BILL REQ. #: H-0611.5
State of Washington | 61st Legislature | 2009 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/20/09. Referred to Committee on Ecology & Parks.
AN ACT Relating to providing an emergency response system for the Strait of Juan de Fuca; amending RCW 88.46.130, 88.46.068, and 88.46.010; and adding a new section to chapter 88.46 RCW.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 88.46.130 and 1991 c 200 s 426 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) An emergency response system for the Strait of Juan de Fuca
shall be established ((by July 1, 1992)) and maintained by the
department. In establishing the emergency response system, the
((administrator)) director shall consider the recommendations of the
regional marine safety committees((. The administrator shall also))
and consult with the province of British Columbia regarding its
participation in the emergency response system.
(2) Full implementation of section 2 of this act, along with
implementation of the drilling requirements for a qualifying tug
provided in RCW 88.46.068, represents the successful adoption of an
emergency response system under this section.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 A new section is added to chapter 88.46 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) In addition to the contingency plan requirements adopted by the
department under RCW 88.46.060, contingency plans for covered vessels
entering any portion of the Strait of Juan de Fuca west of the city of
Port Angeles must include a specific catastrophic event response
provision requiring the vessel owner or operator to have a valid
contract for the specific vessel with a multimission tug on station and
available to provide assistance and response for the vessel any hour of
any day that the vessel may be in the western portion of the Strait of
Juan de Fuca. The contracted vessel must be permanently stationed in
the Neah Bay staging area identified in WAC 173-182-395, as it existed
on the effective date of this section.
(2) To satisfy the requirements of this section, the contracted tug
must have the following response capabilities or equipment:
(a) The ability to, in severe weather conditions, make up, stop,
and tow to safety a fully loaded tanker with a deadweight tonnage
capacity of one hundred eighty thousand metric tons;
(b) Be equipped with an Orville hook and line throwing gun;
(c) The ability to deploy high seas boom and oil spill skimmers
while towing an oil recovery barge or, alternatively, the ability to
store recovered oil on board;
(d) The ability to provide a platform for salvage operations,
including divers and firefighters;
(e) The ability to transfer passengers from a stricken vessel;
(f) Be equipped with onboard oil storage or be contracted with a
dedicated barge stationed alongside the tug, or both; and
(g) Starting five years after the effective date of this section,
be equipped with a fully integrated external firefighting system with
no fewer than two pumps, a total pump capacity of not less than two
thousand four hundred cubic meters per hour, a throw length of not less
than one hundred twenty meters, and a throw height of not less than
forty-five meters.
(3) All covered vessels subject to this section must have a
contract with a qualifying tug by July 1, 2010.
(4) The requirements of this section may be fulfilled by a private
organization or cooperative providing umbrella coverage for multiple
applicable vessels. Financial support for each payee to an
organization or cooperative formed to satisfy the requirements of this
section should be based on the maximum total worst case spill potential
of the payee's vessel or vessels.
(5) Evidence of compliance with this section must be included as
part of the contingency plan submitted or resubmitted to the department
for review and approval under RCW 88.46.060. For covered vessels that
have submitted a contingency plan to the department for review prior to
July 1, 2010, a free-standing addendum to the previously submitted
contingency plan evidencing compliance with this section satisfies the
submittal requirements of this subsection.
(6) This section does not apply if the federal government
implements tug escort requirements for covered vessels in the western
Strait of Juan de Fuca with comparable protective standards or requires
a rescue tug to be stationed at Neah Bay. Upon the implementation of
federal rules or standards, the department shall prepare agency request
legislation recommending the repeal of this section.
Sec. 3 RCW 88.46.068 and 2006 c 316 s 4 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) The department shall ((by rule)) adopt by rule procedures to
determine the adequacy of contingency plans approved under RCW
88.46.060. The rules shall require random practice drills without
prior notice that will test the adequacy of the responding entities.
The rules may provide for unannounced practice drills of individual
contingency plans.
(2)(a) The department shall also provide for the drilling of any
qualifying tug contracted by a covered vessel to satisfy the
requirements of section 2 of this act. Drills performed on a
qualifying tug must be conducted on a regular basis and test the tug's
ability to satisfy oil spill contingency plan requirements.
(b) Drills involving a qualifying tug must place an emphasis on the
tug's ability to respond to a potentially worst case spill scenario
caused by a fully loaded covered vessel or barge. However, drills
should also test a tug's capabilities to successfully tow and respond
to all covered vessels.
(c) Procedures for the drilling of qualifying tugs are not required
to be identified in rule. However, successful drills of a contracted
qualifying tug may be considered as evidence of the adequacy of the
contracting vessel's overall contingency plan.
(3) The department shall review and publish a report on the drills
initiated under this section, including an assessment of response time
and available equipment and personnel compared to those listed in the
contingency plans relying on the responding entities, and requirements,
if any, for changes in the plans or their implementation.
(4) The department may require additional drills and changes in
arrangements for implementing approved plans which are necessary to
ensure their effective implementation.
Sec. 4 RCW 88.46.010 and 2007 c 347 s 5 are each amended to read
as follows:
The definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter
unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Best achievable protection" means the highest level of
protection that can be achieved through the use of the best achievable
technology and those staffing levels, training procedures, and
operational methods that provide the greatest degree of protection
achievable. The director's determination of best achievable protection
shall be guided by the critical need to protect the state's natural
resources and waters, while considering (a) the additional protection
provided by the measures; (b) the technological achievability of the
measures; and (c) the cost of the measures.
