
ENROLLED
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE
FOR
H. B. 4431
(By Delegates Staton, Amores,
Hunt, Rowe and Hutchins
)
[Passed March 11, 2000; in effect ninety days from passage.]
AN ACT
to repeal section five-b, article eleven, chapter twenty
of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred
thirty-one, as amended; and to amend and reenact sections
one, two, three, four, five and six, article nineteen of
chapter twenty-two of said code, all relating to providing
funding for the hazardous waste emergency response fund;
deleting certain provisions relating to solid and hazardous
waste supplemental assessment fee; updating references to
federal law; modifying certain definitions; expanding
circumstances when fund moneys may be utilized; modifying
hazardous waste emergency response fund requirements;
excluding certain materials and substances from the
hazardous waste generator fund fee; modifying fee assessment
criteria for fee assessments to the fund; modifying criteria
for agreements for expenditures from the fund; and modifying
rulemaking authority of the director of the division of
environmental protection.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That section five-b, article eleven, chapter twenty of the
code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as
amended, be repealed; and that sections one, two, three, four,
five and six, article nineteen, of chapter twenty-two of said
code be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 19. HAZARDOUS WASTE EMERGENCY RESPONSE FUND.
§22-19-1. Findings; purpose.
The Legislature recognizes that large quantities of
hazardous waste are generated within the state, and that
emergency situations involving hazardous waste can and will arise
which may present a hazard to human health, safety, or the
environment. The Legislature also recognizes that some hazardous
waste has been stored, treated or disposed of at sites in the
state in a manner insufficient to protect human health, safety or
the environment. The Legislature further recognizes that the
federal government has enacted the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980, as amended by
the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986, which
provides for federal assistance to respond to hazardous substance
emergencies and to remove and remedy the threat of damage to the
public health or welfare or to the environment, and declares that
West Virginia desires to produce revenue for matching the federal
assistance provided under the federal acts. Therefore, the
Legislature hereby creates a hazardous waste emergency fund to
provide state funds for responding to hazardous waste
emergencies, responding to releases of hazardous substances into the environment, matching federal financial assistance for
restoring hazardous waste sites and other costs or expenses
incurred in the administration of this article.
§22-19-2. Definitions.
As used in this article, unless the context clearly requires
a different meaning:
(1) "Cleanup" means such actions as may be necessary to
monitor, assess and evaluate the threat of release of hazardous
waste or hazardous substances, the containment, collection,
control, identification, treatment, dispersal, removal or
disposal of hazardous waste or other such actions as may be
necessary to respond to hazardous waste or hazardous substance
emergencies or to prevent, minimize or mitigate damage to the
public health, safety, welfare or to the environment, and
includes, where necessary, replacement of existing, or provision
of alternative, drinking water supplies that have been
contaminated with hazardous waste as a result of an emergency;
(2) "Cleanup costs" means all costs incurred by the
director, or with the approval of the director, by any state
agency or person participating in the cleanup of a hazardous
waste or hazardous substance emergency or remedial action and
also includes responding to emergencies that may contain
petroleum products: Provided, That cleanup costs do not include
expenditures for remediation of or responding to releases from
underground storage tanks.
(3) "Generator" means any person, corporation, partnership, association or other legal entity, by site location, whose act or
process produces hazardous waste as identified or listed by the
director in rules promulgated pursuant to section six, article
eighteen of this chapter, in an amount greater than five thousand
kilograms per year.
All other terms have the meaning as prescribed in the rules
promulgated by the director pursuant to the provisions of section
six, article eighteen of this chapter.
§22-19-3. Hazardous waste emergency response fund; components
of fund
.
(a) The special fund designated "The Hazardous Waste
Emergency Response Fund," hereinafter referred to as "the fund,"
shall be continued in the state treasury.
(b) All generator fee assessments, any interest or surcharge
assessed and collected by the director, interest accruing on
investments and deposits of the fund, and any other moneys
designated shall be paid into the fund. Expenditures from the
fund shall be for the purposes set forth in this article and are
not authorized from collections but are to be made only in
accordance with appropriation by the Legislature and in
accordance with the provisions of article three, chapter twelve
of this code and upon the fulfillment of the provisions set forth
in article two, chapter five-a of this code: Provided, That for
the fiscal year ending the thirtieth day of June, two thousand,
expenditures are authorized from collections rather than pursuant
to an appropriation by the Legislature. Amounts collected which are found from time to time to exceed the funds needed for
purposes set forth in this article may be transferred to other
accounts or funds and redesignated for other purposes by
appropriation of the Legislature.
