferred to the Natural Resources Agency for use for those programs. The bill would provide for the transfer to the secretary of certain functions and duties of the State Coastal Conservancy with regard to the implementation of contracts and grants on behalf of the council.
(37)
end deletebegin insert(36)end insert The California Integrated Waste Management Act of 1989, administered by the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery, requires a manufacturer of carpets sold in this state, individually or through a carpet stewardship organization, to submit a carpet stewardship plan to the department. A manufacturer or carpet stewardship organization submitting a carpet stewardship plan is required to pay the department an annual administrative fee, as determined by the department. The department is also required to identify the direct development or regulatory costs incurred by the department prior to the submittal of carpet stewardship plans and to establish a fee in an amount adequate to cover those costs, that is required to be paid in 3 equal payments by a carpet stewardship organization that submits a carpet stewardship plan. Existing law establishes the Carpet Stewardship Account in the Integrated Waste Management Fund and requires these fees to be deposited in that account, for expenditure by the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to cover the department’s cost to implement the carpet stewardship program provisions.
This bill would instead require a carpet stewardship organization to pay these fees quarterly to the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery and would make conforming changes regarding those requirements.
(38)
end deletebegin insert(37)end insert The act requires a manufacturer of architectural paint or designated stewardship organization to submit to the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery an architectural paint stewardship plan to develop and implement a recovery program to manage the end of life of postconsumer architectural paint. A stewardship organization is required to pay the department an annual administrative fee in the amount that is sufficient to cover the department’s full costs of administering and enforcing the program. The fee is required to be deposited in the Architectural Paint Stewardship Account in the Integrated Waste Management Fund, which may be expended by the department, upon appropriation by the Legislature, to cover the department’s costs to implement the architectural paint stewardship program provisions.
This bill would require the stewardship organization to pay the fees quarterly and would require the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery to impose the fees in an amount that includes any program development costs or regulatory costs incurred by the department prior to the submittal of the stewardship plans.
(39)
end deletebegin insert(38)end insert Existing law establishes the Office of Education and the Environment in the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery to implement the statewide environmental educational program and requires the office, in cooperation with the State Department of Education and the State Board of Education, to develop and implement a unified education strategy on the environment for elementary and secondary schools in the state. The Governor’s Reorganization Plan No. 2 of 2012, which will become effective July 1, 2013, provides that CalRecycle is transferred from the Natural Resources Agency to the California Environmental Protection Agency.
This bill would make conforming changes with regard to the establishment of the office in the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery.
(40)
end deletebegin insert(39)end insert Existing law requires the Office of Education and the Environment to develop a model environmental curriculum incorporating certain environmental principles and to submit the model curriculum to the Curriculum Development and Supplemental Materials Commission for review, as prescribed.
This bill would instead require the model curriculum to be submitted to the Instructional Quality Commission for review.
(41)
end deletebegin insert(40)end insert Existing law requires the State Department of Education to make the curriculum available electronically and requires the California Environmental Protection Agency to assume the costs associated with the printing of the approved model curriculum.
This bill would instead require Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery to make the curriculum available electronically and would delete the requirement with regard to the assumption of those costs. The bill would require the department to coordinate with specified state agencies to facilitate use of the model environmental curriculum and would authorize the department and those state agencies to collaborate with other specified entities to implement the program.
(42)
end deletebegin insert(41)end insert Existing law establishes the Environmental Education Account in the State Treasury and authorizes the California Environmental Protection Agency to expend the moneys in the account, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for purposes of the program.
This bill would instead authorize Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery to expend the funds in the account.
(43)
end deletebegin insert(42)end insert Existing law establishes the Division of Ratepayer Advocates within the Public Utilities Commission to represent the interests of public utility customers and subscribers, with the goal of obtaining the lowest possible rate for service consistent with reliable and safe service levels. Existing law requires the Director of the Division of Ratepayer Advocates to submit a budget to the Public Utilities Commission for final approval. Existing law authorizes the director of the division to appoint a lead attorney to represent the division and requires all attorneys assigned by the Public Utilities Commission to perform services for the division to report to and be directed by the lead attorney for the division.
This bill would rename the Division of Ratepayer Advocates the Office of Ratepayer Advocates and would require that the director of the office develop a budget for the office that would be submitted to the Department of Finance for final approval. The bill would require the lead attorney to obtain adequate legal personnel for the work to be conducted by the office from the Public Utilities Commission’s attorney and requires the Public Utilities Commission’s attorney to timely and appropriately fulfill all requests for legal personnel made by the lead attorney for the office, provided the office has sufficient moneys and positions in its budget for the services requested.
(44)
end deletebegin insert(43)end insert Existing law establishes the Public Utilities Commission Utilities Reimbursement Account and authorizes the Public Utilities Commission to annually determine a fee to be paid by every public utility providing service directly to customers or subscribers and subject to the jurisdiction of the Public Utilities Commission, except for a railroad corporation. The Public Utilities Commission is required to establish the fee, with the approval of the Department of Finance, to produce a total amount equal to that amount established in the authorized Public Utilities Commission budget for the same year, and an appropriate reserve to regulate public utilities, less specified sources of funding.
This bill would require the Public Utilities Commission to conduct a zero-based budget for all of its programs by January 10, 2015.
(45)
end deletebegin insert(44)end insert Existing law authorizes certain public utilities, including electrical corporations and gas corporations, as defined, to propose research and development programs and authorizes the Public Utilities Commission to allow inclusion of expenses for research and development in rates. Existing law requires the Public Utilities Commission to consider specified guidelines in evaluating the research, development, and demonstration programs proposed by electrical corporations and gas corporations.
This bill would prohibit the Public Utilities Commission, in implementing the 21st Century Energy System Decision, as defined, from authorizing recovery from ratepayers of any expense for research and development projects that are not for purposes of cyber security and grid integration and would limit total funding for research and development projects for the purposes of cyber security and grid integration from exceeding $35,000,000. The bill would require that all cyber security and grid integration research and development projects be concluded by the 5th anniversary of their start date. The bill would prohibit the Public Utilities Commission from approving recovery from ratepayers of certain program management expenditures proposed in the 21st Century Energy System Decision proceeding. The bill would require the Public Utilities Commission to require the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Southern California Edison Company, and San Diego Gas and Electric Company to ensure that research parameters reflect a new contribution to cyber security and grid integration and that there not be a duplication of research being done by other private and governmental entities. The bill would require the participating electrical corporations to jointly report specified information to the Public Utilities Commission by December 1, 2013, and 60 days following conclusion of all research and development projects, and would require the Public Utilities Commission, upon determining that each report is sufficient, to report that information to the Legislature.
(46)
end deletebegin insert(45)end insert Existing law requires the Public Utilities Commission, by January 10 of each year, to report to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and appropriate fiscal and policy committees of the Legislature on all sources and amounts of funding and actual and proposed expenditures, including any costs to ratepayers, related to specified entities or programs established by the Public Utilities Commission by order, decision, motion, settlement, or other action, including, but not limited to, the California Clean Energy Fund, the California Emerging Technology Fund, and the Pacific Forest and Watershed Lands Stewardship Council, and any entities or programs, other than those expressly authorized by statute, that are established by the Public Utilities Commission under specified statutes.
This bill would prohibit the Public Utilities Commission, by order, decision, motion, settlement, or other action, from establishing a nonstate entity, as defined, with any moneys other than those moneys that would otherwise belong to the public utility’s shareholders. The bill would prohibit the Public Utilities Commission from entering into a contract with any nonstate entity in which a person serves as an owner, director, or officer while serving as a commissioner. The bill would provide that any contract between the Public Utilities Commission and a nonstate entity is void and ceases to exist by operation of law if a person who was a commissioner at the time the contract was awarded, entered into, or extended, on or after January 1, 2014, becomes an owner, director, or officer of the nonstate entity while serving as a commissioner.
(47)
end deletebegin insert(46)end insert The California Constitution provides that the Legislature may remove a commissioner of the Public Utilities Commission for incompetence, neglect of duty, or corruption, 2⁄3 of the membership of each house concurring.
This bill would provide that a commissioner who acts as an owner, director, or officer of a nonstate entity that was established after January 1, 2015, as a result of an order, decision, motion, settlement, or other action by the Public Utilities Commission in which the commissioner participated, neglects his or her duty and may be removed pursuant to the California Constitution.
(48)
end deletebegin insert(47)end insert The Public Utilities Act provides for the imposition of fines and penalties by the Public Utilities Commission for various violations of the act and provides that any public utility that violates any provision of the California Constitution or the act, or that fails or neglects to comply with any order, decision, decree, rule, direction, demand, or requirement of the Public Utilities Commission, where a penalty has not otherwise been provided, is subject to a penalty of not less than $500 and not more than $50,000 for each offense. The act authorizes the Public Utilities Commission to bring an action to recover fines and penalties imposed pursuant to the act in the superior court and requires that all fines and penalties recovered by the state in an action filed in the superior court, together with the costs of bringing the action, be paid into the State Treasury to the credit of the General Fund.
This bill would prohibit the Public Utilities Commission from distributing, expending, or encumbering any moneys received by the Public Utilities Commission as a result of any Public Utilities Commission proceeding or judicial action until the Public Utilities Commission provides the Director of Finance with written notification of the receipt of the moneys and the basis for these moneys being received by the Public Utilities Commission and the director provides not less than 60 days written notice to the Chairperson of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee and the chairs of the appropriate budget subcommittees of the Assembly and Senate of the receipt of the moneys and the basis for those moneys being received by the Public Utilities Commission.
(49)
end deletebegin insert(48)end insert Decisions of the Public Utilities Commission adopted the California Solar Initiative. Existing law requires the Public Utilities Commission to undertake certain steps in implementing the California Solar Initiative. Existing law requires the Public Utilities Commission to ensure that the total cost of the California Solar Initiative over the duration of the program does not exceed $3,350,000,000, including $400,000,000 from the Emerging Renewable Resources Account within the Renewable Resource Trust Fund, for programs for the installation of solar energy systems, as defined, on new construction administered by the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, known as the New Solar Homes Partnership Program.
This bill would authorize the Public Utilities Commission, if it is notified by the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission that funding available pursuant to the Emerging Renewable Resources Account for the New Solar Homes Partnership Program has been exhausted, to require an electrical corporation to continue administration of the program pursuant to the guidelines established for the program by the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, until the funding limit of $400,000,000 has been reached. The bill would require the Public Utilities Commission, in consultation with the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission, to supervise the administration of the continuation of the New Solar Homes Partnership Program by an electrical corporation. The bill would authorize an electrical corporation to elect to have a 3rd party administer the utility’s continuation of the program.
(50)
end deletebegin insert(49)end insert Existing law authorizes the Department of Transportation to acquire real property for state highway purposes. Existing law specifies various procedures to be followed by the department when it determines that real property acquired for state highway purposes is no longer necessary for those purposes, generally under terms and conditions established by the California Transportation Commission.
This bill would require the Department of Transportation to transfer certain real property it owns in the City of San Diego to the Department of Parks and Recreation for incorporation into the state park system. The bill would require the transfer to be completed within 90 days of the effective date of the bill. The bill would make various findings and declarations in that regard.
(51)
end deletebegin insert(50)end insert Under existing law, the Department of Water Resources operates the State Water Project and exercises other functions relating to the state’s water resources. Under the Federal Power Act, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, or FERC, is responsible for the relicensing of federally licensed hydroelectric power projects.
This bill would require the Director of Finance to notify the Joint Legislative Budget Committee of any hydroelectric power project relicensing proposal for the FERC that, if approved by the Department of Water Resources, would obligate the General Fund in the current or future years. This bill would authorize the department to approve that relicensing proposal not less than 30 days after the director notifies the committee.
(52)
end deletebegin insert(51)end insert Existing law, the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Reform Act of 2009, establishes the Delta Stewardship Council, consisting of 7 voting members. Existing law prohibits a member of the council from serving 2 consecutive terms, but permits a member to be reappointed after a period of 2 years following the end of his or her term.
This bill would eliminate the above-described prohibition.
(53)
end deletebegin insert(52)end insert The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
(54)
end deletebegin insert(53)end insert This bill would reappropriate to the Coachella Valley Mountains Conservancy the balance of a specified appropriation made in the Budget Act of 2010, the moneys to be available for capital outlay or local assistance until June 30, 2016.
(55)
end deletebegin insert(54)end insert This bill would declare that it is to take effect immediately as a bill providing for appropriations related to the Budget Bill.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: yes. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 712.5 of the Fish and Game Code is
2repealed.
Section 1352 of the Fish and Game Code is amended
4to read:
(a) The money in the Wildlife Restoration Fund, as
6provided for by Section 19632 of the Business and Professions
7Code, is available for expenditure under any provision of this
8chapter.
9(b) All federal moneys made available for projects authorized
10by the board shall be deposited in the Wildlife Restoration Fund.
11Any unexpended balances of the federal moneys remaining on or
12after June 30, 1979, in any other fund shall be transferred to the
13Wildlife Restoration Fund.
14(c) Any moneys received in the Wildlife Restoration Fund from
15leases authorized pursuant to paragraph (2) or (3) of
subdivision
16(c) of Section 1348 shall be expended, upon appropriation, by the
17department for the purposes of managing, maintaining, restoring,
18or operating lands owned and managed by the department.
Section 2850.5 is added to the Fish and Game Code,
20to read:
Notwithstanding any other law and consistent with the
2authority granted under Section 2860, commencing on July 1,
32013, the Ocean Protection Council shall assume responsibility
4for the direction of policy of marine protected areas (MPAs).
Section 927.9 of the Government Code is amended to
6read:
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (c), on an annual
8basis, within 90 calendar days following the end of each fiscal
9year, state agencies shall provide the Director of General Services
10with a report on late payment penalties that were paid by the state
11agency in accordance with this chapter during the preceding fiscal
12year.
13(b) The report shall separately identify the total number and
14dollar amount of late payment penalties paid to small businesses,
15other businesses, and refunds or other payments to individuals.
16State agencies may, at their own initiative, provide the director
17with other relevant performance measures. The director shall
18prepare a report separately listing the
number and total dollar
19amount of all late payment penalties paid to small businesses, other
20businesses, and refunds and other payments to individuals by each
21state agency during the preceding fiscal year, together with other
22relevant performance measures, and shall make the information
23available to the public.
24(c) The reporting requirements of subdivisions (a) and (b) are
25not applicable to the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
Section 1304 is added to the Government Code, to
27read:
(a) A Member of the Legislature appointed to a state
29board, commission, or similar multimember body within the
30Natural Resources Agency may designate an alternate to serve on
31the board, commission, or body in the Member’s absence.
32(b) An alternate designated pursuant to this section shall exercise
33all of the rights, privileges, and powers that are available to the
34Member with respect to serving on the board, commission, or body
35within the Natural Resources Agency. The alternate designated
36pursuant to this section may not vote and shall adhere to the same
37rules of conduct as a voting member.
38(c) An alternate designated pursuant to this section shall serve
39on the board, commission,
or body within the Natural Resources
P22 1Agency only during the period for which the Member may serve
2on the board, commission, or body.
Section 11549.3 of the
Government Code is amended
5to read:
(a) The director shall establish an information security
7program. The program responsibilities include, but are not limited
8to, all of the following:
9(1) The creation, updating, and publishing of information
10security and privacy policies, standards, and procedures for state
11agencies in the State Administrative Manual.
12(2) The creation, issuance, and maintenance of policies,
13standards, and procedures directing state agencies to effectively
14manage security and risk for all of the following:
15(A) Information technology, which includes, but is not limited
16to, all
electronic technology systems and services, automated
17information handling, system design and analysis, conversion of
18data, computer programming, information storage and retrieval,
19telecommunications, requisite system controls, simulation,
20electronic commerce, and all related interactions between people
21and machines.
22(B) Information that is identified as mission critical, confidential,
23sensitive, or personal, as defined and published by the Office of
24Information Security.
25(3) The creation, issuance, and maintenance of policies,
26standards, and procedures directing state agencies for the collection,
27tracking, and reporting of information regarding security and
28privacy incidents.
29(4) The creation, issuance, and
maintenance of policies,
30standards, and procedures directing state agencies in the
31development, maintenance, testing, and filing of each agency’s
32disaster recovery plan.
33(5) Coordination of the activities of agency information security
34officers, for purposes of integrating statewide security initiatives
35and ensuring compliance with information security and privacy
36policies and standards.
37(6) Promotion and enhancement of the state agencies’ risk
38management and privacy programs through education, awareness,
39collaboration, and consultation.
P23 1(7) Representing the state before the federal government, other
2state agencies, local government entities, and private industry on
3issues that have statewide impact on information
security and
4privacy.
5(b) An information security officer appointed pursuant to Section
611546.1 shall implement the policies and procedures issued by the
7Office of Information Security, including, but not limited to,
8performing all of the following duties:
9(1) Comply with the information security and privacy policies,
10standards, and procedures issued pursuant to this chapter by the
11Office of Information Security.
12(2) Comply with filing requirements and incident notification
13by providing timely information and reports as required by policy
14or directives of the office.
15(c) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the office may
16conduct,
or require to be conducted, independent security
17assessments of any state agency, department, or office, the cost of
18which shall be funded by the state agency, department, or office
19being assessed.
20(2) The office shall not conduct, or require to be conducted,
21independent security assessments of the Department of Forestry
22and Fire Prevention.
23(d) The office may require an audit of information security to
24ensure program compliance, the cost of which shall be funded by
25the state agency, department, or office being audited.
26(e) The office shall report to the Department of Technology any
27state agency found to be noncompliant with information security
28program requirements.
Section 51018 of the Government Code is amended
31to read:
(a) Every rupture, explosion, or fire involving a
33pipeline, including a pipeline system otherwise exempted by
34subdivision (a) of Section 51010.5, and including a pipeline
35undergoing testing, shall be immediately reported by the pipeline
36operator to the fire department having fire suppression
37responsibilities and to the California Emergency Management
38Agency.
39(b) (1) The Office of Emergency Services shall immediately
40notify the State Fire Marshal of the incident, who shall immediately
P24 1dispatch State Fire Marshal employees to the scene. The State Fire
2Marshal or the employees, upon arrival, shall provide technical
3expertise and advise the operator and
all public agencies on
4activities needed to mitigate the hazard.
5(2) For purposes of this subdivision, the Legislature does not
6intend to hinder or disrupt the workings of the “incident
7commander system,” but does intend to establish a recognized
8element of expertise and direction for the incident command to
9consult and acknowledge as an authority on the subject of pipeline
10incident mitigation. Furthermore, it is expected that the State Fire
11Marshal will recognize the expertise of the pipeline operator and
12any other emergency agency personnel who may be familiar with
13the particular location of the incident and respect their
14knowledgeable input regarding the mitigation of the incident.
15(c) For purposes of this section, “rupture” includes every
16unintentional liquid leak, including
any leak that occurs during
17hydrostatic testing, except that a crude oil leak of less than five
18barrels from a pipeline or flow line in a rural area, or any crude
19oil or petroleum product leak in any in-plant piping system of less
20than five barrels, when no fire, explosion, or bodily injury results
21or no waterway is contaminated thereby, does not constitute a
22rupture for purposes of the reporting requirements of subdivision
23(a).
24 (d) This section does not preempt any other applicable federal
25or state reporting requirement.
26 (e) Except as otherwise provided in this section and Section
278589.7, a notification made pursuant to this section shall satisfy
28any immediate notification requirement contained in any permit
29issued by a permitting agency.
30 (f) This section does not apply to pipeline ruptures involving
31nonreportable crude oil spills under Section 3233 of the Public
32Resources Code, unless the spill involves a fire or explosion.
Section 25160 of the Health and Safety Code is
35amended to read:
(a) For purposes of this chapter, the following
37definitions apply:
38(1) “Manifest” means a shipping document originated and signed
39by a generator of hazardous waste that contains all of the
P25 1information required by the department and that complies with all
2applicable federal and state regulations.
3(2) “California Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest” means
4either of the following:
5(A) A manifest document printed and supplied by the state for
6a shipment initiated on or before September 4, 2006.
7(B) The
Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest printed by a source
8registered with the United States Environmental Protection Agency
9for a shipment initiated on or after September 5, 2006.
10(3) For purposes of this section and Section 25205.15, a
11shipment is initiated on the date when the manifest is signed by
12the first transporter and the hazardous waste leaves the site where
13it is generated.
14(b) (1) Except as provided in Section 25160.2 or 25160.8, or
15as otherwise authorized by a variance issued by the department, a
16person generating hazardous waste that is transported, or submitted
17for transportation, for offsite handling, treatment, storage, disposal,
18or any combination thereof, shall complete a manifest prior to the
19time the waste is transported or offered for
transportation, and
20shall designate on that manifest the facility to which the waste is
21to be shipped for the handling, treatment, storage, disposal, or
22combination thereof. The manifest shall be completed as required
23by the department. The generator shall provide the manifest to the
24person who will transport the hazardous waste, who is the driver,
25if the hazardous waste will be transported by vehicle, or the person
26designated by the railroad corporation or vessel operator, if the
27hazardous waste will be transported by rail or vessel.
28(A) The generator shall use the standard California Uniform
29Hazardous Waste Manifest supplied by the department for all
30shipments of hazardous waste initiated on and before September
314, 2006, for which a manifest is required, except as provided in
32paragraph (2).
33(B) The generator shall use the Uniform Hazardous Waste
34Manifest printed by a source registered with the United States
35Environmental Protection Agency for all shipments of hazardous
36waste initiated on and after September 5, 2006, for which a
37manifest is required.
38(C) A manifest shall only be used for the purposes specified in
39this chapter, including, but not limited to, identifying materials
P26 1that the person completing the manifest reasonably believes are
2hazardous waste.
3(D) Within 30 days from the date of transport, or submission
4for transport, of hazardous waste, each generator of that hazardous
5waste shall submit to the department a legible copy of each
6manifest used. The copy submitted to the department shall contain
7the signatures of the generator and the
transporter.
8(E) In lieu of submitting a copy of each manifest used, a
9generator may submit an electronic report to the department
10meeting the requirements of Section 25160.3.
11(2) Except as provided in Section 25160.2 or 25160.8 or as
12otherwise authorized by a variance issued by the department, a
13person generating hazardous waste that is transported, or submitted
14for transportation, for offsite handling, treatment, storage, disposal,
15or any combination thereof, outside of the state, shall complete,
16whether or not the waste is determined to be hazardous by the
17importing country or state, a manifest in accordance with the
18following conditions:
19(A) The generator shall use the standard California Uniform
20Hazardous
Waste Manifest or the manifest required by the
21receiving state for all shipments of hazardous waste initiated on
22and before September 4, 2006, for which a manifest is required.
23(B) The generator shall use the Uniform Hazardous Waste
24Manifest printed by a source registered with the United States
25Environmental Protection Agency for all shipments of hazardous
26waste initiated on and after September 5, 2006, for which a
27manifest is required.
28(C) The generator shall submit a copy of the manifest specified
29in subparagraph (A) or (B), as applicable, to the department within
3030 days from the date of the transport, or submission for transport,
31of the hazardous waste. In lieu of submitting a copy of each
32manifest used, a generator may submit an electronic report to the
33department meeting the
requirements of Section 25160.3.
34(3) Within 30 days from the date of transport, or submission for
35transport, of hazardous waste out of state, each generator of that
36hazardous waste shall submit to the department a legible copy of
37each manifest used. The copy submitted to the department shall
38contain the signatures of the generator, all transporters, excepting
39intermediate rail transporters, and the out-of-state facility operator.
40If within 35 days from the date of the initial shipment, or for
P27 1exports by water to foreign countries 60 days after the initial
2shipment, the generator has not received a copy of the manifest
3signed by all transporters and the facility operator, the generator
4shall contact the owner or operator of the designated facility to
5determine the status of the hazardous waste and to request that the
6owner or operator
immediately provide a signed copy of the
7manifest to the generator. Except as provided otherwise in
8paragraph (2) of subdivision (h) of Section 25123.3, if within 45
9days from the date of the initial shipment or, for exports by water
10to foreign countries, 90 days from the date of the initial shipment,
11the generator has not received a copy of the signed manifest from
12the facility owner or operator, the generator shall submit an
13exception report to the department.
14(4) For shipments of waste that do not require a manifest
15pursuant to Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations, the
16department, by regulation, may establish manifest requirements
17that differ from the requirements of this section. The requirements
18for an alternative form of manifest shall ensure that the hazardous
19waste is transported by a registered hazardous waste
transporter,
20that the hazardous waste is tracked, and that human health and
21safety and the environment are protected.
22(5) (A) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,
23except as provided in subparagraph (B), the generator copy of the
24manifest is not required to be submitted to the department for any
25waste transported in compliance with the consolidated manifest
26procedures in Section 25160.2 or with the procedures specified in
27Section 25160.8, or when the transporter is operating pursuant to
28a variance issued by the department pursuant to Section 25143
29authorizing the use of a consolidated manifest for waste not listed
30in Section 25160.2, if the generator, transporter, and facility are
31all identified as the same company on the hazardous waste
32manifest. If multiple identification numbers are used by a single
33company,
all of the company’s identification numbers shall be
34included in its annual transporter registration application, if those
35numbers will be used with the consolidated manifest procedure.
36Nothing in this paragraph affects the obligation of a facility
37operator to submit to the department a copy of a manifest pursuant
38to this section.
39(B) If the waste subject to subparagraph (A) is transported out
40of state, the generator shall either ensure that the facility operator
P28 1submits to the department a copy of the manifest or the generator
2shall submit a copy to the department that contains the signatures
3of the generator, all transporters, excepting intermediate rail
4transporters, and the out-of-state facility operator pursuant to
5paragraph (3).
6(c) (1) The department
shall determine the form and manner
7in which a manifest shall be completed and the information that
8the manifest shall contain. The information requested on the
9manifest shall serve as the data dictionary for purposes of the
10developing of an electronic reporting format pursuant to Section
1171062 of the Public Resources Code. The form of each manifest
12and the information requested on each manifest shall be the same
13for all hazardous wastes, regardless of whether the hazardous
14wastes are also regulated pursuant to the federal act or by
15regulations adopted by the United States Department of
16Transportation. However, the form of the manifest and the
17information required shall be consistent with federal regulations.
18(2) Pursuant to federal regulations, the department may require
19information on the manifest in addition to the information required
20
by federal regulations.
21(d) (1) A person who transports hazardous waste in a vehicle
22shall have a manifest in his or her possession while transporting
23the hazardous waste. The manifest shall be shown upon demand
24to any representative of the department, any officer of the
25Department of the California Highway Patrol, any local health
26officer, any certified unified program agency, or any local public
27officer designated by the director. If the hazardous waste is
28transported by rail or vessel, the railroad corporation or vessel
29operator shall comply with Subchapter C (commencing with
30Section 171.1) of Chapter 1 of Subtitle B of Title 49 of the Code
31of Federal Regulations and shall also enter on the shipping papers
32any information concerning the hazardous waste that the
33department may require.
34(2) Any person who transports a waste, as defined by Section
3525124, and who is provided with a manifest for that waste shall,
36while transporting that waste, comply with all requirements of this
37chapter, and the regulations adopted pursuant thereto, concerning
38the transportation of hazardous waste.
39(3) A person who transports hazardous waste shall transfer a
40copy of the manifest to the facility operator at the time of delivery,
P29 1or to the person who will subsequently transport the hazardous
2waste in a vehicle. A person who transports hazardous waste and
3then transfers custody of that hazardous waste to a person who
4will subsequently transport that waste by rail or vessel shall transfer
5a copy of the manifest to the person designated by the railroad
6corporation or vessel operator, as
specified by Subchapter C
7(commencing with Section 171.1) of Chapter 1 of Subtitle B of
8Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
9(4) A person transporting hazardous waste by motor vehicle,
10rail, or water shall certify to the department, at the time of initial
11registration and at the time of renewal of that registration pursuant
12to this article, that the transporter is familiar with the requirements
13of this section, the department regulations, and federal laws and
14regulations governing the use of manifests.
15(e) (1) A facility operator in the state who receives hazardous
16waste for handling, treatment, storage, disposal, or any combination
17thereof, which was transported with a manifest pursuant to this
18section, shall submit a copy of the manifest to the
department
19within 30 days from the date of receipt of the hazardous waste.
20The copy submitted to the department shall contain the signatures
21of the generator, all transporters, excepting intermediate rail
22transporters, and the facility operator. In instances in which the
23generator or transporter is not required by the generator’s state or
24federal law to sign the manifest, the facility operator shall require
25the generator and all transporters, excepting intermediate rail
26transporters, to sign the manifest before receiving the waste at any
27facility in this state. In lieu of submitting a copy of each manifest
28used, a facility operator may submit an electronic report to the
29department meeting the requirements of Section 25160.3.
30(2) Any treatment, storage, or disposal facility receiving
31hazardous waste generated outside this state may only accept the
32hazardous
waste for treatment, storage, disposal, or any
33combination thereof, if the hazardous waste is accompanied by a
34completed standard California Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest.
35(3) A facility operator may accept hazardous waste generated
36offsite that is not accompanied by a properly completed and signed
37standard California Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest if the
38facility operator meets both of the following conditions:
P30 1(A) The facility operator is authorized to accept the hazardous
2waste pursuant to a hazardous waste facilities permit or other grant
3of authorization from the department.
4(B) The facility operator is in compliance with the regulations
5adopted by the department specifying the conditions and procedures
6applicable
to the receipt of hazardous waste under these
7circumstances.
8(4) This subdivision applies only to shipments of hazardous
9waste for which a manifest is required pursuant to this section and
10the regulations adopted pursuant to this section.
11(f) A generator, transporter, or facility operator may comply
12with the requirements of Sections 66262.40, 66263.22, 66264.71,
13and 66265.71 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations by
14storing manifest information electronically. A generator,
15transporter, or facility operator who stores manifest information
16electronically shall use the standardized electronic format and
17protocol for the exchange of electronic data established by the
18Secretary for Environmental Protection pursuant to Part 2
19(commencing with Section 71050) of Division
34 of the Public
20Resources Code and the stored information shall include all the
21information required to be retained by the department, including
22all signatures required by this section.
