
H. B. 4124
(By Delegates Linch, Johnson, Mahan,




Webb, Pino, Faircloth and Smirl)
[Introduced January 21, 2000;
referred to the Committee on the Judiciary then Finance.]
A BILL to amend and reenact sections two and three, article twenty-
three, chapter seventeen of the code of West Virginia, one
thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended; to amend and
reenact article twenty-four of said chapter; to amend and
reenact section eight, article eleven, chapter twenty of said
code; and to amend chapter twenty-two by adding thereto a new
article, designated article fifteen-a, all relating generally
to waste tires; prohibiting collection, accumulation or
storage of waste tires in salvage yards; providing for
exceptions; defining terms; establishing legislative findings
and policy regarding urgent need for remediation of waste tire
piles; defining terms; prohibiting placing, depositing or
abandoning waste tires or public or private property; creating
exceptions for waste tire monofills, solid waste facilities
and other business authorized to accept or process waste
tires; creating misdemeanor for violations; authorizing the
division of highways to administer funds for waste tire remediation; authorizing the commissioner of the division of
highways to contract with public and private entities to carry
out the requirements of the act; providing for the disposal of
waste tires; creating waste tire remediation fund; authorizing
proceed of waste tire sales to be deposited into fund;
establishing a fee on the issuance of a certificate of title;
providing for a performance review; authorizing remedies;
providing for liberal construction and severability;
authorizing disposal of waste tires collected in a remediation
effort in solid waste facilities; creating the waste tire
management act; establishing legislative findings; defining
terms; providing that waste tires from remediation not subject
to tipping fees or tonnage limits; requiring solid waste
facilities to accept waste tires from remediation projects;
providing that persons hauling waste tires are not required to
obtain a permit or certificate of need; requiring registration
of tire retailers, remanufacturers, waste tire processors,
monofill operators, tire haulers and other persons;
establishing requirements for bills of lading; requiring
annual reports on waste tires; requiring tire retailers to
accept a waste tire for each new tire sold; authorizing
disposal fee; requiring purchaser to leave waste tires with
retailer or sign waiver; posting of signs; prohibiting
accumulation of waste tires without a permit; prohibiting
disposal of waste tires except at facility with valid permit;
prohibiting transportation of waste tires to facility without permit; prohibiting open burning of tires and providing for
enforcement actions.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That sections two and three, article twenty-three, chapter
seventeen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred
thirty-one, as amended, be amended and reenacted; that article
twenty-four of said chapter be amended and reenacted; that section
eight, article eleven, chapter twenty of said code be amended and
reenacted; that chapter twenty-two of said code be amended by
adding thereto a new article designated article fifteen-a, all to
read as follows:
CHAPTER 17. ROADS AND HIGHWAYS.
ARTICLE 23. SALVAGE YARDS.
§17-23-2. Definitions.
As used in this article:
(a) "Abandoned salvage yard" means any unlicensed salvage
yard or any salvage yard that was previously licensed but upon
which the license has not been renewed for more than one year.
(b) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of the West Virginia
department division of highways.
(c) "Fence" means an enclosure, barrier or screen constructed
of materials or consisting of plantings, natural objects or other
appropriate means approved by the commissioner and located, placed
or maintained so as effectively to screen at all times salvage
yards and the salvage therein contained from the view of persons
passing upon the public roads of this state.
(d) "Occupied private residence" means a private residence
which is occupied for at least six months each year.
(e) "Owner or operator" includes an individual, firm,
partnership, association or corporation or the plural thereof.
(f) "Residential community" means an area wherein five or more
occupied private residences are located within any one thousand
foot radius.
(g) "Salvage" means old or scrap brass, copper, iron, steel,
other ferrous or nonferrous materials, batteries or rubber and any
junked, dismantled or wrecked machinery, machines or motor vehicles
or any parts of any junked, dismantled or wrecked machinery,
machines or motor vehicles excluding waste tires not attached to
vehicles or machines.
(h) "Salvage yard" means any place which is maintained,
operated or used for the storing, keeping, buying, selling or
processing of salvage, or for the operation and maintenance of a
motor vehicle graveyard: Provided, That no salvage yard shall
accept, store or process waste tires unless it has all permits
necessary to operate a monofill, waste tire processing facility or
solid waste facility. Any salvage yard which currently has on its
premises waste tires not on a vehicle must establish a plan in
conjunction with the division of environmental protection for the
proper disposal of the waste tires.
(i) "Waste tire" means any continuous solid or pneumatic
rubber covering designed to encircle the wheel of a vehicle but
which has been discarded, abandoned or is no longer suitable for its original, intended purposed nor suitable for recapping, or
other beneficial use because of wear, damage or defect. A tire is
no longer considered to be suitable for its original intended
purpose when it fails to meet the minimum requirements to pass a
West Virginia motor vehicle safety inspection. Used tires located
at a commercial recapping facility or tire dealer for the purpose
of being reused or recapped are not waste tires.
(j) "Waste tire monofill or monofill" means an approved solid
waste facility where waste tires are placed for the purpose of long
term storage for eventual retrieval for marketing purposes:
Provided, That they are not mixed with any other solid waste.
(k) "Waste tire processing facility" means a solid waste
facility or manufacturer that accepts waste tires generated by
sources other than the owner or operator of the facility for
processing by such means as cryogenics, pyrolysis, pyroprossing
cutting, splitting, shredding, quartering, grinding or otherwise
breaking down waste tires for the purposes of disposal, reuse,
recycling and or marketing.
§17-23-3. License required; issuance; fee; renewal; disposition
of fees.





