H-1463.1  _______________________________________________

 

                          HOUSE BILL 1810

          _______________________________________________

 

State of Washington      54th Legislature     1995 Regular Session

 

By Representatives Chandler, Honeyford, Thompson and L. Thomas

 

Read first time 02/09/95.  Referred to Committee on Agriculture & Ecology.

 

Changing the scope of cleanup standards for remedial actions under the model toxics control act.



    AN ACT Relating to the authority of the state for cleanup standards under the model toxics control act; and reenacting and amending RCW 70.105D.030.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

 

    Sec. 1.  RCW 70.105D.030 and 1994 c 257 s 11 and 1994 c 254 s 3 are each reenacted and amended to read as follows:

    (1) The department may exercise the following powers in addition to any other powers granted by law:

    (a) Investigate, provide for investigating, or require potentially liable persons to investigate any releases or threatened releases of hazardous substances, including but not limited to inspecting, sampling, or testing to determine the nature or extent of any release or threatened release.  If there is a reasonable basis to believe that a release or threatened release of a hazardous substance may exist, the department's authorized employees, agents, or contractors may enter upon any property and conduct investigations.  The department shall give reasonable notice before entering property unless an emergency prevents such notice.  The department may by subpoena require the attendance or testimony of witnesses and the production of documents or other information that the department deems necessary;

    (b) Conduct, provide for conducting, or require potentially liable persons to conduct remedial actions (including investigations under (a) of this subsection) to remedy releases or threatened releases of hazardous substances.  In carrying out such powers, the department's authorized employees, agents, or contractors may enter upon property.  The department shall give reasonable notice before entering property unless an emergency prevents such notice. In conducting, providing for, or requiring remedial action, the department shall give preference to permanent solutions to the maximum extent practicable and shall provide for or require adequate monitoring to ensure the effectiveness of the remedial action;

    (c) Indemnify contractors retained by the department for carrying out investigations and remedial actions, but not for any contractor's reckless or wilful misconduct;

    (d) Carry out all state programs authorized under the federal cleanup law and the federal resource, conservation, and recovery act, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 6901 et seq., as amended;

    (e) Classify substances as hazardous substances for purposes of RCW 70.105D.020(6) and classify substances and products as hazardous substances for purposes of RCW 82.21.020(1);

    (f) Issue orders or enter into consent decrees or agreed orders that include deed restrictions where necessary to protect human health and the environment from a release or threatened release of a hazardous substance from a facility.  Prior to establishing a deed restriction under this subsection, the department shall notify and seek comment from a city or county department with land use planning authority for real property subject to a deed restriction;

    (g) Enforce the application of permanent and effective institutional controls that are necessary for a remedial action to be protective of human health and the environment; and

    (h) Take any other actions necessary to carry out the provisions of this chapter, including the power to adopt rules under chapter 34.05 RCW.

    (2) The department shall immediately implement all provisions of this chapter to the maximum extent practicable, including investigative and remedial actions where appropriate.  The department shall adopt, and thereafter enforce, rules under chapter 34.05 RCW to:

    (a) Provide for public participation, including at least (i) the establishment of regional citizen's advisory committees, (ii) public notice of the development of investigative plans or remedial plans for releases or threatened releases, and (iii) concurrent public notice of all compliance orders, agreed orders, enforcement orders, or notices of violation;

    (b) Establish a hazard ranking system for hazardous waste sites;

    (c) Establish reasonable deadlines not to exceed ninety days for initiating an investigation of a hazardous waste site after the department receives information that the site may pose a threat to human health or the environment and other reasonable deadlines for remedying releases or threatened releases at the site;

    (d) Publish and periodically update minimum cleanup standards for remedial actions ((at least as stringent as the cleanup standards under section 121 of the federal cleanup law, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 9621, and at least as stringent as all applicable state and federal laws, including health-based standards under state and federal law)) that comply with the following requirements:

    (i) Cleanup standards shall be protective of public health, safety, and welfare, and the environment;

    (ii) Cleanup standards shall be based upon generally accepted and peer reviewed scientific evidence or methodologies, reasonable assumptions of exposure scenarios as to amounts of contaminants to which humans or other receptors will be exposed, when and where those exposures will occur and the amount of that exposure, and shall avoid the use of redundant conservative assumptions;

    (iii) Cleanup standards shall be based upon site-specific risks;

    (iv) Cleanup standards shall provide for site-specific risk reduction that is proportionate to the total cost of the remedial action;

    (v) Cleanup standards shall require that remedial actions be selected based upon a consideration of technical practicability, and shall give equal consideration to engineering controls, institutional controls, and treatment;

    (vi) Cleanup standards shall provide that remedial actions shall be based on current and reasonably anticipated future land and resource uses; and

    (e) Apply industrial clean-up standards at industrial properties.  Rules adopted under this subsection shall ensure that industrial properties cleaned up to industrial standards cannot be converted to nonindustrial uses without approval from the department.  The department may require that a property cleaned up to industrial standards is cleaned up to a more stringent applicable standard as a condition of conversion to a nonindustrial use.  Industrial clean-up standards may not be applied to industrial properties where hazardous substances remaining at the property after remedial action pose a threat to human health or the environment in adjacent nonindustrial areas.

    (3) Before November 1st of each even-numbered year, the department shall develop, with public notice and hearing, and submit to the ways and means and appropriate standing environmental committees of the senate and house of representatives a ranked list of projects and expenditures recommended for appropriation from both the state and local toxics control accounts.  The department shall also provide the legislature and the public each year with an accounting of the department's activities supported by appropriations from the state toxics control account, including a list of known hazardous waste sites and their hazard rankings, actions taken and planned at each site, how the department is meeting its top two management priorities under RCW 70.105.150, and all funds expended under this chapter.

    (4) The department shall establish a scientific advisory board to render advice to the department with respect to the hazard ranking system, cleanup standards, remedial actions, deadlines for remedial actions, monitoring, the classification of substances as hazardous substances for purposes of RCW 70.105D.020(6) and the classification of substances or products as hazardous substances for purposes of RCW 82.21.020(1).  The board shall consist of five independent members to serve staggered three-year terms.  No members may be employees of the department.  Members shall be reimbursed for travel expenses as provided in RCW 43.03.050 and 43.03.060.

    (5) The department shall establish a program to identify potential hazardous waste sites and to encourage persons to provide information about hazardous waste sites.

 


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