BILL NUMBER: SB 1014	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 1, 2014

INTRODUCED BY   Senator Jackson
    (   Principal coauthor:   Senator 
 Leno   ) 
    (   Coauthors:   Senators   Evans,
  Hancock,   Liu,   and Pavley  
) 
    (   Coauthors:   Assembly Members 
 Ammiano   and Williams   ) 

                        FEBRUARY 13, 2014

   An act to add Section 4068.1 to the Business and Professions Code,
to amend Section 117700 of, and to add Section 117670.1 to, the
Health and Safety Code, and to add Article 3.4 (commencing with
Section 47120) to Chapter 1 of Part 7 of Division 30 of the Public
Resources Code, relating to pharmaceutical waste.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 1014, as amended, Jackson. Pharmaceutical waste: 
home-generated.   home generated. 
   (1) The Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery was
required, pursuant to provisions repealed on January 1, 2013, to
develop, in consultation with appropriate state, local, and federal
agencies, model programs for the collection and proper disposal of
drug waste.
   This bill would enact the Home-Generated Pharmaceutical Waste
Collection Disposal Act and would define terms for purposes of the
act. The bill would require a producer of covered pharmaceuticals to
submit to the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery, by July
1, 2015, except as specified, a product stewardship plan and would
authorize one or more producers to submit a plan or designate a
stewardship organization to act as an agent on behalf of the
producers to submit a plan. The bill would require the stewardship
plan to contain specified elements with regard to the collection and
disposal of home-generated pharmaceutical waste, including provisions
for the payment of all administrative and operational fees
associated with the product stewardship program.
   The bill would specify procedures for the approval of the plan by
the department and would require a producer, group of producers, or
stewardship organization operating a stewardship program to take
specified actions with regard to the disposal of home-generated
pharmaceutical waste and promoting product stewardship programs to
consumers, pharmacists, retailers of covered pharmaceuticals, and
health care practitioners.
   The bill would require a producer, group of producers, or
stewardship organization operating a product stewardship program to
prepare and submit to the department an annual written report
describing the program's activities during the previous calendar year
by July 1, 2016, or at a later date as approved by the department,
and on or before July 1 annually thereafter.
   The bill would authorize the department to adopt regulations to
implement the act and would require the department to adopt
regulations to provide for the appropriate management of consolidated
home-generated pharmaceutical waste, to establish a schedule of fees
to be charged to cover the department's costs of administering and
enforcing the act, and to adopt a schedule setting the amounts of
administrative civil penalties that the department would be
authorized to impose. The bill would require a producer, group of
producers, or a stewardship organization submitting a plan to the
department to pay the fees set by the department and would require
the department to deposit the fees into the Home-Generated
Pharmaceutical Waste Program Account, which the bill would create in
the Integrated Waste Management Fund. The department would be
authorized to expend the fees, upon appropriation by the Legislature,
to administer and enforce the act.
   The bill would authorize the department to issue an administrative
order to, or impose a civil penalty upon, a producer who is in
violation of the act or a regulation adopted pursuant to the act. The
bill would require the department to deposit the penalties into the
Home-Generated Pharmaceutical Waste Penalty Account, which the bill
would create in the Integrated Waste Management Fund, and would
authorize the department to expend the moneys in that account, upon
appropriation by the Legislature, to enforce the act.
   (2) The Medical Waste Management Act, administered by the State
Department of Public Health, regulates the management and handling of
medical waste, including pharmaceutical waste, as defined. Existing
law defines the term medical waste and excludes certain types of
waste from that definition.
   This bill would define the term "home-generated pharmaceutical
waste" for purposes of that act. The bill would exclude, from the
definition of medical waste, home-generated pharmaceutical waste that
is handled by a collection and disposal program operating in
accordance with the act specified above. This exclusion would not
become operative until the Secretary of State posts a notice
regarding the effective date of the regulations that the department
is required to adopt pursuant to that act.
   (3) The Pharmacy Law provides for the licensure and regulation of
pharmacists and pharmacy establishments by the California State Board
of Pharmacy, and makes a knowing violation of that law a
misdemeanor.