23(g) The department shall make available for review, by any
24interested party, the department’s plans for revising and enhancing
25its system for tracking hazardous waste for the purposes of
26protecting human health and the environment, enforcing laws,
27collecting revenue, and generating necessary reports.
28(h) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
29and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
30is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25160 is added to the Health and Safety Code,
33to read:
(a) For purposes of this chapter, the following
35definitions apply:
36(1) “Manifest” means a shipping document originated and signed
37by a generator of hazardous waste that contains all of the
38information required by the department and that complies with all
39applicable federal and state regulations.
P31 1(2) “California Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest” means
2either of the following:
3(A) A manifest document printed and supplied by the state for
4a shipment initiated on or before September 4, 2006.
5(B) The Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest printed by a source
6
registered with the United States Environmental Protection Agency
7for a shipment initiated on or after September 5, 2006.
8(3) For purposes of this section, a shipment is initiated on the
9date when the manifest is signed by the first transporter and the
10hazardous waste leaves the site where it is generated.
11(b) (1) Except as provided in Section 25160.2 or 25160.8, or
12as otherwise authorized by a variance issued by the department, a
13person generating hazardous waste that is transported, or submitted
14for transportation, for offsite handling, treatment, storage, disposal,
15or any combination thereof, shall complete a manifest prior to the
16time the waste is transported or offered for transportation, and
17shall designate on that manifest the facility to which
the waste is
18to be shipped for the handling, treatment, storage, disposal, or
19combination thereof. The manifest shall be completed as required
20by the department. The generator shall provide the manifest to the
21person who will transport the hazardous waste, who is the driver,
22if the hazardous waste will be transported by vehicle, or the person
23designated by the railroad corporation or vessel operator, if the
24hazardous waste will be transported by rail or vessel.
25(A) The generator shall use the standard California Uniform
26Hazardous Waste Manifest supplied by the department for all
27shipments of hazardous waste initiated on and before September
284, 2006, for which a manifest is required, except as provided in
29paragraph (2).
30(B) The generator shall use the Uniform Hazardous Waste
31Manifest
printed by a source registered with the United States
32Environmental Protection Agency for all shipments of hazardous
33waste initiated on and after September 5, 2006, for which a
34manifest is required.
35(C) A manifest shall only be used for the purposes specified in
36this chapter, including, but not limited to, identifying materials
37that the person completing the manifest reasonably believes are
38hazardous waste.
39(D) Within 30 days from the date of transport, or submission
40for transport, of hazardous waste, each generator of that hazardous
P32 1waste shall submit to the department a legible copy of each
2manifest used. The copy submitted to the department shall contain
3the signatures of the generator and the transporter.
4(E) In lieu of submitting a copy of each manifest used, a
5generator may submit an electronic report to the department
6meeting the requirements of Section 25160.3.
7(2) Except as provided in Section 25160.2 or 25160.8 or as
8otherwise authorized by a variance issued by the department, a
9person generating hazardous waste that is transported, or submitted
10for transportation, for offsite handling, treatment, storage, disposal,
11or any combination thereof, outside of the state, shall complete,
12whether or not the waste is determined to be hazardous by the
13importing country or state, a manifest in accordance with the
14following conditions:
15(A) The generator shall use the standard California Uniform
16Hazardous Waste Manifest or the manifest required by the
17receiving state
for all shipments of hazardous waste initiated on
18and before September 4, 2006, for which a manifest is required.
19(B) The generator shall use the Uniform Hazardous Waste
20Manifest printed by a source registered with the United States
21Environmental Protection Agency for all shipments of hazardous
22waste initiated on and after September 5, 2006, for which a
23manifest is required.
24(C) The generator shall submit a copy of the manifest specified
25in subparagraph (A) or (B), as applicable, to the department within
2630 days from the date of the transport, or submission for transport,
27of the hazardous waste. In lieu of submitting a copy of each
28manifest used, a generator may submit an electronic report to the
29department meeting the requirements of Section 25160.3.
30(3) Within 30 days from the date of transport, or submission for
31transport, of hazardous waste out of state, each generator of that
32hazardous waste shall submit to the department a legible copy of
33each manifest used. The copy submitted to the department shall
34contain the signatures of the generator, all transporters, excepting
35intermediate rail transporters, and the out-of-state facility operator.
36If within 35 days from the date of the initial shipment, or for
37exports by water to foreign countries 60 days after the initial
38shipment, the generator has not received a copy of the manifest
39signed by all transporters and the facility operator, the generator
40shall contact the owner or operator of the designated facility to
P33 1determine the status of the hazardous waste and to request that the
2owner or operator immediately provide a signed copy of the
3manifest to the generator. Except as provided
otherwise in
4paragraph (2) of subdivision (h) of Section 25123.3, if within 45
5days from the date of the initial shipment or, for exports by water
6to foreign countries, 90 days from the date of the initial shipment,
7the generator has not received a copy of the signed manifest from
8the facility owner or operator, the generator shall submit an
9exception report to the department.
10(4) For shipments of waste that do not require a manifest
11pursuant to Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations, the
12department, by regulation, may establish manifest requirements
13that differ from the requirements of this section. The requirements
14for an alternative form of manifest shall ensure that the hazardous
15waste is transported by a registered hazardous waste transporter,
16that the hazardous waste is tracked, and that human health and
17safety and
the environment are protected.
18(5) (A) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section,
19except as provided in subparagraph (B), the generator copy of the
20manifest is not required to be submitted to the department for any
21waste transported in compliance with the consolidated manifest
22procedures in Section 25160.2 or with the procedures specified in
23Section 25160.8, or when the transporter is operating pursuant to
24a variance issued by the department pursuant to Section 25143
25authorizing the use of a consolidated manifest for waste not listed
26in Section 25160.2, if the generator, transporter, and facility are
27all identified as the same company on the hazardous waste
28manifest. If multiple identification numbers are used by a single
29company, all of the company’s identification numbers shall be
30included in its annual transporter
registration application, if those
31numbers will be used with the consolidated manifest procedure.
32Nothing in this paragraph affects the obligation of a facility
33operator to submit to the department a copy of a manifest pursuant
34to this section.
35(B) If the waste subject to subparagraph (A) is transported out
36of state, the generator shall either ensure that the facility operator
37submits to the department a copy of the manifest or the generator
38shall submit a copy to the department that contains the signatures
39of the generator, all transporters, excepting intermediate rail
P34 1transporters, and the out-of-state facility operator pursuant to
2paragraph (3).
3(c) (1) The department shall determine the form and manner
4in which a manifest shall be completed and the
information that
5the manifest shall contain. The information requested on the
6manifest shall serve as the data dictionary for purposes of the
7developing of an electronic reporting format pursuant to Section
871062 of the Public Resources Code. The form of each manifest
9and the information requested on each manifest shall be the same
10for all hazardous wastes, regardless of whether the hazardous
11wastes are also regulated pursuant to the federal act or by
12regulations adopted by the United States Department of
13Transportation. However, the form of the manifest and the
14information required shall be consistent with federal regulations.
15(2) Pursuant to federal regulations, the department may require
16information on the manifest in addition to the information required
17by federal regulations.
18(d) (1) A person who transports hazardous waste in a vehicle
19shall have a manifest in his or her possession while transporting
20the hazardous waste. The manifest shall be shown upon demand
21to any representative of the department, any officer of the
22Department of the California Highway Patrol, any local health
23officer, any certified unified program agency, or any local public
24officer designated by the director. If the hazardous waste is
25transported by rail or vessel, the railroad corporation or vessel
26operator shall comply with Subchapter C (commencing with
27Section 171.1) of Chapter 1 of Subtitle B of Title 49 of the Code
28of Federal Regulations and shall also enter on the shipping papers
29any information concerning the hazardous waste that the
30department may require.
31(2) Any person who transports a waste, as defined
by Section
3225124, and who is provided with a manifest for that waste shall,
33while transporting that waste, comply with all requirements of this
34chapter, and the regulations adopted pursuant thereto, concerning
35the transportation of hazardous waste.
36(3) A person who transports hazardous waste shall transfer a
37copy of the manifest to the facility operator at the time of delivery,
38or to the person who will subsequently transport the hazardous
39waste in a vehicle. A person who transports hazardous waste and
40then transfers custody of that hazardous waste to a person who
P35 1will subsequently transport that waste by rail or vessel shall transfer
2a copy of the manifest to the person designated by the railroad
3corporation or vessel operator, as specified by Subchapter C
4(commencing with Section 171.1) of Chapter 1 of Subtitle B of
5Title 49 of the
Code of Federal Regulations.
6(4) A person transporting hazardous waste by motor vehicle,
7rail, or water shall certify to the department, at the time of initial
8registration and at the time of renewal of that registration pursuant
9to this article, that the transporter is familiar with the requirements
10of this section, the department regulations, and federal laws and
11regulations governing the use of manifests.
12(e) (1) A facility operator in the state who receives hazardous
13waste for handling, treatment, storage, disposal, or any combination
14thereof, which was transported with a manifest pursuant to this
15section, shall submit a copy of the manifest to the department
16within 30 days from the date of receipt of the hazardous waste.
17The copy submitted to the
department shall contain the signatures
18of the generator, all transporters, excepting intermediate rail
19transporters, and the facility operator. In instances in which the
20generator or transporter is not required by the generator’s state or
21federal law to sign the manifest, the facility operator shall require
22the generator and all transporters, excepting intermediate rail
23transporters, to sign the manifest before receiving the waste at any
24facility in this state. In lieu of submitting a copy of each manifest
25used, a facility operator may submit an electronic report to the
26department meeting the requirements of Section 25160.3.
27(2) Any treatment, storage, or disposal facility receiving
28hazardous waste generated outside this state may only accept the
29hazardous waste for treatment, storage, disposal, or any
30combination thereof, if the hazardous waste
is accompanied by a
31completed standard California Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest.
32(3) A facility operator may accept hazardous waste generated
33offsite that is not accompanied by a properly completed and signed
34standard California Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest if the
35facility operator meets both of the following conditions:
36(A) The facility operator is authorized to accept the hazardous
37waste pursuant to a hazardous waste facilities permit or other grant
38of authorization from the department.
39(B) The facility operator is in compliance with the regulations
40adopted by the department specifying the conditions and procedures
P36 1applicable to the receipt of hazardous waste under these
2circumstances.
3(4) This subdivision applies only to shipments of hazardous
4waste for which a manifest is required pursuant to this section and
5the regulations adopted pursuant to this section.
6(f) A generator, transporter, or facility operator may comply
7with the requirements of Sections 66262.40, 66263.22, 66264.71,
8and 66265.71 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations by
9storing manifest information electronically. A generator,
10transporter, or facility operator who stores manifest information
11electronically shall use the standardized electronic format and
12protocol for the exchange of electronic data established by the
13Secretary for Environmental Protection pursuant to Part 2
14(commencing with Section 71050) of Division 34 of the Public
15Resources Code and the stored information
shall include all the
16information required to be retained by the department, including
17all signatures required by this section.
18(g) The department shall make available for review, by any
19interested party, the department’s plans for revising and enhancing
20its system for tracking hazardous waste for the purposes of
21protecting human health and the environment, enforcing laws,
22collecting revenue, and generating necessary reports.
23(h) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
24shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
25thereafter, including the prepayments due during the reporting
26period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
27the reporting period.
Section 25174 of the Health and Safety Code is
30amended to read:
(a) There is in the General Fund the Hazardous Waste
32Control Account, which shall be administered by the director. In
33addition to any other money that may be deposited in the
34Hazardous Waste Control Account, pursuant to statute, all of the
35following amounts shall be deposited in the account:
36(1) The fees collected pursuant to Sections 25174.1, 25205.2,
3725205.5, 25205.14, 25205.15, and 25205.16.
38(2) The fees collected pursuant to Section 25187.2, to the extent
39that those fees are for the oversight of corrective action taken under
40this chapter.
P37 1(3) Any interest
earned upon the money deposited in the
2Hazardous Waste Control Account.
3(4) Any money received from the federal government pursuant
4to the federal act.
5(5) Any reimbursements for funds expended from the Hazardous
6Waste Control Account for services provided by the department
7pursuant to this chapter, including, but not limited to, the
8reimbursements required pursuant to Sections 25201.9 and 25205.7.
9(b) The funds deposited in the Hazardous Waste Control
10Account may be appropriated by the Legislature, for expenditure
11as follows:
12(1) To the department for the administration and implementation
13of this chapter.
14(2) To the department for allocation to the State Board of
15Equalization to pay refunds of fees collected pursuant to Sections
1643051 and 43053 of the Revenue and Taxation Code and for the
17administration and collection of the fees imposed pursuant to
18Article 9.1 (commencing with Section 25205.1) that are deposited
19into the Hazardous Waste Control Account.
20(3) To the department for the costs of performance or review
21of analyses of past, present, or potential environmental public
22health effects related to toxic substances, including extremely
23hazardous waste, as defined in Section 25115, and hazardous waste,
24as defined in Section 25117.
25(4) (A) To the department for allocation to the office of the
26Attorney General for the support of the Toxic Substance
27Enforcement
Program in the office of the Attorney General, in
28carrying out the purposes of this chapter.
29(B) On or before October 1 of each year, the Attorney General
30shall report to the Legislature on the expenditure of any funds
31allocated to the office of the Attorney General for the preceding
32fiscal year pursuant to this paragraph and paragraph (14) of
33subdivision (b) of Section 25173.6. The report shall include all of
34the following:
35(i) A description of cases resolved by the office of the Attorney
36General through settlement or court order, including the monetary
37benefit to the department and the state.
38(ii) A description of injunctions or other court orders benefiting
39the people of the state.
P38 1(iii) A description of any cases in which the Attorney General’s
2Toxic Substance Enforcement Program is representing the
3department or the state against claims by defendants or responsible
4parties.
5(iv) A description of other pending litigation handled by the
6Attorney General’s Toxic Substance Enforcement Program.
7(C) Nothing in subparagraph (C) shall require the Attorney
8General to report on any confidential or investigatory matter.
9(5) To the department for administration and implementation
10of Chapter 6.11 (commencing with Section 25404).
11(c) (1) Expenditures from the Hazardous
Waste Control
12Account for support of state agencies other than the department
13shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature to the department, be
14subject to an interagency agreement or similar mechanism between
15the department and the state agency receiving the support.
16(2) The department shall, at the time of the release of the annual
17Governor’s Budget, describe the budgetary amounts proposed to
18be allocated to the State Board of Equalization, as specified in
19paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) and in paragraph (3) of subdivision
20(b) of Section 25173.6, for the upcoming fiscal year.
21(3) It is the intent of the Legislature that moneys appropriated
22in the annual Budget Act each year for the purpose of reimbursing
23the State Board of Equalization, a private party, or other public
24agency,
for the administration and collection of the fees imposed
25pursuant to Article 9.1 (commencing with Section 25205.1) and
26deposited in the Hazardous Waste Control Account, shall not
27exceed the costs incurred by the State Board of Equalization, the
28private party, or other public agency, for the administration and
29collection of those fees.
30(d) With respect to expenditures for the purposes of paragraphs
31(1) and (3) of subdivision (b) and paragraphs (1) and (2) of
32subdivision (b) of Section 25173.6, the department shall, at the
33time of the release of the annual Governor’s Budget, also make
34available the budgetary amounts and allocations of staff resources
35of the department proposed for the following activities:
36(1) The department shall identify, by permit type, the projected
37allocations
of budgets and staff resources for hazardous waste
38facilities permits, including standardized permits, closure plans,
39and postclosure permits.
P39 1(2) The department shall identify, with regard to surveillance
2and enforcement activities, the projected allocations of budgets
3and staff resources for the following types of regulated facilities
4and activities:
5(A) Hazardous waste facilities operating under a permit or grant
6of interim status issued by the department, and generator activities
7conducted at those facilities. This information shall be reported
8by permit type.
9(B) Transporters.
10(C) Response to complaints.
11(3) The department shall identify the projected allocations of
12budgets and staff resources for both of the following activities:
13(A) The registration of hazardous waste transporters.
14(B) The operation and maintenance of the hazardous waste
15manifest system.
16(4) The department shall identify, with regard to site mitigation
17and corrective action, the projected allocations of budgets and staff
18resources for the oversight and implementation of the following
19activities:
20(A) Investigations and removal and remedial actions at military
21bases.
22(B) Voluntary investigations and removal and remedial actions.
23(C) State match and operation and maintenance costs, by site,
24at joint state and federally funded National Priority List Sites.
25(D) Investigation, removal and remedial actions, and operation
26and maintenance at the Stringfellow Hazardous Waste Site.
27(E) Investigation, removal and remedial actions, and operation
28and maintenance at the Casmalia Hazardous Waste Site.
29(F) Investigations and removal and remedial actions at
30nonmilitary, responsible party lead National Priority List Sites.
31(G) Preremedial activities under the federal Comprehensive
32Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980
33
(42 U.S.C. Sec. 9601 et seq.).
34(H) Investigations, removal and remedial actions, and operation
35and maintenance at state-only orphan sites.
36(I) Investigations and removal and remedial actions at
37nonmilitary, non-National Priority List responsible party lead sites.
38(J) Investigations, removal and remedial actions, and operation
39and maintenance at Expedited Remedial Action Program sites
40pursuant to former Chapter 6.85 (commencing with Section 25396).
P40 1(K) Corrective actions at hazardous waste facilities.
2(5) The department shall identify, with regard to the regulation
3of hazardous waste, the projected
allocation of budgets and staff
4resources for the following activities:
5(A) Determinations pertaining to the classification of hazardous
6wastes.
7(B) Determinations for variances made pursuant to Section
825143.
9(C) Other determinations and responses to public inquiries made
10by the department regarding the regulation of hazardous waste and
11hazardous substances.
12(6) The department shall identify projected allocations of
13budgets and staff resources needed to do all of the following:
14(A) Identify, remove, store, and dispose of, suspected hazardous
15substances or hazardous materials associated
with the investigation
16of clandestine drug laboratories.
17(B) Respond to emergencies pursuant to Section 25354.
18(C) Create, support, maintain, and implement the railroad
19accident prevention and immediate deployment plan developed
20pursuant to Section 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.
21(7) The department shall identify projected allocations of
22budgets and staff resources for the administration and
23implementation of the unified hazardous waste and hazardous
24materials regulatory program established pursuant to Chapter 6.11
25(commencing with Section 25404).
26(8) The department shall identify the total cumulative
27expenditures of the Regulatory Structure Update and Site
28Mitigation
Update projects since their inception, and shall identify
29the total projected allocations of budgets and staff resources that
30are needed to continue these projects.
31(9) The department shall identify the total projected allocations
32of budgets and staff resources that are necessary for all other
33activities proposed to be conducted by the department.
34(e) Notwithstanding this chapter, or Part 22 (commencing with
35Section 43001) of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code,
36for any fees, surcharges, fines, penalties, and funds that are required
37to be deposited into the Hazardous Waste Control Account or the
38Toxic Substances Control Account, the department, with the
39approval of the Secretary for Environmental Protection, may take
40any of the following actions:
P41 1(1) Assume responsibility for, or enter into a contract with a
2private party or with another public agency, other than the State
3Board of Equalization, for the collection of any fees, surcharges,
4fines, penalties and funds described in subdivision (a) or otherwise
5described in this chapter or Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section
625300), for deposit into the Hazardous Waste Control Account or
7the Toxic Substances Control Account.
8(2) Administer, or by mutual agreement, contract with a private
9party or another public agency, for the making of those
10determinations and the performance of functions that would
11otherwise be the responsibility of the State Board of Equalization
12pursuant to this chapter, Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section
1325300), or Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001)
of Division
142 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, if those activities and
15functions for which the State Board of Equalization would
16otherwise be responsible become the responsibility of the
17department or, by mutual agreement, the contractor selected by
18the department.
19(f) If, pursuant to subdivision (e), the department, or a private
20party or another public agency, pursuant to a contract with the
21department, performs the determinations and functions that would
22otherwise be the responsibility of the State Board of Equalization,
23the department shall be responsible for ensuring that persons who
24are subject to the fees specified in subdivision (e) have equivalent
25rights to public notice and comment, and procedural and
26substantive rights of appeal, as afforded by the procedures of the
27State Board of Equalization pursuant to Part 22 (commencing
with
28Section 43001) of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
29Final responsibility for the administrative adjustment of fee rates
30and the administrative appeal of any fees or penalty assessments
31made pursuant to this section may only be assigned by the
32department to a public agency.
33(g) If, pursuant to subdivision (e), the department, or a private
34party or another public agency, pursuant to a contract with the
35department, performs the determinations and functions that would
36otherwise be the responsibility of the State Board of Equalization,
37the department shall have equivalent authority to make collections
38and enforce judgments as provided to the State Board of
39Equalization pursuant to Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001)
40of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. Unpaid amounts,
P42 1including penalties and interest, shall
be a perfected and
2enforceable state tax lien in accordance with Section 43413 of the
3Revenue and Taxation Code.
4(h) The department, with the concurrence of the Secretary for
5Environmental Protection, shall determine which administrative
6functions should be retained by the State Board of Equalization,
7administered by the department, or assigned to another public
8agency or private party pursuant to subdivisions (e), (f), and (g).
9(i) The department may adopt regulations to implement
10subdivisions (e) to (h), inclusive.
11(j) The Director of Finance, upon request of the director, may
12make a loan from the General Fund to the Hazardous Waste
13 Control Account to meet cash needs. The loan shall be subject to
14the
repayment provisions of Section 16351 of the Government
15Code and the interest provisions of Section 16314 of the
16Government Code.
17(k) The department shall establish, within the Hazardous Waste
18Control Account, a reserve of at least one million dollars
19($1,000,000) each year to ensure that all programs funded by the
20Hazardous Waste Control Account will not be adversely affected
21by any revenue shortfalls.
22(l) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
23and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
24is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25174 is added to the Health and Safety Code,
27to read:
(a) There is in the General Fund the Hazardous Waste
29Control Account, which shall be administered by the director. In
30addition to any other money that may be deposited in the
31Hazardous Waste Control Account, pursuant to statute, all of the
32following amounts shall be deposited in the account:
33(1) The fees collected pursuant to Sections 25205.2, 25205.5,
34and 25205.14.
35(2) The fees collected pursuant to Section 25187.2, to the extent
36that those fees are for the oversight of corrective action taken under
37this chapter.
38(3) Any interest earned upon
the money deposited in the
39Hazardous Waste Control Account.
P43 1(4) Any money received from the federal government pursuant
2to the federal act.
3(5) Any reimbursements for funds expended from the Hazardous
4Waste Control Account for services provided by the department
5pursuant to this chapter, including, but not limited to, the
6reimbursements required pursuant to Sections 25201.9 and 25205.7.
7(b) The funds deposited in the Hazardous Waste Control
8Account may be appropriated by the Legislature, for expenditure
9as follows:
10(1) To the department for the administration and implementation
11of this chapter.
12(2) To
the department for allocation to the State Board of
13Equalization to pay refunds of fees collected pursuant to Sections
1443051 and 43053 of the Revenue and Taxation Code and for the
15administration and collection of the fees imposed pursuant to
16Article 9.1 (commencing with Section 25205.1) that are deposited
17into the Hazardous Waste Control Account.
18(3) To the department for the costs of performance or review
19of analyses of past, present, or potential environmental public
20health effects related to toxic substances, including extremely
21hazardous waste, as defined in Section 25115, and hazardous waste,
22as defined in Section 25117.
23(4) (A) To the department for allocation to the office of the
24Attorney General for the support of the Toxic Substance
25Enforcement
Program in the office of the Attorney General, in
26carrying out the purposes of this chapter.
27(B) On or before October 1 of each year, the Attorney General
28shall report to the Legislature on the expenditure of any funds
29allocated to the office of the Attorney General for the preceding
30fiscal year pursuant to this paragraph and paragraph (14) of
31subdivision (b) of Section 25173.6. The report shall include all of
32the following:
33(i) A description of cases resolved by the office of the Attorney
34General through settlement or court order, including the monetary
35benefit to the department and the state.
36(ii) A description of injunctions or other court orders benefiting
37the people of the state.
38(iii) A description of any cases in which the Attorney General’s
39Toxic Substance Enforcement Program is representing the
P44 1department or the state against claims by defendants or responsible
2parties.
3(iv) A description of other pending litigation handled by the
4
Attorney General’s Toxic Substance Enforcement Program.
5(C) Nothing in subparagraph (C) shall require the Attorney
6General to report on any confidential or investigatory matter.
7(5) To the department for administration and implementation
8of Chapter 6.11 (commencing with Section 25404).
9(c) (1) Expenditures from the Hazardous Waste Control
10Account for support of state agencies other than the department
11shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature to the department, be
12subject to an interagency agreement or similar mechanism between
13the department and the state agency receiving the support.
14(2) The department shall, at the time of the
release of the annual
15Governor’s Budget, describe the budgetary amounts proposed to
16be allocated to the State Board of Equalization, as specified in
17paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) and in paragraph (3) of subdivision
18(b) of Section 25173.6, for the upcoming fiscal year.
19(3) It is the intent of the Legislature that moneys appropriated
20in the annual Budget Act each year for the purpose of reimbursing
21the State Board of Equalization, a private party, or other public
22agency, for the administration and collection of the fees imposed
23pursuant to Article 9.1 (commencing with Section 25205.1) and
24deposited in the Hazardous Waste Control Account, shall not
25exceed the costs incurred by the State Board of Equalization, the
26private party, or other public agency, for the administration and
27collection of those fees.
28(d) With respect to expenditures for the purposes of paragraphs
29(1) and (3) of subdivision (b) and paragraphs (1) and (2) of
30subdivision (b) of Section 25173.6, the department shall, at the
31time of the release of the annual Governor’s Budget, also make
32available the budgetary amounts and allocations of staff resources
33of the department proposed for the following activities:
34(1) The department shall identify, by permit type, the projected
35allocations of budgets and staff resources for hazardous waste
36facilities permits, including standardized permits, closure plans,
37and postclosure permits.
38(2) The department shall identify, with regard to surveillance
39and enforcement activities, the projected allocations of budgets
P45 1and
staff resources for the following types of regulated facilities
2and activities:
3(A) Hazardous waste facilities operating under a permit or grant
4of interim status issued by the department, and generator activities
5conducted at those facilities. This information shall be
reported
6by permit type.
7(B) Transporters.
8(C) Response to complaints.
9(3) The department shall identify the projected allocations of
10budgets and staff resources for both of the following activities:
11(A) The registration of hazardous waste transporters.
12(B) The operation and maintenance of the hazardous waste
13manifest system.
14(4) The department shall identify, with regard to site mitigation
15and corrective action, the projected allocations of budgets and staff
16resources for the oversight and implementation of the following
17
activities:
18(A) Investigations and removal and remedial actions at military
19bases.
20(B) Voluntary investigations and removal and remedial actions.
21(C) State match and operation and maintenance costs, by site,
22at joint state and federally funded National Priority List Sites.
23(D) Investigation, removal and remedial actions, and operation
24and maintenance at the Stringfellow Hazardous Waste Site.
25(E) Investigation, removal and remedial actions, and operation
26and maintenance at the Casmalia Hazardous Waste Site.
27(F) Investigations and removal and
remedial actions at
28nonmilitary, responsible party lead National Priority List Sites.
29(G) Preremedial activities under the federal Comprehensive
30Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980
31(42 U.S.C. Sec. 9601 et seq.).
32(H) Investigations, removal and remedial actions, and operation
33and maintenance at state-only orphan sites.
34(I) Investigations and removal and remedial actions at
35nonmilitary, non-National Priority List responsible party lead sites.
36(J) Investigations, removal and remedial actions, and operation
37and maintenance at Expedited Remedial Action Program sites
38pursuant to former Chapter 6.85 (commencing with Section 25396).
39(K) Corrective actions at hazardous waste facilities.
P46 1(5) The department shall identify, with regard to the regulation
2of hazardous waste, the projected allocation of budgets and staff
3resources for the following activities:
4(A) Determinations pertaining to the classification of hazardous
5wastes.
6(B) Determinations for variances made pursuant to Section
725143.
8(C) Other determinations and responses to public inquiries made
9by the department regarding the regulation of hazardous waste and
10hazardous substances.
11(6) The department shall
identify projected allocations of
12budgets and staff resources needed to do all of the following:
13(A) Identify, remove, store, and dispose of, suspected hazardous
14substances or hazardous materials associated with the investigation
15of clandestine drug laboratories.
16(B) Respond to emergencies pursuant to Section 25354.
17(C) Create, support, maintain, and implement the railroad
18accident prevention and immediate deployment plan developed
19pursuant to Section 7718 of the Public Utilities Code.
20(7) The department shall identify projected allocations of
21budgets and staff resources for the administration and
22implementation of the unified hazardous waste and hazardous
23materials
regulatory program established pursuant to Chapter 6.11
24(commencing with Section 25404).
25(8) The department shall identify the total cumulative
26expenditures of the Regulatory Structure Update and Site
27Mitigation Update projects since their inception, and shall identify
28the total projected allocations of budgets and staff resources that
29are needed to continue these projects.
30(9) The department shall identify the total projected allocations
31of budgets and staff resources that are necessary for all other
32activities proposed to be conducted by the department.
33(e) Notwithstanding this chapter, or Part 22 (commencing with
34Section 43001) of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code,
35for any fees, surcharges, fines, penalties, and
funds that are required
36to be deposited into the Hazardous Waste Control Account or the
37Toxic Substances Control Account, the department, with the
38approval of the Secretary for Environmental Protection, may take
39any of the following actions:
P47 1(1) Assume responsibility for, or enter into a contract with a
2private party or with another public agency, other than the State
3Board of Equalization, for the collection of any fees, surcharges,
4fines, penalties and funds described in subdivision (a) or otherwise
5described in this chapter or Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section
625300), for deposit into the Hazardous Waste Control Account or
7the Toxic Substances Control Account.