No salvage yard or any part thereof shall be established,
operated or maintained without a state license. The commissioner
shall have the sole authority to issue such a state license, and he
or she shall charge therefor a fee of two hundred dollars payable
annually in advance. No license shall be issued to any salvage
yard that contains waste tires which are not on vehicles or machines unless the salvage yard has received a license, permit or
approval from the division of environmental protection for storage,
use or processing of waste tires or has entered into an agreement
with the division of environmental protection for the proper
disposal of the waste tires. All licenses issued under this
section shall expire on the first day of January following the date
of issuance. A license may be renewed from year to year upon
paying the commissioner the sum of two hundred dollars for each
such renewal. All such renewal license fees collected under the
provisions of this article shall be deposited in the special fund
provided for in section ten of this article.
ARTICLE 24. WASTE TIRE REMEDIATION.
§17-24-1. Legislative findings; statement of policy.





The Legislature recognizes and declares that waste tires are
and constitute a public nuisance and hazard to both adults and
children and therefore are dangerous and constitute a clear and
present danger; that waste tires serve as harborage and breeding
places for rodents, mosquitoes, fleas, ticks and other insects and
pests injurious to the public health, safety and general welfare;
that waste tires collected in large piles pose an excessive risk to
public health, safety and welfare from disease and fire; that the
environmental, economic and societal damage resulting from fires in
waste tire piles can avoided by removing the piles; that tire pile
fires cause extensive pollution of the air and surface and ground
water for miles downwind and downstream from the fire; that
abatement of this pollution is costly; that the accumulation and storage of any of waste tires or parts thereof on private or public
property, including but not limited to highways, is hereby found to
create a condition tending to reduce the value of private property
and to promote blight and deterioration which if permitted to
remain will continue to destroy the natural beauty of this state
and have adverse economic and social effects; that waste tires
constitute an unattractive nuisance creating a hazard to the health
and safety of minors; that waste tires are nearly always discarded
or abandoned on public highways, rights-of-way, or within sight of
such highway rights-of-way and on private property within a
reasonable proximity thereto, and when so located the cost of
controlling or abating such visual pollution is a cost of
maintenance of public highways; that said visual pollution
elsewhere located may be controlled or abated by funds made
available for such purpose from sources other than those
contemplated by section 52, article VI of the West Virginia
Constitution; that all such visual pollution is a deterrent to
economic development; and that it is in the public interest and
welfare to provide for a program to eliminate the unsightly
practice of discarding or abandoning waste tires.