   The bill would also authorize a pharmacy to accept the return of
home-generated pharmaceutical waste from a consumer, consistent with
specified federal laws. Because a knowing violation of this provision
would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local
program.
   (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 1.  Section 4068.1 is added to the Business and Professions
Code, to read:
   4068.1.  A pharmacy may accept the return of home-generated
pharmaceutical waste, as defined in Section 117670.1 of the Health
and Safety Code, from a consumer, consistent with the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. Sec. 301 et seq.) and the 
federal  Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. Sec. 801 et seq.).

  SEC. 2.  Section 117670.1 is added to the Health and Safety Code,
to read:
   117670.1.  "Home-generated pharmaceutical waste" means a
prescription or over-the-counter human or veterinary home-generated
pharmaceutical, including, but not limited to, a drug, as defined in
Section 109925 or in Section 321(g)(1) of Title 21 of the United
States Code, that is a waste, as defined in Section 25124, derived
from a household, including, but not limited to, a multifamily
residence or household.
  SEC. 3.  Section 117700 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to
read:
   117700.  Medical waste does not include any of the following:
   (a) Waste generated in food processing or biotechnology that does
not contain an infectious agent as defined in Section 117675.
   (b) Waste generated in biotechnology that does not contain human
blood or blood products or animal blood or blood products suspected
of being contaminated with infectious agents known to be communicable
to humans.
   (c) Urine, feces, saliva, sputum, nasal secretions, sweat, tears,
or vomitus, unless it contains fluid blood, as provided in
subdivision (d) of Section 117635.
   (d) Waste which is not biohazardous, such as paper towels, paper
products, articles containing nonfluid blood, and other medical solid
waste products commonly found in the facilities of medical waste
generators.
   (e) Hazardous waste, radioactive waste, or household waste,
including, but not limited to, home-generated sharps waste, as
defined in Section 117671.
   (f) Waste generated from normal and legal veterinarian,
agricultural, and animal livestock management practices on a farm or
ranch.
   (g) (1) Home-generated pharmaceutical waste, including, but not
limited to, consolidated home-generated pharmaceutical waste, that is
handled by a collection and disposal program operating in accordance
with Article 3.4 (commencing with Section 47120) of Chapter 1 of
Part 7 of Division 30 of the Public Resources Code.
   (2)  The Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery shall
notify the Secretary of State of the effective date of the
regulations adopted pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 47129 of
the Public Resources Code. The Secretary of State shall post this
notification on its Internet Web site within 15 days after receiving
that notice.
   (3) Paragraph (1) shall not become operative until the Secretary
of State posts the notice described in paragraph (2) on its Internet
Web site.
  SEC. 4.  Article 3.4 (commencing with Section 47120) is added to
Chapter 1 of Part 7 of Division 30 of the Public Resources Code, to
read:

      Article 3.4.  Home-Generated Pharmaceutical Waste Collection
and Disposal


   47120.  The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the
following:
   (a) Prescription and nonprescription drugs successfully allow us
to live longer, healthier, and more productive lives.
   (b) The public, particularly children and the elderly, are at
significant and unnecessary risk of poisoning due to improper or
careless disposal of drugs and the illegal resale of drugs.
   (c) Our source water for drinking water is being contaminated by
unwanted, leftover, or expired drugs passing through our wastewater
and treatment centers.
   (d) There is no mandatory statewide drug stewardship program for
unwanted drugs in California.
   (e) It is the intent of the Legislature that all members of the
supply chain work together to implement an effective program to
maximize the collection and disposal of unused drugs in California.
   47121.  This article shall be known, and may be cited, as the
"Home-Generated Pharmaceutical Waste Collection and Disposal Act."
   47122.  For the purposes of this article, the following terms have
the following meanings:
   (a) "Consumer" means an individual purchaser or owner of a covered
pharmaceutical. "Consumer" does not include a business, corporation,
limited partnership, or an entity involved in a wholesale
transaction between a distributor and retailer.