§22-19-4. Fee assessments; tonnage fees; due dates of payments;
interest on unpaid fees
.
(a) Each generator of hazardous waste within this state
shall pay an annual fee based upon the amount of hazardous waste
generated as reported to the director by the generator on a fee
assessment form prescribed by the director submitted pursuant to
article eighteen of this chapter. The director shall establish
a fee schedule according to the following: Full assessment for
generated hazardous waste disposed or treated off-site; ninety
percent of the full assessment for generated hazardous waste
either treated or disposed on-site; seventy-five percent of the
full assessment for generated hazardous waste treated off-site so
that such waste is rendered nonhazardous; and twenty-five percent
of the full assessment for generated hazardous waste treated
on-site so that such waste is rendered nonhazardous: Provided,
That the generator fee assessment does not apply to the
following: (1) Sludge from any publicly owned treatment works in
the state; (2) any discharge to waters of the state of hazardous
waste pursuant to a valid water pollution control permit issued
under federal or state law; (3) any hazardous wastes
beneficially used or reused or legitimately recycled or
reclaimed; (4) hazardous wastes which are created or retrieved pursuant to an emergency or remedial action plan; (5) hazardous
wastes whose sole characteristic as a hazardous waste is based on
corrosivity and which are subjected to on-site elementary
neutralization in containers or tanks; (6) fly ash waste,
bottom ash waste, slag waste, and flue gas emission control waste
generated primarily from the combustion of coal or other fossil
fuels; (7) solid waste from the extraction, beneficiation, and
processing of ores and minerals, including coal, phosphate rock
and overburden from the mining of uranium ore; (8) cement kiln
dust waste; (9) drilling fluids, produced waters, and other
wastes associated with the exploration, development or production
of crude oil, natural gas, or geo-thermal energy; and (10) any
other material that is exempted or excluded from hazardous waste
regulation pursuant to the federal Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act and the rules promulgated thereunder, including, but
not limited to the exemptions and exclusions set forth in 40 CFR
261.4 and 261.6, or the state hazardous waste management act,
article eighteen of this chapter, and the rules promulgated
thereunder.
(b) Each generator of hazardous waste within the state
subject to a fee assessment under subsection (a) of this section
shall pay a fee based on its annual tonnage of generated
hazardous waste. Any unexpended balance of such collected fees
shall not be transferred to the general revenue fund, but shall
remain in the fund. Whenever the balance in the fund is less
than one million dollars, the director is authorized to impose a fee assessment as provided in this article, but in no event shall
the fees established to be set to produce revenue exceeding five
hundred thousand dollars in any year.
(c) Generator fee assessments are due and payable to the
division of environmental protection on the fifteenth day of
January of each year. Such payments shall be accompanied by
information in such form as the director may prescribe.
(d) If the fees or any portion thereof are not paid by the
date prescribed, interest accrues upon the unpaid amount at the
rate of ten percent per annum from the date due until payment is
actually made. Such interest payments shall be deposited in the
fund. If any generator fails to pay the fees imposed before the
first day of April of the year in which they are due, there is
imposed in addition to the fee and interest determined to be owed
a surcharge equivalent to the total amount of the fee which shall
also be collected and deposited in the fund.
§22-19-5. Director's responsibilities; fee schedules; authorized
expenditures; other powers of director; authorizing
civil actions; assistance of attorney general or
prosecuting attorney.
(a) The director shall collect all fees assessed pursuant to
this article and administer the fund. The fee schedule shall be
published in the state register by the first day of August of
each year. Each generator who filed the fee assessment form
prescribed by the director shall be notified and provided with a
copy of the fee schedule by certified mail. In the event the fee schedule is not published by the first day of August, the date
prescribed for payment in section four of this article shall be
advanced by the same number of days that the publication of the
fee schedule is delayed. The interest and surcharge provisions
of section four of this article shall be similarly advanced.
