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BILL REQUEST - CODE REVISER'S OFFICE
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BILL REQ. #: H-4709.1/02
ATTY/TYPIST: KT:seg
BRIEF DESCRIPTION:
5909-S2 AMH AGEC H4709.1
2SSB 5909 - H COMM AMD
By Committee on Agriculture & Ecology
Strike everything after the enacting clause and insert the following:
"NEW SECTION. Sec. 1. The legislature finds that the current financial responsibility laws for vessels and facilities are in need of update and revision. These changes are necessary due to the increased risks of spills, the length of time that has passed since the current standards were put in place, the recent changes that have occurred in federal statutory and case law, the comparative standards of other western states, and the recent experiences of other states with spills. The legislature intends that, whenever possible, the standards set for Washington state provide the highest level of protection consistent with other western states and to ultimately achieve a more uniform system of financial responsibility on the Pacific Coast.
Sec. 2. RCW 88.40.011 and 2000 c 69 s 30 are each amended to read as follows:
Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter.
(1) "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.
(2) "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.
(3) "Covered vessel" means a tank vessel, cargo vessel, or passenger vessel.
(4) "Department" means the department of ecology.
(5) "Director" means the director of the department of ecology.
(6)(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.
(7) "Hazardous
substances" means any substance listed as of March 1, 2002, 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. The
following are not hazardous substances for purposes of this chapter:
(a) Wastes listed as
F001 through F028 in Table 302.4; ((and))
(b) Wastes listed as K001 through K136 in Table 302.4; and
(c) The noncompound metals antimony, arsenic, beryllium, cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, nickel, selenium, silver, thallium, and zinc, when in solid form in a particle larger than one hundred micrometers (0.004 inches) in diameter.
(8) (("Inland
barge" means any barge operating on the waters of the state and certified
by the coast guard as an inland barge.
(9))) "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.
(((10))) (9)
"Oil" or "oils" means any naturally occurring liquid
hydrocarbons at atmospheric temperature and pressure coming from the earth,
including condensate and natural gasoline, and any fractionation thereof,
including, but not limited to, crude oil, petroleum, gasoline, fuel oil, diesel
oil, oil sludge, oil refuse, and oil mixed with wastes other than dredged
spoil. Oil does not include any substance listed as of March 1, 2002,
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.
(((11))) (10)
"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.
(((12))) (11)
"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.
(((13))) (12)(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.
(((14))) (13)
"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.
(((15))) (14)
"Ship" means any boat, ship, vessel, barge, or other floating craft
of any kind.
(((16))) (15)
"Spill" means an unauthorized discharge of oil into the waters of the
state.
(((17))) (16)
"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.
(((18))) (17)
"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.
Sec. 3. RCW 88.40.020 and 2000 c 69 s 31 are each amended to read as follows:
(1)(a) Any ((inland))
barge that transports hazardous substances in bulk as cargo, using any port or
place in the state of Washington or the navigable waters of the state shall
establish evidence of financial responsibility in the amount of the greater of
((one)) five million dollars, or ((one)) three
hundred ((fifty)) dollars per gross ton of such vessel.
(b) The director by rule may establish a lesser standard of financial responsibility for barges, transporting hazardous substances, of three hundred gross tons or less. The standard shall set the level of financial responsibility based on the quantity of cargo and type of cargo the barge is capable of carrying.
(2)(a) Except as provided in (b) or (c) of this subsection or subsection (5) of this section, a tank vessel that carries oil as cargo in bulk shall demonstrate financial responsibility to pay at least five hundred million dollars. The amount of financial responsibility required under this subsection is seven hundred fifty million dollars after January 1, 2003, and one billion dollars after January 1, 2005.
(b) The director by rule may establish a lesser standard of financial responsibility for tank vessels or barges of three hundred gross tons or less. The standard shall set the level of financial responsibility based on the quantity of cargo the tank vessel or barge is capable of carrying. The director shall not set the standard for tank vessels or barges of three hundred gross tons or less below that required under federal law.
(c) The owner or
operator of a tank vessel who is a member of an international protection and
indemnity mutual organization and is covered for oil pollution risks up to the
amounts required under this section is not required to demonstrate financial
responsibility under this chapter. The director ((may)) shall
require the owner or operator of a tank vessel to prove membership in such an
organization.
