BILL ANALYSIS Ó ----------------------------------------------------------------- |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE | SB 414| |Office of Senate Floor Analyses | | |(916) 651-1520 Fax: (916) | | |327-4478 | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- UNFINISHED BUSINESS Bill No: SB 414 Author: Jackson (D) Amended: 9/4/15 Vote: 21 PRIOR SENATE VOTES NOT RELEVANT ASSEMBLY FLOOR: 79-0, 9/8/15 - See last page for vote SUBJECT: Oil spill response SOURCE: Environmental Defense Center Environmental Action Committee of West Marin DIGEST: This bill makes several changes to state law regarding oil spill preparedness, prevention and response. Assembly Amendments delete the previous Senate version of the bill, related to marriage, and instead add the current language. ANALYSIS: Existing federal law addresses oil spills in the navigable waters of the United States through the creation of a comprehensive prevention, response, liability and compensation program through the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, as amended. This law assigned numerous duties to the U.S. Coast Guard related to oil spills and increased federal oversight of maritime SB 414 Page 2 transportation. Existing federal regulation establishes Regional Response Teams representing different geographic regions to support emergency response. Team membership includes representatives of both federal and state entities with relevant expertise and the team provides regional planning and coordination of preparedness and response actions, including to oil spills (see Title 40, Code of Federal Regulations, section 300.115). Through the required planning processes information regarding the appropriate use of chemical dispersants and other agents to control oil spills must be developed. Existing state law: 1)Establishes the Lempert-Keene-Seastrand Oil Spill Prevention and Response Act (SB 2040, Chapter 1248, Statutes of 1990), as amended. This Act created the Office of Spill Prevention and Response (OSPR) in the Department of Fish and Wildlife. 2)Establishes OSPR's mission to provide the best achievable protection of California's natural resources and the public health and safety by preventing, preparing for, and responding to spills of oil and other deleterious materials to all waters of the state, and to restore and enhance affected resources. 3)Provides for the appointment of the OSPR administrator (administrator) to lead OSPR. 4)Establishes the Oil Spill Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) with specified membership to provide public input and independent judgment of the actions of the administrator. 5)Provides for the possibility of both criminal and civil remedies in the event of an oil spill. The amount of an SB 414 Page 3 administrative civil penalty for an oil spill is based on the volume of oil spilled reduced by the amount of oil cleaned up. This bill makes several changes to state law regarding oil spill preparedness, prevention and response. Specifically, this bill: 1)Requires the administrator to: a) Arrange drills and exercises with the U.S. Coast Guard, as specified. b) Consult peer-reviewed scientific literature with respect to studies of chemical dispersants and to ask that the California Dispersant Plan be updated by May 1, 2016. The studies are expanded to include bioremediation and biological agents in addition to dispersants and other chemical agents. c) Provide written notification, as specified, to the Legislature within three days of use of dispersants in an oil spill. d) Report to the Legislature, as specified, on the effectiveness of the use of dispersants on oil spill response within two months of their use. e) Support the Regional Response Team in its efforts to update chemical dispersant use plans, as specifies. f) Submit a report to the Legislature by January 1, 2017 assessing best achievable technology of equipment for oil spill prevention, preparedness and response. This shall include an assessment of a new method - estimated recovery system potential - for evaluating oil skimmers. SB 414 Page 4 g) Update regulations governing the adequacy of oil spill contingency plans for best achievable technologies for oil spill prevention and response by July 1, 2018, as specified. h) Direct the Harbor Safety Committees to assess the presence and capability of tugs in certain areas to provide emergency towing of vessels, as specified. San Francisco Bay and Los Angeles/Long Beach harbor assessment shall be completed by May 1, 2016 and other harbors by January 1, 2020. 2)Requires the TAC to convene a taskforce with specified membership to evaluate and make recommendations on the use of "vessels of opportunity", such as commercial fishing vessels, to respond to oil spills in marine waters. The evaluation shall include certain topics and include two public meetings. The TAC shall make a recommendation to the administrator by January 1, 2017. If necessary, the administrator shall update regulations by January 1, 2018 to include vessels of opportunity. 3)Deletes the provision requiring the administrative civil penalty take into consideration how much oil was cleaned up. 4)Deletes obsolete provisions. Background The Refugio Beach spill. On May 19, 2015 a pipeline owned by Houston-based Plains All American Pipeline ruptured spilling (according to the operator) up to an estimated 140,000 gallons of heavy crude oil along the Gaviota coast at Refugio Beach in Santa Barbara County. The release was from a 10.6 mile long, SB 414 Page 5 24-inch diameter pipeline and (according to the operator) as much as 21,000 gallons of oil ended up in coastal waters. News reports indicate the pipeline was potentially severely corroded where it ruptured. The main oil spill stretched over 9 miles of California coastline and tar balls associated with the spill were found, according to news reports, as far south as Los Angeles County. Shoreline and beaches were affected by the spill and nesting areas for protected species were also affected. Approximately 250 birds and 170 mammals in addition to a large number of marine invertebrates were known to be impacted by the spill. Although some of the birds and mammals have been released following treatment, most are dead. A 23 mile by 6 mile area was closed to fishing for