In view of these findings the Legislature declares it to be
the public policy of the state of West Virginia to eliminate the
present danger resulting from discarded or abandoned waste tires
and to eliminate the visual pollution resulting from waste tire
piles, and that in order to provide for the public health, safety
and welfare, and quality of life, to enact legislation to that end by providing expeditious means and methods for effecting the
disposal of waste tires. The Legislature further finds and
declares that the presence of discarded or abandoned waste tire or
any part thereof, on private or public property, including but not
limited to highways, except as expressly hereinafter permitted, is
a public nuisance injurious to the public health, safety and
general welfare of the citizens of this state which shall be abated
as such by the methods provided in this article.
§17-24-2. Definitions.





Unless the context clearly indicates a different meaning, as
used in this article:





(1) "Beneficial use" means whole waste tires or tire derived
material which are reused in constructing retaining walls,
rebuilding highway shoulders and subbase, building highway crash
attenuation barriers, feedhopper or watering troughs for livestock,
playground equipment, boat or truck dock construction, house or
building construction, go-cart, motorbike or race track barriers,
or similar types of beneficial applications: Provided, That waste
tires may not be reused as fencing, as erosion control structures,
along stream banks or river banks or reused in any manner where
human health or the environment, as determined by the director of
the division of environmental protection, is put at risk.




(2) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of the division of
highways or his or her designee.





(3) "Person" includes a natural person, corporation, firm,
partnership, association or society, and the plural as well as the singular.





(4) "Waste tire" means any continuous solid or pneumatic
rubber covering designed to encircle the wheel of a vehicle but
which has been discarded, abandoned or is no longer suitable for
its original, intended purpose nor suitable for recapping, or other
beneficial use because of wear, damage or defect. A tire is no
longer considered to be suitable for its original intended purpose
when it fails to meet the minimum requirements to pass a West
Virginia motor vehicle safety inspection. Used tires located at a
commercial recapping facility or tire dealer for the purpose of
being reused or recapped are not waste tires.





(5) "Waste tire monofill or monofill" means an approved solid
waste facility where no solid waste except waste tires are placed
for the purpose of long term storage for eventual retrieval for
marketing purposes.





(6) "Waste tire processing facility" means a solid waste
facility or manufacturer that accepts waste tires generated by
sources other than the owner or operator of the facility for
processing by such means as cryogenics, pyrolysis, pyroprossing
cutting, splitting, shredding, quartering, grinding or otherwise
breaking down waste tires for the purposes of disposal, reuse,
recycling and or marketing.
§17-24-3. Waste tires prohibited in certain places; penalty.





(a) No person shall, within this state, place, deposit or
abandon any waste tire or part thereof upon the right-of-way of any
public highway or upon any other public property nor deposit or abandon any waste tire or part thereof upon any private property
unless it is at a licensed monofill, solid waste facility or at any
other business authorized by the division of environmental
protection to accept, process, manufacture or re-manufacture waste
tires; Provided, That the commissioner may temporarily accumulate
as many waste tires as he or she deems necessary at any location or
locations necessary to effectuate the purposes of this article.





(c) No person, except those persons who have received and
maintain a valid permit or license from the state for the operation
of a solid waste facility, waste tire monofill, waste tire
processing facility, or other such permitted activities, shall
accumulate more than one hundred waste tires for beneficial use
without obtaining a license or permit from the division of
environmental protection.





(d) Any person who violates any provision of this section
shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof,
shall be fined not less than fifty dollars nor more than one
thousand dollars.





(e) Nothing herein shall prohibit any state agency or law
enforcement officer from prosecuting violations of article fifteen,
chapter twenty-two of this code.
§17-24-4. Division of highways to administer funds for waste tire
remediation; rules authorized; duties of commissioner.





(a) The division of highways shall administer all funds made
available to the division for remediation of waste tire piles and
for the proper disposal of waste tires removed from waste tire piles. The commissioner of the division of highways is hereby
authorized and empowered (i) to propose for legislative
promulgation in accordance with article three, chapter twenty-nine-
a of this code, rules necessary to implement the provisions of this
article, and (ii)to administer all funds appropriated by the
Legislature to carry out the requirements of this article, and any
other funds from whatever source including but not limited to
federal, state or private grants.