(3)(a) A cargo
vessel or passenger vessel that carries more than six thousand five hundred
barrels of oil as fuel shall demonstrate financial responsibility to pay ((the
greater of at least six hundred dollars per gross ton or five hundred thousand)),
except as provided in subsection (5) of this section, at least three hundred
million dollars.
(b) A cargo vessel or passenger vessel, as defined in RCW 88.40.011, that carries: (i) Between one and ten barrels of oil shall demonstrate financial responsibility to pay at least two million dollars; (ii) between eleven and fifty barrels of oil shall demonstrate financial responsibility to pay at least five million dollars; (iii) between fifty-one and five hundred barrels of oil shall demonstrate financial responsibility to pay at least ten million dollars; (iv) between five hundred one and one thousand barrels of oil shall demonstrate financial responsibility to pay at least twenty million dollars; and (v) between one thousand one and six thousand five hundred barrels of oil shall demonstrate financial responsibility to pay at least twenty million dollars for the first one thousand barrels and five million for each additional one thousand barrels.
(c) The owner or operator of a cargo or passenger vessel who is a member of an international protection and indemnity mutual organization and is covered for oil pollution risks up to the amounts required under this section is not required to demonstrate financial responsibility under this chapter. The director shall require the owner or operator of a tank vessel to prove membership in such an organization.
(4) The documentation of financial responsibility shall demonstrate the ability of the document holder to meet state and federal financial liability requirements for the actual costs for removal of oil or hazardous substance spills, for natural resource damages, for civil penalties and fines imposed, for removal of shipwrecks and ship debris from the lands and waters of the state, and for necessary expenses related to a spill, or substantial threat of a spill, involving oil or a hazardous substance.
(5) The department may
by rule set a lesser amount of financial responsibility for a tank vessel,
cargo vessel, or passenger vessel that meets safety performance or other
standards ((for construction, propulsion, equipment, and personnel))
established by the department. The department shall require as a minimum level
of financial responsibility under this subsection the same level of financial
responsibility required under federal law.
(6) This section shall not apply to a covered vessel owned or operated by the federal government or by a state or local government.
Sec. 4. RCW 88.40.025 and 1991 c 200 s 704 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) An onshore
or offshore facility shall demonstrate financial responsibility in an amount
determined by the department, and established in rule by January 1, 2005,
as necessary to compensate the state and affected counties and cities for
damages that might occur during a reasonable worst case spill of oil from that
facility into the navigable waters of the state and for civil penalties and
fines imposed. The department shall consider such matters as: (a) The
amount of oil that could be spilled into the navigable waters from the
facility((,)); (b) the cost of cleaning up the spilled oil((,));
(c) the frequency of operations at the facility((,)); (d) the
amount of civil penalties and fines that could be imposed; (e) the damages
that could result from the spill; and (f) the commercial
availability and affordability of financial responsibility for both large
and small facilities.
(2) This section shall not apply to an onshore or offshore facility owned or operated by the federal government or by the state or local government.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5. To assist the department in determining the proper levels of financial responsibility for onshore and offshore facilities, as required under RCW 88.40.025, the department shall contract for an independent economic analysis regarding adequate levels of financial responsibility. The analysis shall include consideration of the matters identified in RCW 88.40.025. The analysis shall be completed and delivered to the legislature and governor by September 1, 2003.
Sec. 6. RCW 88.40.040 and 2000 c 69 s 33 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) ((The department
shall deny entry to the waters of the state to any vessel that does not meet
the financial responsibility requirements of this chapter)) It is
unlawful for any vessel required to have financial responsibility under this
chapter to enter or operate on Washington waters without meeting the
requirements of this chapter or rules adopted under this chapter, except when
necessary to avoid injury to the vessel's crew or passengers. Any vessel
owner or operator that does not meet the financial responsibility requirements
of this chapter and any rules prescribed thereunder or the federal oil
pollution act of 1990 shall be reported by the department to the United States
coast guard.
(2) The department shall enforce section 1016 of the federal oil pollution act of 1990 as authorized by section 1019 of the federal act."
Correct the title.
EFFECT: The striking amendment advances dates in financial responsibility provisions and review and report requirements by one year. The striking amendment also removes the requirement for the DOE to review the statutory financial responsibility requirements for tank, cargo, or passenger vessels and report on the sufficiency of these requirements every five years.
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