8(2) Administer, or by mutual agreement, contract with a private
9party or another public agency, for the making of
those
10determinations and the performance of functions that would
11otherwise be the responsibility of the State Board of Equalization
12pursuant to this chapter, Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section
1325300), or Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001) of Division
142 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, if those activities and
15functions for which the State Board of Equalization would
16otherwise be responsible become the responsibility of the
17department or, by mutual agreement, the contractor selected by
18the department.
19(f) If, pursuant to subdivision (e), the department, or a private
20party or another public agency, pursuant to a contract with the
21department, performs the determinations and functions that would
22otherwise be the responsibility of the State Board of Equalization,
23the department shall be responsible for ensuring that persons who
24are
subject to the fees specified in subdivision (e) have equivalent
25rights to public notice and comment, and procedural and
26substantive rights of appeal, as afforded by the procedures of the
27State Board of Equalization pursuant to Part 22 (commencing with
28Section 43001) of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
29Final responsibility for the administrative adjustment of fee rates
30and the administrative appeal of any fees or penalty assessments
31made pursuant to this section may only be assigned by the
32department to a public agency.
33(g) If, pursuant to subdivision (e), the department, or a private
34party or another public agency, pursuant to a contract with the
35department, performs the determinations and functions that would
36otherwise be the responsibility of the State Board of Equalization,
37the department shall have equivalent authority to make
collections
38and enforce judgments as provided to the State Board of
39Equalization pursuant to Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001)
40of Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. Unpaid amounts,
P48 1including penalties and interest, shall be a perfected and
2enforceable state tax lien in accordance with Section 43413 of the
3Revenue and Taxation Code.
4(h) The department, with the concurrence of the Secretary for
5Environmental Protection, shall determine which administrative
6functions should be retained by the State Board of Equalization,
7administered by the department, or assigned to another public
8agency or private party pursuant to subdivisions (e), (f), and (g).
9(i) The department may adopt regulations to implement
10subdivisions (e) to (h), inclusive.
11(j) The Director of Finance, upon request of the director, may
12make a loan from the General Fund to the Hazardous Waste
13Control Account to meet cash needs. The loan shall be subject to
14the repayment provisions of Section 16351 of the Government
15Code and the interest provisions of Section 16314 of the
16Government Code.
17(k) The department shall establish, within the Hazardous Waste
18Control Account, a reserve of at least one million dollars
19($1,000,000) each year to ensure that all programs funded by the
20Hazardous Waste Control Account will not be adversely affected
21by any revenue shortfalls.
22(l) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014.
Section 25174.1 of the Health and Safety Code is
25amended to read:
(a) A person who disposes of hazardous waste in this
27state shall pay a fee for the disposal of hazardous waste to land,
28based on the type of waste placed in a disposal site, in accordance
29with this section and Section 25174.6.
30(b) “Disposal fee” means the fee imposed by this section.
31(c) For purposes of this section, “dispose” and “disposal” include
32“disposal,” as defined in Section 25113, including, but not limited
33to, “land treatment,” as defined in subdivision (n) of Section
3425205.1.
35(d) An operator of an authorized hazardous
waste facility, at
36which hazardous wastes are disposed, shall collect a fee from any
37person submitting hazardous waste for disposal and shall transmit
38the fees to the State Board of Equalization for the disposal of those
39wastes. The operator shall be considered the taxpayer for purposes
40of Section 43151 of the Revenue and Taxation Code. The facility
P49 1operator is not required to collect and transmit the fee for a
2hazardous waste if the operator maintains written evidence that
3the hazardous waste is eligible for the exemption provided by
4Section 25174.7 or otherwise exempted from the fees pursuant to
5this chapter. The written evidence may be provided by the operator
6or by the person submitting the hazardous waste for disposal, and
7shall be maintained by the operator at the facility for a minimum
8of three years from the date that the waste is submitted for disposal.
9If the operator submits the
hazardous waste for disposal, the
10operator shall pay the same fee as would any other person.
11(e) Notwithstanding subdivision (d), the disposal facility shall
12not be liable for the underpayment of any disposal fees for
13hazardous waste submitted for disposal by a person other than the
14operator, if the person submitting the hazardous waste to the
15disposal facility has done either of the following:
16(1) Mischaracterized the hazardous waste.
17(2) Misrepresented any exemptions pursuant to Section 25174.7
18or any other exemption from the disposal fee provided pursuant
19to this chapter.
20(f) (1) Any additional payment of disposal fees that are due to
21the
State Board of Equalization as a result of a mischaracterization
22of a hazardous waste, a misrepresentation of an exemption, or any
23other error, shall be the responsibility of the person making the
24mischaracterization, misrepresentation, or error.
25(2) In the event of a dispute regarding the responsibility for a
26mischaracterization, misrepresentation, or other error, for which
27additional payment of disposal fees are due, the State Board of
28Equalization shall assign responsibility for payment of the fee to
29that person, or those persons, it determines responsible for the
30mischaracterization, misrepresentation, or other error, provided
31that the person, or persons, has the right to a public hearing and
32comment, and the procedural and substantive rights of appeal
33pursuant to Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001) of Division
342 of the Revenue and
Taxation Code.
35(3) Any generator, transporter, or owner or operator of a disposal
36facility shall report to the department and the State Board of
37Equalization any information regarding the mischaracterization,
38misrepresentation, or error, which could affect the disposal fee,
39within 30 days of that information first becoming known to that
40person.
P50 1(g) The State Board of Equalization shall deposit the fees
2collected pursuant to this section in the Hazardous Waste Control
3Account, for expenditure by the department, upon appropriation
4by the Legislature.
5(h) The operator of the facility that disposes of the hazardous
6waste to land shall provide to every person who submits hazardous
7waste for disposal at the facility a
statement showing the amount
8of hazardous waste fees payable pursuant to this section.
9(i) Any person who disposes of hazardous waste at any site that
10is not an authorized hazardous waste facility shall be responsible
11for payment of fees pursuant to this section and shall be the
12taxpayer for purposes of Section 43151 of the Revenue and
13Taxation Code.
14(j) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
15reporting periods.
16(k) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
17and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
18is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25174.2 of the Health and Safety Code is
21amended to read:
(a) The base rate for the hazardous wastes specified
23in Section 25174.6 that are disposed of or submitted for disposal
24in the state is eighty-five dollars and twenty-four cents ($85.24)
25per ton for disposal of hazardous waste to land.
26(b) The base rate specified in subdivision (a) is the base rate for
27the period of January 1, 1997, to December 31, 1997. Beginning
28with calendar year 1998, and for each year thereafter, the State
29Board of Equalization shall adjust the base rate annually to reflect
30increases or decreases in the cost of living during the prior fiscal
31year, as measured by the Consumer Price Index issued by the
32Department of Industrial
Relations or a successor agency.
33(c) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
34reporting periods.
35(d) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
36and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
37is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25174.6 of the Health and Safety Code is
40amended to read:
(a) The fee provided pursuant to Section 25174.1
2shall be determined as a percentage of the base rate, as adjusted
3by the State Board of Equalization, pursuant to Section 25174.2,
4or as otherwise provided by this section. The procedure for
5determining these fees is as follows:
6(1) The following fees shall be paid for each ton, or fraction of
7a ton for up to the first 5,000 tons of the following hazardous
8wastes disposed of, or submitted for disposal, in the state at each
9specific offsite facility by each producer, or at each specific onsite
10facility, per month, if the hazardous wastes are not otherwise
11subject to the fee specified in paragraph (3)
or (4) and are not
12otherwise exempt from the fees imposed pursuant to this article:
13(A) For non-RCRA hazardous waste, excluding asbestos,
14generated in a remedial action, a removal action, or a corrective
15action taken pursuant to this chapter, Chapter 6.7 (commencing
16with Section 25280), Chapter 6.75 (commencing with Section
1725299.10), or Chapter 6.8 (commencing with Section 25300), or
18generated in any other required or voluntary cleanup, removal, or
19remediation of a hazardous substance or non-RCRA hazardous
20waste, a fee of five dollars and seventy-two cents ($5.72) per ton.
21(B) For all other non-RCRA hazardous waste, a fee of 16.31
22percent of the base rate for each ton.
23(2) Thirteen percent of the base rate for each
ton, or fraction
of
24a ton, shall be paid for up to the first 5,000 tons of hazardous waste
25disposed of, or submitted for disposal, in the state, at each specific
26offsite facility by each producer, or at each specific onsite facility,
27per month, which result from the extraction, beneficiation, and
28processing of ores and minerals, including phosphate rock and the
29overburden from the mining of uranium ore and that is not
30otherwise subject to the fee specified in paragraph (3) or (4).
31(3) Two hundred percent of the base rate shall be paid for each
32ton, or fraction of a ton, of extremely hazardous waste disposed
33of, or submitted for disposal, in the state.
34(4) Two hundred percent of the base rate shall be paid for each
35ton, or fraction of a ton, of restricted hazardous wastes listed
in
36subdivision (b) of Section 25122.7 disposed of, or submitted for
37disposal, in the state.
38(5) Forty and four-tenths percent of the base rate shall be paid
39for each ton, or fraction thereof, of hazardous waste disposed of,
P52 1or submitted for disposal, in the state that is not otherwise subject
2to the fees specified in paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4), or (6).
3(6) Five percent of the base rate shall be paid for each ton, or
4fraction of a ton, of hazardous waste disposed of, or submitted for
5disposal, in the state that is a solid hazardous waste residue
6resulting from incineration or dechlorination.
Fees shall not be
7imposed pursuant to this paragraph on a solid hazardous waste
8residue resulting from incineration or dechlorination that is
9disposed of, or submitted for disposal, outside of the state.
10(7) Fifty percent of the fee that would otherwise be paid for
11each ton, or fraction of a ton, of hazardous waste disposed of in
12the state that is a solid hazardous waste residue resulting from
13treatment of a treatable waste by means of a designated treatment
14technology, as defined in Section 25179.2. Fees shall not be
15imposed pursuant to this paragraph on a solid hazardous waste
16residue resulting from treatment of a treatable waste by means of
17a designated treatment technology that is not a hazardous waste
18or that is disposed of, or submitted for disposal, outside of the
19state.
20(b) The amount of fees payable to the State Board of
21Equalization pursuant to this section shall be calculated using the
22total wet weight, measured in tons or fractions of a ton, of the
23hazardous waste in the form in which the hazardous waste existed
24at the time of disposal, submission for disposal, or application to
25land using a land disposal method, as defined in Section 66260.10
26of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations, if all of the
27following apply:
28(1) The weight of any nonhazardous reagents or treatment
29additives added to the waste, after it has been submitted for
30disposal, for purposes of rendering the waste less hazardous, shall
31not be included in those calculations.
32(2) Except as provided by paragraph (7) of subdivision (a), any
33RCRA hazardous
waste received, treated, and disposed at the
34disposal facility shall be subject to a disposal fee pursuant to this
35section as if it were a non-RCRA hazardous waste, if the waste,
36due to treatment, is no longer a RCRA hazardous waste at the time
37of disposal.
38(c) All fees imposed by this section shall be paid in accordance
39with Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001) of Division 2 of
40the Revenue and Taxation Code.
P53 1(d) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
2reporting periods.
3(e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
4and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
5is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25174.7 of the Health and Safety Code is
8amended to read:
(a) The fees provided for in Sections 25174.1 and
1025205.5 do not apply to any of the following:
11(1) Hazardous wastes that result when a government agency,
12or its contractor, removes or remedies a release of hazardous waste
13in the state caused by another person.
14(2) Hazardous wastes generated or disposed of by a public
15agency operating a household hazardous waste collection facility
16in the state pursuant to Article 10.8 (commencing with Section
1725218), including, but not limited to, hazardous waste received
18from conditionally exempt small quantity commercial generators,
19authorized pursuant
to Section 25218.3.
20(3) Hazardous wastes generated or disposed of by local vector
21control agencies that have entered into a cooperative agreement
22pursuant to Section 116180 or by county agricultural
23commissioners, if the hazardous wastes result from their control
24or regulatory activities and if they comply with the requirements
25of this chapter and regulations adopted pursuant this chapter.
26(4) Hazardous waste disposed of, or submitted for disposal or
27treatment, by any person, which is discovered and separated from
28solid waste as part of a load checking program.
29(b) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), any person
30responsible for a release of hazardous waste, that has been removed
31or remedied by a
government agency, or its contractor, shall pay
32the fee pursuant to Section 25174.1.
33(c) Any person who acquires land for the sole purpose of
34owner-occupied single-family residential use, and who acquires
35that land without actual or constructive notice or knowledge that
36there is a tank containing hazardous waste on or under that
37property, is exempt from the fees imposed pursuant to Sections
3825174.1 and 25205.5, in connection with the removal of the tank.
39(d) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
40reporting periods.
P54 1(e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
2and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
3is enacted before January
1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25174.11 of the Health and Safety Code is
6repealed.
Section 25175 of the Health and Safety Code is
9amended to read:
(a) (1) The department shall prepare and adopt, by
11regulation, a list, and on or before January 1, 2002, and when
12appropriate thereafter, shall revise, by regulation, that list, of
13specified hazardous wastes that the department finds are
14economically and technologically feasible to recycle either onsite
15or at an offsite commercial hazardous waste recycling facility in
16the state, taking into consideration various factors that shall include,
17but are not limited to, the quantities of, concentrations of, and
18potential contaminants in, these hazardous wastes, the number and
19location of recycling facilities, and the proximity of these facilities
20to hazardous waste generators.
21(2) Whenever any hazardous waste on the list adopted or revised
22pursuant to paragraph (1) is transported offsite for disposal, the
23department may request, in writing, by certified mail with return
24receipt requested, and the generator of that waste shall supply the
25department with, a formal, complete, and detailed statement
26justifying why the waste was not recycled. The generator shall
27supply the statement in writing, by certified mail with return receipt
28requested, within 30 calendar days of receipt of the department’s
29request. This statement shall include the generator’s assessment
30of the economic and technological feasibility of recycling the
31wastes and may include, but need not to be limited to, the
32generator’s good faith determination that sending the hazardous
33waste to any recycling facility where it is feasible to recycle that
34
hazardous waste would constitute an unacceptable environmental
35or business risk. This determination by the generator shall be based
36upon an environmental audit or other reasonably diligent
37investigation of the environmental and other relevant business
38practices of the recycling facility or facilities where it would
39otherwise be feasible to recycle the waste. If the request is made
40of any entity listed in Section 25118 other than an individual, the
P55 1statement shall be issued by the responsible management of that
2entity. The department shall keep confidential any trade secrets
3contained in that statement.
4(3) On or before January 1, 2002, the department shall establish
5a procedure for the department to independently verify whether
6any hazardous waste identified in the list adopted pursuant to
7paragraph (1) is disposed of, rather than recycled.
The department
8shall, on or before January 1, 2002, prepare and adopt those
9regulations that the department finds necessary to ensure that it
10can fully perform its duties pursuant to subdivisions (k) and (l) of
11Section 25170 to encourage the exchange of hazardous waste and
12to establish and maintain an information clearinghouse of
13hazardous wastes that may be recyclable.
14(4) On or before July 1, 2000, the department shall establish an
15advisory committee to advise the department on the development
16of the regulations required or authorized by this section and on the
17department’s implementation of this section. The advisory
18committee shall consist of representatives of generators, hazardous
19waste facility operators, environmental organizations, the
20Legislature, and other interested parties.
21(5) In determining to which generators the department will send
22the request specified in paragraph (2), the department shall give
23priority to notifying generators transporting offsite for disposal
24more than 1000 pounds per year of the type of hazardous waste
25that would be the subject of the request, to the extent this
26prioritization is feasible within the information management
27capabilities of the department.
28(b) (1) If, after the department receives a statement from a
29generator pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), the
30department finds the recycling of a hazardous waste to be
31economically and technologically feasible, the department shall
32inform the generator, in writing, by certified mail, return receipt
33requested, that 30 days after the date the generator receives notice
34of the department’s
finding, any of the generators’ hazardous waste
35transported offsite to which the department’s finding applies shall,
36after that date, be recycled. The department may establish
37procedures for rescinding or modifying any finding made by the
38department pursuant to this paragraph if there is a pertinent change
39in circumstances related to that finding.
P56 1(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the department shall not
2find the recycling of a hazardous waste to be economically and
3technologically feasible if a generator includes a good faith
4determination in the statement submitted pursuant to paragraph
5(2) of subdivision (a) that sending its hazardous waste to any
6recycling facility where it is otherwise feasible to recycle the
7hazardous waste constitutes an unacceptable environmental or
8business risk.
9(c) A generator who does not recycle a hazardous waste after
10the generator receives a notice of the departments’ findings
11pursuant to subdivision (b) that the hazardous waste is
12economically and technologically feasible to recycle is subject to
13five times the disposal fee that would otherwise apply to the
14disposal of that hazardous waste pursuant to Section 25174.1.
15(d) For purposes of this section, “recycle” and “recycling” shall
16have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section
1725121.1.
18(e) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
19reporting periods.
20(f) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
21and as of that date is repealed, unless a
later enacted statute, that
22is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25175 is added to the Health and Safety Code,
25to read:
(a) (1) The department shall prepare and adopt, by
27regulation, a list, and when appropriate, shall revise, by regulation,
28that list, of specified hazardous wastes that the department finds
29are economically and technologically feasible to recycle either
30onsite or at an offsite commercial hazardous waste recycling facility
31in the state, taking into consideration various factors that shall
32include, but are not limited to, the quantities of, concentrations of,
33and potential contaminants in, these hazardous wastes, the number
34and location of recycling facilities, and the proximity of these
35facilities to hazardous waste generators.
36(2) Whenever any
hazardous waste on the list adopted or revised
37pursuant to paragraph (1) is transported offsite for disposal, the
38department may request, in writing, by certified mail with return
39receipt requested, and the generator of that waste shall supply the
40department with a formal, complete, and detailed statement
P57 1justifying why the waste was not recycled. The generator shall
2supply the statement in writing, by certified mail with return receipt
3requested, within 30 calendar days of receipt of the department’s
4request. This statement shall include the generator’s assessment
5of the economic and technological feasibility of recycling the
6wastes and may include, but need not to be limited to, the
7generator’s good faith determination that sending the hazardous
8waste to any recycling facility where it is feasible to recycle that
9hazardous waste would constitute an unacceptable environmental
10or business risk. This
determination by the generator shall be based
11upon an environmental audit or other reasonably diligent
12investigation of the environmental and other relevant business
13practices of the recycling facility or facilities where it would
14otherwise be feasible to recycle the waste. If the request is made
15of any entity listed in Section 25118 other than an individual, the
16statement shall be issued by the responsible management of that
17entity. The department shall keep confidential any trade secrets
18contained in that statement.
19(3) The department shall establish a procedure for the
20department to independently verify whether any hazardous waste
21identified in the list adopted pursuant to paragraph (1) is disposed
22of, rather than recycled. The department shall prepare and adopt
23those regulations that the department finds necessary to ensure
24that
it can fully perform its duties pursuant to subdivisions (k) and
25(l) of Section 25170 to encourage the exchange of hazardous waste
26and to establish and maintain an information clearinghouse of
27hazardous wastes that may be recyclable.
28(4) The department shall establish an advisory committee to
29advise the department on the development of the regulations
30required or authorized by this section and on the department’s
31implementation of this section. The advisory committee shall
32consist of representatives of generators, hazardous waste facility
33operators, environmental organizations, the Legislature, and other
34interested parties.
35(5) In determining to which generators the department will send
36the request specified in paragraph (2), the department shall give
37priority to
notifying generators transporting offsite for disposal
38more than 1000 pounds per year of the type of hazardous waste
39that would be the subject of the request, to the extent this
P58 1prioritization is feasible within the information management
2capabilities of the department.
3(b) (1) If, after the department receives a statement from a
4generator pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (a), the
5department finds the recycling of a hazardous waste to be
6economically and technologically feasible, the department shall
7inform the generator, in writing, by certified mail, return receipt
8requested, that 30 days after the date the generator receives notice
9of the department’s finding, any of the generators’ hazardous waste
10transported offsite to which the department’s finding applies shall,
11after that date, be recycled. The department
may establish
12procedures for rescinding or modifying any finding made by the
13department pursuant to this paragraph if there is a pertinent change
14in circumstances related to that finding.
15(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the department shall not
16find the recycling of a hazardous waste to be economically and
17technologically feasible if a generator includes a good faith
18determination in the statement submitted pursuant to paragraph
19(2) of subdivision (a) that sending its hazardous waste to any
20recycling facility where it is otherwise feasible to recycle the
21hazardous waste constitutes an unacceptable environmental or
22business risk.
23(c) A generator who does not recycle a hazardous waste after
24the generator receives a notice of the departments’ findings
25pursuant to
subdivision (b) that the hazardous waste is
26economically and technologically feasible to recycle is subject to
27five times the generation and handling fee that would otherwise
28apply to of that hazardous waste pursuant to Section 25205.5.
29(d) For purposes of this section, “recycle” and “recycling” shall
30have the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (a) of Section
3125121.1.
32(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
33shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
34thereafter, including the prepayments due following the reporting
35period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
36the reporting period.
Section 25178.1 of the Health and Safety Code is
39amended to read:
(a) The State Board of Equalization shall provide
2quarterly reports to the Legislature on the fees collected pursuant
3to Sections 25205.2 and 25205.5. The reports shall be due on the
415th day of the second month following each quarter.
5(b) The report submitted pursuant to this subdivision shall be
6submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government
7Code.
Section 25189.3 of the Health and Safety Code is
10amended to read:
(a) For purposes of this section, the term “permit”
12means a hazardous waste facilities permit, interim status
13authorization, or standardized permit.
14(b) The department shall suspend the permit of any facility for
15nonpayment of any facility fee assessed pursuant to Section
1625205.2 or activity fee assessed pursuant to Section 25205.7, if
17the operator of the facility is subject to the fee, and if the
18department or the State Board of Equalization has certified in
19writing to all of the following:
20(1) The facility’s operator is delinquent in the payment of the
21fee for one or more reporting
periods.
22(2) The department or the State Board of Equalization has
23notified the facility’s operator of the delinquency.
24(3) For a facility operator that exercised the option to pay the
25flat activity fee rate under subdivision (d) of Section 25205.7 as
26that section read on January 1, 2013, the operator has exhausted
27
his or her administrative rights of appeal provided by Chapter 3
28(commencing with Section 43151) of Part 22 of Division 2 of the
29Revenue and Taxation Code, and the State Board of Equalization
30has determined that the operator is liable for the fee, or that the
31operator has failed to assert those rights.
32(c) (1) The department shall suspend the permit of any facility
33for nonpayment of a penalty assessed upon the owner or operator
34for failure to comply with this chapter or the regulations adopted
35pursuant to this chapter, if the penalty has been imposed by a trial
36court judge or by an administrative hearing officer if the person
37has agreed to pay the penalty pursuant to a written
agreement
38resolving a lawsuit or an administrative order or if the penalty has
39become final due to the person’s failure to respond to the lawsuit
40or order.
P60 1(2) The department may suspend a permit pursuant to this
2subdivision only if the owner or operator is delinquent in the
3payment of the penalty and the department has notified the owner
4or operator of the delinquency pursuant to subdivision (d).
5(d) Before suspending a permit pursuant to this section, the
6department shall notify the owner or operator of its intent to do
7so, and shall allow the owner or operator a minimum of 30 days
8in which to cure the delinquency.
9(e) The department may deny a new permit or refuse to renew
10a permit on the same grounds
for which the department is required
11to suspend a permit under this section, subject to the same
12requirements and conditions.
13(f) (1) The department shall reinstate a permit that is suspended
14pursuant to this section upon payment of the amount due if the
15permit has not otherwise been revoked or suspended pursuant to
16any other provision of this chapter or regulation. Until the
17department reinstates a permit suspended pursuant to this section,
18if the facility stores, treats, disposes of, or recycles hazardous
19wastes, the facility shall be in violation of this chapter. If the
20operator of the facility subsequently pays the amount due, the
21period of time for which the operator shall have been in violation
22of this chapter shall be from the date of the activity that is in
23violation until the day after the owner or operator
submits the
24payment to the department.
25(2) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the department
26is not required to take any other statutory or regulatory procedures
27governing the suspension of the permit before suspending a permit
28in compliance with the procedures of this section.
29(g) (1) A suspension under this section shall be stayed while
30an authorized appeal of the fee or penalty is pending before a court
31or an administrative agency.
32(2) For purposes of this subdivision, “an authorized appeal”
33means any appeal allowed pursuant to an applicable regulation or
34statute.
35(h) The department may suspend a permit under this section
36based
on a failure to pay the required fee or penalty that
37commenced prior to January 1, 2002, if the failure to pay has been
38ongoing for at least 30 days following that date.
39(i) Notwithstanding Section 43651 of the Revenue and Taxation
40Code, the suspension of a permit pursuant to this section, the reason
P61 1for the suspension, and any documentation supporting the
2suspension, shall be a matter of public record.
3(j) (1) This section does not authorize the department to suspend
4a permit held by a government agency if the agency does not
5dispute the payment but nonetheless is unable to process the
6payment in a timely manner.
7(2) This section does not apply to a site owned or operated by
8a federal agency if the
department has entered into an agreement
9with that federal agency regarding the remediation of that site.
10(k) This section does not limit or supersede Section 25186.
Section 25205.2 of the Health and Safety Code is
13amended to read:
(a) Except as provided in subdivisions (c) and (h),
15in addition to the fees specified in Section 25174.1, each operator
16of a facility shall pay a facility fee for each reporting period, or
17any portion thereof, to the board based on the size and type of the
18facility, as specified in Section 25205.4. On or before January 31
19of each calendar year, the department annually shall notify the
20board of all known facility operators by facility type and size. The
21department shall also notify the board of any operator who is issued
22a permit or grant of interim status within 30 days from the date
23that a permit or grant of interim status is issued to the operator.
24The fee specified in this section does not apply to
facilities
25exempted pursuant to Section 25205.12.
26(b) The board shall deposit all fees collected pursuant to
27subdivision (a) in the Hazardous Waste Control Account in the
28General Fund. The fees so deposited may be expended by the
29department, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purposes
30specified in subdivision (b) of Section 25174.
31(c) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), a person who is issued a
32variance by the department from the requirement of obtaining a
33hazardous waste facilities permit or grant of interim status is not
34subject to the fee, for any reporting period following the reporting
35period in which the variance was granted by the department.
36(d) Operators subject to facility fee liability pursuant to this
37section
shall pay the following amounts:
38(1) The operator shall pay the applicable facility fee for each
39reporting period in which the facility actually engaged in the
40treatment, storage, or disposal of hazardous waste.
P62 1(2) The operator shall pay the applicable facility fee for one
2additional reporting period immediately following the final
3reporting period in which the facility actually engaged in that
4treatment or storage. For the 1994 reporting period and thereafter,
5the facility’s size for that additional reporting period shall be
6deemed to be the largest size at which the facility has ever been
7subject to the fee. If the department previously approved a unit or
8portion of the facility for a variance, closure, or permit-by-rule,
9the facility’s size for that reporting period shall be deemed
to be
10its largest size since the department granted the approval.
11(3) The operator of a disposal facility shall pay twice the
12applicable facility fee for one additional reporting period
13immediately following the final reporting period in which the
14facility actually engaged in disposal of hazardous waste.
15(4) For the 1994 reporting period and thereafter, a facility shall
16not be deemed to have stopped treating, storing, or disposing of
17hazardous waste unless it has actually ceased that activity and has
18notified the department of its intent to close.
19(5) If the reporting period which immediately followed the final
20reporting period in which a facility actually engaged in the
21treatment, storage, or disposal of the hazardous
waste was the
22six-month period from July 1, 1991, through December 31, 1991,
23the operator shall be subject to twice the fee otherwise applicable
24to that operator for that reporting period under paragraphs (2) and
25(3).
26(e) No facility shall be subject to a facility fee for treatment,
27storage, or disposal, if that activity ceased before July 1, 1986, and
28if the fee for the activity was not paid prior to January 1, 1994.
29(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a person
30who ceased actual treatment, storage, or disposal of hazardous
31waste, whether generated onsite or received from offsite, before
32July 1, 1986, and who paid facility fees for any reporting period
33after that date pursuant to a decision of the State Board of
34Equalization, and who filed a claim for refund
of those fees on or
35before January 1, 1994, shall be entitled to a refund of those
36amounts.
37(g) Facility operators who treated, stored, or disposed of
38hazardous waste on or after July 1, 1986, shall be subject to the
39provisions of this section which were in effect prior to January 1,
401994, as to payments which their operators made prior to January
P63 11, 1994. The operators shall be subject to subdivision (d) as to any
2other liability for the facility fee.
3(h) A treatment facility is not subject to the facility fee
4established pursuant to this section, if the facility engages in
5treatment exclusively to accomplish a removal or remedial action
6or a corrective action in accordance with an order issued by the
7Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to the federal act or
8in
accordance with an order issued by the department pursuant to
9Section 25187, if the facility was put in operation solely for
10purposes of complying with that order. The department shall
11instead assess a fee for that facility for the actual time spent by the
12department for the inspection and oversight of that facility. The
13department shall base the fee on the department’s work standards
14and shall assess the fee on an hourly basis.
15(i) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), a facility operating pursuant
16to a standardized permit or grant of interim status, as specified in
17Section 25201.6, shall receive a credit for the annual facility fee
18imposed by this section for a period of time equal to the number
19of years that the facility lawfully operated prior to September 21,
201993, pursuant to a hazardous waste facilities permit or other grant
21of authorization
and paid facility fees for the operation of the
22facility pursuant to this section.
23(j) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
24reporting periods, including the prepayments due during each
25reporting period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable
26by February 28 of the year following each reporting period.
27(k) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
28and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
29is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25205.2 is added to the Health and Safety
32Code, to read:
(a) Except as provided in subdivisions (c) and (e),
34each operator of a facility shall pay a facility fee for each reporting
35period, or any portion of the reporting period, to the board based
36on the size and type of the facility, as specified in Section 25205.4.