   (b) "Controlled substance" means a substance listed in Chapter
 1   2  (commencing with Section 11053) of
Division 10 of the Health and Safety Code, or in Section 812 of Title
21 of the United States Code or subject to Section 813 of Title 21
of the United States Code.
   (c) "Cosmetic" means anything defined as a cosmetic in Section
109900 of the Health and Safety Code.
   (d) (1) "Covered pharmaceutical" means a prescription drug or an
over-the-counter human or veterinary drug.
   (2) "Covered pharmaceutical" does not include any of the
following:
   (A) A drug that is regulated pursuant to either of the following:
   (i) The federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as
amended (42 U.S.C. Sec. 6901 et seq.).
   (ii) The Radiation Control Law (Chapter 8 (commencing with Section
114960) of Part 9) of Division 104 of the Health and Safety Code.
   (B) A vitamin or supplement.
   (C)  A   An  herbal-based remedy or a
homeopathic drug, product, or remedy.
   (D) Cosmetics, soap, with or without germicidal agents, laundry
detergent, bleach, household cleaning products, shampoos, sunscreens,
toothpaste, lip balm, antiperspirants, or other personal care
products that are regulated cosmetics under the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. Sec. 301 et seq.).
   (E) A drug for which a producer provides a take-back program as
part of a federal Food and Drug Administration managed risk
evaluation and mitigation strategy (21 U.S.C. Sec. 355-1).
   (F) A drug that is a biological product, as defined in subsection
(h) of Section 600.3 of Title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations,
as it read on January 1, 2015, if the producer provides a take-back
program.
   (G) A pet pesticide product contained in a pet collar, powder,
shampoo, topical application, or other delivery system.
   (e)  "Drug" means anything defined as a drug in Section 109925 of
the Health and Safety Code or in Section 321 (g)(1) of Title 21 of
the United States Code.
   (f) "Home-generated pharmaceutical waste" means a covered
pharmaceutical that is a waste, as defined in Section 25124 of the
Health and Safety Code, derived from a household, including, but not
limited to, a multifamily residence or household.
   (g) "Mail-back program" means a system whereby a generator of
home-generated pharmaceutical waste may obtain a prepaid and
preaddressed mailing envelope in which to place home-generated
pharmaceutical waste for shipment to an entity that will dispose of
it safely and legally.
   (h) "Over-the-counter drug" means a drug that may be lawfully sold
without a prescription.
   (i) "Pharmaceutical wholesaler" means a person that sells or
distributes covered pharmaceuticals for resale to an entity other
than a consumer.
   (j) "Plan" or "product stewardship plan" means a product
stewardship plan to implement a program to collect and dispose of
home-generated pharmaceutical waste.
   (k) "Prescription drug" means a drug required by federal or state
law to be dispensed lawfully only on prescription.
   (l) (1) "Producer" shall be determined with regard to a covered
pharmaceutical that is sold, offered for sale, or distributed in the
state as meaning one of the following:
   (A) The person that manufactures a covered pharmaceutical and that
sells, offers for sale, or distributes that covered pharmaceutical
in the state under that person's own name or brand.
   (B) If there is no person who meets the condition specified in
subparagraph (A), the producer of the covered pharmaceutical is the
owner or licensee of a trademark or brand under which the covered
pharmaceutical is sold or distributed in California, whether or not
the trademark is registered.
   (C) If there is no person who meets the conditions specified in
subparagraph (A) or (B), the producer of that covered pharmaceutical
is the person who brings the pharmaceutical into the state for sale
or distribution.
   (2) "Producer" does not include either of the following:
   (A) A retailer that puts its store label on a covered
pharmaceutical.
    (B) A pharmacist who dispenses prescription drugs to, or
compounds a prescribed individual drug product for, a consumer.
   (m) "Product stewardship program" or "program" means a program
financed and operated by one or more producers to collect, transport,
and dispose of home-generated pharmaceutical waste.
   (n) "Stewardship organization" means an organization designated by
a group of producers to act as an agent on behalf of each producer
to operate a product stewardship program.
