FINAL BILL REPORT

 

 

                               SSB 5810

 

 

                              C 406 L 89

 

 

BYSenate Committee on Agriculture (originally sponsored by Senators Barr, Madsen, Sutherland and Benitz)

 

 

Modifying responsibility for hazardous material incidents.

 

 

Senate Committee on Agriculture

 

 

House Committe on Environmental Affairs

 

 

                         SYNOPSIS AS ENACTED

 

BACKGROUND:

 

Local fire districts are under a general obligation to protect life and property in their jurisdictions.  In addition, fire districts may be designated as "incident command agencies" under state law governing coordination of responses to hazardous materials incidents (70.136 RCW).  Hazardous materials incidents are defined as incidents creating a danger to person, property, or the environment from actual or possible spillage, seepage, fire, explosion, or release of hazardous materials.

 

Current law requires any person transporting hazardous materials to clean up any hazardous materials incident that occurs during transportation.  A person responsible for causing the incident, other than an employee of a transportation company, is also liable to the state or local government for any "extraordinary costs" in protecting the public from actual or threatened harm.  "Extraordinary costs" are defined as those that exceed the normal and usual expenses anticipated for police and fire protection, such as overtime pay, damage to equipment, and the cost of any special equipment or services.

 

The law is unclear as to whether state or local governmental entities may obtain reimbursement for extraordinary costs arising out of non-transportation incidents--as, for example, with a leak of hazardous materials from a storage facility--and as to the obligations arising out of a potential release.

 

SUMMARY:

 

The obligation of a transporting company is made applicable to any "hazardous materials incident" as defined in RCW 70.136.020, which includes possible releases.  The limitation to releases only during transportation is modified and any person, other than the operating employees of a company, causing the release or potential release of hazardous materials is made liable for extraordinary costs incurred by any municipal fire department or fire district until the Department of Ecology assumes oversight of the incident.

 

 

VOTES ON FINAL PASSAGE:

 

     Senate   45    2

     House 97  0 (House amended)

     Senate   46    0 (Senate concurred)

 

EFFECTIVE:July 23, 1989