The commissioner shall also have the following powers:





(1) To apply and carry out the provisions of this article and
the rules promulgated hereunder.





(2) To investigate from time to time the operation and effect
of this article and of the rules promulgated hereunder and to
report his or her findings and recommendations to the secretary of
the department of transportation, the Legislature and the governor.





(c) The provisions of articles two-a and four, chapter
seventeen of this code and the policy, rules, practices and
procedures thereunder shall be followed by the commissioner in
carrying out the purposes of this article.





(d) The commissioner may contract with the department of
health and human resources and/or the division of corrections to
remediate or assist in remediation of waste tire piles throughout
the state. Utilization of available department of health and human
resources and the department of corrections work programs shall be
given priority status in the contract process so long as such
programs prove a cost effective method of remediating waste tire piles.
§17-24-5. Disposal of waste tires.





(a) The division may sell waste tires collected during
remediation of waste tire piles at public auction or to a waste
tire monofill, waste tire processing facility or business
authorized by the division of environmental protection to accept,
store, use or process waste tires.





(b) If there is no market in West Virginia for the sale of
waste tires the division may sell them at any available market.





(c) If there is no market for the sale of waste tires the
division may dispose of them in any lawful manner.
§17-24-6. Creation of waste tire remediation fund; proceeds from





sale of waste tires; fee on issuance of certificate of title;





performance review.





(a) There is hereby created in the state treasury a special
revenue fund known as the "Waste Tire Remediation Fund". The fund
shall operate as a special fund whereby all deposits and payments
thereto do not expire to the general revenue fund, but remain in
the fund and are available for expenditure on succeeding fiscal
years. The fund shall consist of the proceeds from the sale of
waste tires; fees collected by the division of motor vehicles as
provided for in this section; any federal, state or private grants;
legislative appropriations; and any other funding source available
for waste tire remediation.





(b) A temporary fee of one dollar in addition to the statutory
fee required by article three, section four, chapter seventeen-a of this code for the issuance of a certificate of title to a motor
vehicle on or after the first day of July, two thousand shall be
transmitted by the division of motor vehicles to the waste tire
remediation fund: Provided, That no further collections or
transmittals shall be made after the commissioner certifies to the
governor and the legislature that the remediation of all waste tire
piles that were in existence on the first day of January, two
thousand and one has been completed.





(c) The joint committee on government operations shall,
pursuant to authority granted in article ten of chapter four of
this code, conduct a preliminary performance review of the
division's compliance with the waste tire remediation mandated in
this article; whether the purposes of this article have been met
and whether it is appropriate to terminate this program. In
conducting such preliminary performance review, the committee shall
follow the guidelines established in article ten, section ten,
chapter four of this code. The review shall be completed on or
before the first day of January, two thousand two.
§17-24-7. Injunctive relief; additional remedy.





In addition to all other remedies provided for in this
article, the attorney general of this state, the prosecuting
attorney of any county where any violation of any provision of this
article occurs, or any citizen, resident or taxpayer of the county
where any violation of any provision of this article occurs, may
apply to the circuit court, or the judge thereof in vacation, of
the county where the alleged violation occurred, for an injunction to restrain, prevent or abate the maintenance and storage of waste
tires in violation of any provision of this article, or the
violation of any other provision of this article.
§17-24-8. Construction; severable provisions.





The provisions of this article shall be liberally construed to
accomplish the objectives and purposes hereof. If any provision of
this article or the application thereof to any person or
circumstance be held invalid or unconstitutional by any court of
competent jurisdiction, such invalidity or unconstitutionality
shall not affect or invalidate other provisions or applications,
and to this end, all of the provisions of this article are hereby
declared to be severable.
CHAPTER 20. NATURAL RESOURCES.
ARTICLE 11. WEST VIRGINIA RECYCLING PROGRAM.
§20-11-8. Prohibition on the disposal of certain items; plans
for the proper handling of said items required.