   47124.  (a) On or before July 1, 2015, or on a later date that may
be specified by the department, a producer shall submit to the
department a product stewardship plan that complies with the
requirements of subdivision (b). One or more producers may submit a
plan or designate a stewardship organization to act as an agent on
behalf of the producers to submit a plan. A producer that designates
a stewardship organization shall enter into an agreement with that
stewardship organization to operate, on the producer's behalf, a
product stewardship program and the stewardship organization shall
submit a plan pursuant to this section on or before July 1, 2015, or
on a later date that may be specified by the department.
   (b) A product stewardship plan shall contain all of the following
elements:
   (1) A certification that the product stewardship program will
accept all home-generated pharmaceutical waste that results from a
covered pharmaceutical sold by the producer, or by the producers that
enter into agreement with the stewardship organization, from all
households, including multifamily households, unless excused from
this requirement by the department as part of the approval of the
plan.
   (2) Contact information for the producer submitting the plan or
for each of the producers participating in the product stewardship
program submitting the plan.
   (3) A description of the methods by which home-generated
pharmaceutical waste will be collected and an explanation of how the
collection system will conveniently and adequately serve the
residents of the state.
   (4) A description of how the product stewardship plan will provide
collection services for home-generated pharmaceutical waste in all
areas of that state that are convenient to the public and adequate to
meet the needs of the population in the area being served.
   (5) The location of each collection site and locations where
envelopes for a mail-back program are available, if applicable.
   (6) A list containing the name, location, permit status, and
record of any penalties, violations, or regulatory orders received in
the previous five years by each person that will be involved in
transporting home-generated pharmaceutical waste and each medical
waste disposal facility proposed to participate in the product
stewardship program.
   (7) A description of how the home-generated pharmaceutical waste
will be safely and securely tracked and handled from collection
through final disposal and the policies and procedures to be followed
to ensure security.
   (8) A description of how the public education and outreach
activities required by subdivision (c) of Section 47126 will be
implemented and how the effectiveness of those activities will be
evaluated.
   (9) A description of how the scope and extent of the product
stewardship program are reasonably related to the amount of covered
pharmaceuticals that are sold in the state by the producer or group
of producers.
   (10) A starting date when the collection of home-generated
pharmaceutical waste will begin.
   (11) A description of how support will be provided to any law
enforcement agencies within the state that have, or later agree to
have, a collection program for controlled substances, including all
of the following:
   (A) The provision of a collection kiosk with appropriate
accessories and signage.
   (B) An ability to accept controlled substances and other
home-generated covered pharmaceutical waste.
   (C) Technical support, including an appropriate person to provide
onsite assistance with the sorting and separation of controlled
substances at no cost to a participating law enforcement agency.
   (12) A description of how collection sites for home-generated
pharmaceutical waste may be placed at appropriate retail stores in
the state, including a description of the involvement of the retail
stores.
   (13) If more than one producer will be involved in a proposed
product stewardship program, the product stewardship plan for that
program shall include a fair and reasonable manner for allocating the
costs of the program among the participants in that program, so that
the portion of costs paid by each producer is reasonably related to
the amount of covered pharmaceutical sold by the producer in the
state.
   (14) (A) Provisions for the payment of all administrative and
operational fees associated with the product stewardship program,
including the cost of collecting, transporting, and disposing of
home-generated pharmaceutical waste and the recycling or disposal, or
both, of packaging collected with the home-generated pharmaceutical
waste.
   (B) The plan shall not allow a person or producer to charge a
specific point-of-sale fee to consumers to recoup the costs of their
product stewardship program, or charge a specific point-of-collection
fee at the time the home-generated pharmaceutical waste is collected
or delivered for disposal.
   47125.  (a) A producer, group of producers, or stewardship
organization shall not collect home-generated pharmaceutical waste
until it has received written approval of its product stewardship
plan from the department.
   (b) Within 180 days after receipt and review of a product
stewardship plan, the department shall conduct a noticed public
hearing and determine whether the plan complies with the requirements
of this article and any regulations adopted pursuant to this
article. As part of its approval, the department may set reasonable
performance goals for the program proposed to be implemented by the
plan.