over one month and beaches were closed, including over the Memorial Day weekend, resulting in economic losses. The fishery and beaches have since re-opened. The clean-up is in its third phase with Shoreline Cleanup Assessment Technique teams continuing to survey and monitor the impacted area. The Natural Resources Damage Assessment has begun. The spill and the events leading up to the spill remain under investigation. The use of chemical dispersants in oil spill response. According to an OSPR fact sheet, dispersants are usually not applied to oil spills in near shore areas, for example, where sea grass beds, oyster beds, mariculture or coral reefs are present. The fact sheet further states that spill responders are generally "reluctant" to use dispersants in shallow waters less than 30 feet deep. Chemical dispersants were not used in the response to the Refugio Beach spill which occurred in near shore shallow waters. The California Dispersant Plan is part of federal oil spill contingency planning. In general dispersant use is pre-approved in federal waters outside National Marine Sanctuaries and more than 3 miles away from the California/Oregon and California/Mexico borders. For state waters and in other areas, there is a process established by which dispersants may, on a case-by-case basis, be used. The California Dispersant Plan SB 414 Page 6 notes that the U.S. Coast Guard, the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, other federal entities and OSPR "agree that one of the primary methods of controlling discharged oil shall be the physical removal of the oil by mechanical means." Dispersants are not without risks. For example, following the unprecedented use - both in volume and duration - of chemical dispersants following the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico, new research, published in the peer-reviewed scientific literature, has shown that the dispersants, alone or in combination with spilled oil, are more toxic to at least some species than the spilled oil by itself. That said it is important to acknowledge that oil spills, in addition to short-term impacts on impacted wildlife may also have long-term effects on affected species. Recent work, for example, has shown that a delayed effect of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill is likely to include significant subsequent salmon and herring population declines in the Prince William Sound. Embryonic salmon and herring exposed to very low concentrations of crude oil developed heart defects which likely impacted their chances for survival. Oil spill response equipment evaluation. The Ocean Studies Board of the National Research Council in November 2013 found that a new method proposed for estimating the efficiency of oil skimmers - the estimated recovery system potential or ERSP - to be "basically sound and a substantial improvement over method currently employed" by the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE - one of the federal offshore oil regulators). The Ocean Studies Board provided further recommendations on how best to implement this method. FISCAL EFFECT: Appropriation: No Fiscal Com.:YesLocal: No According to the Assembly Appropriations Committee (on a previous version of the bill), the fiscal impact of this bill is increased one-time and ongoing costs in the range of several SB 414 Page 7 million dollars (general and/or special fund) for the Department of Fish and Wildlife to implement the requirements of the bill. SUPPORT: (Verified9/1/15) Audobon California Azul Black Surfers Collective California Coastal Protection Network California League of Conservation Voters California Environmental Justice Alliance Center for Biological Diversity Clean Water Action Coastal Environmental Rights Foundation Defenders of Wildlife Environment California Environmental Action Committee of West Marin Environmental Defense Center Friends of the Earth City of Goleta Heal the Bay Humboldt Baykeeper National Parks Conservation Association Natural Resources Defense Council Ocean Conservancy Pacific Merchant Shipping Association Planning and Conservation League San Francisco Bar Pilots Association Santa Barbara Channelkeeper Sierra Club California Surfrider Foundation Surfrider Foundation, South Bay Chapter Surfrider Foundation, Santa Barbara Chapter the Trust for Public Land the Wildlands Conservancy OPPOSITION: (Verified9/4/15) SB 414 Page 8 None received ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT: According to the author, "On May 19 of this year, tragedy struck again when an onshore pipeline carrying crude oil ruptured and spilled over 100,000 gallons of oil, over 20,000 gallons of which ended up in the ocean off the Santa Barbara Coastline. To date this spill has caused significant negative impacts to the ocean, local beaches, wildlife, and the local economy. Although the investigation in the response and the oil spill - dubbed the Refugio Oil Spill - is ongoing, several deficiencies in our ability to immediately response to these disasters and act quickly to protect our environment have been highlighted." "SB 414 will help make oil spill response faster, more effective, and more environmentally friendly." The San Francisco Bar Pilots Association adds that this bill "would require {OSPR} to improve its voluntary program for local fishermen and women to utilize their vessels and experience with local waters to be trained as first responders to oil spills." ASSEMBLY FLOOR: 79-0, 9/08/15 AYES: Achadjian, Alejo, Travis Allen, Baker, Bigelow, Bloom, Bonilla, Bonta, Brough, Brown, Burke, Calderon, Campos, Chang, Chau, Chiu, Chu, Cooley, Cooper, Dababneh, Dahle, Daly, Dodd, Eggman, Frazier, Beth Gaines, Gallagher, Cristina Garcia, Eduardo Garcia, Gatto, Gipson, Gomez, Gonzalez, Gordon, Gray, Grove, Hadley, Harper, Roger Hernández, Holden, Irwin, Jones, Jones-Sawyer, Kim, Lackey, Levine, Linder, Lopez, Low, Maienschein, Mathis, Mayes, McCarty, Medina, Melendez, Mullin, Nazarian, Obernolte, O'Donnell, Olsen, Patterson, Perea, Quirk, Rendon, Ridley-Thomas, Rodriguez, Salas, Santiago, SB 414 Page 9 Steinorth, Mark Stone, Thurmond, Ting, Wagner, Waldron, Weber, Wilk, Williams, Wood, Atkins NO VOTE RECORDED: Chávez Prepared by:Katharine Moore / N.R. & W. / (916) 651-4116 9/8/15 20:47:55 **** END ****