AB 1126,
as amended, Gordon. Solid waste: biomass conversion:begin insert engineeredend insert municipal solid wastebegin delete (MSW)end deletebegin insert (EMSW)end insert conversion.
(1) The California Integrated Waste Management Act of 1989 (act), which is administered by the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery, requires each city, county, and regional agency, if any, to develop a source reduction and recycling element of an integrated waste management plan. With certain exceptions, the source reduction and recycling element of that plan is required to divert 50% of all solid waste, through source reduction, recycling, and composting activities. Existing law allows the 50% diversion requirement to include, pursuant to specified conditions, not more than 10% through biomass conversion, which is defined as the controlled combustion of specific materials for use in producing electricity or heat.
This bill would define the termsbegin delete “MSWend deletebegin insert
“EMSWend insert conversion” andbegin delete “MSWend deletebegin insert “EMSWend insert conversion facility,” and would make conforming changes to existing definitions with regard to those operations and facilities.begin delete The bill would also revise the definition of “composting” to include the anaerobic digestion of organic waste.end delete
(2) The act requires the integrated waste management plan required to be adopted by a county to include a countywide siting element that provides a description of the areas to be used for the development of certain facilities. The act excludes certain solid wastes, for purposes of determining the base rate for the diversion of solid waste, and requires that the amount of solid waste diverted include solid waste diverted from a disposal facility or transformation facility.
This bill would require the countywide siting element to include a description of the areas to be used for the development of adequatebegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert conversion, thereby imposing a state-mandated local program by imposing new duties upon local agencies.
This bill would additionally exclude certain used or waste tires or biomass materials from the solid waste calculation used in that base rate determination and would require the amount of solid waste to include solid waste diverted from anbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert
EMSWend insert conversion facility.
(3) Existing law prohibits a person from establishing or expanding a solid waste facility in a county, after a countywide or regional agency integrated waste management plan has been approved, unless the solid waste facility is, among other things, a disposal facility or a transformation facility that meets certain criteria.
This bill would additionally include, as one of those facilities, anbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert conversion facility.
(4) 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.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 40116.1 of the Public Resources Code
2 is amended to read:
(a) “Composting” means the controlled or
2uncontrolled biological decomposition of organic wastes.
3(b) “Composting” also includes the anaerobic digestion of
4organic wastes.
Section 40121 of the Public Resources Code is
7amended to read:
“Disposal facility” or “facility” means a facility or
9location where disposal of solid waste occurs or anbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert
10 conversion facility.
Section 40150.5 is added to the Public Resources Code,
12to read:
(a) “Municipal solid waste conversion” or “MSW
14conversion” means the conversion of solid waste through a process
15that meets all of the following requirements:
16(1) The waste to be converted is beneficial and effective in that
17it replaces or supplements the use of fossil fuels.
18(2) The waste to be converted, the resulting ash, and any other
19products of conversion do not meet the criteria or guidelines for
20the identification of a hazardous waste adopted by the Department
21of Toxic Substances Control pursuant to Section 25141 of the
22Health and Safety Code.
23(3) The conversion is efficient and maximizes the net
calorific
24value and burn rate of the waste.
25(4) The waste to be processed contains less than 25 percent
26moisture and less than 10 percent noncombustible waste.
27(5) The waste to be processed that is received at the facility is
28handled in compliance with the requirements for the handling of
29solid waste imposed pursuant to this division, and no more than a
30seven-day supply of that waste, based on the throughput capacity
31of the operation or facility, is stored at the facility at any one time.
32(6) No more than 500 tons per day of waste is converted at the
33facility where the operation takes place.
34(b) “Municipal solid waste conversion facility” or “MSW
35facility” means a facility where municipal solid waste conversion
36that meets the requirements of subdivision
(a) takes place.
begin insertSection 40131.2 is added to the end insertbegin insertPublic Resources Codeend insertbegin insert,
38to read:end insert
(a) “Engineered municipal solid waste conversion”
2or “EMSW conversion” means the conversion of solid waste
3through a process that meets all of the following requirements:
4(1) The waste to be converted is beneficial and effective in that
5it replaces or supplements the use of fossil fuels.