   (c) The department shall notify the applicant in writing of the
approval of the plan.
   (d) If the department rejects a plan, it shall notify the
applicant in writing of its reasons for rejecting the plan. The
department may reject a plan without conducting a public hearing,
other than the hearing required by subdivision (b).
   (e) An applicant whose plan has been rejected by the department
shall submit a revised plan to the department within 60 days after
receiving notice of the rejection. The department may require the
submission of a further revised plan or may develop, approve, and
impose its own product stewardship plan or an approved plan submitted
by other producers pursuant to this article. The department shall
present the imposed plan at a public hearing. The department is not
required, and nothing in this article shall be interpreted as
requiring the department, to create or impose a product stewardship
plan.
   (f) If the department rejects a revised product stewardship plan
or any other subsequently revised plan, a producer that is subject to
the plan shall be considered to be out of compliance with this
article and subject to the enforcement provisions contained in this
article. If the department imposes its own plan, the producer shall
not be considered out of compliance with this article if the producer
complies with that plan.
   (g) At least every three years, a producer, group of producers, or
stewardship organization operating a product stewardship program
shall update the product stewardship plan and submit the updated plan
to the department for review and approval.
   (h) Any proposed changes to a product stewardship plan shall be
submitted in writing to the department and approved by the department
in writing prior to implementation of any change.
   (i) On and after July 1, 2015, a producer who commences to sell a
covered pharmaceutical in the state shall submit a product
stewardship plan to the department or provide evidence of having
joined an existing approved product stewardship program no later than
180 days after the date the producer commences to sell that covered
pharmaceutical, following the producer's initial sale of the offer
for sale of a covered pharmaceutical.
   47126.  A producer, group of producers, or stewardship
organization operating a stewardship program shall comply with all
local, state, and federal laws and regulations applicable to its
operations, including laws and regulations governing the disposal of
medical waste and controlled substances, and shall additionally take
all of the following actions when operating the program:
   (a) (1) Dispose of all home-generated pharmaceutical waste, in
accordance with paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 118215 of
the Health and Safety Code.
   (2) A producer or stewardship organization operating a stewardship
program may petition the department for approval to use a final
disposal technology, if lawful, that provides superior environmental
and human health protection than provided by current medical waste
disposal technology for covered pharmaceuticals, if and when the
technology is proven and available. The department may approve that
technology, if it provides equivalent protection in each, and
superior protection in one or more, of the following areas:
   (A) Monitoring of any emissions or waste.
   (B) Worker health and safety.
   (C) Air, water, or land emissions contributing to persistent,
bioaccumulative, or toxic pollution.
   (D) Overall impact on the environment and human health.
   (b) Encourage the separation of home-generated pharmaceutical
waste from its original containers, when appropriate, prior to
collection or disposal.
   (c) Promote the product stewardship program to consumers,
pharmacists, retailers of covered pharmaceuticals, and health care
practitioners as to the proper and safe method to dispose of
home-generated pharmaceutical waste, in accordance with the
following:
   (1) Develop and update as necessary, educational and other
outreach materials aimed at retailers of covered pharmaceuticals.
These materials may include, but are not limited to, one or more of
the following:
   (A) Signage that is prominently displayed and easily visible to
the consumer.
   (B) Written materials and templates of materials for reproduction
by retailers to be provided to the consumer at the time of purchase
or delivery, or both.
   (C) Advertising or other promotional materials related to the
product stewardship program.
   (2) Prepare education and outreach materials that publicize the
location and operation of collection locations in the state and
disseminate the materials to health care facilities, pharmacies, and
other interested parties.
   (3) Establish an Internet Web site publicizing collection
locations and program operations and a toll-free telephone number
that residential generators can call to find nearby collection
locations and understand how the program works.