37On or before January 31 of each calendar year, the department
38annually shall notify the board of all known facility operators by
39facility type and size. The department shall also notify the board
40of any operator who is issued a permit or grant of interim status
P64 1within 30 days from the date that a permit or grant of interim status
2is issued to the operator. The fee specified in this section does not
3apply to facilities exempted pursuant to Section 25205.12.
4(b) The board shall deposit all fees collected pursuant to
5subdivision (a) in the Hazardous Waste Control Account in the
6General Fund. The fees so deposited may be expended by the
7department, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purposes
8specified in subdivision (b) of Section 25174.
9(c) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), a person who is issued a
10variance by the department from the requirement of obtaining a
11hazardous waste facilities permit or grant of interim status is not
12subject to the fee for any reporting period following the reporting
13period in which the variance was granted by the department.
14(d) Operators subject to facility fee liability pursuant to this
15section shall pay the following amounts:
16(1) The operator shall pay the applicable facility fee for each
17reporting period in which the facility actually engaged in the
18
treatment, storage, or disposal of hazardous waste.
19(2) The operator shall pay the applicable facility fee for one
20additional reporting period immediately following the final
21reporting period in which the facility actually engaged in that
22treatment or storage. The facility’s size for the additional reporting
23period shall be deemed to be the largest size at which the facility
24has ever been subject to the fee. If the department previously
25approved a unit or portion of the facility for a variance, closure,
26or permit-by-rule, the facility’s size for that reporting period shall
27be deemed to be its largest size since the department granted the
28approval.
29(3) The operator of a disposal facility shall pay twice the
30applicable facility fee for one additional reporting period
31immediately
following the final reporting period in which the
32facility actually engaged in disposal of hazardous waste.
33(4) A facility shall not be deemed to have stopped treating,
34storing, or disposing of hazardous waste unless it has actually
35ceased that activity and has notified the department of its intent to
36close.
37(e) A treatment facility is not subject to the facility fee
38established pursuant to this section if the facility engages in
39treatment exclusively to accomplish a removal or remedial action
40or a corrective action in accordance with an order issued by the
P65 1United States Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to the
2federal act or in accordance with an order issued by the department
3pursuant to Section 25187, or if the removal or remedial action is
4carried out pursuant to
a removal action work plan or a remedial
5action plan prepared pursuant to Section 25356.1 and that treatment
6facility is authorized to operate pursuant to Section 25358.9, if the
7facility was put in operation
solely for purposes of complying with
8that order. The department shall instead assess a fee for that facility
9for the actual time spent by the department for the inspection and
10oversight of that facility. The department shall base the fee on the
11department’s work standards and shall assess the fee on an hourly
12basis.
13(f) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014 and
14shall apply to the annual facility fees due for the 2014 reporting
15period and thereafter, including the prepayments due during the
16reporting period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable
17by February 28 of the year following the reporting period.
Section 25205.3 of the Health and Safety Code is
20amended to read:
The following facilities are exempt from the fees
22imposed by this article:
23(a) Any household hazardous waste collection facility operated
24pursuant to Article 10.8 (commencing with Section 25218).
25(b) Any facility operated by a local government agency, or by
26any person operating a hazardous waste collection program under
27an agreement with a public agency, which is used for wastes which
28meet the requirements of paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of Section
2925174.7.
30(c) That portion of a solid waste facility permitted pursuant to
31Chapter 3
(commencing with Section 44001) of Part 4 of Division
3230 of the Public Resources Code, which is used for the segregation,
33handling, and storage of hazardous waste separated from solid
34waste loads received by the facility, pursuant to a load checking
35program.
36(d) A facility used solely for the treatment, storage, disposal,
37or recycling of hazardous waste which results when a public agency
38or its contractor investigates, removes, or remedies a release of
39hazardous waste caused by another person.
P66 1(e) (1) For purposes of fees assessed in any reporting period
2beginning July 1, 1990, or subsequently, a facility which has been
3issued a permit for the purpose of storing hazardous waste onsite,
4and whose permit has expired, if all of the following has occurred:
5(A) The facility has received no waste from offsite since the
6permit expired.
7(B) The owner or operator gave the department timely
8notification of intent to close the facility, pursuant to regulations
9adopted by the department.
10(C) At least 90 days have elapsed since the owner or operator
11gave the department that notification.
12(D) The department did not complete its review of the closure
13plan within 90 days of receiving the notification.
14(2) This exclusion shall take effect the reporting period
15following the reporting period in which the facility first satisfied
16the requirements of paragraph (1) and did
not accumulate waste
17onsite for more than 90 consecutive days.
18(f) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
19reporting periods.
20(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
21and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
22is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25205.3 is added to the Health and Safety
25Code, to read:
The following facilities are exempt from the fees
27imposed by this article:
28(a) Any household hazardous waste collection facility operated
29pursuant to Article 10.8 (commencing with Section 25218).
30(b) Any facility operated by a local government agency or by
31any person operating a hazardous waste collection program under
32an agreement with a public agency that is used for wastes that meet
33the requirements of paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of Section
3425205.5.2.
35(c) That portion of a solid waste facility permitted pursuant to
36Chapter 3 (commencing with Section
44001) of Part 4 of Division
3730 of the Public Resources Code, which is used for the segregation,
38handling, and storage of hazardous waste separated from solid
39waste loads received by the facility, pursuant to a load checking
40program.
P67 1(d) A facility used solely for the treatment, storage, disposal,
2or recycling of hazardous waste that results when a public agency
3or its contractor investigates, removes, or remedies a release of
4hazardous waste caused by another person.
5(e) (1) A facility that has been issued a permit for the purpose
6of storing hazardous waste onsite and whose permit has expired,
7if all of the following has occurred:
8(A) The facility has received no waste from offsite since the
9permit
expired.
10(B) The owner or operator gave the department timely
11notification of intent to close the facility, pursuant to regulations
12adopted by the department.
13(C) At least 90 days have elapsed since the owner or operator
14gave the department that notification.
15(D) The department did not complete its review of the closure
16plan within 90 days of receiving the notification.
17(2) This exclusion shall take effect the reporting period
18following the reporting period in which the facility first satisfied
19the requirements of paragraph (1) and did not accumulate waste
20onsite for more than 90 consecutive days.
21(f) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
22shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
23thereafter. This includes the prepayments due during the reporting
24period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
25the reporting period.
Section 25205.4 of the Health and Safety Code is
28amended to read:
(a) The base rate for the 2013 reporting period for
30the fee imposed by Section 25205.2 is thirty thousand five dollars
31($30,005). Commencing with the 2014 reporting period, and for
32each reporting period thereafter, the board shall adjust the base
33rate annually to reflect increases or decreases in the cost of living
34during the prior fiscal year, as measured by the Consumer Price
35Index issued by the Department of Industrial Relations or by a
36successor agency.
37(b) The determination of the facility fee pursuant to this section,
38including the redetermination of the base rate, is exempt from
39Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1
of Division
403 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
P68 1(c) Except as provided in subdivision (e), in computing the
2facility fees pursuant to this section, all of the following shall
3apply:
4(1) The fee to be paid by a ministorage facility shall equal 25
5percent of the base facility rate.
6(2) The fee to be paid by a small storage facility shall equal the
7base facility rate.
8(3) The fee to be paid by a large storage facility shall equal
9twice the base facility rate.
10(4) The fee to be paid by a minitreatment facility shall equal 50
11percent of the base facility rate.
12(5) The fee to be paid by a small treatment facility shall equal
13twice the base facility rate.
14(6) The fee to be paid by a large onsite treatment facility shall
15equal three times the base facility rate.
16(7) The fee to be paid by a large offsite treatment facility shall
17be three times the base facility rate.
18(8) The fee to be paid by a disposal facility shall equal 10 times
19the base facility rate.
20(9) (A) The fee to be paid by a facility with a postclosure permit
21shall be five thousand seven hundred twenty-five dollars ($5,725)
22annually for a small facility, eleven thousand four
hundred fifty
23dollars ($11,450) annually for a medium facility, and seventeen
24thousand one hundred seventy-five dollars ($17,175) for a large
25facility during the first five years of the postclosure period. The
26fee to be paid by a facility with a postclosure permit during the
27remaining years of the postclosure care period shall be three
28thousand fifty dollars ($3,050) annually for a small facility, six
29thousand one hundred dollars ($6,100) annually for a medium
30facility, and ten thousand three hundred dollars ($10,300) annually
31for a large facility.
32(B) The fees required by subparagraph (A) shall be reduced by
3350 percent for any facility for which an agency, other than the
34
department, is the lead agency pursuant to paragraph (1) of
35subdivision (b) of Section 25204.6.
36(d) If a facility falls into more than one category listed in either
37subdivision (c) or (e), or any combination thereof, or multiple
38operations under a single hazardous waste facilities permit or grant
39of interim status fall into more than one category listed in
40subdivision (c) or (e), or any combination thereof, the facility
P69 1operator shall pay only the rate for the facility category which is
2the highest rate.
3(e) Notwithstanding subdivision (c), the facility fee for a facility
4that has been issued a standardized permit shall be as follows:
5(1) The fee to be paid for a facility that has been issued a Series
6A
standardized permit shall be eleven thousand seven hundred
7thirty dollars ($11,730).
8(2) The fee to be paid for a facility that has been issued a Series
9B standardized permit shall be five thousand four hundred
10ninety-seven dollars ($5,497).
11(3) Except as specified in paragraph (4), the fee to be paid for
12a facility that has been issued a Series C standardized permit shall
13be four thousand six hundred seventeen dollars ($4,617).
14(4) The fee for a facility that has been issued a Series C
15standardized permit is two thousand three hundred eight dollars
16($2,308) if the facility meets all of the following conditions:
17(A) The facility treats not more than 1,500 gallons of
liquid
18hazardous waste and not more than 3,000 pounds of solid
19hazardous waste in any calendar month.
20(B) The total facility storage capacity does not exceed 15,000
21gallons of liquid hazardous waste and 30,000 pounds of solid
22hazardous waste.
23(C) If the facility both treats and stores hazardous waste, the
24facility does not exceed the volume limitations specified in
25subparagraphs (A) and (B) for each individual activity.
26(f) The fee imposed pursuant to this section shall be paid in
27accordance with Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001) of
28Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
Section 25205.5 of the Health and Safety Code is
31amended to read:
(a) In addition to the fee imposed pursuant to Section
3325174.1, every generator of hazardous waste, in the amounts
34specified in subdivision (c), shall pay the board a generator fee for
35each generator site for each calendar year, or portion thereof, unless
36the generator has paid a facility fee or received a credit, as specified
37in Section 25205.2, for each specific site, for the calendar year for
38which the generator fee is due.
39(b) The base fee rate for the fee imposed pursuant to subdivision
40(a) is two thousand seven hundred forty-eight dollars ($2,748).
P70 1(c) (1) Each
generator who generates an amount equal to, or
2more than, five tons, but less than 25 tons, of hazardous waste
3during the prior calendar year shall pay 5 percent of the base rate.
4(2) Each generator who generates an amount equal to, or more
5than, 25 tons, but less than 50 tons, of hazardous waste during the
6prior calendar year shall pay 40 percent of the base rate.
7(3) Each generator who generates an amount equal to, or more
8than, 50 tons, but less than 250 tons, of hazardous waste during
9the prior calendar year shall pay the base rate.
10(4) Each generator who generates an amount equal to, or more
11than, 250 tons, but less than 500 tons, of hazardous waste during
12the prior calendar year shall pay five times the base rate.
13(5) Each generator who generates an amount equal to, or more
14than, 500 tons, but less than 1,000 tons, of hazardous waste during
15the prior calendar year shall pay 10 times the base rate.
16(6) Each generator who generates an amount equal to, or more
17than, 1,000 tons, but less than 2,000 tons, of hazardous waste
18during the prior calendar year shall pay 15 times the base rate.
19(7) Each generator who generates an amount equal to, or more
20than, 2,000 tons of hazardous waste during the prior calendar year
21shall pay 20 times the base rate.
22(d) The base rate established pursuant to subdivision (b) was
23the base rate for the 1997 calendar year and the board shall adjust
24the
base rate annually to reflect increases or decreases in the cost
25of living, during the prior fiscal year, as measured by the Consumer
26Price Index issued by the Department of Industrial Relations or
27by a successor agency.
28(e) The establishment of the annual operating fee pursuant to
29this section is exempt from Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
3011340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
31(f) The following materials are not hazardous wastes for
32purposes of this section:
33(1) Hazardous materials which are recycled, and used onsite,
34and are not transferred offsite.
35(2) Aqueous waste treated in a treatment unit operating, or which
36subsequently
operates, pursuant to a permit-by-rule, or pursuant
37to Section 25200.3 or 25201.5. However, hazardous waste
38generated by a treatment unit treating waste pursuant to a
39permit-by-rule, by a unit which subsequently obtains a
P71 1permit-by-rule, or other authorization pursuant to Section 25200.3
2or 25201.5 is hazardous waste for purposes of this section.
3(g) The fee imposed pursuant to this section shall be paid in
4accordance with Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001) of
5Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
6(h) (1) A generator who pays a hazardous waste generator
7inspection fee to a certified unified program agency, which is
8imposed as part of a single fee system and fee accountability
9program that are both in compliance with the requirements of
10Section
25404.5, shall be eligible for a refund of all, or part of, the
11generator fee paid pursuant to subdivision (a) if both of the
12following conditions apply:
13(A) The generator received a credit pursuant to Section 43152.7
14or 43152.11 of the Revenue and Taxation Code for fees paid for
15hazardous waste generated in 1996.
16(B) The department certifies, pursuant to subdivision (b) of
17Section 25205.9, that funds are available to pay all or part of the
18refund.
19(2) A generator who is eligible for a refund pursuant to
20paragraph (1) shall submit an application for that refund to the
21board by September 30 following the fiscal year during which the
22generator paid the generator fee pursuant to subdivision (a). An
23application for a
refund postmarked after September 30 is void,
24shall not be processed by the board, and shall be returned to the
25applicant.
26(i) (1) A generator who transfers hazardous materials to an
27offsite facility for recycling at that offsite facility or another offsite
28facility shall be eligible for a refund of all, or part of, the generator
29fee paid pursuant to subdivision (a) if all of the following
30
conditions apply:
31(A) The offsite facility to which the hazardous materials are
32manifested pays a facility fee pursuant to Section 25205.2.
33(B) The amount of hazardous materials transferred to the offsite
34facility and recycled there, when deducted from the total tonnage
35of hazardous waste generated at the generator’s site, results in the
36generator becoming eligible for a generator fee that is lower than
37the fee paid pursuant to subdivision (a).
38(C) The hazardous materials transferred to the offsite facility
39are not burned in a boiler, industrial furnace, or an incinerator, as
40those terms are defined in Section 260.10 of Title 40 of the Code
P72 1of Federal Regulations, used in a manner constituting disposal, or
2used
to produce products that are applied to land.
3(D) The department certifies, pursuant to subdivision (b) of
4Section 25205.9, that funds are available to pay all or part of the
5refund.
6(2) A generator who is eligible for a refund pursuant to
7paragraph (1) shall submit an application for that refund to the
8board by September 30 following the fiscal year during which the
9generator paid the generator fee pursuant to subdivision (a). An
10application for a refund postmarked after September 30 is void,
11shall not be processed by the board, and shall be returned to the
12applicant.
13(j) (1) The amendment of this section made by Chapter 1125
14of the Statutes of 1991 does not constitute a change in, but is
15declaratory
of, existing law.
16(2) The amendment of subdivision (a) of this section made by
17Chapter 259 of the Statutes of 1996 does not constitute a change
18in, but is declaratory of, existing law.
19(k) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
20reporting periods, including the prepayments due during each
21reporting period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable
22by February 28 of the year following each reporting period.
23(l) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
24and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
25is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25205.5 is added to the Health and Safety
28Code, to read:
(a) (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section,
30each generator, as defined in subdivision (e) of Section 25205.1,
31of hazardous waste that generates an amount equal to, or greater
32than, five tons of hazardous waste shall pay the board for each
33generator site for each calendar year, or portion of the calendar
34year, a generation and handling fee of thirty-one dollars and
35fifty-two cents ($31.52) per ton of hazardous waste generated.
36(2) A generator that is issued a hazardous waste facilities permit
37from the department and that pays an annual facility fee, as
38specified in Section 25205.2, may deduct, from the amount of
39hazardous waste
otherwise subject to this subdivision that is
40generated per calendar year, the amount of hazardous waste that
P73 1is solely stored, bulked, or transferred through the location of the
2permitted hazardous waste facility and that is in route to another
3facility that is authorized to do any of the following:
4(A) Manage the hazardous waste for reclamation and recovery,
5including fuel blending prior to energy recovery at another site.
6(B) Manage the hazardous waste through destruction methods
7or treatment prior to disposal at another site.
8(C) Manage the hazardous waste by any form of treatment.
9(D) Dispose of the hazardous waste.
10(b) Generators of more than five tons of hazardous waste in the
11prior calendar year are subject to the prepayment due during each
12reporting period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable
13by February 28 of the year following each reporting period.
14(c) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), a generator of used oil shall
15pay a generation and handling fee of twenty-seven dollars and
16eighty-six cents ($27.86) per ton of used oil generated.
17(d) The base rates established pursuant to subdivisions (a) and
18(c) are the rates for the 2014 reporting period and the board shall
19adjust the base rates annually to reflect increases or decreases in
20the cost of living, during the prior fiscal year, as measured
by the
21Consumer Price Index issued by the Department of Industrial
22Relations or by a successor agency.
23(e) The following materials are not hazardous wastes for
24purposes of this section:
25(1) Hazardous materials that are recycled and used onsite, and
26that are not transferred offsite.
27(2) Aqueous waste treated in a treatment unit operating, or which
28subsequently operates, pursuant to a permit-by-rule, or pursuant
29to Section 25200.3 or 25201.5. However, hazardous waste
30generated by a treatment unit treating waste pursuant to a
31permit-by-rule, by a
unit that subsequently obtains a permit-by-rule,
32or by other authorization pursuant to Section 25200.3 or 25201.5
33is hazardous waste for purposes of this section.
34(f) The fee imposed pursuant to this section shall be paid in
35accordance with Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001) of
36Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
37(g) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
38shall apply to the annual generation and handling fees due for the
392014 reporting period and thereafter. This includes the prepayments
40due during the reporting period and the final reconciliation fee due
P74 1and payable by February 28 of the year following the reporting
2
period.
Section 25205.5.1 of the Health and Safety Code is
5amended to read:
Notwithstanding Sections 25174.1 and 25205.5,
7the department may adopt regulations exempting victims of
8disasters from the hazardous waste disposal fee imposed pursuant
9to Section 25174.1 and the generator fee imposed pursuant to
10Section 25205.5. The regulations may allow that exemption if all
11of the following apply:
12(a) The hazardous waste is generated in a geographical area
13identified in a state of emergency proclamation by the Governor
14pursuant to Section 8625 of the Government Code because of fire,
15flood, storm, earthquake, riot, or civil unrest.
16(b) The hazardous waste is generated when property owned
or
17controlled by the victim is damaged or destroyed as a result of the
18
disaster.
19(c) The hazardous waste is not hazardous waste that is routinely
20produced as part of a manufacturing or commercial business or
21that is managed by a hazardous waste facility or a facility operated
22by a generator of hazardous waste who files a hazardous waste
23notification statement with the department pursuant to subdivision
24(a) of Section 25158.
25(d) The victim meets any other condition or limitation on
26eligibility specified by the department.
27(e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
28and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
29is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25205.5.1 is added to the Health and Safety
32Code, to read:
Notwithstanding Section 25205.5, the department
34may adopt regulations exempting victims of disasters from the
35generation and handling fee imposed pursuant to Section 25205.5.
36The regulations may allow that exemption if all of the following
37apply:
38(a) The hazardous waste is generated in a geographical area
39identified in a state of emergency proclamation by the Governor
P75 1pursuant to Section 8625 of the Government Code because of fire,
2flood, storm, earthquake, riot, or civil unrest.
3(b) The hazardous waste is generated when property owned or
4controlled by the victim is damaged or destroyed as a result of the
5disaster.
6(c) The hazardous waste is not hazardous waste that is routinely
7produced as part of a manufacturing or commercial business or
8that is managed by a hazardous waste facility or a facility operated
9by a generator of hazardous waste who files a hazardous waste
10notification statement with the department pursuant to subdivision
11(a) of Section 25158.
12(d) The victim meets any other condition or limitation on
13eligibility specified by the department.
14(e) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
15shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
16thereafter, including the prepayments due following the reporting
17period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
18the reporting
period.
Section 25205.5.2 is added to the Health and Safety
21Code, to read:
(a) The fees provided for in Section 25205.5 do
23not apply to any of the following:
24(1) Hazardous wastes that result when a government agency,
25or its contractor, removes or remedies a release of hazardous waste
26in the state caused by another person.
27(2) Hazardous waste generated or disposed of by a public agency
28operating a household hazardous waste collection facility in the
29state pursuant to Article 10.8 (commencing with Section 25218),
30including, but not limited to, hazardous waste received from
31conditionally exempt small quantity commercial generators,
32authorized pursuant to Section 25218.3.
33(3) Hazardous waste generated by a local vector control agency
34that has entered into a cooperative agreement pursuant to Section
35116180 or by a county agricultural commissioner, if the hazardous
36wastes result from the agency’s or commissioner’s control or
37regulatory activities and if the agency or commissioner complies
38with the requirements of this chapter and regulations adopted
39pursuant to this chapter.
P76 1(4) Hazardous waste generated by any person, which is
2discovered and separated from solid waste as part of a load
3checking program.
4(5) Hazardous waste used oil generated by a used oil collection
5center certified by the Department of Resources Recycling and
6Recovery pursuant to Section 48660 of the Public Resources
Code
7for the collection of used oil from the public.
8(b) Notwithstanding paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), any person
9responsible for a release of hazardous waste, which has been
10removed or remedied by a government agency, or its contractor,
11shall pay the fee pursuant to Section 25205.5.
12(c) Any person who acquires land for the sole purpose of
13owner-occupied single-family residential use, and who acquires
14that land without actual or constructive notice or knowledge that
15there is a tank containing hazardous waste on or under that
16property, is exempt from the fees imposed pursuant to Section
1725205.5 in connection with the removal of the tank.
18(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
19shall apply to
the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
20thereafter, including the prepayments due during the reporting
21period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
22the reporting period.
Section 25205.7 of the Health and Safety Code is
25amended to read:
(a) (1) A person who applies for, or requests, any
27of the following shall enter into a written agreement with the
28department pursuant to which that person shall reimburse the
29department, pursuant to Article 9.2 (commencing with Section
3025206.1), for the costs incurred by the department in processing
31the application or responding to the request, including the costs of
32reviewing and overseeing corrective action as set forth in
33subdivision (b):
34(A) A new hazardous waste facilities permit, including a
35standardized permit.
36(B) A hazardous waste facilities permit for postclosure.
37(C) A renewal of an existing hazardous waste facilities permit,
38including a standardized permit or postclosure permit.
39(D) A class 2 or class 3 modification of an existing hazardous
40waste facilities permit or grant of interim status, including a
P77 1standardized permit or grant of interim status or a postclosure
2permit.
3(E) A variance.
4(F) A waste classification determination.
5(2) Any agreement required pursuant to paragraph (1) shall
6provide for at least 25 percent of the reimbursement to be made
7in advance of the processing of the application or the response to
8the request.
9(3) Any agreement entered into pursuant to this section shall,
10if applicable, include costs of reviewing and overseeing corrective
11action as set forth in subdivision (b).
12(b) An applicant pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (a)
13shall pay the department’s costs in reviewing and overseeing any
14corrective action program described in the application for a
15standardized permit pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph
16(2) of subdivision (c) of Section 25201.6 or required pursuant to
17subdivision (b) of Section 25200.10, and in reviewing and
18overseeing any corrective action work undertaken at the facility
19pursuant to that corrective action program.
20(c) (1) An applicant pursuant to paragraph (1) of
subdivision
21(a) shall, pursuant to Section 21089 of the Public Resources Code,
22pay all costs incurred by the department for purposes of complying
23with the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13
24(commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code)
25in conjunction with an application or request, including any
26activities associated with corrective action for any of the activities
27identified in subdivision (a).
28(2) Paragraph (1) does not apply to projects that are exempt
29from the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13
30(commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).
31(d) Any reimbursements received pursuant to this section shall
32be placed in the Hazardous Waste Control Account for
33appropriation in accordance with Section 25174.
34(e) Subdivision (a) does not apply to any variance granted
35pursuant to Article 4 (commencing with Section 66263.40) of
36Chapter 13 of Division 4.5 of Title 22 of the California Code of
37Regulations.
38(f) Subdivision (a) does not apply to any of the following:
39(1) Any variance issued to a public agency to transport wastes
40for purposes of operating a household hazardous waste collection
P78 1facility, or to transport waste from a household hazardous waste
2collection facility, which receives household hazardous waste or
3hazardous waste from conditionally exempted small quantity
4generators pursuant to Article 10.8 (commencing with Section
525218).
6(2) A permanent household hazardous waste collection facility.
7(3) Any variance issued to a public agency to conduct a
8collection program for agricultural wastes.
9(g) (1) This section applies to applications and requests
10submitted to the department on or after July 1, 2013, and
11applications and requests pending before the department as of July
121, 2013.
13(2) For purposes of applying the provisions of this subdivision,
14the Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
15(A) The department expends a substantial amount of time and
16resources in processing permit applications and modifications.
17(B) The former flat fee option paid by applicants was most often
18insufficient to cover the actual costs to the department in reviewing
19and processing the applications and modifications.
20(C) The applicant, being the primary beneficiary of the permit
21process, in fairness should pay the actual costs of the department
22in reviewing permit applications and modifications.
23(D) The amendment to the act adding this subdivision in the
242013-14 Regular Session eliminating the flat fee option and
25revising provisions requiring applicants to enter into a written
26reimbursement agreement with the department is intended to apply
27both to future and pending applications and modification requests
28in order to remedy this inequity.
29(3) For an application or request that is submitted to the
30department prior to July 1, 2013, which remains pending as of that
31date, the reimbursement agreement shall provide credit for any fee
32previously paid to the department, minus the value of services
33provided by the department prior to July 1, 2013, in conjunction
34with that application or request pursuant to this section as it read
35prior to January 1, 2013.
36(4) Only time and resources expended by the department after
37July 1, 2013, on already pending permit applications and
38modification requests will be the subject of the written
39reimbursement agreement with the department.
Section 25205.9 of the Health and Safety Code is
3repealed.
Section 25205.12 of the Health and Safety Code is
6amended to read:
(a) The owner of a hazardous waste facility
8authorized to operate pursuant to a permit-by-rule, authorized
9under a grant of conditional authorization pursuant to Section
1025200.3, exempted pursuant to subdivision (a) or (c) of Section
1125201.5, or exempted pursuant to Section 25144.6 or 25201.14 is
12exempt from the fee specified in Section 25205.2 for any activities
13authorized by the permit-by-rule, under a grant of conditional
14authorization pursuant to Section 25200.3, exempted pursuant to
15subdivision (a) or (c) of Section 25201.5, or exempted pursuant
16to Section 25144.6 or 25201.14 at that facility for any year or
17reporting period during which the facility is operating.
18(b) The operator of a hazardous waste facility authorized by the
19department to clean and recycle excavated underground storage
20tanks is exempt from the facility fee specified in Section 25205.2
21with regard to those activities conducted before January 1, 1994,
22and those activities conducted after that date, until the effective
23date of a regulation adopted by the department governing the
24statewide requirements for the issuance of a permit for tank
25cleaning and recycling facilities.
Section 25205.14 of the Health and Safety Code is
28amended to read:
(a) Except as provided in Section 25404.5, the owner
30or operator of a facility or transportable treatment unit operating
31pursuant to a permit-by-rule shall pay a fee to the board per facility
32or transportable treatment unit for each reporting period, or portion
33of a reporting period. The fee for the 2013 reporting period shall
34be one thousand four hundred fifty-seven dollars ($1,457).
35
Thereafter, the fee shall be adjusted annually by the board to reflect
36increases and decreases in the cost of living, as measured by the
37Consumer Price Index issued by the Department of Industrial
38Relations or a successor agency. The reporting period shall begin
39January 1 of each calendar year. On or before January 31 of each
40calendar year, the department shall notify the board of all known
P80 1owners or operators operating pursuant to a permit-by-rule who
2are not exempted from this fee pursuant to Section 25404.5. The
3department shall also notify the board of any owner or operator
4authorized to operate pursuant to a permit-by-rule, who is not
5exempted from this fee pursuant to Section 25404.5, within 60
6days after the owner or operator is authorized.
7(b) Except as provided in Section 25404.5, a generator operating
8under
a grant of conditional authorization pursuant to Section
925200.3 shall pay a fee to the board per facility for each reporting
10period, or portion thereof, unless the generator is subject to a fee
11under a permit-by-rule. The fee for the 2013 reporting period shall
12be one thousand four hundred fifty-seven dollars ($1,457).
13Thereafter, the fee shall be adjusted annually by the board to reflect
14increases and decreases in the cost of living, during the prior fiscal
15year, as measured by the Consumer Price Index issued by the
16Department of Industrial Relations or a successor agency. The
17reporting period shall begin January 1 of each calendar year. On
18or before January 31 of each calendar year, the department shall
19notify the board of all known generators operating pursuant to a
20grant of conditional authorization under Section 25200.3 who are
21not exempted from this fee pursuant to Section 25404.5. The
22
department shall also notify the board of any generator authorized
23to operate under a grant of conditional authorization, who is not
24exempted from this fee pursuant to Section 25404.5, within 60
25days of the receipt of notification.
