HOUSE BILL REPORT

                 SHB 1047

                    As Passed Legislature

 

Title:  An act relating to solid waste received from outside the state.

 

Brief Description:  Requiring solid waste reports and landfill fee reciprocity on waste received from outside the state.

 

Sponsors:  By House Committee on Environmental Affairs (originally sponsored by Representatives Rust, Horn, Valle, Long, Springer, Brough, Forner, Miller, Edmondson, Lemmon, Tate, Chandler, Wood, Roland and J. Kohl.)

 

Brief History:

  Reported by House Committee on:

Environmental Affairs, January 28, 1993, DPS;

  Passed House, February 12, 1993, 95-0;

  Amended by Senate;

Passed Legislature, April 20, 1993, 97-0.

 

HOUSE COMMITTEE ON ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS

 

Majority Report:  The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass.  Signed by 12 members:  Representatives Rust, Chair; J. Kohl, Vice Chair; Horn, Ranking Minority Member; Van Luven, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Bray; Edmondson; Hansen; Holm; L. Johnson; Linville; Roland; and Sheahan.

 

Staff:  Rick Anderson (786-7114).

 

Background:  One regional solid waste landfill is currently operating in Washington state and another is planned to open in 1993.  The Rabanco Company is operating a site in Klickitat County with an estimated capacity in excess of 40 million tons.  A company owned by Waste Management Incorporated is planning a site in Adams County with an estimated capacity of 60 million tons.  The combined residential, commercial, and industrial waste stream generated in annually Washington state is between four and five million tons.

 

Two regional landfills, with a total capacity of 100 million tons, are currently operating in Oregon.  Seattle currently sends its waste to a facility in Arlington, Oregon.  Oregon requires that Seattle's waste meet the same recycling standards that are imposed on in-state waste.  Oregon also assesses a $2.25 per ton fee on Seattle's waste.   The fee charged by Oregon is based on a study identifying the additional costs associated with out-of-state waste.

 

Recent decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court have held that solid waste shipments are covered under the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution and that states have the burden of proof in showing that differential fees do not discriminate against commerce on the basis of origin.       

 

Under current law, there are no reporting requirements on out-of-state waste imported into this state nor are there any provisions authorizing the Department of Ecology to assess a fee on such waste.  Solid waste generated in this state must meet certain waste reduction and recycling requirements.  There are no similar standards for out-of-state waste that is imported into this state. 

 

Summary of Bill:  Owners or operators of solid waste disposal facilities are required to notify the Department of Ecology 60 days before receiving solid waste generated from an out-of-state source.  The department must prepare reporting guidelines.  The guidelines must provide for less than 60 day notice for shipments of waste made on an emergency or short-term basis.

 

The Department of Ecology is directed to identify activities and costs necessary to ensure that out-of-state waste meets waste reduction recycling, and management standards required of waste generated within the state.  The department is directed to assess a fee sufficient to recover the cost of the activities identified by the department.  The Department of Ecology may delegate authority to implement the identified activities to a local health department.

 

The Department of Ecology may prohibit land disposal and incineration of solid waste generated outside of this state, if the entity generating the waste does not have waste reduction recycling, and handling requirements comparable to those required in Washington State. 

 

Fiscal Note:  Requested January 19, 1993.

 

Effective Date:  Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.

 

Testimony For:  Out of state waste should meet equivalent standards required of waste generated within the state.  Fees should not be used to discriminate waste based on its (out-of-state) origin.

 

Testimony Against:  None.

 

Witnesses:  Narda Pierce, Department of Ecology; Bill Reed, King County Solid Waste; John Paul Jones, Washington Refuse and Recycling; Ray Hoffman, City of Seattle; Kathleen Collins, Association of Washington Cities; and Jay Freeborne, Washington State Recycling Association.