   47127.  On or before July 1, 2016, or at a later date as approved
in writing by the department, and on or before July 1 annually
thereafter, a producer, group of producers, or stewardship
organization operating a product stewardship program shall prepare
and submit to the department an annual written report describing the
program's activities during the previous calendar year. The report
shall include all of the following information:
   (a) A list of producers participating in the product stewardship
program.
   (b) The amount, by weight, of home-generated pharmaceutical waste
collected at each drop-off site and in the entire state and, if
applicable, the total amount by weight collected by a mail-back
program.
   (c) A description of the collection system, including the location
of each collection site and if applicable, locations where envelopes
for a mail-back program are provided.
   (d) The name and location of disposal facilities at which
home-generated pharmaceutical waste were disposed of and the weight
of home-generated pharmaceutical waste collected from residential
generators disposed of at each facility.
   (e) Whether policies and procedures for collecting, transporting,
and disposing of home-generated pharmaceutical waste, as established
in the plan, were followed during the previous calendar year and a
description of any noncompliance.
   (f) Whether any safety or security problems occurred during
collection, transportation, or disposal of home-generated
pharmaceutical waste during the previous calendar year and, if so,
what changes have been or will be made to policies, procedures, or
tracking mechanisms to alleviate the problem and to improve safety
and security.
   (g) A description of public education and outreach activities
implemented during the reporting period, including the methodology
used to evaluate the outreach and program activities.
   (h) How the product stewardship program complied with all other
elements in the product stewardship plan approved by the department,
including its degree of success in meeting any performance goals set
by the department as part of the approval of the plan.
   (i) Any other information that the department may reasonably
require.
   47128.  The department shall provide on its Internet Web site a
list of all producers participating in product stewardship programs
approved by the department and a list of all producers the department
has identified as noncompliant with this article or the regulations
adopted pursuant to this article.
   47129.  (a) The department may adopt regulations to implement this
article.
   (b) The department shall adopt regulations to do all of the
following:
   (1) Provide for the appropriate management of consolidated
home-generated pharmaceutical waste to ensure public and
environmental safety, including, but not limited to, handling,
storage, containment, tracking, transportation, and disposal.
   (2) Establish a schedule of fees to be charged to the producers to
cover the department's costs of administering and enforcing this
article. In setting the fee schedule, the department shall only
recover its actual costs of administration and enforcement under this
article and shall not charge any amounts under this article in
excess of its actual administrative and enforcement costs.
   (3)  Adopt a schedule setting the amounts of administrative civil
penalties that the department may impose pursuant to Section 47130,
based on the nature, extent, and severity of the violation and any
other relevant factors.
   (c) A producer, group of producers, or a stewardship organization
submitting a plan to the department shall pay the fees set by the
department pursuant to subdivision (b).
   (d) The department shall deposit all fees collected pursuant to
this section into the Home-Generated Pharmaceutical Waste Program
Account, which is hereby created in the Integrated Waste Management
Fund. Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys deposited into
the account may be expended by the department to administer and
enforce this article.
   47130.  (a) The department may issue an administrative order to,
or impose an administrative civil penalty upon, a producer who is in
violation of this article or a regulation adopted pursuant to this
article, to require compliance with this article or the regulation.
   (b) The department shall deposit all penalties collected pursuant
to this article into the Home-Generated Pharmaceutical Waste Penalty
Account, which is hereby created in the Integrated Waste Management
Fund. Upon appropriation by the Legislature, moneys deposited into
the account may be expended by the department to enforce this
article.
   47134.  This article does not require a retailer to host a
collection site and nothing in this article shall be interpreted as
requiring this participation.
   47135.  A producer or stewardship organization that creates and
operates a plan that is approved by the department is not in
violation of the Cartwright Act (Chapter 2 (commencing with Section
16700) of Part 2 of Division 7 of the Business and Professions Code),
the Unfair Practices Act (Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 17000)
of Part 2 of Division 7 of the Business and Professions Code), or the
Unfair Competition Law (Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 17200) of
Part 2 of Division 7 of the Business and Professions Code), with
regard to actions that are taken in accordance with the plan or this
article.
  SEC. 5.  No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the
Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the
meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
Constitution.