26(c) Except as provided in Section 25404.5, a generator
27performing treatment conditionally exempted pursuant to Section
2825144.6 or subdivision (a) or (c) of Section 25201.5 shall pay
29thirty-eight dollars ($38) to the board per facility for each reporting
30period, unless that generator is subject to a fee under a
31permit-by-rule or a conditional authorization pursuant to Section
3225200.3. The reporting period shall begin January 1 of each
33calendar year. On or before January 31 of each calendar year, the
34department shall notify the board of all known facilities performing
35treatment conditionally exempted by Section
25144.6 or
36subdivision (a) or (c) of Section 25201.5 who are not exempted
37from this fee pursuant to Section 25404.5. The department shall
38also notify the board of any generator who notifies the department
39that the generator is conducting a conditionally exempt treatment
P81 1operation, and who is not exempted from this fee pursuant to
2Section 25404.5, within 60 days of the receipt of the notification.
3(d) The fees imposed pursuant to this section shall be paid in
4accordance with Part 22 (commencing with Section 43001) of
5Division 2 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
Section 25205.15 of the Health and Safety Code is
8amended to read:
(a) Except for the first four manifests used in a
10calendar year by a business with less than 100 employees, and
11except as provided in paragraph (2), in addition to any fees to cover
12printing and distribution costs, the department shall impose a
13manifest fee of seven dollars and fifty cents ($7.50) for each
14California Hazardous Waste Manifest form or electronic equivalent
15used after June 30, 1998, by any person, in the following manner:
16(1) The department shall bill generators for each California
17Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest form, manifest number, or
18electronic equivalent used after June 30, 1998. The billing
19frequency specified by the
department may range from monthly
20to annually, with the payment by the generator required within 30
21days from the date of receipt of the billing, and shall be determined
22based on consultation with the regulated community. In preparing
23the bills, the department shall distinguish between manifests used
24solely for recycled hazardous wastes and those used for
25nonrecycled hazardous wastes. In determining the billing
26frequency, the department may take into account each person’s
27volume of manifest usage.
28(2) (A) The manifest fee shall not be collected on the use of
29California Hazardous Waste Recycling Manifests that are used
30solely for hazardous wastes that are recycled.
31(B) The manifest fee for each California Uniform Hazardous
32Waste Manifest form used solely for
hazardous waste derived from
33air compliance solvents, shall be three dollars and fifty cents
34($3.50) This is in addition to any fees charged to cover printing
35and distribution costs.
36(3) The department shall implement a system for the use of
37manifests that distinguishes among recycling manifests used solely
38for hazardous wastes that are to be recycled, manifests used solely
39to transport hazardous waste derived from air compliance solvents,
P82 1and general manifests that may be used for transporting waste for
2any purpose.
3(4) (A) If a person erroneously reports on a California Uniform
4Hazardous Waste Manifest that the manifest is being used for the
5transport of hazardous wastes that are being shipped for recycling
6or for the transport of hazardous wastes derived
from air
7compliance solvents rather than the transport of other types of
8hazardous waste, the person shall pay the seven dollars and fifty
9cents ($7.50) manifest fee and an additional error correction fee
10of twenty dollars ($20) per manifest, as required pursuant to
11Section 25160.5.
12(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A) the department shall
13provide the manifest user with a reasonable opportunity to notify
14the department of any incorrect use of the recycling manifest, as
15described in subparagraph (A), and to provide the department with
16the appropriate manifest fee payment without additional fines,
17penalties, or payment of the error correction fee.
18(5) The department may adopt regulations to implement and
19administer the manifest fee system imposed pursuant to this
20subdivision.
21(b) For purposes of subdivision (a), a California Uniform
22Hazardous Waste Manifest means either of the following:
23(1) A manifest document printed and supplied by the state for
24a shipment initiated on and before September 4, 2006.
25(2) The Uniform Hazardous Waste Manifest printed by a source
26registered with the United States Environmental Protection Agency
27for a shipment initiated on and after September 5, 2006, if the
28manifest originates from a generator located in California, is
29received by the designated facility located in California where the
30manifest is signed and terminated, or is imported or exported
31through a point of entry or exit in California.
32(c) On and
after July 1, 1999, commencing with 1999-2000
33fiscal year and annually thereafter, the department shall expend,
34upon appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act,
35not less than one million fifty thousand dollars ($1,050,000) from
36the manifest fees, deposited in the Hazardous Waste Control
37Account, to establish a program to encourage hazardous waste
38generators to implement pollution prevention measures. The
39program shall be administered pursuant to administrative and
40expenditure criteria to be established by the Legislature.
P83 1(d) The manifest fees shall be deposited in the Hazardous Waste
2Control Account and be available for expenditure, upon
3appropriation by the Legislature.
4(e) For purposes of this section, “air compliance solvent” means
5a solvent, including aqueous
solutions, that are required or
6approved for use by regulations adopted by the State Air Resources
7Board, an air pollution control district, or an air quality
8management district, to meet air emission standards adopted by
9that board or district and, pursuant to those regulations, is required
10to be used instead of another solvent that was used and recycled
11prior to the adoption of those regulations.
12(f) This section shall apply only to fees due for the 2013 and
13earlier reporting periods.
14(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
15and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
16is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25205.16 of the Health and Safety Code is
19amended to read:
(a) (1) The department may impose an annual
21verification fee upon all generators, transporters, and facility
22operators with 50 or more employees that possess a valid
23identification number issued either by the department or by the
24Environmental Protection Agency. The fee charged shall be one
25hundred fifty dollars ($150) for each generator, transporter, and
26facility operator with 50 or more employees, but less than 75
27employees; one hundred seventy-five dollars ($175) for each
28generator, transporter, and facility operator with 75 or more
29employees, but less than 100 employees; two hundred dollars
30($200) for each generator, transporter, and facility operator with
31100 or more employees,
but less than 250 employees; two hundred
32twenty-five dollars ($225) for each generator, transporter, and
33facility operator with 250 or more employees, but less than 500
34employees; two hundred fifty dollars ($250) for each generator,
35transporter, and facility operator with 500 or more employees.
36However, no generator, transporter, or facility operator shall be
37assessed fees pursuant to this section that exceed, in total, five
38thousand dollars ($5,000).
39(2) The generator, transporter, or facility operator subject to the
40fee shall submit payment of the fee within 30 days from the date
P84 1of receiving a notice of assessment from the department. The notice
2shall be sent once during each fiscal year to each holder of a valid
3identification number. The fee imposed by this section shall be
4deposited in the Hazardous Waste Control Account and be
5available
for expenditure, upon appropriation by the Legislature.
6For purposes of this section, “employee” shall have the same
7meaning set forth in Section 25205.6.
8(b) The department shall establish an identification number
9certification system to biennially verify the accuracy of information
10related to generators, transporters, and facilities authorized to treat,
11store, or dispose of hazardous waste. However, if the number of
12identification numbers issued since the previous certification
13exceeds 20 percent of the active identification numbers, the
14department may implement an annual certification. Each entity
15issued an identification number shall provide or verify the
16information specified in paragraphs (1) to (9), inclusive, when
17requested by the department. The system shall include the provision
18or verification of all of the following
information:
19(1) The name, mailing address, facsimile number, fictitious
20business name, federal employer number, State Board of
21Equalization identification number, SIC code, electronic mail
22address, if available, and telephone number of the firm or
23organization engaged in hazardous waste activities.
24(2) The name, mailing address, facsimile number, and telephone
25number of the owner of the firm or organization.
26(3) The name, title, mailing address, facsimile number, and
27telephone number of a contact person for the firm or organization.
28(4) The identification number assigned to the firm or
29organization.
30(5) The site location address or description associated with the
31firm or organization’s identification number provided in paragraph
32(4).
33(6) The number of employees of the firm or organization.
34(7) If the firm or organization is a generator, a statement of
35whether the generator produces RCRA hazardous waste or
36non-RCRA hazardous waste.
37(8) An identification of any of the following hazardous waste
38activities in which the firm or organization is engaged:
39(A) Generation.
40(B) Transportation.
P85 1(C) Onsite treatment, storage, or disposal.
2(9) The waste codes associated with the four largest hazardous
3waste streams, by volume, of the firm or organization. The federal
4waste code shall be verified for RCRA hazardous waste and the
5California waste code shall be verified for non-RCRA hazardous
6waste.
7(c) Any generator, transporter, and facility operator who fails
8to comply with this section, or who fails to provide information
9required by the department to verify the accuracy of hazardous
10waste activity data, shall be subject to suspension of any and all
11identification numbers assigned to the generator, transporter, or
12facility operator and to any other authorized enforcement action.
13(d) This section shall apply only to fees due for the 2013 and
14earlier
reporting periods.
15(e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
16and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
17is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25205.16 is added to the Health and Safety
20Code, to read:
(a) The department shall establish an identification
22number certification system to annually verify the accuracy of
23information related to generators, transporters, and facilities
24authorized to treat, store, or dispose of hazardous waste. Each
25entity issued an identification number shall provide or verify the
26information specified in paragraphs (1) to (9), inclusive, when
27requested by the department. The system shall include the provision
28or verification of all of the following information:
29(1) The name, mailing address, facsimile number, fictitious
30business name, federal employer number, State Board of
31Equalization identification number, SIC code, electronic mail
32address,
if available, and telephone number of the firm or
33organization engaged in hazardous waste activities.
34(2) The name, mailing address, facsimile number, and telephone
35number of the owner of the firm or organization.
36(3) The name, title, mailing address, facsimile number, and
37telephone number of a contact person for the firm or organization.
38(4) The identification number assigned to the firm or
39organization.
P86 1(5) The site location address or description associated with the
2firm or organization’s identification number provided in paragraph
3(4).
4(6) The number of employees of the firm or organization.
5(7) If the firm or organization is a generator, a statement of
6whether the generator produces RCRA hazardous waste or
7non-RCRA hazardous waste.
8(8) An identification of any of the following hazardous waste
9activities in which the firm or organization is engaged:
10(A) Generation.
11(B) Transportation.
12(C) Onsite treatment, storage, or disposal.
13(9) The waste codes associated with the four largest hazardous
14waste streams, by volume, of the firm or organization. The federal
15waste code shall be verified for RCRA hazardous waste and the
16California
waste code shall be verified for non-RCRA hazardous
17waste.
18(b) Any generator, transporter, and facility operator who fails
19to comply with this section, or who fails to provide information
20required by the department to verify the accuracy of hazardous
21waste activity data, shall be subject to suspension of any and all
22identification numbers assigned to the generator, transporter, or
23facility operator and to any other authorized enforcement action.
24(c) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
25shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
26thereafter, including the prepayments due following the reporting
27period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
28the reporting period.
Section 25205.18 of the Health and Safety Code is
31amended to read:
(a) If a facility has a permit or an interim status
33document that sets forth the facility’s allowable capacity for
34treatment or storage, the facility’s size for purposes of the annual
35facility fee pursuant to Section 25205.2 shall be based upon that
36capacity, except as provided in subdivision (d).
37(b) If a facility’s allowable capacity changes or is initially
38established as a result of a permit modification, or a submission
39of a certification pursuant to subdivision (d), the fee that is due for
P87 1the reporting period in which the change occurs shall be
the higher
2fee.
3(c) The department may require the facility to submit an
4application to modify its permit to provide for an allowable
5capacity.
6(d) A facility may reduce its allowable capacity below the
7amounts specified in subdivision (a) or (c) by submitting a
8certification signed by the owner or operator in which the owner
9or operator pledges that the facility will not handle hazardous waste
10at a capacity above the amount specified in the certification. In
11that case, the facility’s size for purposes of the annual facility fee
12pursuant to Section 25205.2 shall be based upon the capacity
13specified in the certification, until the certification is withdrawn.
14Exceeding the capacity limits specified in a certification that has
15not been withdrawn shall
be a violation of the hazardous waste
16control law and may subject a facility or its operator to a penalty
17and corrective action as provided in this chapter, including, but
18not limited to, an augmentation pursuant to Section 25191.1.
19(e) This section shall have no bearing on the imposition of the
20annual postclosure facility fee.
Section 25205.19 of the Health and Safety Code is
23amended to read:
(a) If a facility has a permit or an interim status
25document that sets forth the facility’s type, pursuant to Section
2625205.1, as either treatment, storage, or disposal, the facility’s
27type for purposes of the annual facility fee pursuant to Section
2825205.2 shall be rebuttably presumed to be what is set forth in that
29permit or document.
30(b) If the facility’s type changes as a result of a permit or interim
31status modification, any change in the annual fee shall be effective
32the reporting period following the one in which the modification
33becomes effective.
34(c) If the facility’s
permit or interim status document does not
35set forth its type, the department may require the facility to submit
36an application to modify the permit or interim status document to
37provide for a facility type.
38(d) A permit or interim status document may set forth more than
39one facility type or size. In accordance with subdivision (d) of
P88 1Section 25205.4, the facility shall be subject only to the highest
2applicable fee.
Section 25205.20 of the Health and Safety Code is
5repealed.
Section 25205.21 of the Health and Safety Code is
8amended to read:
(a) Notwithstanding Section 25205.4, a disposal
10facility operator that is a government agency shall be subject to a
11maximum facility fee pursuant to Section 25205.2 of ten thousand
12dollars ($10,000) for any reporting period of 12 months and five
13thousand dollars ($5,000) for any reporting period of six months,
14for that disposal facility for any reporting period in which it did
15not at any time dispose of hazardous waste therein. This section
16shall apply to all reporting periods since the inception of the facility
17fee.
18(b) This section shall not affect the imposition of the annual
19postclosure facility fee pursuant to Section
25205.2.
Section 25205.22 of the Health and Safety Code is
22amended to read:
(a) Prior to January 1, 1996, any person transporting,
24importing, or receiving non-RCRA hazardous waste imported into
25this state for purposes of treatment, recycling, or disposal shall be
26considered the generator of that waste and the facility shall be
27considered the site of generation for purposes of payment of the
28generator fee pursuant to Section 25205.5, and the facility operator
29shall pay the applicable generator fee even if the operator has also
30paid a facility fee, but no generator fee shall be assessed for
31non-RCRA hazardous waste imported prior to January 1, 1994.
32(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (c), any fees due pursuant to
33this chapter
for calendar year 1995 and which are due and payable
34in calendar year 1996 shall be paid in 1996 in accordance with
35Section 43152.7 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
36(c) On and after January 1, 1996, any person transporting,
37importing, or receiving non-RCRA hazardous waste imported into
38this state for purposes of treatment, recycling, or disposal shall be
39exempt from the payment of the generator fee imposed pursuant
P89 1to Section 25205.5 and the generator surcharge imposed pursuant
2to Section 25205.9.
3(d) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
4reporting periods, including the prepayments due during each
5reporting period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable
6by February 28 of the year following each reporting period.
7(e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
8and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
9is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25205.22 is added to the Health and Safety
12Code, to read:
(a) On and after January 1, 2014, for hazardous
14waste imported into this state for purposes of treatment, recycling,
15or disposal, the operator of the facility receiving the imported
16hazardous waste shall pay the applicable generation and handling
17fee.
18(b) This section shall initially apply to the annual generation
19and handling fees due for the 2014 reporting period. This includes
20the prepayments due during the reporting period and the final
21reconciliation fee due and payable by February 28 of the year
22following the reporting period.
23(c) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014.
Section 25207.12 of the Health and Safety Code is
26amended to read:
(a) Any eligible participant who submits banned,
28unregistered, or outdated agricultural wastes for collection in a
29program established pursuant to this article is exempt from the
30fees and reimbursements required by Sections 25174.1, 25205.2,
3125205.5, and 25205.7, with regard to the wastes submitted for
32collection.
33(b) An eligible participant who submits banned, unregistered,
34or outdated agricultural wastes for collection is exempt from the
35hazardous waste facilities permit requirements of Section 25201
36with regard to the management of the wastes submitted for
37collection.
38(c) A county operating a collection program in compliance with
39this article shall not be held liable in any cost recovery action
40brought pursuant to Section 25360 for any hazardous waste which
P90 1has been properly handled and transported to an authorized
2hazardous waste treatment or disposal facility, in compliance with
3this chapter, at a location other than that of the collection program.
4(d) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
5and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
6is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25207.12 is added to the Health and Safety
9Code, to read:
(a) Any eligible participant who submits banned,
11unregistered, or outdated agricultural wastes for collection in a
12program established pursuant to this article is exempt from the
13fees and reimbursements required by Sections 25205.2, 25205.5,
14and 25205.7, with regard to the wastes submitted for collection.
15(b) An eligible participant who submits banned, unregistered,
16or outdated agricultural wastes for collection is exempt from the
17hazardous waste facilities permit requirements of Section 25201
18with regard to the management of the wastes submitted for
19collection.
20(c) A county operating a collection
program in compliance with
21this article shall not be held liable in any cost recovery action
22brought pursuant to Section 25360 for any hazardous waste that
23has been properly handled and transported to an authorized
24hazardous waste treatment or disposal facility, in compliance with
25this chapter, at a location other than that of the collection program.
26(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
27shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
28thereafter, including the prepayments due following the reporting
29period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
30the reporting period.
Section 25247 of the Health and Safety Code is
33amended to read:
(a) The department shall review each plan submitted
35pursuant to Section 25246 and shall approve the plan if it finds
36that the plan complies with the regulations adopted by the
37department and complies with all other applicable state and federal
38regulations.
39(b) The department shall not approve the plan until at least one
40of the following occurs:
P91 1(1) The plan has been approved pursuant to Section 13227 of
2the Water Code.
3(2) Sixty days expire after the owner or operator of an interim
4status facility submits the plan
to the department. If the department
5denies approval of a plan for an interim status facility, this 60-day
6period shall not begin until the owner or operator resubmits the
7plan to the department.
8(3) The director finds that immediate approval of the plan is
9necessary to protect public health, safety, or the environment.
10(c) Any action taken by the department pursuant to this section
11is subject to Section 25204.5.
12(d) (1) To the extent consistent with the federal act, the
13department shall impose the requirements of a hazardous waste
14facility postclosure plan on the owner or operator of a facility
15through the issuance of an enforcement order, entering into an
16enforceable agreement, or issuing a postclosure
permit.
17(A) A hazardous waste facility postclosure plan imposed or
18modified pursuant to an enforcement order, a permit, or an
19enforceable agreement shall be approved in compliance with the
20California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing
21with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).
22(B) Before the department initially approves or significantly
23modifies a hazardous waste facility postclosure plan pursuant to
24this subdivision, the department shall provide a meaningful
25opportunity for public involvement, which, at a minimum, shall
26include public notice and an opportunity for public comment on
27the proposed action.
28(C) For the purposes of subparagraph (B), a “significant
29modification” is a modification
that the department determines
30would constitute a class 3 permit modification if the change were
31being proposed to a hazardous waste facilities permit. In
32determining whether the proposed modification would constitute
33a class 3 modification, the department shall consider the similarity
34of the modification to class 3 modifications codified in Appendix
35I of Chapter 20 (commencing with Section 66270.1) of Division
364.5 of Title 22 of the California Code of Regulations. In
37determining whether the proposed modification would constitute
38a class 3 modification, the department shall also consider whether
39there is significant public concern about the proposed modification,
40and whether the proposed change is so substantial or complex in
P92 1nature that the modification requires the more extensive procedures
2of a class 3 permit modification.
3(2) This subdivision does not limit or delay the authority of the
4department to order any action necessary at a facility to protect
5public health or safety.
6(3) If the department imposes a hazardous waste facility
7postclosure plan in the form of an enforcement order or enforceable
8agreement, in lieu of issuing or renewing a postclosure permit, the
9owner or operator who submits the plan for approval shall, at the
10time the plan is submitted, enter into a cost reimbursement
11agreement pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 25205.7 and upon
12commencement of the postclosure period shall pay the fee required
13by paragraph (9) of subdivision (c) of Section 25205.4. For
14purposes of this paragraph and paragraph (9) of subdivision (c) of
15Section 25205.4, the commencement of the postclosure period
16shall be the effective date of the
postclosure permit, enforcement
17order, or enforceable agreement.
18(4) In addition to any other remedy available under state law to
19enforce a postclosure plan imposed in the form of an enforcement
20order or enforcement agreement, the department may take any of
21the following actions:
22(A) File an action to enjoin a threatened or continuing violation
23of a requirement of the enforcement order or agreement.
24(B) Require compliance with requirements for corrective action
25or other emergency response measures that the department deems
26necessary to protect human health and the environment.
27(C) Assess or file an action to recover civil penalties and fines
28for a violation
of a requirement of an enforcement order or
29agreement.
30(e) Subdivision (d) does not apply to a postclosure plan for
31which a final or draft permit has been issued by the department on
32or before December 31, 2003, unless the department and the facility
33mutually agree to replace the permit with an enforcement order or
34enforceable agreement pursuant to the provisions of subdivision
35(d).
36(f) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3), the
37department may only impose postclosure plan requirements through
38an enforcement order or an enforceable agreement pursuant to
39subdivision (d) until January 1, 2009.
P93 1(2) This subdivision does not apply to an enforcement order or
2enforceable agreement
issued prior to January 1, 2009, or an order
3or agreement for which a public notice is issued on or before
4January 1, 2009.
5(3) This subdivision does not apply to the modification on or
6after January 1, 2009, of an enforcement order or enforceable
7agreement that meets the conditions in paragraph (2).
8(g) If the department determines that a postclosure permit is
9necessary to enforce a postclosure plan, the department may, at
10any time, rescind and replace an enforcement order or an
11enforceable agreement issued pursuant to this section by issuing
12a postclosure permit for the hazardous waste facility, in accordance
13with the procedures specified in the department’s regulations for
14the issuance of postclosure permits.
15(h) Nothing in this section may be construed to limit or delay
16the authority of the department to order any action necessary at a
17facility to protect public health or safety, or the environment.
Section 25250.24 of the Health and Safety Code is
20amended to read:
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), any person
22who generates, receives, stores, transfers, transports, treats, or
23recycles used oil, unless specifically exempted or unless the used
24oil is not regulated by the department pursuant to subdivision (b)
25of Section 25250.1, shall comply with all provisions of this chapter.
26(b) Used oil which is removed from a motor vehicle and which
27is subsequently recycled, by a recycler who is permitted pursuant
28to this article, shall not be included in the calculation of the amount
29of hazardous waste generated for purposes of the generator fee
30imposed pursuant to Section 25205.5.
31(c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
32and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
33is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 25250.24 is added to the Health and Safety
36Code, to read:
(a) A person who generates, receives, stores,
38transfers, transports, treats, or recycles used oil, unless specifically
39exempted or unless the used oil is not regulated by the department
P94 1pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 25250.1, shall comply with
2all provisions of this chapter.
3(b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
4shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
5thereafter, including the prepayments due following the reporting
6period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
7the reporting period.
Section 44299.91 of the Health and Safety Code is
10amended to read:
Of the funds appropriated pursuant to Item
123900-001-6053 of Section 2.00 of the Budget Act of 2007, the
13State Air Resources Board shall allocate the funds in accordance
14with all of the following:
15(a) All schoolbuses in operation in the state of model year 1976
16or earlier shall be replaced.
17(b) (1) The funds remaining after the allocation made pursuant
18to subdivision (a) shall be apportioned to local air quality
19management districts and air pollution control districts based on
20the number of schoolbuses of model years 1977 to 1986, inclusive,
21that are in operation within each district.
22(2) Each district shall determine the percentage of its allocation
23to spend between replacement of schoolbuses of model years 1977
24to 1986, inclusive, and retrofit of schoolbuses of any model year.
25Of the funds spent by a district for replacement of schoolbuses
26pursuant to this paragraph, a district shall replace the oldest
27schoolbuses of model years 1977 to 1986, inclusive, within the
28district. Of the funds spent by a district for retrofit of schoolbuses
29pursuant to this paragraph, a district shall retrofit the most polluting
30schoolbuses within the district.
31(c) All schoolbuses replaced pursuant to this section shall be
32scrapped.
33(d) These funds shall be administered by either the California
34Energy Commission or the
local air district.
35(e) If a local air district’s funds, including accrued interest, are
36not committed by an executed contract as reported to the State Air
37Resources Board on or before June 30, 2012, then those funds
38shall be transferred, on or before January 1, 2013, to another local
39air district that demonstrates an ability to expend the funds by
40January 1, 2014. In implementing this section, the State Air
P95 1Resources Board in consultation with the local air districts shall,
2by September 30, 2012, establish a list of potential recipient local
3air districts, prioritizing local air districts with the most polluting
4school buses and the greatest need for school bus funding.
5(f) Each allocation made pursuant to this section to a local air
6district shall provide enough funding for at
least one project to be
7implemented pursuant to the Lower-Emission School Bus Program
8adopted by the State Air Resources Board. In the event a local air
9district has unspent funds as of January 1, 2014, the local air district
10shall work with the State Air Resources Board to transfer the
11unspent funds to an alternative local air district with existing
12demand.
13(g) Funds made available pursuant to this chapter to a local air
14district shall be expended by June 30, 2014.
15(h) All funds not expended by a local air district by June 30,
162014, shall be returned to the State Air Resources Board.
17(i) Funds authorized by the State Air Resources Board during
18or subsequent to the 2013-14 fiscal year shall be allocated to local
19air
districts by prioritizing to retrofit or replace the most polluting
20schoolbuses in small local air districts first and then medium local
21air districts as defined by the State Air Resources Board. Each
22allocation shall provide sufficient funding for at least one project
23to be implemented pursuant to the Lower-Emission School Bus
24Program adopted by the State Air Resources Board. If a local air
25district has unspent funds within six months of the expenditure
26deadline, the local air district shall work with the State Air
27Resources Board to transfer those funds to an alternative local air
28district with existing demand.
Section 12211 of the Public Contract Code is amended
31to read:
(a) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), a state
33agency shall report annually to the board its progress in meeting
34the recycled product purchasing requirements using the SABRC
35report format provided by the Department of Resources Recycling
36and Recovery.
37(2) The reporting requirement in paragraph (1) does not apply
38to the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
P96 1(b) On or before October 31 of each year, the department shall
2provide to the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery
3the following information:
4(1) A list, by category, of individual reportable recycled
5products, materials, goods, and supplies that were available for
6purchase by state agencies from a statewide-use contract,
7agreement, or schedule during the previous fiscal year.
8(2) A list, by category, of all reportable products, materials,
9goods, and supplies that were available for purchase by state
10agencies from a statewide-use contract, agreement, or schedule,
11including contract, agreement, or schedule tracking numbers,
12during the previous fiscal year.
Section 4124 of the Public Resources Code is
15repealed.
Section 4515 of the Public Resources Code is
18repealed.
Section 4785 of the Public Resources Code is
21amended to read:
The department shall from time to time prepare reports
23setting forth data as to experiments conducted and the department’s
24findings and conclusions with reference to those experiments and
25submit these reports to the board for its guidance and assistance
26in determining the policy to be followed by the board with
27reference to range and forage lands.
Section 5018.1 of the Public Resources Code is
30amended to read:
(a) Notwithstanding any other law, the Department
32of Finance may delegate to the department the right to exercise
33the same authority granted to the Division of the State Architect
34and the Real Estate Services Division in the Department of General
35Services, to plan, design, construct, and administer contracts and
36professional services for legislatively approved capital outlay
37projects.
38(b) Any right afforded to the department pursuant to subdivision
39(a) to exercise project planning, design, construction, and
40administration of contracts and professional services may be
P97 1revoked, in whole or in part, by the Department of Finance at any
2time prior
to January 1, 2019.
3(c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2019,
4and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
5is enacted before January 1, 2019, deletes or extends that date.
Section 5080.18 of the Public Resources Code is
8amended to read:
All concession contracts entered into pursuant to this
10article shall contain, but are not limited to, all of the following
11provisions:
12(a) (1) The maximum term shall be 10 years, except that a term
13of more than 10 years may be provided if the director determines
14that the longer term is necessary to allow the concessionaire to
15amortize improvements made by the concessionaire, to facilitate
16the full utilization of a structure that is scheduled by the department
17for replacement or redevelopment, or to serve the best interests of
18the state. The term shall not exceed 20 years without specific
19authorization by statute.
20(2) The maximum term shall be 50 years if the concession
21contract is for the construction, development, and operation of
22multiple-unit lodging facilities equipped with full amenities,
23including plumbing and electrical, that is anticipated to exceed an
24initial cost of one million five hundred thousand dollars
25($1,500,000) in capital improvements in order to begin operation.
26The term for a concession contract described in this paragraph
27shall not exceed 50 years without specific authorization by statute.
28(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), a concession agreement at
29Will Rogers State Beach executed prior to December 31, 1997,
30including, but not limited to, an agreement signed pursuant to
31Section 25907 of the Government Code, may be extended to exceed
3220 years in total length without
specific authorization by statute,
33upon approval by the director and pursuant to a determination by
34the director that the longer term is necessary to allow the
35concessionaire to amortize improvements made by the
36concessionaire that are anticipated to exceed one million five
37hundred thousand dollars ($1,500,000) in capital improvements.
38Any extensions granted pursuant to this paragraph shall not be for
39more than 15 years.
P98 1(b) Every concessionaire shall submit to the department all sales
2and use tax returns.
3(c) Every concession shall be subject to audit by the department.
4(d) A performance bond shall be obtained and maintained by
5the concessionaire. In lieu of a bond, the concessionaire may
6substitute a deposit of
funds acceptable to the department. Interest
7on the deposit shall accrue to the concessionaire.
8(e) The concessionaire shall obtain and maintain in force at all
9times a policy of liability insurance in an amount adequate for the
10nature and extent of public usage of the concession and naming
11the state as an additional insured.
12(f) Any discrimination by the concessionaire or his or her agents
13or employees against any person because of the marital status or
14ancestry of that person or any characteristic listed or defined in
15Section 11135 of the Government Code is prohibited.
16(g) To be effective, any modification of the concession contract
17shall be evidenced in writing.
18(h) Whenever a concession contract is terminated for substantial
19breach, there shall be no obligation on the part of the state to
20purchase any improvements made by the concessionaire.