6(2) The waste to be converted, the resulting ash, and any other
7products of conversion do not meet the criteria or guidelines for
8the identification of a hazardous waste adopted by the Department
9of Toxic Substances Control pursuant to Section 25141 of the
10Health and Safety Code.
11(3) The conversion is efficient and maximizes the
net calorific
12value and burn rate of the waste.
13(4) The waste to be converted contains less than 25 percent
14moisture and less than 25 percent noncombustible waste.
15(5) The waste received at the facility for conversion is handled
16in compliance with the requirements for the handling of solid waste
17imposed pursuant to this division, and no more than a seven-day
18supply of that waste, based on the throughput capacity of the
19operation or facility, is stored at the facility at any one time.
20(6) No more than 500 tons per day of waste is converted at the
21facility where the operation takes place.
22(7) After conversion, the waste has a value of 5,000 BTU per
23pound.
24(b) “Engineered municipal solid
waste conversion facility” or
25“EMSW facility” means a facility where municipal solid waste
26conversion that meets the requirements of subdivision (a) takes
27place.
Section 40180 of the Public Resources Code is
30amended to read:
“Recycle” or “recycling” means the process of
32collecting, sorting, cleansing, treating, and reconstituting materials
33that would otherwise become solid waste, and returning them to
34the economic mainstream in the form of raw material for new,
35reused, or reconstituted products which meet the quality standards
36necessary to be used in the marketplace. “Recycling” does not
37include transformation, as defined in Section 40201 or begin delete MSWend delete
38begin insert EMSWend insert conversion.
Section 40192 of the Public Resources Code is
3amended to read:
(a) Except as provided in subdivisions (b) and (c),
5“solid waste disposal,” “disposal,” or “dispose” means the final
6deposition of solid wastes onto land, into the atmosphere, or into
7the waters of the state.
8(b) For purposes of Part 2 (commencing with Section 40900),
9“solid waste disposal,” “dispose,” or “disposal” means the
10management of solid waste through landfill disposal,
11transformation, orbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert conversion, at a permitted solid
12waste facility, unless the term is
expressly defined otherwise.
13(c) For purposes of Chapter 16 (commencing with Section
1442800) and Chapter 19 (commencing with Section 42950) of Part
153, Part 4 (commencing with Section 43000), Part 5 (commencing
16with Section 45000), Part 6 (commencing with Section 45030),
17and Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 47901) of Part 7, “solid
18waste disposal,” “dispose,” or “disposal” means the final deposition
19of solid wastes onto land.
Section 40194 of the Public Resources Code is
22amended to read:
“Solid waste facility” includes a solid waste transfer
24or processing station, a composting facility, a gasification facility,
25a transformation facility, anbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert conversion facility, and
26a disposal facility. For purposes of Part 5 (commencing with
27Section 45000), “solid waste facility” additionally includes a solid
28waste operation that may be carried out pursuant to an enforcement
29agency notification, as provided in regulations adopted by the
30department.
Section 40200 of the Public Resources Code is
33amended to read:
(a) “Transfer or processing station” or “station”
35includes those facilities utilized to receive solid wastes, temporarily
36store, separate, convert, or otherwise process the materials in the
37solid wastes, or to transfer the solid wastes directly from smaller
38to larger vehicles for transport, and those facilities utilized for
39transformation.
P6 1(b) “Transfer or processing station” or “station” does not include
2any of the following:
3(1) A facility, whose principal function is to receive, store,
4separate, convert, or otherwise process in accordance with state
5minimum standards, manure.
6(2) A facility, whose principal function is to receive, store,
7convert, or otherwise process wastes that have already been
8separated for reuse and are not intended for disposal.
9(3) The operations premises of a duly licensed solid waste
10handling operator who receives, stores, transfers, or otherwise
11processes wastes as an activity incidental to the conduct of a refuse
12collection and disposal business in accordance with regulations
13adopted pursuant to Section 43309.
14(4) Anbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert conversion facility.
Section 40201 of the Public Resources Code is
17amended to read:
“Transformation” means incineration, pyrolysis,
19distillation, or biological conversion other than composting.
20“Transformation” does not include composting, gasification,begin delete MSWend delete
21begin insert EMSWend insert conversion, or biomass conversion.