(a) Effective the first day of June, one thousand nine hundred
ninety-four, it shall be unlawful to deposit lead-acid batteries in
a solid waste facility in West Virginia; effective the first day of
June, one thousand nine hundred ninety-six, it shall be unlawful to
deposit tires in a solid waste facility in West Virginia except for
waste tires collected as part of the division of highways waste
tire remediation projects or other collection efforts in accordance
with the provisions of article twenty-four, chapter seventeen of
this code: Provided, That the division may deposit tires in solid
waste facilities only when the division of highways has determined there is no reasonable alternative available.

(b) Effective the first day of January, one thousand nine
hundred ninety-seven, it shall be unlawful to deposit yard waste,
including grass clippings and leaves, in a solid waste facility in
West Virginia: Provided, That such prohibitions do not apply to
a facility designed specifically to compost such yard waste or
otherwise recycle or reuse such items: Provided, however That
reasonable and necessary exceptions to such prohibitions may be
included as part of the rules promulgated pursuant to subsection
(c) of this section.

(c) No later than the first day of May, one thousand nine
hundred ninety-five, the solid waste management board shall design
a comprehensive program to provide for the proper handling of yard
waste and lead-acid batteries. No later than the first day of May
one thousand nine hundred ninety-four, a comprehensive plan shall
be designed in the same manner to provide for the proper handling
of tires.

(d) No later than the first day of August, one thousand nine
hundred ninety-five, the division of environmental protection shall
promulgate rules, in accordance with chapter twenty-nine-a of this
code, as amended, to implement and enforce the program for yard
waste and lead-acid batteries designed pursuant to subsection (b)
of this section. No later than the first day of August, one
thousand nine hundred ninety-four two thousand, the division of
environmental protection shall promulgate rules, in accordance with
chapter twenty-nine-a of said code, as amended, to implement and enforce the program for tires designed pursuant to subsection (b)
of this section.

(d) For the purposes of this section, "yard waste" means grass
clippings, weeds, leaves, brush, garden waste, shrub or tree
prunings and other living or dead plant tissues, except that, such
materials which, due to inadvertent contamination or mixture with
other substances which render the waste unsuitable for composting,
shall not be considered to be yard waste: Provided, That the same
or similar waste generated by commercial agricultural enterprises
is excluded.

(e) In promulgating the rules required by subsections (b)
and (c) of this section, yard waste, as described in subsection (d)
of this section, the division shall provide for the disposal of
yard waste in a manner consistent with one or any combination of
the following:

(1) Disposal in a publicly or privately operated commercial or
noncommercial composting facility.

(2) Disposal by composting on the property from which domestic
yard waste is generated or on adjoining property or neighborhood
property if consent is obtained from the owner of the adjoining or
neighborhood property.

(3) Disposal by open burning where such activity is not
prohibited by this code, rules promulgated hereunder or municipal
or county codes or ordinances.

(4) Disposal in a publicly or privately operated landfill,
only where none of the foregoing options are available. Such manner of disposal will involve only small quantities of domestic
yard waste generated only from the property of the participating
resident or tenant.
CHAPTER 22. ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES.
ARTICLE 15A. WASTE TIRE MANAGEMENT ACT.
§22-15A-1. Legislative findings.

The purpose of this act is to assure the proper disposal,
recycling or reuse of waste tires in West Virginia, by establishing
a program designed to require proper management of all waste tires
through a tracking process. The accumulation of used and waste
tires constitutes a fire hazard posing a threat to both air and
water quality, and further creates a potential health hazard by
providing a habitat for disease spreading mosquitoes. Mechanisms
must be in place to assure the citizens of this state that in the
future their waste tires and waste tires imported from outside the
state are properly disposed of, recycled or reused in this state.
Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to promote and
facilitate the recycling, reuse and proper disposal of waste tires
in this state by establishing a tracking system to ensure that
waste tires are properly collected and disposed of, recycled or
reused.
§22-15A-2. Definitions.