Section 5096.650 of the Public Resources Code is
23amended to read:
The one billion two hundred seventy-five million
25dollars ($1,275,000,000) allocated pursuant to subdivision (c) of
26Section 5096.610 shall be available for the acquisition and
27development of land, air, and water resources in accordance with
28the following schedule:
29(a) Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code,
30the sum of three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) is
31continuously appropriated to the Wildlife Conservation Board for
32the acquisition, development, rehabilitation, restoration, and
33protection of habitat that promotes the recovery of threatened and
34endangered species, that provides corridors linking separate habitat
35areas to prevent
habitat fragmentation, and that protects significant
36natural landscapes and ecosystems such as old growth redwoods
37and oak woodlands and other significant habitat areas; and for
38grants and related state administrative costs pursuant to the Wildlife
39Conservation Law of 1947 (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section
401300) of Division 2 of the Fish and Game Code). Funds scheduled
P99 1in this subdivision may be used to prepare management plans for
2properties acquired in fee by the Wildlife Conservation Board.
3(b) The sum of four hundred forty-five million dollars
4($445,000,000) to the conservancies in accordance with the
5particular provisions of the statute creating each conservancy for
6the acquisition, development, rehabilitation, restoration, and
7protection of land and water resources; for grants and state
8administrative costs; and in accordance with the
following
9schedule:
|
(1) |
To the State Coastal Conservancy |
$200,000,000 |
|
(2) |
To the California Tahoe Conservancy |
$ 40,000,000 |
|
(3) |
To the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy |
$ 40,000,000 |
|
(4) |
To the Coachella Valley Mountains Conservancy |
$ 20,000,000 |
|
(5) |
To the San Joaquin River Conservancy |
$ 25,000,000 |
|
(6) |
To the San Gabriel and Lower Los Angeles Rivers and Mountains Conservancy |
$ 40,000,000 |
|
(7) |
To the Baldwin Hills Conservancy |
$ 40,000,000 |
|
(8) |
To the San Francisco Bay Area Conservancy Program |
$ 40,000,000 |
22(c) The
sum of three hundred seventy-five million dollars
23($375,000,000) shall be available for grants to public agencies and
24nonprofit organizations for acquisition, development, restoration,
25and associated planning, permitting, and administrative costs for
26the protection and restoration of water resources in accordance
27with the following schedule:
28(1) The sum of seventy-five million dollars ($75,000,000) to
29the secretary for the acquisition and development of river parkways
30and for protecting urban streams. The secretary shall make funds
31available in accordance with Sections 7048 and 78682.2 of the
32Water Code, and pursuant to any other applicable statutory
33authorization. Not less than five million dollars ($5,000,000) shall
34be available for grants for the urban streams program, pursuant to
35Section 7048 of the Water Code.
36(2) The sum of three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000)
37shall be available for the purposes of clean beaches, watershed
38protection, and water quality projects to protect beaches, coastal
39waters, rivers, lakes, and streams from contaminants, pollution,
40and other environmental threats.
P100 1(d) (1) The sum of fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) to the
2State Air Resources Board for grants to air districts pursuant to
3Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 44275) of Part 5 of Division
426 of the Health and Safety Code for projects that reduce air
5pollution that affects air quality in state and local park and
6recreation areas. Eligible projects shall meet the requirements of
7Section 16727 of the Government Code and shall be consistent
8with Section 43023.5 of the Health
and Safety Code, if Assembly
9Bill 1390 of the 2001-02 Regular Session of the Legislature is
10enacted on or before January 1, 2003. Each air district shall be
11eligible for grants of not less than two hundred thousand dollars
12($200,000). Not more than 5 percent of the funds allocated to an
13air district may be used to cover the costs associated with
14implementing the grant program.
15(2) Allocations of funds pursuant to this subdivision to the
16Lower-Emission School Bus Program shall be prioritized to retrofit
17or replace the most polluting schoolbuses in small air districts first
18and then to medium air districts as defined by the State Air
19Resources Board. Each allocation for this purpose shall provide
20enough funding for at least one project to be implemented pursuant
21to the Lower-Emission School Bus Program adopted by the State
22Air Resources
Board. If a local air district has unspent funds within
23six months of the expenditure deadline, the air district shall work
24with the State Air Resources Board to transfer funds to an
25alternative air district with existing demand.
26(e) The sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) to the
27California Conservation Corps for the acquisition, development,
28restoration, and rehabilitation of land and water resources, and for
29grants and state administrative costs in accordance with the
30following schedule:
31(1) The sum of five million dollars ($5,000,000) shall be
32available for resource conservation activities.
33(2) The sum of fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000) shall be
34available for grants to local conservation corps for
acquisition and
35development of facilities to support local conservation corps
36programs.
37(f) The sum of seventy-five million dollars ($75,000,000) shall
38be available for grants for the preservation of agricultural lands
39and grazing lands, including oak woodlands and grasslands.
P101 1(g) The sum of ten million dollars ($10,000,000) to the
2Department of Forestry and Fire Protection for grants for urban
3forestry programs pursuant to the California Urban Forestry Act
4of 1978 (Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 4799.06) of Part
52.5 of Division 1).
Section 14538 of the Public Resources Code is
8amended to read:
(a) (1) The department shall certify the operators of
10recycling centers pursuant to this section.
11(2) The department shall review whether an application for
12certification or renewal is complete within 30 working days of
13receipt, including compliance with subdivision (c). If the
14department deems an application complete, the department shall
15approve or deny the application no later than 60 calendar days
16after the date when the application was deemed complete.
17 (b) The director shall adopt, by regulation, a procedure for the
18certification of recycling centers, including
standards and
19requirements for certification. These regulations shall require that
20all information be submitted to the department under penalty of
21perjury. A recycling center shall meet all of the standards and
22requirements contained in the regulations for certification. The
23regulations shall require, but shall not be limited to requiring, that
24all of the following conditions be met for certification:
25(1) The operator of the recycling center demonstrates, to the
26satisfaction of the department, that the operator will operate in
27accordance with this division.
28(2) If one or more certified entities have operated at the same
29location within the past five years, the operations at the location
30of the recycling center exhibit, to the satisfaction of the department,
31a pattern of
operation in compliance with the requirements of this
32division and regulations adopted pursuant to this division.
33(3) The operator of the recycling center notifies the department
34promptly of any material change in the nature of his or her
35operations which conflicts with information submitted in the
36operator’s application for certification.
37(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2014, an applicant for
38certification as a recycling center, and a recycling center applying
39for renewal of a certification, shall complete the precertification
40training program required by this subdivision and meet all other
P102 1qualification requirements prescribed by the department, which
2may include, but are not limited to, requiring the applicant to obtain
3a passing score on an examination
administered by the department.
4(2) The department may use staff or industry experts, or may
5seek expertise available in other state agencies, to provide the
6training program required by this subdivision, which shall include
7providing technical assistance to better prepare recycling centers
8for successful participation in this division, thereby reducing the
9potential for errors, fraud, or other activities that compromise the
10integrity of the implementation of this division.
11 (d) A certified recycling center shall comply with all of the
12following requirements for operation:
13(1) The operator of the recycling center shall not pay a refund
14value for, or receive a refund value from any processor for, any
15food or drink
packaging material or any beverage container or
16other product that does not have a refund value established pursuant
17to Section 14560.
18(2) The operator of a recycling center shall take those actions
19that satisfy the department to prevent the payment of a refund value
20for any food or drink packaging material or any beverage container
21or other product that does not have a refund value established
22pursuant to Section 14560.
23(3) Unless exempted pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section
2414572, a certified recycling center shall accept, and pay at least
25the refund value for, all empty beverage containers, regardless of
26type.
27(4) A certified recycling center shall not pay any refund values,
28processing payments, or
administrative fees to a noncertified
29recycler.
30(5) A certified recycling center shall not pay any refund values,
31processing payments, or administrative fees on empty beverage
32containers or other containers that the certified recycling center
33knew, or should have known, were coming into the state from out
34of the state.
35(6) A certified recycling center shall not claim refund values,
36
processing payments, or administrative fees on empty beverage
37containers that the certified recycling center knew, or should have
38known, were received from noncertified recyclers or on beverage
39containers that the certified recycling center knew, or should have
40known, come from out of the state.
P103 1(7) A certified recycling center shall prepare and maintain the
2following documents involving empty beverage containers, as
3specified by the department by regulation:
4(A) Shipping reports that are required to be prepared by the
5recycling center, or that are required to be obtained from other
6recycling centers.
7(B) Consumer transaction receipts.
8(C) Consumer transaction logs.
9(D) Rejected container receipts on materials subject to this
10division.
11(E) Receipts for transactions with beverage manufacturers on
12materials subject to this division.
13(F) Receipts for transactions with beverage distributors on
14materials subject to this division.
15(G) Documents authorizing the recycling center to cancel empty
16beverage containers.
17(H) Weight tickets.
18(8) In addition to the requirements of paragraph (7), a certified
19recycling center shall cooperate with the department and make
20available
its records of scrap transactions when the review of these
21records is necessary for an audit or investigation by the department.
22 (e) The department may recover, in restitution pursuant to
23paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) of Section 14591.2, payments
24made from the fund to the certified recycling center pursuant to
25Section 14573.5 that are based on the documents specified in
26paragraph (7), that are not prepared or maintained in compliance
27with the department’s regulations, and that do not allow the
28department to verify claims for program payments.
29 (f) The department may certify a recycling center that will
30operate less than 30 hours a week, as specified in paragraph (2) of
31subdivision (b) of Section 14571.
Section 14539 of the Public Resources Code is
34amended to read:
(a) (1) The department shall certify processors pursuant
36to this section.
37(2) The department shall review whether an application for
38certification or renewal is complete within 30 working days of
39receipt, including compliance with subdivision (c). If the
40department deems an application complete, the department shall
P104 1approve or deny the application no later than 60 calendar days
2after the date when the application was deemed complete.
3 (b) The director shall adopt, by regulation, requirements and
4standards for certification. The regulations shall require, but shall
5
not be limited to requiring, that all of the following conditions be
6met for certification:
7(1) The processor demonstrates to the satisfaction of the
8department that the processor will operate in accordance with this
9division.
10(2) If one or more certified entities have operated at the same
11location within the past five years, the operations at the location
12of the processor exhibit, to the satisfaction of the department, a
13pattern of operation in compliance with the requirements of this
14division and regulations adopted pursuant to this division.
15(3) The processor notifies the department promptly of any
16material change in the nature of the processor’s operations that
17conflicts with the information submitted in the
operator’s
18application for certification.
19(c) (1) On and after January 1, 2014, an applicant for
20certification as a processor and a processor applying for renewal
21of a certification shall complete the precertification training
22program required by this subdivision and meet all other
23qualification requirements prescribed by the department, which
24may include, but are not limited to, requiring the applicant to obtain
25a passing score on an examination administered by the department.
26(2) The department may use staff or industry experts, or may
27seek expertise available in other state agencies, to provide the
28training program required by this subdivision, which shall include
29providing technical assistance to better prepare processors for
30successful
participation in this division, thereby reducing the
31potential for errors, fraud, or other activities which compromise
32the integrity of the implementation of this division.
33 (d) A certified processor shall comply with all of the following
34requirements for operation:
35(1) The processor shall not pay a refund value for, or receive a
36refund value from the department for, any food or drink packaging
37material or any beverage container or other product that does not
38have a refund value established pursuant to Section 14560.
39(2) The processor shall take those actions that satisfy the
40department to prevent the payment of a refund value for any food
P105 1or drink packaging material or any beverage container or other
2product that does not
have a refund value established pursuant to
3Section 14560.
4(3) Unless exempted pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section
514572, the processor shall accept, and pay at least the refund value
6for, all empty beverage containers, regardless of type, for which
7the processor is certified.
8(4) A processor shall not pay any refund values, processing
9payments, or administrative fees to a noncertified recycler. A
10processor may pay refund values, processing payments, or
11administrative fees to any entity that is identified by the department
12on its list of certified recycling centers.
13(5) A processor shall not pay any refund values, processing
14payments, or administrative fees on empty beverage containers or
15other containers that
the processor knew, or should have known,
16were coming into the state from out of the state.
17(6) A processor shall not claim refund values, processing
18payments, or administrative fees on empty beverage containers
19that the processor knew, or should have known, were received
20from noncertified recyclers or on beverage containers that the
21processor knew, or should have known, come from out of the state.
22A processor may claim refund values, processing payments, or
23administrative fees on any empty beverage container that does not
24come from out of the state and that is received from any entity that
25is identified by the department on its list of certified recycling
26centers.
27(7) A processor shall take the actions necessary and approved
28by the department to cancel containers to render them
unfit for
29redemption.
30(8) A processor shall prepare or maintain the following
31documents involving empty beverage containers, as specified by
32the department by regulation:
33(A) Shipping reports that are required to be prepared by the
34processor or that are required to be obtained from recycling centers.
35(B) Processor invoice reports.
36(C) Cancellation verification documents.
37(D) Documents authorizing recycling centers to cancel empty
38beverage containers.
39(E) Processor-to-processor transaction receipts.
P106 1(F) Rejected container receipts on materials subject to this
2division.
3(G) Receipts for transactions with beverage manufacturers on
4materials subject to this division.
5(H) Receipts for transactions with distributors on materials
6subject to this division.
7(I) Weight tickets.
8(9) In addition to the requirements of paragraph (7), a processor
9shall cooperate with the department and make available its records
10of scrap transactions when the review of these records is necessary
11for an audit or investigation by the department.
12 (e) The
department may recover, in restitution pursuant to
13paragraph (5) of subdivision (c) of Section 14591.2, any payments
14made by the department to the processor pursuant to Section 14573
15that are based on the documents specified in paragraph (8) of
16subdivision (b) of this section, that are not prepared or maintained
17in compliance with the department’s regulations, and that do not
18allow the department to verify claims for program payments.
Section 14549.5 of the Public Resources Code is
21amended to read:
On or before April 1, 2004, and annually thereafter,
23or more frequently as determined to be necessary by the
24department, the department shall review and, if necessary in order
25to ensure payment of the most accurate commingled rate feasible,
26recalculate commingled rates paid for beverage containers and
27postfilled containers paid to curbside recycling programs and
28collection programs. Prior to recalculating a commingled rate
29pursuant to this section, the department shall do all of the
30following:
31(a) Consult with private and public operators of curbside
32recycling programs and collection programs concerning the size
33of the statewide sample, appropriate
sampling methodologies, and
34alternatives to exclusive reliance on a statewide commingled rate.
35(b) At least 60 days prior to the effective date of any new
36commingled rate, hold a public hearing, after giving notice, to
37make available to the public and affected parties the department’s
38review and any proposed recalculations of the commingled rate.
39(c) At least 60 days prior to the effective date of any new
40commingled rate, and upon the request of any party, make available
P107 1documentation or studies which were prepared as part of the
2department’s review of a commingled rate.
3(d) (1) Notwithstanding this division, the department may
4calculate a curbside recycling program commingled rate pursuant
5to this
subdivision for bimetal containers and a combined
6commingled rate for all plastic beverage containers displaying the
7resin identification code “3,” “4,” “5,” “6,” or “7” pursuant to
8Section 18015.
9(2) The department may enter into a contract for the services
10required to implement the amendments to this section made by
11Chapter 753 of the Statutes of 2003. The department may not
12expend more than two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000)
13for each year of the contract. The contract shall be paid only from
14revenues derived from redemption payments and processing fees
15paid on plastic beverage containers displaying the resin
16identification code “3,” “4,” “5,” “6,” or “7” pursuant to Section
1718015. If the department determines that insufficient funds will
18be available from these revenues, after refund values are paid to
19
processors and the reduction is made in the processing fee pursuant
20to subdivision (e) of Section 14575 for these containers, the
21department may determine not to calculate a commingled rate
22pursuant to this subdivision.
Section 14553 of the Public Resources Code is
25amended to read:
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), all reports,
27claims, and other information required pursuant to this division
28and submitted to the department shall be complete, legible, and
29accurate, as determined by the department by regulation, and shall
30be signed, by an officer, director, managing employee, or owner
31of the certified recycling center, processor, distributor, beverage
32manufacturer, container manufacturer, or other entity.
33(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), a person submitting the
34reports, claims, and other information specified in subdivision (a)
35shall use the Division of Recycling Integrated Information System
36(DORIIS) or other
system designated by the department for
37reporting, making, or claiming payments, or providing other
38information required pursuant to this division.
39 (c) The department may inspect the operations, processes, and
40records of an entity required to submit a report to the department
P108 1pursuant to this division to determine the accuracy of the report
2and compliance with the requirements of this division.
3 (d) (1) A violation of this section is subject to the penalties
4specified in Section 14591.1.
5(2) The department may take an enforcement action against a
6certified recycling center or processor that fails to comply with
7this section, including, but not limited to, imposing penalties,
8denying claims for
payment, or terminating the certification of the
9certified recycling center or processor.
Section 14572 of the Public Resources Code is
12amended to read:
(a) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (b), a certified
14recycling center shall accept from any consumer or dropoff or
15collection program any empty beverage container, and shall pay
16to the consumer or dropoff or collection program the refund value
17of the beverage container.
18(2) Except as provided in paragraph (3), the recycling center
19may pay the refund value based on the weight of returned
20containers.
21(3) On and after September 1, 2013, for beverage containers
22redeemed by consumers, a certified recycling center shall pay the
23refund value using the applicable
segregated rate, as defined in
24paragraph (43) of subsection (a) of Section 2000 of Title 14 of the
25California Code of Regulations, as that section read on September
261, 2013, which shall be based on the weight of the redeemed
27beverage containers.
28(b) Any recycling center or processor that was in existence on
29January 1, 1986, and that refused, as of January 1, 1986, to accept
30at a particular location a certain type of empty beverage container
31may continue to refuse to accept at the location the type or types
32of empty beverage containers that the recycling center or processor
33refused to accept as of January 1, 1986. A certified recycling center
34that refuses, pursuant to this subdivision, to accept a certain type
35or types of empty beverage containers is not eligible to receive
36handling fees unless the center agrees to accept all types of
empty
37beverage containers and is a supermarket site. This subdivision
38does not preclude the certified recycling center from receiving a
39handling fee for beverage containers redeemed at supermarket
40sites that do accept all types of containers.
P109 1(c) The department shall develop procedures by which recycling
2centers and processors that meet the criteria of subdivision (b) may
3recertify to change the material types accepted.
4(d) (1) Only a certified recycling center may pay the refund
5value to consumers or dropoff or collection programs. A person
6shall not pay a noncertified recycler for empty beverage containers
7an amount that exceeds the current scrap value for each container
8type, which shall be determined in the following manner:
9(A) For a plastic or glass beverage container, the current scrap
10value shall be determined by the department.
11(B) For an aluminum beverage container, the current scrap value
12shall be not greater than the amount paid to the processor for that
13aluminum beverage container, on the date the container was
14purchased, by the location of end use, as defined in the regulations
15of the department.
16(2) A person shall not receive or retain, for empty beverage
17containers that come from out of state, any refund values,
18processing payments, or administrative fees for which a claim is
19made to the department against the fund.
20(3) Paragraph (1) does not affect curbside programs
under
21contract with cities or counties.
Section 14591 of the Public Resources Code is
24amended to read:
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (b), in addition
26to any other applicable civil or criminal penalties, a person
27convicted of a violation of this division, or a regulation adopted
28pursuant to this division, is guilty of an infraction, which is
29punishable by a fine of one hundred dollars ($100) for each initial
30separate violation and not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000)
31for each subsequent separate violation per day.
32(b) (1) Every person who, with intent to defraud, knowingly
33takes any of the following actions is guilty of a crime:
34(A) Submits a false or fraudulent claim for payment pursuant
35to
Section 14573 or 14573.5.
36(B) Fails to accurately report the number of beverage containers
37sold, as required by subdivision (b) of Section 14550.
38(C) Fails to make payments as required by Section 14574.
39(D) Redeems out-of-state containers, rejected containers, line
40breakage, or containers that have already been redeemed.
P110 1(E) Returns redeemed containers to the California marketplace
2for redemption.
3(F) Brings out-of-state containers, rejected containers, or line
4breakage to the California marketplace for redemption.
5(G) Submits a false or
fraudulent claim for handling fee
6payments pursuant to Section 14585.
7(2) If the money obtained or withheld pursuant to paragraph (1)
8exceeds nine hundred fifty dollars ($950), a person convicted of
9a crime pursuant to paragraph (1) is subject to punishment by
10imprisonment in the county jail for not more than one year or by
11a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or by both,
12or by imprisonment pursuant to subdivision (h) of Section 1170
13of the Penal Code for 16 months, two years, or three years, or by
14a fine not exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) or
15twice the late or unmade payments plus interest, whichever is
16greater, or by both fine and imprisonment. If the money obtained
17or withheld pursuant to paragraph (1) equals, or is less than, nine
18hundred fifty dollars ($950), the person is subject to punishment
19
by imprisonment in the county jail for not more than six months
20or by a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000), or by
21both.
22(c) For purposes of this section and Chapter 8.5 (commencing
23with Section 14595), “line breakage” and “rejected container”
24have the same meanings as defined in the regulations adopted or
25amended by the department pursuant to this division.
Section 25711.5 is added to the Public Resources
28Code, to read:
In administering moneys in the fund for research,
30development, and demonstration programs under this chapter, the
31commission shall develop and implement the Electric Program
32Investment Charge (EPIC) program to do all of the following:
33(a) Award funds for projects that will benefit electricity
34ratepayers and lead to technological advancement and
35breakthroughs to overcome the barriers that prevent the
36achievement of the state’s statutory energy goals and that result
37in a portfolio of projects that is strategically focused and
38sufficiently narrow to make advancement on the most significant
39technological challenges that shall include, but not be limited to,
40energy storage, renewable
energy and its integration into the
P111 1electrical grid, energy efficiency, integration of electric vehicles
2into the electrical grid, and accurately forecasting the availability
3of renewable energy for integration into the grid.
4(b) In consultation with the Treasurer, establish terms that shall
5be imposed as a condition to receipt of funding for the state to
6accrue any intellectual property interest or royalties that may derive
7from projects funded by the EPIC program. The commission, when
8determining if imposition of the proposed terms is appropriate,
9shall balance the potential benefit to the state from those terms
10and the effect those terms may have on the state achieving its
11statutory energy goals. The commission shall require each reward
12recipient, as a condition of receiving moneys pursuant to this
13chapter, to agree to any terms the
commission determines are
14appropriate for the state to accrue any intellectual property interest
15or royalties that may derive from projects funded by the EPIC
16program.
17(c) Require each applicant to report how the proposed project
18may lead to technological advancement and potential breakthroughs
19to overcome barriers to achieving the state’s statutory energy goals.
20(d) Establish a process for tracking the progress and outcomes
21of each funded project, including an accounting of the amount of
22funds spent by program administrators and individual grant
23recipients on administrative and overhead costs and whether the
24project resulted in any technological advancement or breakthrough
25to overcome barriers to achieving the state’s statutory energy goals.
26(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code,
27prepare and submit to the Legislature no later than April 30 of
28each year an annual report in compliance with Section 9795 of the
29Government Code that shall include all of the following:
30(1) A brief description of each project for which funding was
31awarded in the immediately prior calendar year, including the
32name of the recipient and the amount of the award, a description
33of how the project is thought to lead to technological advancement
34or breakthroughs to overcome barriers to achieving the state’s
35statutory energy goals, and a description of why the project was
36selected.
37(2) A brief description of each project funded by the EPIC
38program that was completed
in the immediately prior calendar
39year, including the name of the recipient, the amount of the award,
40and the outcomes of the funded project.
P112 1(3) A brief description of each project funded by the EPIC
2program for which an award was made in the previous years but
3that is not completed, including the name of the recipient and the
4amount of the award, and a description of how the project will
5lead to technological advancement or breakthroughs to overcome
6barriers to achieving the state’s statutory energy goals.
7(4) Identification of the award recipients that are
8California-based entities, small businesses, or businesses owned
9by women, minorities, or disabled veterans.
10(5) Identification of which awards were made through a
11competitive
bid, interagency agreement, or sole source method,
12and the action of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee pursuant
13to paragraph (2) of subdivision (g) for each award made through
14an interagency agreement or sole source method.
15(6) Identification of the total amount of administrative and
16overhead costs incurred for each project.
17(f) Establish requirements to minimize program administration
18and overhead costs, including costs incurred by program
19administrators and individual grant recipients. Each program
20administrator and grant recipient, including a public entity, shall
21be required to justify actual administration and overhead costs
22incurred, even if the total costs incurred do not exceed a cap on
23those costs that the commission may adopt.
24(g) (1) The commission shall use a sealed competitive bid as
25the preferred method to solicit project applications and award funds
26pursuant to the EPIC program.
27(2) (A) The commission may use a sole source or interagency
28agreement method if the project cannot be described with sufficient
29specificity so that bids can be evaluated against specifications and
30criteria set forth in a solicitation for bid and if both of the following
31conditions are met:
32(i) The commission, at least 60 days prior to making an award
33pursuant to this subdivision, notifies the Joint Legislative Budget
34Committee and the relevant policy committees in both houses of
35the Legislature, in writing, of its intent to take the proposed action.
36(ii) The Joint Legislative Budget Committee either approves or
37does not disapprove the proposed action within 60 days from the
38date of notification required by clause (i).
P113 1(B) It is the intent of the Legislature to enact this paragraph to
2ensure legislative oversight for awards made on a sole source basis,
3or through an interagency agreement.
4(3) Notwithstanding any other law, standard terms and
5conditions that generally apply to contracts between the
6commission and any entities, including state entities, do not
7automatically preclude the award of moneys from the fund through
8the sealed competitive bid method.
Section 25711.7 is added to the Public Resources
11Code, to read:
(a) The Public Utilities Commission shall not require
13the collection of funds pursuant to its Decision 12-05-037 (May
1424, 2012), Phase 2 Decision Establishing Purposes and Governance
15for Electric Program Investment Charge and Establishing Funding
16Collections for 2013-2020, as corrected by Decision 12-07-001
17(July 3, 2012), Order Correcting Error, and as modified by Decision
1813-04-030 (April 18, 2013), Order Modifying Decision (D.)
1912-05-037, and Denying Rehearing of Decision, as Modified, in
20an annual amount greater than the amount specified in those
21decisions.
22(b) This section does not modify, alter, or, in any way, affect
23the operation of Section
25712.
Section 25751 of the Public Resources Code is
26amended to read:
(a) The Renewable Resource Trust Fund is hereby
28created in the State Treasury.
29(b) The Emerging Renewable Resources Account is hereby
30established within the Renewable Resources Trust Fund.
31Notwithstanding Section 13340 of the Government Code, the
32moneys in the account are hereby continuously appropriated to
33the commission without regard to fiscal years for the following
34purposes:
35(1) To close out the award of incentives for emerging
36technologies in accordance with former Section 25744, as this law
37existed prior to the enactment of the Budget Act of 2012, for which
38applications had been approved before the enactment of
the Budget
39Act of 2012.
P114 1(2) To close out consumer education activities in accordance
2with former Section 25746, as this law existed prior to the
3enactment of the Budget Act of 2012.
4(3) To provide funding for the New Solar Homes Partnership
5pursuant to paragraph (3) of subdivision (e) of Section 2851 of the
6Public Utilities Code.
7(c) The Controller shall provide to the commission funds
8pursuant to the continuous appropriation in, and for purposes
9specified in, subdivision (b).
10(d) The Controller shall provide to the commission moneys
11from the fund sufficient to satisfy all contract and grant awards
12that were made by the commission pursuant to former
Sections
1325744 and 25746, and Chapter 8.8 (commencing with Section
1425780), as these laws existed prior to the enactment of the Budget
15Act of 2012.
Section 26052 of the Public Resources Code is
18amended to read:
“Applicant” means, for the purposes of Article 2
20(commencing with Section 26060), a public agency as defined in
21paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) of Section 5898.20 of the Streets
22and Highways Code, or an entity administering a PACE loan
23program on behalf of and with written consent of a public agency,
24and, for the purposes of Article 3 (commencing with Section
2526070), a financial institution providing a loan pursuant to that
26chapter to finance the installation of distributed generation
27renewable energy sources, electric vehicle charging infrastructure,
28or energy or water efficiency improvements.
Section 26055 of the Public Resources Code is
31amended to read:
“PACE program” means a program established by an
33applicant that is financed by the PACE bond or a PACE loan
34program regardless of funding sources.
Section 26060 of the Public Resources Code is
37amended to read:
(a) The authority shall develop and administer a PACE
39Reserve program to reduce overall costs to the property owners
40of PACE bonds issued by an applicant by providing a reserve of
P115 1no more than 10 percent of the initial principal amount of the PACE
2bond.
3(b) The authority shall develop and administer a PACE risk
4mitigation program for PACE loans to increase their acceptance
5in the marketplace and protect against the risk of default and
6foreclosure.
Section 26062 of the Public Resources Code is
9amended to read:
An applicant shall submit to the authority an application
11providing a detailed description of the PACE program, a detailed
12description of the transactional activities associated with the PACE
13bond issuance, including all transactional costs, information
14regarding any credit enhancement or loan insurance associated
15with a PACE loan program, and other information deemed
16necessary by the authority.
Section 26063 of the Public Resources Code is
19amended to read:
(a) In evaluating eligibility, the authority shall consider
21whether the applicant’s PACE program includes the following
22conditions:
23(1) Loan recipients are legal owners of underlying property.
24(2) Loan recipients are current on mortgage and property tax
25payments.
26(3) Loan recipients are not in default or in bankruptcy
27proceedings.
28(4) Loans are for less than 10 percent of the value of the
29property.
30(5) The property is within the
geographical boundaries of the
31PACE program.
32(6) The program offers financing for energy efficiency
33improvements or electric vehicle charging infrastructure.
34(7) Improvements financed by the program follow applicable
35standards of energy efficiency retrofit work, including any
36guidelines adopted by the State Energy Resources Conservation
37and Development Commission.
38(b) In evaluating an application, the authority shall consider all
39of the following factors:
P116 1(1) The use by the PACE program of best practices, adopted by
2the authority, to qualify eligible properties for participation in
3underwriting the PACE program.