(2) "Best achievable technology" means the technology that provides
the greatest degree of protection taking into consideration (a)
processes that are being developed, or could feasibly be developed,
given overall reasonable expenditures on research and development, and
(b) processes that are currently in use. In determining what is best
achievable technology, the director shall consider the effectiveness,
engineering feasibility, and commercial availability of the technology.
(3) "Cargo vessel" means a self-propelled ship in commerce, other
than a tank vessel or a passenger vessel, of three hundred or more
gross tons, including but not limited to, commercial fish processing
vessels and freighters.
(4) "Bulk" means material that is stored or transported in a loose,
unpackaged liquid, powder, or granular form capable of being conveyed
by a pipe, bucket, chute, or belt system.
(5) "Covered vessel" means a tank vessel, cargo vessel, or
passenger vessel.
(6) "Department" means the department of ecology.
(7) "Director" means the director of the department of ecology.
(8) "Discharge" means any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring,
emitting, emptying, or dumping.
(9)(a) "Facility" means any structure, group of structures,
equipment, pipeline, or device, other than a vessel, located on or near
the navigable waters of the state that transfers oil in bulk to or from
a tank vessel or pipeline, that is used for producing, storing,
handling, transferring, processing, or transporting oil in bulk.
(b) A facility does not include any: (i) Railroad car, motor
vehicle, or other rolling stock while transporting oil over the
highways or rail lines of this state; (ii) retail motor vehicle motor
fuel outlet; (iii) facility that is operated as part of an exempt
agricultural activity as provided in RCW 82.04.330; (iv) underground
storage tank regulated by the department or a local government under
chapter 90.76 RCW; or (v) marine fuel outlet that does not dispense
more than three thousand gallons of fuel to a ship that is not a
covered vessel, in a single transaction.
(10) "Marine facility" means any facility used for tank vessel
wharfage or anchorage, including any equipment used for the purpose of
handling or transferring oil in bulk to or from a tank vessel.
(11) "Navigable waters of the state" means those waters of the
state, and their adjoining shorelines, that are subject to the ebb and
flow of the tide and/or are presently used, have been used in the past,
or may be susceptible for use to transport intrastate, interstate, or
foreign commerce.
(12) "Oil" or "oils" means oil of any kind that is liquid at
atmospheric temperature and any fractionation thereof, including, but
not limited to, crude oil, petroleum, gasoline, fuel oil, diesel oil,
biological oils and blends, oil sludge, oil refuse, and oil mixed with
wastes other than dredged spoil. Oil does not include any substance
listed in Table 302.4 of 40 C.F.R. Part 302 adopted August 14, 1989,
under section 101(14) of the federal comprehensive environmental
response, compensation, and liability act of 1980, as amended by P.L.
99-499.
(13) "Offshore facility" means any facility located in, on, or
under any of the navigable waters of the state, but does not include a
facility any part of which is located in, on, or under any land of the
state, other than submerged land. "Offshore facility" does not include
a marine facility.
(14) "Onshore facility" means any facility any part of which is
located in, on, or under any land of the state, other than submerged
land, that because of its location, could reasonably be expected to
cause substantial harm to the environment by discharging oil into or on
the navigable waters of the state or the adjoining shorelines.
(15)(a) "Owner or operator" means (i) in the case of a vessel, any
person owning, operating, or chartering by demise, the vessel; (ii) in
the case of an onshore or offshore facility, any person owning or
operating the facility; and (iii) in the case of an abandoned vessel or
onshore or offshore facility, the person who owned or operated the
vessel or facility immediately before its abandonment.
(b) "Operator" does not include any person who owns the land
underlying a facility if the person is not involved in the operations
of the facility.
(16) "Passenger vessel" means a ship of three hundred or more gross
tons with a fuel capacity of at least six thousand gallons carrying
passengers for compensation.
(17) "Person" means any political subdivision, government agency,
municipality, industry, public or private corporation, copartnership,
association, firm, individual, or any other entity whatsoever.
(18) "Qualifying tug" means a tug boat that satisfies the
capabilities and equipment standards set forth in section 2 of this
act.
(19) "Severe weather conditions" means observed nautical conditions
with sustained winds measured at forty or more knots and wave heights
measured at twelve feet or more.
(20) "Ship" means any boat, ship, vessel, barge, or other floating
craft of any kind.
(((19))) (21) "Spill" means an unauthorized discharge of oil into
the waters of the state.
(((20))) (22) "Tank vessel" means a ship that is constructed or
adapted to carry, or that carries, oil in bulk as cargo or cargo
residue, and that:
(a) Operates on the waters of the state; or
(b) Transfers oil in a port or place subject to the jurisdiction of
this state.
(((21))) (23) "Waters of the state" includes lakes, rivers, ponds,
streams, inland waters, underground water, salt waters, estuaries,
tidal flats, beaches and lands adjoining the seacoast of the state,
sewers, and all other surface waters and watercourses within the
jurisdiction of the state of Washington.
(((22))) (24) "Worst case spill" means: (a) In the case of a
vessel, a spill of the entire cargo and fuel of the vessel complicated
by adverse weather conditions; and (b) in the case of an onshore or
offshore facility, the largest foreseeable spill in adverse weather
conditions.