The following words and phrases when used in this article
shall have the meanings given to them in this section unless the
context clearly indicates otherwise:

(1) "Division" means the division of environmental protection.

(2) "Monofill" means an approved solid waste facility where
waste tires are placed for the purpose of long term storage for
eventual retrieval for marketing purposes.

(3) "Retailer of new tires" means a person who engages in the
retail sale of a new tire in any quantity for any use or purpose by
the purchaser other than for resale.

(4) "Tire" means a continuous solid or pneumatic rubber wheel
covering, which has a rim size of twelve inches or more in
diameter. Bicycle tires, other tires for vehicles propelled by
human power and off road vehicle tires utilized in earth moving
activities are not subject to the provisions of this article.

(5) "Tire hauler" means a person engaged in the business of
transporting waste tires for hire or consideration. Tire hauler
does not include a person who hauls waste tires generated by their
own business activity.

(6) "Tire processor or waste tire processor" means a person
who owns, operates or otherwise engages in the processing of waste
tires by any means, including but not limited to, cryogenics,
pyrolysis, pyroprocessing, cutting, splitting, shredding,
chipping, grinding or joining for the purpose of reuse,
remanufacturing, recycling, creating fuel or marketing of waste
tires.

(7) "Tire processing site" means a site or any portion of a
site actively used to produce or manufacture raw material feed
stock or other usable materials from waste tires. Waste tire
processing facilities are not solid waste facilities even though the processing site is located within the permit area of a solid
waste facility.

(8) "Used tires" means a tire that has been removed from a
wheel following a period of use and has been determined by its
owner to have reuse potential as a tire.

(9) "Waste tire" means any continuous solid or pneumatic
rubber covering designed to encircle the wheel of a vehicle but
which has been discarded, abandoned or is no longer suitable for
its original, intended purposed nor suitable for recapping, or
other beneficial use because of wear, damage or defect. A tire is
no longer considered to be suitable for its original intended
purpose when it fails to meet the minimum requirements to pass a
West Virginia motor vehicle safety inspection. Used tires located
at a commercial recapping facility or tire dealer for the purpose
of being reused or recapped are not waste tires.
§22-15A-3. Waste tires not subject to solid waste tipping fees;
disposal in solid waste facility prohibited; exceptions;
permit and certificate of need not required; exceptions.

(a) Persons authorized by the division of highways to haul,
collect or dispose of waste tires as part of a waste tire
remediation project and persons processing waste tires under a
permit from the division of environmental protection are not
responsible for any solid waste tipping fees for waste tires
imposed by section five-a, article eleven, chapter twenty; section
eleven, article fifteen, chapter twenty-two, section four, article
sixteen, chapter twenty-two and section thirty, article four, chapter twenty-two-c of this code.

(b) Solid waste facilities are required to accept waste tires
from persons authorized by the division of highways to dispose of
waste tires at solid waste facilities as part of a waste tire pile
remediation project conducted pursuant to article twenty-four,
chapter seventeen of this code. All waste tires from division of
highways remediation projects shall be excluded from the
calculation of monthly tonnage limits and from the rates and
charges established by the public service commission pursuant to
article one, chapter twenty-four of this code.

(c) Persons required to be registered pursuant to section four
of this article are not required to obtain a permit or certificate
of need pursuant to the requirements of article fifteen, chapter
twenty-two and article one, chapter twenty-four of this code unless
those persons also engage in activities otherwise regulated by
article fifteen, chapter twenty-two and article one, chapter
twenty-four of this code.
§22-15A-4. Registration and bill of lading requirements.

(a) No person may operate as a retailer of new tires, tire
remanufacturer, waste tire processor, monofill operator, tire
hauler or other business that sells, transports, stores, disposes
or process waste tires in this state without registering with the
division. The purpose of registration is to assure that all
businesses participating in the flow of tires from new to waste
tires are identified and comply with the provisions of this
article.