Section 41700 of the Public Resources Code is
24amended to read:
Each county shall prepare a countywide siting element
26that provides a description of the areas to be used for development
27of adequate transformation,begin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert conversion, or disposal
28capacity concurrent and consistent with the development and
29implementation of the county and city source reduction and
30recycling elements adopted pursuant to this part.
Section 41721 of the Public Resources Code is
33amended to read:
(a) The countywide siting element shall be approved
35by the county and by a majority of the cities within the county that
36contain a majority of the population of the incorporated area of
37the county except in those counties that have only two cities, in
38which case the element is subject to approval of the city that
39contains the majority of the population of the incorporated area of
40the county. Each city shall act upon the countywide siting element
P7 1within 90 days after receipt of the siting element. If a city fails to
2act upon the siting element within 90 days after receiving the siting
3element, the city shall be deemed to have approved the siting
4element as submitted.
5(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), a siting element providing
6for anbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert conversion facility is only required to be
7approved by the city in which it is located, or if thebegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert
8 is not located in a city, by the county.
Section 41781 of the Public Resources Code is
11amended to read:
(a) Except as provided in Sections 41781.1, and
1341781.2, for the purpose of determining the base rate of solid waste
14from which diversion requirements shall be calculated, “solid
15waste” includes only the following:
16(1) The amount of solid waste generated within a local agency’s
17jurisdiction, the types and quantities of which were disposed of at
18a permitted disposal facility as of January 1, 1990. Nothing in this
19section requires local agencies to perform waste characterization
20in addition to the waste characterization requirements established
21under Sections 41030, 41031, 41330, 41331, and 41332.
22(2) The amount of solid waste diverted from a disposal facility,
23transformation facility, orbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert facility, through source
24reduction, recycling, or composting.
25(b) For the purposes of this section, “solid waste” does not
26include any of the following:
27 (1) Solid waste that would not normally be disposed of at a
28disposal facility.
29(2) Used or waste tires, as defined in Article 1 (commencing
30with Section 42800) of Chapter 16 of Part 3, or biomass material,
31as described in subdivision (a) of Section 40106, which are
32converted at anbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert
EMSWend insert conversion facility.
33(c) For the purposes of this chapter, the amount of solid waste
34from which the required reductions are measured shall be the
35amount of solid waste existing on January 1, 1990, with future
36adjustments for increases or decreases in the quantity of waste
37caused only by changes in population or changes in the number
38or size of governmental, industrial, or commercial operations in
39the jurisdiction.
Section 50001 of the Public Resources Code is
3amended to read:
(a) Except as provided by subdivision (b), after a
5countywide or regional agency integrated waste management plan
6has been approved by the Department of Resources Recycling and
7Recovery pursuant to Division 30 (commencing with Section
840000), a person shall not establish or expand a solid waste facility,
9as defined in Section 40194, in the county unless the solid waste
10facility meets one of the following criteria:
11(1) The solid waste facility is a disposal facility, a transformation
12facility, or anbegin delete MSWend deletebegin insert EMSWend insert
conversion facility, the location of
13which is identified in the countywide siting element or amendment
14to that element, which has been approved pursuant to Section
1541721.
16(2) The solid waste facility is a facility that is designed to
17recover for reuse or recycling at least 5 percent of the total volume
18of material received by the facility, and that is identified in the
19nondisposal facility element that has been approved pursuant to
20Section 41800 or is included in an update to that element.
21(b) Solid waste facilities other than those specified in paragraphs
22(1) and (2) of subdivision (a) shall not be required to comply with
23the requirements of this section.
24(c) The person or agency proposing to establish a
solid waste
25facility shall prepare and submit a site identification and description
26of the proposed facility to the task force established pursuant to
27Section 40950. Within 90 days after the site identification and
28description is submitted to the task force, the task force shall meet
29and comment on the proposed solid waste facility in writing. These
30comments shall include, but are not limited to, the relationship
31between the proposed solid waste facility and the implementation
32schedule requirements of Section 41780 and the regional impact
33of the facility. The task force shall transmit these comments to the
34person or public agency proposing establishment of the solid waste
35facility, to the county, and to all cities within the county. The
36comments shall become part of the official record of the proposed
37solid waste facility.
38(d) The
review and comment by the local task force shall not
39be required for an update to a nondisposal facility element.
No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
3Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
4a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service
5charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or
6level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section
717556 of the Government Code.
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