4(2) The cost efficiency of the applicant’s PACE program,
5including bond issuance, credit enhancement, or loan insurance.
6(3) The projected number of jobs created by the PACE program.
7(4) The applicant’s PACE program requirements for quality
8assurance and consumer protection as related to achieving
9efficiency and clean energy production.
10(5) The mechanisms by which savings produced by this program
11are passed on to the property owners.
12(6) Any other factors deemed appropriate by the authority.
Section 35600 of the Public Resources Code is
15amended to read:
(a) The Ocean Protection Council is established in
17state government. The council consists of the Secretary of the
18Natural Resources Agency, the Secretary for Environmental
19Protection, the Chair of the State Lands Commission, and two
20members of the public appointed by the Governor.
21(b) The two public members shall each serve a term of four
22years, and may each be reappointed to one additional term. The
23public members of the board shall be appointed on the basis of
24their educational and professional qualifications and their general
25knowledge of, interest in, and experience in the protection and
26conservation of coastal waters and ocean
ecosystems. One of the
27public members shall have a scientific professional background
28and experience in coastal and ocean ecosystems.
29(c) Except as provided in this section, members of the council
30shall serve without compensation. A member shall be reimbursed
31for actual and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of
32his or her duties, and in addition shall be compensated at one
33hundred dollars ($100) for each day during which the member is
34engaged in the performance of official duties of the council.
35Payment for actual and necessary expenses shall be paid only to
36the extent that those expenses are not provided or payable by
37another public agency. The total number of days for which a
38member shall be compensated may not exceed 25 days in any one
39fiscal year.
Section 35605 of the Public Resources Code is
3amended to read:
The Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency shall
5serve as the chairperson of the council, and the Secretary for
6Environmental Protection shall serve as the vice chairperson of
7the council. The Assistant Secretary for Coastal Matters at the
8Natural Resources Agency shall be designated as the Deputy
9Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency for Ocean and Coastal
10Policy, and the deputy secretary shall also serve as the executive
11director for the council.
Section 35625 of the Public Resources Code is
14amended to read:
(a) Under the direction of the Secretary of the Natural
16Resources Agency, the council shall administer its affairs, and
17provide the staff services that the council needs to carry out this
18division, including, but not limited to, both of the following:
19(1) Administering grants and expenditures authorized by the
20council from the fund or other sources, including, but not limited
21to, block grants from other state boards, commissions, or
22departments.
23(2) Arranging meetings, agendas, and other administrative
24functions in support of the council.
25(b) The Legislature may make appropriations to be used for the
26purposes of this division directly to the Secretary of the Natural
27Resources Agency, for expenditures authorized by the council. If
28an expenditure has been approved by the council for the purposes
29of this division, approval of the secretary is not required, except
30in the case of block grants provided by the council to be
31administered by the secretary.
32(c) Any bond funds received by the State Coastal Conservancy,
33on or before July 1, 2013, which authorized the use of funds for
34council programs, shall be transferred to the Natural Resources
35Agency for use for those programs.
36(d) (1) The Legislature finds and declares that, on the
effective
37date of the act adding this subdivision during the 2013-14 Regular
38Session, various contracts and grants will be pending or remain
39subject to management and control by the State Coastal
40
Conservancy on behalf of the council. On and after that date, the
P118 1Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency is hereby designated
2as the legal successor to the State Coastal Conservancy, and the
3Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency shall assume
4management and control of those contracts and grants and shall
5have all of the same powers and duties as the State Coastal
6Conservancy.
7(2) In addition to the powers and duties described in paragraph
8(1), on and after the effective date of the act adding this subdivision
9during the 2013-14 Regular Session, the Secretary of the Natural
10Resources Agency shall have the following powers and duties on
11behalf of the council:
12(A) The management of all contracts and grants, including the
13completion, modification, and
cancellation of those contracts and
14grants in accordance with existing law.
15(B) The negotiation and settlement of claims relating to contracts
16and grants.
17(C) Responsibility for the completion, maintenance, and disposal
18of any records relating to the transfer of responsibilities from the
19State Coastal Conservancy to the Natural Resources Agency.
Section 42977 of the Public Resources Code is
22amended to read:
(a) The carpet stewardship organization submitting a
24carpet stewardship plan shall pay the department a quarterly
25administrative fee. The department shall set the fee at an amount
26that, when paid by every carpet stewardship organization that
27submits a carpet stewardship plan, is adequate to cover the
28department’s full costs of administering and enforcing this chapter,
29including any program development costs or regulatory costs
30incurred by the department prior to carpet stewardship plans being
31submitted. The department may establish a variable fee based on
32relevant factors, including, but not limited to, the portion of carpets
33sold in the state by members of the organization compared to the
34total amount of carpet sold in the state by all
organizations
35submitting a carpet stewardship plan.
36(b) The total amount of fees collected annually pursuant to this
37section shall not exceed the amount necessary to recover costs
38incurred by the department in connection with the administration
39and enforcement of the requirements of this chapter.
P119 1(c) The department shall identify the direct development or
2regulatory costs it incurs pursuant to this chapter prior to the
3submittal of a carpet stewardship plan and shall establish a fee in
4an amount adequate to cover those costs, which shall be paid by
5a carpet stewardship organization that submits a carpet stewardship
6plan. The fee established pursuant to this subdivision shall be paid
7pursuant to the schedule specified in subdivision (d).
8(d) A carpet stewardship organization subject to this section
9shall pay a quarterly fee to the department to cover the
10administrative and enforcement costs of the requirements of this
11chapter pursuant to subdivision (a) on or before July 1, 2012, and
12every three months thereafter and the applicable portion of the fee
13pursuant to subdivision (c) on July 1, 2012, and every three months
14thereafter through July 1, 2014. Each year after the initial payment,
15the total amount of the administrative fees paid for a calendar year
16may not exceed 5 percent of the aggregate assessments collected
17for the preceding calendar year.
18(e) The department shall deposit the fees collected pursuant to
19this section into the Carpet Stewardship Account created pursuant
20to Section
42977.1.
Section 48704 of the Public Resources Code is
23amended to read:
(a) The department shall review the plan within 90
25days of receipt, and make a determination whether or not to
26approve the plan. The department shall approve the plan if it
27provides for the establishment of a paint stewardship program that
28meets the requirements of Section 48703.
29(b) (1) The approved plan shall be a public record, except that
30financial, production, or sales data reported to the department by
31a manufacturer or the stewardship organization is not a public
32record under the California Public Records Act, as described in
33Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of
34Title 1 of the Government Code and shall not be open to public
35inspection.
36(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the department may release
37a summary form of financial, production, or sales data if it does
38not disclose financial, production, or sales data of a manufacturer
39or stewardship organization.
P120 1(c) On or before July 1, 2012, or three months after a plan is
2approved pursuant to subdivision (a), whichever date is later, the
3manufacturer or stewardship organization shall implement the
4architectural paint stewardship program described in the approved
5plan.
6(d) The department shall enforce this chapter.
7(e) (1) The stewardship organization shall pay the department
8a quarterly administrative fee pursuant to
paragraph (2).
9(2) The department shall impose fees in an amount that is
10sufficient to cover the full administrative and enforcement costs
11of the requirements of this chapter, including any program
12development costs or regulatory costs incurred by the department
13prior to the submittal of the stewardship plans. The stewardship
14organization shall pay the fee on or before the last day of the month
15following the end of each quarter. Fee revenues collected under
16this section shall only be used to administer and enforce this
17chapter.
18(f) (1) A civil penalty may be administratively imposed by the
19department on any person who violates this chapter in an amount
20of up to one thousand dollars ($1,000) per violation per day.
21(2) A person who intentionally, knowingly, or negligently
22violates this chapter may be assessed a civil penalty by the
23department of up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) per violation
24per day.
The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the
27following:
28(a) Environmental literacy enhances a citizen’s ability to make
29informed decisions with an understanding that humans depend on
30natural systems and human actions influence natural systems in
31both beneficial and detrimental ways.
32(b) Environmentally literate citizens are better able to make
33wise individual and collective decisions to conserve natural
34
resources and protect environmental and human health.
35(c) An environmentally literate citizenry is essential to
36confronting and overcoming the environmental challenges of the
3721st century.
38(d) An environmentally literate citizenry, consisting of
39technological innovators, entrepreneurs, scientists, and engineers,
40as well as environmentally conscientious consumers, supports a
P121 1vibrant state economy and drives California’s role as a leader in
2the emerging global green marketplace.
3(e) A model environmental curriculum, also known as the
4Education and the Environment Curriculum (curriculum) was
5developed by the California Environmental Protection Agency, in
6cooperation with the State Department of Education and the Natural
7
Resources Agency, to increase environmental literacy among
8students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.
9(f) The curriculum is the first environment-based curriculum of
10its kind in the nation to receive State Board of Education approval.
11(g) There are many benefits of enhanced environmental literacy,
12and the curriculum materials, along with training and support,
13should be made readily available to any educator in California
14who wishes to teach the curriculum.
15(h) To achieve this goal, the Department of Resources Recycling
16and Recovery should collaborate across agencies and disciplines,
17including, but not limited to, the California Environmental
18Protection Agency, the State Department of Education, and the
19Natural
Resources Agency.
20(i) The state should seek to develop strong partnerships with
21the private sector, including nonprofit organizations, associations,
22
businesses, and private entities, in order to support use of the
23curriculum and increase environmental literacy.
Section 71300 of the Public Resources Code is
26amended to read:
(a) For purposes of this part, the following definitions
28shall apply:
29(1) “Department” means the Department of Resources Recycling
30and Recovery.
31(2) “Office” means the Office of Education and the Environment
32of the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery, as
33established pursuant to this section.
34(3) “Program” means the statewide environmental education
35program prescribed in this part.
36(b) The Office of Education and the Environment previously
37established in the California Environmental
Protection Agency is
38hereby established in the Department of Resources Recycling and
39Recovery. The office shall dedicate its effort to implementing the
40statewide environmental education program prescribed pursuant
P122 1to this part, including the integrated waste educational requirements
2specified in paragraph (9) of subdivision (b) of Section 71301.
3The office, through staffing and resources, shall give a high priority
4to implementing the statewide environmental education program.
5(c) The office, under the direction of the department, in
6cooperation with the State Department of Education and the State
7Board of Education, shall develop and implement a unified
8education strategy on the environment for elementary and
9secondary schools in the state. The office shall develop a unified
10education strategy to do all of the following:
11(1) Coordinate instructional resources and strategies for
12providing active pupil participation with onsite conservation efforts.
13(2) Promote service-learning opportunities between schools and
14local communities.
15(3) Assess the impact to participating pupils of the unified
16education strategy on pupil achievement and resource conservation.
17(d) The State Department of Education and the State Board of
18Education, in cooperation with the department, shall develop and
19implement to the extent feasible, a teacher training and
20implementation plan, to guide the implementation of the unified
21education strategy, for the education of pupils, faculty, and
22administrators
on the importance of integrating environmental
23concepts and programs in schools throughout the state. The strategy
24shall project the phased implementation of elementary, middle,
25and high school programs.
26(e) In implementing this part, the office may hold public
27meetings to receive and respond to comments from affected state
28agencies, stakeholders, and the public regarding the development
29of resources and materials pursuant to this part.
30(f) In implementing this part, the office shall coordinate with
31other agencies and groups with expertise in education and the
32environment.
33(g) Any instructional materials developed pursuant to this part
34shall be subject to the requirements of Chapter 1 (commencing
35with Section 60000) of
Part 33 of Division 4 of Title 2 of the
36Education Code, including, but not limited to, reviews for legal
37and social compliance before the materials may be used in
38elementary or secondary public schools.
Section 71301 of the Public Resources Code is
3amended to read:
(a) As part of the unified education strategy specified
5in subdivision (c) of Section 71300, the office, in cooperation with
6the Secretary for Environmental Protection, the Natural Resources
7Agency, the State Department of Education, and the State Board
8of Education, shall develop education principles for the
9environment for elementary and secondary school pupils. The
10principles may be updated every four years beginning July 1, 2008.
11The principles shall be aligned to the academic content standards
12adopted by the State Board of Education pursuant to Section 60605
13of the Education Code. The principles shall be used to do all of
14the following:
15(1) To direct state agencies
that include environmental education
16components for elementary and secondary education in regulatory
17decisions or enforcement actions.
18(2) To align state agency environmental education programs
19and materials that are developed for elementary and secondary
20
education.
21(b) The education principles for the environment shall include,
22but not be limited to, concepts relating to the following topics:
23(1) Environmental sustainability.
24(2) Water.
25(3) Air.
26(4) Energy.
27(5) Forestry.
28(6) Fish and wildlife resources.
29(7) Oceans.
30(8) Toxics and hazardous waste.
31(9) Integrated waste management.
32(10) Integrated pest management.
33(11) Public health and the environment.
34(12) Pollution prevention.
35(13) Resource conservation and recycling.
36(14) Environmental justice.
37(c) The principles shall be aligned to the applicable academic
38content standards adopted by the State Board of Education and
39shall not duplicate or conflict with any academic content standards.
P124 1(d) (1)
The education principles for the environment shall be
2incorporated, as the State Board of Education determines to be
3appropriate, in criteria developed for textbook adoption required
4pursuant to Section 60200 or 60400 of the Education Code in
5science, mathematics, English/language arts, and history/social
6sciences.
7(2) If the State Board of Education determines that the education
8principles for the environment are not appropriate for inclusion in
9the textbook adoption criteria cited in paragraph (1), the State
10Board of Education shall collaborate with the office to make the
11changes necessary to ensure that the principles are included in the
12textbook adoption criteria in science, mathematics,
13English/language arts, and history/social sciences.
14(e) If the content standards
required pursuant to Section 60605
15of the Education Code are revised, the education principles for the
16environment shall be appropriately considered for inclusion into
17part of the revised academic content standards.
Section 71302 of the Public Resources Code is
20amended to read:
(a) Using the education principles for the environment
22required to be developed pursuant to Section 71301, the office, in
23cooperation with the Secretary for Environmental Protection, the
24Natural Resources Agency, the State Department of Education,
25and the State Board of Education, shall develop a model
26environmental curriculum that incorporates these education
27principles for the environment. The model curriculum shall be
28aligned with applicable State Board of Education adopted academic
29content standards in Science, Mathematics, English/Language
30Arts, and History/Social Sciences, to the extent that any of those
31content areas are addressed in the model curriculum.
32(b) The
model curriculum shall be submitted to the Instructional
33Quality Commission for review. The commission shall submit its
34recommendation to the Secretary for Environmental Protection
35and to the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency.
36(1) The Secretary for Environmental Protection and the Secretary
37of the Natural Resources Agency shall review and comment on
38the model curriculum.
39(2) The model curriculum along with the comments by the
40Secretary for Environmental Protection and the Secretary of the
P125 1Natural Resources Agency shall be submitted to the State Board
2of Education for its approval.
Section 71303 of the Public Resources Code is
5amended to read:
(a) As determined appropriate by the Superintendent
7of Public Instruction, the State Department of Education shall
8incorporate into publications that provide examples of curriculum
9resources for teacher use, those materials developed by the office
10that provide information on the education principles for the
11environment developed pursuant to Section 71300.
12(b) If the Superintendent of Public Instruction determines that
13materials developed by the office that provide information on the
14education principles for the environment are not appropriate for
15inclusion in publications that provide examples of curriculum
16resources for teacher use, the Superintendent of Public Instruction
17shall
collaborate with the office to make the changes necessary to
18ensure that the materials are included in that information.
19(c) Pursuant to Section 71302, the department shall coordinate
20with the Secretary for Environmental Protection, the Superintendent
21of Public Instruction, the State Department of Education, and the
22Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency to facilitate use of the
23model environmental curriculum by elementary and secondary
24schools to the extent that funds are available for this purpose.
25(d) The department, the Secretary for Environmental Protection,
26the Superintendent of Public Instruction, the State Department of
27Education, and the Secretary of the Natural Resources Agency
28may collaborate with other federal, state, and local entities, and
29nongovernmental
entities including nonprofit organizations,
30associations, businesses, individuals, and private entities, and may
31enter into interagency agreements, memoranda of understanding,
32and contracts to ensure implementation of this part.
33(e) The department shall make the model curriculum available
34electronically on the department’s Internet Web site. The State
35Department of Education shall make readily identifiable on its
36Internet Web site a link to the department’s Internet Web site
37containing the curriculum.
38 (f) The State Department of Education, to the extent feasible
39and to the extent that funds are available for this purpose, shall
40encourage the development and use of instructional materials and
P126 1active pupil participation in campus and community environmental
2education programs. To
the extent feasible, the environmental
3education programs should be considered in the development and
4promotion of after school programs for elementary and secondary
5school pupils and state and local professional development
6activities to provide teachers with content background and
7resources to assist in teaching about the environment.
8 (g) The State Department of Education shall explore
9implementation of this section from its baseline resources dedicated
10to this purpose and if funding is not available from that source,
11then funding may be provided to the department, pursuant to
12appropriation by the Legislature, under Section 71305.
Section 71304 of the Public Resources Code is
15amended to read:
(a) The office, in coordination with the Secretary for
17Environmental Protection, shall be responsible for the statewide
18coordination of regulatory administrative decisions that require
19the development or encourage the promotion of environmental
20education for elementary and secondary school pupils.
21(b) All California Environmental Protection Agency or Natural
22Resources Agency boards, departments, or offices that take
23regulatory actions or take enforcement actions requiring the
24development of, or encouraging the promotion of, environmental
25education for elementary and secondary school pupils shall, prior
26to adoption or approval of the action, seek comments on the action
27from
the office in order to promote consistency with this part and
28cross-media coordination.
29(c) The office shall coordinate with all state agencies to develop
30and distribute environmental education materials.
Section 71305 of the Public Resources Code, as added
33by Section 23 of Chapter 718 of the Statutes of 2010, is amended
34to
read:
(a) The Environmental Education Account is hereby
36established within the State Treasury. Moneys in the account may,
37upon appropriation by the Legislature, be expended by the
38department for the purposes of this part. The Director of Resources
39Recycling and Recovery shall administer this part, including, but
40not limited to, the account.
P127 1(b) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the
2department may accept and receive federal, state, and local funds
3and contributions of funds from a public or private organization
4or individual. The account may also receive proceeds from a
5judgment, settlement, fine, penalty, or other mechanism, in state
6or federal court, when the
funds are contributed or the judgment
7specifies that the proceeds are to be used for the purposes of this
8part. The account may receive those funds, contributions, or
9proceeds from judgments, that are specifically designated for use
10for environmental education purposes. Private contributors shall
11not have the authority to further influence or direct the use of their
12contributions.
13(c) Notwithstanding any other law, a state agency that requires
14the development of, or encourages the promotion of, environmental
15education for elementary and secondary school pupils, may
16contribute to the account.
17(d) The department shall immediately deposit any funds
18contributed pursuant to subdivision (b) into the account.
19(e) The
Legislature finds and declares that the maintenance of
20the account is of the utmost importance to the state and that it is
21essential that any moneys in the account be used solely for the
22purposes authorized in this section and not be used, loaned, or
23transferred for any other purposes. Further, state agencies that
24promote environmental education for elementary and secondary
25school pupils will benefit from the environmental curriculum
26adopted pursuant to this part and should provide equitable and
27balanced support for the program.
Section 309.5 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
30to read:
(a) There is within the commission an independent
32Office of Ratepayer Advocates to represent and advocate on behalf
33of the interests of public utility customers and subscribers within
34the jurisdiction of the commission. The goal of the office shall be
35to obtain the lowest possible rate for service consistent with reliable
36and safe service levels. For revenue allocation and rate design
37matters, the office shall primarily consider the interests of
38residential and small commercial customers.
P128 1(b) The director of the office shall be appointed by, and serve
2at the pleasure of, the Governor, subject to confirmation by the
3Senate.
4The director shall annually appear before the appropriate policy
5committees of the Assembly and the Senate to report on the
6activities of the office.
7(c) The director shall develop a budget for the office that shall
8be subject to final approval of the Department of Finance. As
9authorized in the approved budget, the office shall employ
10personnel and resources, including attorneys and other legal support
11staff, at a level sufficient to ensure that customer and subscriber
12interests are effectively represented in all significant proceedings.
13The office may employ experts necessary to carry out its functions.
14The director may appoint a lead attorney who shall represent the
15office, and shall report to and serve at the pleasure of the director.
16The lead attorney for the office
shall obtain adequate legal
17personnel for the work to be conducted by the office from the
18commission’s attorney appointed pursuant to Section 307. The
19commission’s attorney shall timely and appropriately fulfill all
20requests for legal personnel made by the lead attorney for the
21office, provided the office has sufficient moneys and positions in
22its budget for the services requested.
23(d) The commission shall develop appropriate procedures to
24ensure that the existence of the office does not create a conflict of
25roles for any employee. The procedures shall include, but shall
26not be limited to, the development of a code of conduct and
27procedures for ensuring that advocates and their representatives
28on a particular case or proceeding are not advising decisionmakers
29on the same case or proceeding.
30(e) The office may compel the production or disclosure of any
31information it deems necessary to perform its duties from any
32entity regulated by the commission, provided that any objections
33to any request for information shall be decided in writing by the
34assigned commissioner or by the president of the commission, if
35there is no assigned commissioner.
36(f) There is hereby created the Public Utilities Commission
37Ratepayer Advocate Account in the General Fund. Moneys from
38the Public Utilities Commission Utilities Reimbursement Account
39in the General Fund shall be transferred in the annual Budget Act
40to the Public Utilities Commission Ratepayer Advocate Account.
P129 1The funds in the Public Utilities Commission Ratepayer Advocate
2Account shall be a budgetary program fund administered and
3
utilized exclusively by the office in the performance of its duties
4as determined by the director. The director shall annually submit
5a staffing report containing a comparison of the staffing levels for
6each five-year period.
7(g) On or before January 10 of each year, the office shall provide
8to the chairperson of the fiscal committee of each house of the
9Legislature and to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee all of
10the following information:
11(1) The number of personnel years utilized during the prior year
12by the Office of Ratepayer Advocates.
13(2) The total dollars expended by the Office of Ratepayer
14Advocates in the prior year, the estimated total dollars expended
15in the current year, and the total
dollars proposed for appropriation
16in the following budget year.
17(3) Workload standards and measures for the Office of
18Ratepayer Advocates.
19(h) The office shall meet and confer in an informal setting with
20a regulated entity prior to issuing a report or pleading to the
21commission regarding alleged misconduct, or a violation of a law
22or a commission rule or order, raised by the office in a complaint.
23The meet and confer process shall be utilized in good faith to reach
24agreement on issues raised by the office regarding any regulated
25entity in the complaint proceeding.
Section 318 is added to the Public Utilities Code, to
28read:
The commission shall conduct a zero-based budget for
30all of its programs by January 10, 2015. The zero-based budget
31shall be completed for the entire commission, rather than on a
32division-by-division basis.
(a) The Legislature finds and declares that the
35purpose of adding Section 740.5 to the Public Utilities Code is to
36limit the implementation of the Public Utilities Commission
37Decision 12-12-031 (December 20, 2012), Decision Granting
38Authority to Enter Into a Research and Development Agreement
39with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory for 21st Century
40Energy Systems and for costs up to $152.19 million so that:
P130 1(1) No research and development
projects other than for the
2purposes of cyber security and grid integration shall be funded by
3ratepayers as a result of Decision 12-12-031.
4(2) Total funding for research and development projects for the
5purposes of cyber security and grid integration shall not exceed
6$35 million over the five-year research period.
7(3) Those program management expenditures proposed,
8commencing with page seven, in the joint advice letter filed by
9the state’s three largest electrical corporations, Advice
103379-G/4215-E (Pacific Gas and Electric Company), Advice
112887-E (Southern California Edison Company), and Advice 2473-E
12(San Diego Gas and Electric Company), dated April 19, 2013, be
13voided.
14(4) Project managers be limited to three
representatives, one
15representative each from Pacific Gas and Electric Company,
16Southern California Edison Company, and San Diego Gas and
17Electric Company.
18(5) The Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Pacific Gas
19and Electric Company, Southern California Edison Company, and
20San Diego Gas and Electric Company ensure that research
21parameters reflect a new contribution to cyber security and that
22there not be a duplication of research being done by other private
23and governmental entities.
24(b) Nothing in this act authorizes the Public Utilities
25Commission’s adoption of Decision 12-12-031.
Section 740.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code,
28to read:
(a) For purposes of this section, “21st Century Energy
30System Decision” means commission Decision 12-12-031
31(December 20, 2012), Decision Granting Authority to Enter Into
32a Research and Development Agreement with Lawrence Livermore
33National Laboratory for 21st Century Energy Systems and for
34costs up to $152.19 million, or any subsequent decision in
35Application 11-07-008 (July 18, 2011), Application of Pacific Gas
36and Electric Company (U39M), San Diego Gas and Electric
37Company (U902E), and Southern California Edison Company
38(U338E) for Authority to Increase Electric Rates and Charges to
39Recover Costs of Research and Development Agreement with
P131 1Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory for 21st Century Energy
2Systems.
3(b) In implementing the 21st Century Energy System Decision,
4the commission shall not authorize recovery from ratepayers of
5any expense for research and development projects that are not
6for purposes of cyber security and grid integration. Total funding
7for research and development projects for the purposes of cyber
8security and grid integration pursuant to the 21st Century Energy
9System Decision shall not exceed thirty-five million dollars
10($35,000,000). All cyber security and grid integration research
11and development projects shall be concluded by the fifth
12anniversary of their start date.
13(c) The commission shall not approve for recovery from
14ratepayers, those program management expenditures proposed,
15commencing with page seven, in the joint advice letter filed by
16the state’s
three largest electrical corporations, Advice
173379-G/4215-E (Pacific Gas and Electric Company), Advice
182887-E (Southern California Edison Company), and Advice 2473-E
19(San Diego Gas and Electric Company), dated April 19, 2013.
20Project managers for the 21st Century Energy System Decision
21shall be limited to three representatives, one representative each
22from Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Southern California
23Edison Company, and San Diego Gas and Electric Company.
24(d) The commission shall require the Lawrence Livermore
25National Laboratory, as a condition for entering into any contract
26pursuant to the 21st Century Energy System Decision, and Pacific
27Gas and Electric Company, Southern California Edison Company,
28and San Diego Gas and Electric Company to ensure that research
29parameters reflect a new contribution to cyber security and that
30there
not be a duplication of research being done by other private
31and governmental entities.
32(e) (1) The commission shall require each participating
33electrical corporation to prepare and submit to the commission by
34December 1, 2013, a joint report on the scope of all proposed
35research projects, how the proposed project may lead to
36technological advancement and potential breakthroughs in cyber
37security and grid integration, and the expected timelines for
38concluding the projects. The commission shall, within 30 days of
39receiving the joint report, determine whether the report is sufficient
40or requires revision, and upon determining that the report is
P132 1sufficient submit the report to the Legislature in compliance with
2Section 9795 of the Government Code.
3(2) The commission shall require each participating electrical
4corporation to prepare and submit to the commission by 60 days
5following the conclusion of all research and development projects,
6a joint report summarizing the outcome of all funded projects,
7including an accounting of expenditures by the project managers
8and grant recipients on administrative and overhead costs and
9whether the project resulted in any technological advancements
10or breakthroughs in promoting cyber security and grid integration.
11The commission shall, within 30 days of receiving the joint report,
12determine whether the report is sufficient or requires revision, and
13upon determining that the report is sufficient, submit the report to
14the Legislature in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government
15Code.
16(3) This subdivision shall become inoperable January 1,
2023,
17pursuant to Section 10231.5 of the Government Code.
Section 854.5 is added to the Public Utilities Code,
20to read:
(a) For purposes of this section, a “nonstate entity”
22means a company, corporation, partnership, firm, or other entity
23or group of entities, whether organized for profit or not for profit.
24(b) The commission, by order, decision, motion, settlement, or
25other action, shall not establish a nonstate entity with any moneys
26other than those moneys that would otherwise belong to the public
27utility’s shareholders. A nonstate entity to be created with moneys
28from a public utility’s shareholders shall be subject to a 30-day
29review by the Joint Legislative Budget Committee prior to creation.
30This subdivision does not limit the authority of the commission
31to form an advisory
committee or other body whose budget is
32subject to oversight by the commission and the Department of
33Finance.
34(c) The commission shall not enter into a contract with a
35nonstate entity in which a person serves as an owner, director, or
36officer while serving as a commissioner. Any contract between
37the commission and a nonstate entity shall be void and cease to
38exist by operation of law, if a commissioner, who was a
39commissioner at the time the contract was awarded, entered into,
40or extended, becomes, on or after January 1, 2014, an owner,
P133 1director, or officer of the nonstate entity while serving as a
2commissioner.
3(d) A commissioner who acts as an owner, director, or officer
4of a nonstate entity that was established after January 1, 2015, as
5a result of an order, decision, motion,
settlement, or other action
6by the commission in which the commissioner participated,
7neglects his or her duty pursuant to Section 1 of Article XII of the
8California Constitution, for which the commissioner may be
9removed pursuant to that section.
Section 2120 is added to the Public Utilities Code,
12to read:
(a) The commission shall not distribute, expend, or
14encumber any moneys received by the commission as a result of
15any commission proceeding or judicial action, including the
16compromise or settlement of a claim, until both of the following
17are true:
18(1) The commission has provided the Director of Finance with
19written notification of the receipt of the moneys and the basis for
20those moneys being received by the commission.
21(2) The Director of Finance provides not less than 60 days’
22written notice to the Chairperson of the Joint Legislative Budget
23Committee and the chairs of the appropriate budget
subcommittees
24of the Assembly and Senate of the receipt of the moneys and the
25basis for those moneys being received by the commission.
26(b) This section does not apply to application or licensing fees
27charged by the commission to defray regulatory expenses.
28(c) This section does not apply to moneys received by the
29commission in a court-approved settlement or as a result of a court
30judgment where the court orders that the moneys be used for
31specified purposes.