(b) Each person registered pursuant to this section shall
document the removal, transportation and proper disposal of all
waste tires in this state using a bill of lading. The division
shall propose for Legislative promulgation, in accordance with
article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code, the bill of
lading requirements and all other requirements necessary to
effectuate the purposes of this article. The division, at a
minimum, shall require the bill of lading to include such
information as the name, physical address, mailing address, county
and telephone number of the licensee and other specific information
that is necessary to track waste tires from the retailer to the
hauler and the disposal site. The top original of the bill of
lading shall be kept by the tire retailer or other originating
registrant at the location from which the waste tires were
originally transported. The tire retailer or other originating
registrant must receive the completed bill of lading from the tire
hauler within sixty days after the waste tires were transported
off-site. The tire retailer or other originating registrant shall
notify the division within seventy-five days of any tire hauler or
other entity that fails to complete the bill of lading, alters the
tire retailer's portion of the bill of lading or fails to return
the bill of lading within sixty days of the off-site
transportation. The second original of the bill of lading shall be
kept by the tire hauler. The third original of the bill of lading
shall be kept by the waste tire processor. All bills of lading
shall be kept on site for a period of three years. Any authorized representative of the division may, at reasonable times, enter onto
the registered site to inspect bill of lading. The registrant
shall submit a copy of the bill of lading to the division upon
request of the division.

(c) All registrants shall submit an annual report to the
division setting forth the quantity of tires disposed, processed,
remanufactured, recycled or otherwise beneficially reused.
§22-15A-5. Requirements for retail sale of tires.

(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
section, each retailer is required to accept one tire of comparable
size for each new tire sold at retail. The retailer may charge a
disposal fee to cover the actual costs of lawful waste tire
disposal. No retail tire dealer registered by the division may
deliver any waste tire, or part thereof, to a person not authorized
by the state of West Virginia to transport or accept waste tires.

(b) Any person purchasing a new tire from a retailer must
provide a used or waste tire for each tire purchased or sign a
waiver, provided to the tire retailer by the division,
acknowledging that he or she is retaining the waste tire and that
he or she is legally responsible for proper disposal of each tire
retained. These forms are to be kept by the retailer in the same
manner as the bills of lading provided for in section four of this
article. If the tire purchaser returns to the tire retailer with
a signed form given to the purchaser by that retailer, the retailer
must accept up to the total number of comparable size tires as
previously retained by the purchaser: Provided, That persons having winter tires changed or buying new winter tires and keeping
usable summer tires for later installation are not required to
provide a used or waste tire, or sign a waiver.

(c) Each tire retailer shall post in a conspicuous place a
written notice, provided by the division, that bears the following
statements:

(1) "State law requires us to accept your (old) waste tires
for recycling or proper disposal if you purchase new tires from
us."

(2) "State law requires us to charge you no more than the
actual cost of disposal of your waste tires even if you do not
leave your tires with us."

(3) "It is a crime to burn, bury, abandon or throw away waste
tires without authorization and or permits from the Division of
Environmental Protection."

This notice must be at least eight and one-half inches wide
and eleven inches high.
§22-15A-6. Prohibitions on waste tire disposal; penalties.

(a) No person, except those persons who have received and
maintain a valid permit or license from the state for the operation
of a solid waste facility, waste tire monofill, waste tire
processing facility, or other such permitted activities, shall
accumulate waste tires without obtaining a license or permit from
the division: Provided, That persons who use waste tires for
beneficial uses may in the discretion of the director of the
division of environmental protection accumulate waste tires without a permit.

(b) No person shall dispose of waste tires in or upon any
public or private land, any site or facility other than a site or
facility which holds a valid permit issued by the division for such
disposal or usage.

(c) No person shall knowingly transport or knowingly allow
waste tires under his or her control to be transported to a site or
facility that does not have a valid permit or license to accept
waste tires.

(d) No person shall engage in the open burning of waste tires.

(e) Persons who violate this article are subject to all
enforcement actions available to the director under the provisions
of section fifteen, article fifteen, chapter twenty-two of this
code.

Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from
the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would
be added. Article 24, Chapter 17 has been substantially rewritten.

Article 15A is new; therefore strike-throughs and underscoring
have been omitted.