(b) The director is authorized to enter into agreements and
contracts and to expend the moneys in the fund for the following
purposes:
(1) Responding to hazardous waste emergencies and releases
of hazardous substances when, based on readily available
information, the director determines that immediate action may
prevent or mitigate significant risk of harm to human health,
safety or the environment from hazardous wastes or releases of
hazardous substances in situations for which no federal funds are
immediately available for such response cleanup or containment:
Provided, That the director shall apply for and diligently pursue
available federal funds for such emergencies at the earliest
possible time;
(2) Reimbursing any person for reasonable cleanup costs
incurred with the authorization of the director in responding to
a hazardous waste emergency or release of hazardous substances
pursuant to authorization of the director;
(3) Financing the nonfederal share of the cleanup and site
reclamation activities pursuant to the federal Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980,
as amended by the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 as well as future operation and maintenance costs for these
sites; and
(4) Financing any and all preparations necessary for
responding to hazardous waste and hazardous substance activities
and emergencies within the state, including, but not limited to,
the purchase or lease of hazardous waste emergency response
equipment.
(c) Prior to making expenditures from the fund pursuant to
subdivision (1), (2) or (3), subsection (b) of this section, the
director will make reasonable efforts to secure agreements to pay
the costs of cleanup and remedial actions from owners or
operators of sites or other responsible persons.
(d) The director is authorized to promulgate and revise
rules in compliance with chapter twenty-nine-a of this code to
implement and effectuate the powers, duties and responsibilities
vested in him or her under this article. Prior to the assessment
of any fees under this article, the director shall promulgate
rules which account for the mixture of hazardous and nonhazardous
constituents in the hazardous waste which is generated. The
director may not assess a fee on the nonhazardous portion,
including, but not limited to, the weight of water.
(e) The director is authorized to recover through civil
action or cooperative agreements with responsible persons the
full amount of any funds expended for purposes enumerated in
subdivision (1), (2) or (3), subsection (b) of this section. All
moneys expended from the fund which are so recovered shall be deposited in the fund. Any civil action instituted pursuant to
this subsection may be brought in either Kanawha County or the
county in which the hazardous waste emergency occurs or the
county in which remedial action is taken.
(f) The director is authorized to institute a civil action
against any generator for failure to pay any fee assessed
pursuant to this article. Any action instituted against a
generator pursuant to this subsection may be brought in either
Kanawha County or the county in which the generator does
business. The generator shall pay all attorney fees and costs of
such action if the director prevails.
(g) Upon request by the director, the attorney general or
prosecuting attorney for the county in which an action was
brought shall assist the director in any civil action instituted
pursuant to this section and any proceedings relating thereto.
(h) The director is authorized to enter into contracts or
cooperative agreements with the federal government to secure to
the state the benefits of funding for action taken pursuant to
the requirements of the federal Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 as amended by
the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986.
(i) The director is authorized to accept gifts, donations,
contributions, bequests or devises of money, security or property
for deposit in the fund.
(j) The director is authorized to invest the fund to earn a
reasonable rate of return on the unexpended balance.
§22-19-6. State hazardous waste contingency plan.
The director shall promulgate rules in compliance with
chapter twenty-nine-a of this code, establishing a state
hazardous waste contingency plan which shall set forth procedures
and standards for responding to hazardous waste emergencies,
releases of hazardous substances, for conducting remedial cleanup
and maintenance of hazardous waste sites and for making
expenditures from the fund after the date of promulgation of the
plan. The plan shall include:
(a) Methods for discovering, reporting and investigating
sites at which hazardous waste or hazardous substances may
present significant risk of harm to the public health and safety
or to the environment;
(b) Methods and criteria for establishing priority responses
and for determining the appropriate extent of cleanup,
containment and other measures authorized by this article;
(c)Appropriate roles for governmental, interstate and
nongovernmental entities in effectuating the plan;
(d) Methods for identifying, procuring, maintaining, and
storing hazardous waste response equipment and supplies; and
(e) Methods to identify the most appropriate and
cost-effective emergency and remedial actions in view of the
relative risk or danger presented by each case or event.