32(d) This section does not apply to moneys received by the
33commission where statutes expressly provide how the moneys are
34to be paid or used, including all of the following:
35(1) Payment to any fund created
by Chapter 1.5 (commencing
36with Section 270).
37(2) Payment to any account or fund pursuant to Chapter 2.5
38
(commencing with Section 401).
P134 1(3) Payment to the Ratepayer Relief Fund pursuant to Article
29.5 (commencing with Section 16428.1) of Chapter 2 of Part 2 of
3Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
Section 2851 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
6to read:
(a) In implementing the California Solar Initiative, the
8commission shall do all of the following:
9(1) The commission shall authorize the award of monetary
10incentives for up to the first megawatt of alternating current
11generated by solar energy systems that meet the eligibility criteria
12established by the State Energy Resources Conservation and
13Development Commission pursuant to Chapter 8.8 (commencing
14with Section 25780) of Division 15 of the Public Resources Code.
15The commission shall determine the eligibility of a solar energy
16system, as defined in Section 25781 of the Public Resources Code,
17to receive monetary incentives until the time the State Energy
18Resources Conservation and
Development Commission establishes
19eligibility criteria pursuant to Section 25782. Monetary incentives
20shall not be awarded for solar energy systems that do not meet the
21eligibility criteria. The incentive level authorized by the
22commission shall decline each year following implementation of
23the California Solar Initiative, at a rate of no less than an average
24of 7 percent per year, and shall be zero as of December 31, 2016.
25The commission shall adopt and publish a schedule of declining
26incentive levels no less than 30 days in advance of the first decline
27in incentive levels. The commission may develop incentives based
28upon the output of electricity from the system, provided those
29incentives are consistent with the declining incentive levels of this
30paragraph and the incentives apply to only the first megawatt of
31electricity generated by the system.
32(2) The commission shall adopt a performance-based incentive
33program so that by January 1, 2008, 100 percent of incentives for
34solar energy systems of 100 kilowatts or greater and at least 50
35percent of incentives for solar energy systems of 30 kilowatts or
36greater are earned based on the actual electrical output of the solar
37energy systems. The commission shall encourage, and may require,
38performance-based incentives for solar energy systems of less than
3930 kilowatts. Performance-based incentives shall decline at a rate
P135 1of no less than an average of 7 percent per year. In developing the
2performance-based incentives, the commission may:
3(A) Apply performance-based incentives only to customer
4classes designated by the commission.
5(B) Design the performance-based incentives
so that customers
6may receive a higher level of incentives than under incentives
7based on installed electrical capacity.
8(C) Develop financing options that help offset the installation
9costs of the solar energy system, provided that this financing is
10ultimately repaid in full by the consumer or through the application
11of the performance-based rebates.
12(3) By January 1, 2008, the commission, in consultation with
13the State Energy Resources Conservation and Development
14Commission, shall require reasonable and cost-effective energy
15efficiency improvements in existing buildings as a condition of
16providing incentives for eligible solar energy systems, with
17appropriate exemptions or limitations to accommodate the limited
18financial resources of low-income residential housing.
19(4) Notwithstanding subdivision (g) of Section 2827, the
20commission may develop a time-variant tariff that creates the
21maximum incentive for ratepayers to install solar energy systems
22so that the system’s peak electricity production coincides with
23California’s peak electricity demands and that ensures that
24ratepayers receive due value for their contribution to the purchase
25of solar energy systems and customers with solar energy systems
26continue to have an incentive to use electricity efficiently. In
27developing the time-variant tariff, the commission may exclude
28customers participating in the tariff from the rate cap for residential
29customers for existing baseline quantities or usage by those
30customers of up to 130 percent of existing baseline quantities, as
31required by Section 80110 of the Water Code. Nothing in this
32paragraph authorizes
the commission to require time-variant pricing
33for ratepayers without a solar energy system.
34(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), in implementing the
35California Solar Initiative, the commission may authorize the award
36of monetary incentives for solar thermal and solar water heating
37devices, in a total amount up to one hundred million eight hundred
38thousand dollars ($100,800,000).
39(c) (1) In implementing the California Solar Initiative, the
40commission shall not allocate more than fifty million dollars
P136 1($50,000,000) to research, development, and demonstration that
2explores solar technologies and other distributed generation
3technologies that employ or could employ solar energy for
4generation or storage of electricity or to offset natural gas usage.
5Any
program that allocates additional moneys to research,
6development, and demonstration shall be developed in
7collaboration with the Energy Commission to ensure there is no
8duplication of efforts, and adopted by the commission through a
9rulemaking or other appropriate public proceeding. Any grant
10awarded by the commission for research, development, and
11demonstration shall be approved by the full commission at a public
12meeting. This subdivision does not prohibit the commission from
13continuing to allocate moneys to research, development, and
14demonstration pursuant to the self-generation incentive program
15for distributed generation resources originally established pursuant
16to Chapter 329 of the Statutes of 2000, as modified pursuant to
17Section 379.6.
18(2) The Legislature finds and declares that a program that
19provides a stable source of
monetary incentives for eligible solar
20energy systems will encourage private investment sufficient to
21make solar technologies cost effective.
22(3) On or before June 30, 2009, and by June 30th of every year
23thereafter, the commission shall submit to the Legislature an
24assessment of the success of the California Solar Initiative program.
25That assessment shall include the number of residential and
26commercial sites that have installed solar thermal devices for which
27an award was made pursuant to subdivision (b) and the dollar value
28of the award, the number of residential and commercial sites that
29have installed solar energy systems, the electrical generating
30capacity of the installed solar energy systems, the cost of the
31program, total electrical system benefits, including the effect on
32electrical service rates, environmental benefits, how the
program
33affects the operation and reliability of the electrical grid, how the
34 program has affected peak demand for electricity, the progress
35made toward reaching the goals of the program, whether the
36program is on schedule to meet the program goals, and
37recommendations for improving the program to meet its goals. If
38the commission allocates additional moneys to research,
39development, and demonstration that explores solar technologies
40and other distributed generation technologies pursuant to paragraph
P137 1(1), the commission shall include in the assessment submitted to
2the Legislature, a description of the program, a summary of each
3award made or project funded pursuant to the program, including
4the intended purposes to be achieved by the particular award or
5project, and the results of each award or project.
6(d) (1) The commission shall not impose any charge upon the
7consumption of natural gas, or upon natural gas ratepayers, to fund
8the California Solar Initiative.
9(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any charge
10imposed to fund the program adopted and implemented pursuant
11to this section shall be imposed upon all customers not participating
12in the California Alternate Rates for Energy (CARE) or family
13electric rate assistance (FERA) programs, including those
14residential customers subject to the rate cap required by Section
1580110 of the Water Code for existing baseline quantities or usage
16up to 130 percent of existing baseline quantities of electricity.
17(3) The costs of the program adopted and implemented pursuant
18to this section may not be recovered from customers participating
19
in the California Alternate Rates for Energy or CARE program
20established pursuant to Section 739.1, except to the extent that
21program costs are recovered out of the nonbypassable system
22benefits charge authorized pursuant to Section 399.8.
23(e) In implementing the California Solar Initiative, the
24commission shall ensure that the total cost over the duration of the
25program does not exceed three billion five hundred fifty million
26eight hundred thousand dollars ($3,550,800,000). The financial
27components of the California Solar Initiative shall consist of the
28following:
29(1) Programs under the supervision of the commission funded
30by charges collected from customers of San Diego Gas and Electric
31Company, Southern California Edison Company, and Pacific Gas
32and Electric Company.
The total cost over the duration of these
33programs shall not exceed two billion three hundred sixty-six
34million eight hundred thousand dollars ($2,366,800,000) and
35includes moneys collected directly into a tracking account for
36support of the California Solar Initiative.
37(2) Programs adopted, implemented, and financed in the amount
38of seven hundred eighty-four million dollars ($784,000,000), by
39charges collected by local publicly owned electric utilities pursuant
40to Section 387.5. Nothing in this subdivision shall give the
P138 1commission power and jurisdiction with respect to a local publicly
2owned electric utility or its customers.
3(3) Programs for the installation of solar energy systems on new
4construction (New Solar Homes Partnership Program),
5administered by the Energy
Commission, and funded by charges
6in the amount of four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000),
7collected from customers of San Diego Gas and Electric Company,
8Southern California Edison Company, and Pacific Gas and Electric
9Company. If the commission is notified by the Energy Commission
10that funding available pursuant to Section 25751 of the Public
11Resources Code for the New Solar Homes Partnership Program
12has been exhausted, the commission may require an electrical
13corporation to continue administration of the program pursuant to
14the guidelines established for the program by the Energy
15Commission, until the funding limit authorized by this paragraph
16has been reached. The commission, in consultation with the Energy
17Commission, shall supervise the administration of the continuation
18of the New Solar Homes Partnership Program by an electrical
19corporation. An electrical corporation may elect to have a
third
20party, including the Energy Commission, administer the utility’s
21continuation of the New Solar Homes Program. After the
22exhaustion of funds, the Energy Commission shall notify the Joint
23Legislative Budget Committee 30 days prior to the continuation
24of the program.
25(4) The changes made to this subdivision by the act adding this
26paragraph do not authorize the levy of a charge or any increase in
27the amount collected pursuant to any existing charge, nor do the
28changes add to, or detract from, the commission’s existing authority
29to levy or increase charges.
Section 5900 of the Public Utilities Code is amended
32to read:
(a) The holder of a state franchise shall comply with
34the provisions of Sections 53055, 53055.1, 53055.2, and 53088.2
35of the Government Code, and any other customer service standards
36pertaining to the provision of video service established by federal
37law or regulation or adopted by subsequent enactment of the
38Legislature. All customer service and consumer protection
39standards under this section shall be interpreted and applied to
P139 1accommodate newer or different technologies while meeting or
2exceeding the goals of the standards.
3(b) The holder of a state franchise shall comply with provisions
4of Section 637.5 of the Penal Code and the privacy
standards
5contained in Section 551 et seq. of Title 47 of the United States
6
Code.
7(c) The local entity shall enforce all of the customer service and
8protection standards of this section with respect to complaints
9received from residents within the local entity’s jurisdiction, but
10it may not adopt or seek to enforce any additional or different
11customer service or other performance standards under Section
1253055.3 or subdivision (q), (r), or (s) of Section 53088.2 of the
13Government Code, or any other authority or provision of law.
14(d) The local entity shall, by ordinance or resolution, provide a
15schedule of penalties for any material breach by a holder of a state
16franchise of this section. No monetary penalties shall be assessed
17for a material breach if it is out of the reasonable control of the
18holder. Further, no monetary penalties may be
imposed prior to
19January 1, 2007. Any schedule of monetary penalties adopted
20pursuant to this section shall in no event exceed five hundred
21dollars ($500) for each day of each material breach, not to exceed
22one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500) for each occurrence
23of a material breach. However, if a material breach of this section
24has occurred, and the local entity has provided notice and a fine
25or penalty has been assessed, and if a subsequent material breach
26of the same nature occurs within 12 months, the penalties may be
27increased by the local entity to a maximum of one thousand dollars
28($1,000) for each day of each material breach, not to exceed three
29thousand dollars ($3,000) for each occurrence of the material
30breach. If a third or further material breach of the same nature
31occurs within those same 12 months, and the local entity has
32provided notice and a fine or penalty has been
assessed, the
33penalties may be increased to a maximum of two thousand five
34hundred dollars ($2,500) for each day of each material breach, not
35to exceed seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) for each
36occurrence of the material breach. With respect to video providers
37subject to a franchise or license, any monetary penalties assessed
38under this section shall be reduced dollar-for-dollar to the extent
39any liquidated damage or penalty provision of a current cable
40television ordinance, franchise contract, or license agreement
P140 1imposes a monetary obligation upon a video provider for the same
2customer service failures, and no other monetary damages may be
3assessed.
4(e) The local entity shall give the video service provider written
5notice of any alleged material breach of the customer service
6standards of this division and allow the
video provider at least 30
7days from receipt of the notice to remedy the specified material
8breach.
9(f) A material breach for the purposes of assessing penalties
10shall be deemed to have occurred for each day within the
11jurisdiction of each local entity, following the expiration of the
12period specified in subdivision (e), that any material breach has
13not been remedied by the video service provider, irrespective of
14the number of customers or subscribers affected.
15(g) Any penalty assessed pursuant to this section shall be
16remitted to the local entity, which shall submit one-half of the
17penalty to the Digital Divide Account established in Section 280.5.
18(h) Any interested person may seek judicial review of a decision
19of
the local entity in a court of appropriate jurisdiction. For this
20purpose, a court of law shall conduct a de novo review of any
21issues presented.
22(i) This section shall not preclude a party affected by this section
23from utilizing any judicial remedy available to that party without
24regard to this section. Actions taken by a local legislative body,
25including a local franchising entity, pursuant to this section shall
26not be binding upon a court of law. For this purpose, a court of
27law shall conduct de novo review of any issues presented.
28(j) For purposes of this section, “material breach” means any
29substantial and repeated failure of a video service provider to
30comply with service quality and other standards specified in
31subdivision (a).
32(k) The Office of Ratepayer Advocates shall have authority to
33advocate on behalf of video subscribers regarding renewal of a
34state-issued franchise and enforcement of this section, and Sections
355890 and 5950. For this purpose, the office shall have access to
36any information in the possession of the commission subject to all
37restrictions on disclosure of that information that are applicable
38to the commission.
Section 43002.3 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
3 is amended to read:
(a) For purposes of the collection of the fees specified
5in subdivision (a) of Section 25174 and the fee imposed pursuant
6to Section 25174.1 of the Health and Safety Code, a determination
7by the Department of Toxic Substances Control that a waste is
8nonhazardous shall be effective only for wastes disposed of, or
9submitted for disposal, commencing with the month during which
10the Department of Toxic Substances Control receives a completed
11application for that determination.
12(b) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
13reporting periods.
14(c) This
section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
15and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
16is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 43005.5 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
19 is repealed.
Section 43012 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
22amended to read:
(a) For purposes of this part, “taxpayer” means any
24person liable for the payment of a fee or a tax specified in
25paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 25173.6 of the Health
26and Safety Code or subdivision (a) of Section 25174 of the Health
27and Safety Code, or imposed by Section 105310 or 25174.1 of the
28Health and Safety Code.
29(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
30and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
31is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 43012 is added to the Revenue and Taxation
34Code, to read:
(a) For purposes of this part, “taxpayer” means any
36person liable for the payment of a fee or a tax specified in
37paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 25173.6 of the Health
38and Safety Code or subdivision (a) of Section 25174 of the Health
39and Safety Code, or imposed by Section 105310 of the Health and
40Safety Code.
P142 1(b) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
2shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
3thereafter, including the prepayments due following the reporting
4period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
5the reporting period.
Section 43051 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
8amended to
read:
(a) The fee imposed pursuant to Section 25174.1 of
10the Health and Safety Code shall be administered and collected
11by the board in accordance with this part.
12(b) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
13reporting periods.
14(c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
15and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
16is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 43053 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
19amended to
read:
The fees imposed pursuant to Sections 25205.2,
2125205.5, and 25205.14 of the Health and Safety Code shall be
22administered and collected by the board in accordance with this
23part.
Section 43055 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
26repealed.
Section 43101 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
29amended to
read:
Every person, as defined in Section 25118 of the Health
31and Safety Code, who is subject to the fees specified in Section
32105190 of the Health and Safety Code, and imposed pursuant to
33Sections 25205.2, 25205.5, 25205.6, and 25205.14 of the Health
34and Safety Code, shall register with the board on forms provided
35by the board.
Section 43151 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
38amended to
read:
(a) The fee imposed pursuant to Section 25174.1 of
40the Health and Safety Code, which is a tax collected and
P143 1administered under Section 43051, is due and payable to the board
2monthly on or before the last day of the third calendar month
3following the end of the calendar month for which the fee is due.
4Each taxpayer shall, on or before the last day of the third calendar
5month following the end of the calendar month for which the fee
6is due, make out a tax return for the calendar month, in the form
7as prescribed by the board, which may include, but not be limited
8to, electronic media in accordance with subdivision (c). The
9taxpayer shall deliver the return, together with a remittance of the
10amount of fee
due, to the office of the board on or before the last
11day of the third calendar month following the end of the calendar
12month for which the fee is due. Returns shall be authenticated in
13a form or pursuant to methods as may be prescribed by the board.
14(b) With the approval of the board, a taxpayer who has more
15than one facility subject to the taxes collected and administered
16under this chapter, may file a combined tax return covering
17operations at more than one, or all, of those facilities.
18(c) The form required to be submitted by the taxpayer pursuant
19to this section shall show, for the taxpayer and for each person
20from whom the taxpayer accepted hazardous waste for disposal,
21all of the following:
22(1) The total amount of
hazardous waste subject to the tax and
23the amount of the tax for the period covered by the return.
24(2) The amount of hazardous waste disposed during the tax
25period that is in each of the fee categories described in Section
2625174.6 of the Health and Safety Code, and the amount of disposal
27fees paid for each of those categories.
28(3) The amount of hazardous waste received for disposal by the
29taxpayer’s facility or facilities that is exempt from the payment of
30disposal fees pursuant to Section 25174.7 of the Health and Safety
31Code, including a copy of any written documentation provided for
32any shipment or shipments of hazardous waste received by a
33facility.
34(4) The amount of RCRA hazardous waste which is treated by
35the
taxpayer so that the waste is considered to be non-RCRA
36hazardous waste for purposes of the disposal fee, pursuant to
37paragraph (2) of subdivision (b) of Section 25174.6.
38(d) (1) Each taxpayer shall maintain records documenting all
39of the following information for each person who has submitted
40hazardous waste for disposal by the taxpayer during each calendar
P144 1month and shall make those records available for review and
2inspection at the request of the board or the department:
3(A) The tonnage of hazardous waste submitted for disposal.
4(B) The type of hazardous waste disposed as specified by
5Section 25174.6 of the Health and Safety Code, including both of
6the following:
7(i) Any characterization of the hazardous waste made by the
8person submitting the hazardous waste for disposal.
9(ii) Any other documentation which the taxpayer maintains
10regarding the type of hazardous waste disposed to land.
11(C) Any representation made by the person submitting the
12hazardous waste regarding any exemptions that may be applicable
13to the payment of disposal fees.
14(D) For any RCRA hazardous waste which is treated by the
15taxpayer so that the waste is considered to be non-RCRA hazardous
16waste for purposes of the disposal fee, pursuant to paragraph (2)
17of subdivision (b) of Section 25174.6, all of the following
18information:
19(i) The tonnage and type of hazardous waste.
20(ii) The method or methods used to treat the hazardous waste.
21(iii) Operating records documenting the treatment activity.
22(iv) Representative and statistical waste sampling and analysis
23data demonstrating that the waste is no longer RCRA hazardous
24waste at the time of disposal.
25(2) If the hazardous wastes submitted for disposal were
26accompanied by a manifest, the information specified in paragraph
27(1) shall be maintained by manifest number for each calendar
28month.
29(e) This section applies only to
fees due for the 2013 and earlier
30reporting periods.
31(f) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
32and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
33is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 43152 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is
36amended to
read:
(a) The board shall establish and annually submit to
38each generator of hazardous waste a consolidated statement of fees
39required to be paid by the generator to the board pursuant to
P145 1Sections 25205.2, 25205.5, 25205.6, and 25205.14 of the Health
2and Safety Code.
3(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any return or
4other document that is required to be submitted by a generator of
5hazardous waste to the board in connection with the payment of
6any fee specified in subdivision (a) shall instead be submitted
7together with the consolidated statement made pursuant to
8subdivision (a).
Section 43152.7 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
11 is amended to
read:
(a) The fee imposed pursuant to Section 25205.5 of
13the Health and Safety Code that is collected and administered
14under Section 43053 is due and payable on the last day of the
15second month following the end of the calendar year.
16(b) Every generator subject to the fee imposed pursuant to
17Section 25205.5 of the Health and Safety Code shall file an annual
18return in the form as prescribed by the board, which may include,
19but not be limited to, electronic media and pay the proper amount
20of fee due. The board shall credit the prepayment made pursuant
21to Section 43152.15 against the amount due with the annual return.
22Returns shall be authenticated in a form
or pursuant to methods
23as may be prescribed by the board.
Section 43152.10 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
26 is amended to
read:
The fees collected and administered under Sections
2843053 and 43054, are due and payable within 30 days after the
29date of assessment and the feepayer shall deliver a remittance of
30the amount of the assessed fee to the office of the board within
31that 30-day period.
Section 43152.11 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
34 is
repealed.
Section 43152.15 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
37 is amended to
read:
(a) In addition to the requirements imposed pursuant
39to Section 43152.7, every generator subject to the fees specified
40in Sections 25205.5 and 25205.9 of the Health and Safety Code
P146 1shall make a prepayment of the fee by site to the board which is
2due and payable on or before the last day of August of each
3calendar year. The prepayment shall be accompanied by a
4prepayment return in a form prescribed by the board.
5(b) For purposes of subdivision (a), the amount of the
6prepayment shall be not less than either of the following:
7(1) One hundred percent of the applicable fee imposed on the
8generator,
based on the generator’s fee category as specified in
9Section 25205.5 of the Health and Safety Code for the total volume
10of hazardous waste generated by site during the period January 1
11to June 30, inclusive, of the current calendar year in which the
12prepayment is due. The prepayment may be offset by fees paid by
13the generator for a local hazardous waste management program
14conducted by a local agency pursuant to a memorandum of
15understanding with the department which includes the following:
16(A) The local fees are paid for the current calendar year for
17which the prepayment is due or the local fees are paid for the
18preceding calendar year, if fees have not been paid for the current
19year.
20(B) The offset is subject to the limitations and requirements
21specified in subdivision (c)
of Section 43152.7.
22(2) Fifty percent of the generator fee liability paid to the board
23by site for the preceding calendar year provided the generator paid
24a generator fee liability to the board for the preceding calendar
25year for that site.
26(c) The board shall credit the amount of the prepayment against
27the amount of the fee due and payable for the calendar year in
28which the prepayment is due.
29(d) Notwithstanding any other provision in this section, the
30prepayment of a generator fee shall not be required for any amount
31due that is less than five hundred dollars ($500), or for any other
32amount due if the board determines that prepayment is not in the
33best economic interest of the program.
34(e) Any person required to make a prepayment pursuant to this
35section who fails to make a prepayment by the due date specified
36in subdivision (a) shall also pay penalties and interest in accordance
37with Section 43155.
38(f) This section applies only to fees due for the 2013 and earlier
39 reporting periods.
P147 1(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2014,
2and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
3is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends that date.
Section 43152.15 is added to the Revenue and
6Taxation Code, to
read:
(a) In addition to the requirements imposed pursuant
8to Section 43152.7, every generator subject to the fees specified
9in Section 25205.5 of the Health and Safety Code shall make a
10prepayment of the fee by site to the board which is due and payable
11on or before the last day of August of each calendar year. The
12prepayment shall be accompanied by a prepayment return in a
13form prescribed by the board.
14(b) For purposes of subdivision (a), the amount of the
15prepayment shall be not less than either of the following:
16(1) One hundred percent of the applicable fee imposed on the
17generator, based on the
generation and handling fee specified in
18Section 25205.5 of the Health and Safety Code for the total volume
19of hazardous waste generated by site during the period January 1
20to June 30, inclusive, of the current calendar year in which the
21prepayment is due. The prepayment may be offset by fees paid by
22the generator for a local hazardous waste management program
23conducted by a local agency pursuant to a memorandum of
24understanding with the department which includes the following:
25(A) The local fees are paid for the current calendar year for
26which the prepayment is due or the local fees are paid for the
27preceding calendar year, if fees have not been paid for the current
28year.
29(B) The offset is subject to the limitations and requirements
30specified in subdivision (c) of Section
43152.7.
31(2) Fifty percent of the generation and handling fee liability
32paid to the board by site for the preceding calendar year provided
33the generator paid a generation and handling fee liability to the
34board for the preceding calendar year for that site.
35(c) The board shall credit the amount of the prepayment against
36the amount of the fee due and payable for the calendar year in
37which the prepayment is due.
38(d) Notwithstanding any other provision in this section, the
39prepayment of a generation and handling fee shall not be required
40for any amount due that is less than five hundred dollars ($500),
P148 1or for any other amount due if the board determines that
2prepayment is not in the best economic interest of the program.
3(e) Any person required to make a prepayment pursuant to this
4section who fails to make a prepayment by the due date specified
5in subdivision (a) shall also pay penalties and interest in accordance
6with Section 43155.
7(f) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014, and
8shall apply to the fees due for the 2014 reporting period and
9thereafter, including the prepayments due following the reporting
10period and the final reconciliation fee due and payable following
11the reporting period.
Section 43152.16 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
14 is
repealed.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
17following:
18(a) The Department of Transportation owns real property
19commonly known as 2829 Juan Street, San Diego, which served
20as the department’s District 11 administrative headquarters until
212006.
22(b) Subsequently, the Department of Transportation constructed
23a new District 11 administrative headquarters and relocated its
24staff to the new
facility, and no longer needs the property at 2829
25Juan Street, and is desirous of transferring it.
26(c) It has cost the Department of Transportation over five
27hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) to continue to own and
28maintain the property at 2829 Juan Street, and future annual costs
29to maintain the property will be at least eighty thousand dollars
30($80,000) annually. It is also estimated to cost between three
31million dollars ($3,000,000) and six million dollars ($6,000,000)
32to remove antiquated and obsolete buildings and fixtures from the
33property.
34(d) The property at 2829 Juan Street is immediately adjacent to
35property owned by the Department of Parks and Recreation, which
36is operated as Old Town San Diego State Historic Park and which
37is one of the most popular and most
visited parks in the state park
38system.
39(e) The Department of Parks and Recreation desires to have the
40property at 2829 Juan Street transferred to it, so that it can be
P149 1incorporated into Old Town San Diego State Historic Park, or
2developed in a manner than complements the state park.
3(f) It is adequate consideration for the Department of
4Transportation to transfer the property at 2829 Juan Street to the
5Department of Parks and Recreation if the recipient department
6assumes all ongoing maintenance and ownership liabilities as well
7as all future development costs, including the removal of all
8structures and fixtures that the recipient department concludes are
9not consistent with the development of Old Town San Diego State
10Historic Park.
Section 104.22 is added to the Streets and Highways
13Code, to read:
(a) Notwithstanding any other law, the Department
15of Transportation shall, consistent with Article XIX of the
16California Constitution, transfer to the Department of Parks and
17Recreation the real property in the City of San Diego between
18Taylor Street and Wallace Street and between Juan Street and
19Calhoun Street, which was acquired for highway purposes and
20which was previously used by the department as its District 11
21administrative headquarters, and which is commonly known as
222829 Juan Street, San Diego.
23(b) The real property transferred pursuant to subdivision (a)
24shall be incorporated into the state park system upon its transfer
25to the Department of Parks and
Recreation.
26(c) On and after the date of transfer, the Department of
27Transportation shall have no continuing obligation relating to the
28ownership, maintenance, or control of the transferred real property,
29and all obligations of ownership, maintenance, and control shall
30thereafter be borne by the Department of Parks and Recreation.
31(d) The transfer of the real property required by this section
32shall be completed within 90 days of the effective date of the act
33enacting this section in the 2013-14 Regular Session of the
34Legislature.
35(e) The transfer of the real property required by this section
36serves a public purpose.
Section 10001.7 is added to the Water Code, to read:
The Director of Finance shall notify the Joint
40Legislative Budget Committee of any hydroelectric power project
P150 1relicensing proposal for the Federal Energy Regulatory
2Commission that, if approved by the department, would obligate
3the General Fund in the current or future years. The department
4may approve that relicensing proposal not less than 30 days after
5the Director of Finance notifies the Joint Legislative Budget
6Committee.
Section 85200 of the Water Code is amended to
9read:
(a) The Delta Stewardship Council is hereby established
11as an independent agency of the state.
12(b) The council shall consist of seven voting members, of which
13four members shall be appointed by the Governor and confirmed
14by the Senate, one member shall be appointed by the Senate
15Committee on Rules, one member shall be appointed by the
16Speaker of the Assembly, and one member shall be the Chairperson
17of the Delta Protection Commission. Initial appointments to the
18council shall be made by July 1, 2010.
19(c) (1) (A) The initial terms of two of the four members
20appointed by the Governor shall
be four years.
21(B) The initial terms of two of the four members appointed by
22the Governor shall be six years.
23(C) The initial terms of the members appointed by the Senate
24Committee on Rules and the Speaker of the Assembly shall be
25four years.
26(D) Upon the expiration of each term described in subparagraphs
27(A), (B), or (C), the term of each succeeding member shall be four
28years.
29(2) The Chairperson of the Delta Protection Commission shall
30serve as a member of the council for the period during which he
31or she holds the position as commission chairperson.
32(d) Any vacancy shall be filled by the
appointing authority
33within 60 days. If the term of a council member expires, and no
34successor is appointed within the allotted timeframe, the existing
35member may serve up to 180 days beyond the expiration of his or
36her term.
37(e) The council members shall select a chairperson from among
38their members, who shall serve for not more than four years in that
39capacity.
P151 1(f) The council shall meet once a month in a public forum. At
2least two meetings each year shall take place at a location within
3the Delta.
Section 34 of Chapter 718 of the Statutes of 2010
6is repealed.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant
9to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
10the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
11district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
12infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
13for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
14the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
15the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
16Constitution.
The balance of the appropriation made in Schedule
19(1) of Item 3850-301-6051 of Section 2.00 the Budget Act of 2010
20(Chapter 724, Statutes 2010) is hereby reappropriated to the
21Coachella Valley Mountains Conservancy, to be available for
22expenditure for capital outlay or local assistance until June 30,
232016.
This act is a bill providing for appropriations related
26to the Budget Bill within the meaning of subdivision (e) of Section
2712 of Article IV of the California Constitution, has been identified
28as related to the budget in the Budget Bill, and shall take effect
29immediately.
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