Passed by the Senate March 8, 2004 YEAS 47   ________________________________________ President of the Senate Passed by the House March 3, 2004 YEAS 96   ________________________________________ Speaker of the House of Representatives | I, Milton H. Doumit, Jr., Secretary of the Senate of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL 6329 as passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives on the dates hereon set forth. ________________________________________ Secretary | |
Approved ________________________________________ Governor of the State of Washington | Secretary of State State of Washington |
State of Washington | 58th Legislature | 2004 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 02/05/04.
AN ACT Relating to extending the date for ballast water discharge implementation; amending RCW 77.120.005 and 77.120.030; amending 2002 c 282 s 1 (uncodified); and providing an expiration date.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 77.120.005 and 2000 c 108 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
The legislature finds that some nonindigenous species have the
potential to cause economic and environmental damage to the state and
that current efforts to stop the introduction of nonindigenous species
from shipping vessels do not adequately reduce the risk of new
introductions into Washington waters.
The legislature recognizes the international ramifications and the
rapidly changing dimensions of this issue, the lack of currently
available treatment technologies, and the difficulty that any one state
has in either legally or practically managing this issue. Recognizing
the possible limits of state jurisdiction over international issues,
the state declares its support for the international maritime
organization and United States coast guard efforts, and the state
intends to complement, to the extent its powers allow it, the United
States coast guard's ballast water management program.
Sec. 2 2002 c 282 s 1 (uncodified) is amended to read as follows:
(1) The director of the department of fish and wildlife must
establish the ballast water work group.
(2) The ballast water work group consists of the following
individuals:
(a) One staff person from the governor's executive policy office.
This person must act as chair of the ballast water work group;
(b) Two representatives from the Puget Sound steamship operators;
(c) Two representatives from the Columbia river steamship
operators;
(d) Three representatives from the Washington public ports, one of
whom must be a marine engineer;
(e) Two representatives from the petroleum transportation industry;
(f) One representative from the Puget Sound water quality action
team; ((and))
(g) Two representatives from the environmental community;
(h) One representative of the shellfish industry;
(i) One representative of the tribes;
(j) One representative of maritime labor; and
(k) One representative from the department of fish and wildlife.
(3) The ballast water work group must study, and provide a report
to the legislature by December 15, ((2003)) 2006, the following issues:
(a) All issues relating to ballast water technology, including
exchange and treatment methods ((and)), management plans, the
associated costs, and the availability of feasible and proven ballast
water treatment technologies that could be cost-effectively installed
on vessels that typically call on Washington ports;
(b) The services needed by the industry and the state to protect
the marine environment, including penalties and enforcement; ((and))
(c) The costs associated with, and possible funding methods for,
implementing the ballast water program;
(d) Consistency with federal and international standards, and
identification of gaps between those standards, and the need for
additional measures, if any, to meet the goals of this chapter;
(e) Describe how the costs of treatment required as of July 1,
2007, will be substantially equivalent among ports where treatment is
required;
(f) Describe how the states of Washington and Oregon are
coordinating their efforts for ballast water management in the Columbia
river system; and
(g) Describe how the states of Washington, Oregon, and California
and the province of British Columbia are coordinating their efforts for
ballast water management on the west coast.
(4) The ballast water work group must begin operation immediately
upon the effective date of this section. The ((department of fish and
wildlife)) Puget Sound water quality action team must provide staff for
the ballast water work group. The staff must come from existing
personnel within the ((department of fish and wildlife)) team.
(5) The director must also monitor the activities of the task force
created by the state of Oregon in 2001 Or. Laws 722, concerning ballast
water management. The director shall provide the ballast water work
group with periodic updates of the Oregon task force's efforts at
developing a ballast water management system.
(6)(a) The ballast water work group expires June 30, ((2004)) 2007.
(b) This section expires June 30, ((2004)) 2007.
Sec. 3 RCW 77.120.030 and 2002 c 282 s 2 are each amended to read
as follows:
The owner or operator in charge of any vessel covered by this
chapter is required to ensure that the vessel under their ownership or
control does not discharge ballast water into the waters of the state
except as authorized by this section.
(1) Discharge into waters of the state is authorized if the vessel
has conducted an open sea exchange of ballast water. A vessel is
exempt from this requirement if the vessel's master reasonably
determines that such a ballast water exchange operation will threaten
the safety of the vessel or the vessel's crew, or is not feasible due
to vessel design limitations or equipment failure. If a vessel relies
on this exemption, then it may discharge ballast water into waters of
the state, subject to any requirements of treatment under subsection
(2) of this section and subject to RCW 77.120.040.
(2) After July 1, ((2004)) 2007, discharge of ballast water into
waters of the state is authorized only if there has been an open sea
exchange or if the vessel has treated its ballast water to meet
standards set by the department consistent with applicable state and
federal laws. When weather or extraordinary circumstances make access
to treatment unsafe to the vessel or crew, the master of a vessel may
delay compliance with any treatment required under this subsection
until it is safe to complete the treatment.
(3) Masters, owners, operators, or persons-in-charge shall submit
to the department an interim ballast water management report by July 1,
2006, in the form and manner prescribed by the department. The report
shall describe actions needed to implement the ballast water
requirements in subsection (2) of this section, including treatment
methods applicable to the class of the vessel. Reports may include a
statement that there are no treatment methods applicable to the vessel
for which the report is being submitted.
(4) The ballast water work group created in section 1, chapter 282,
Laws of 2002 shall develop recommendations for the interim ballast
water management report. The recommendations must include, but are not
limited to:
(a) Actions that the vessel owner or operator will take to
implement the ballast water requirements in subsection (2) of this
section, including treatment methods applicable to the class of the
vessel;
(b) Necessary plan elements when there are not treatment methods
applicable to the vessel for which the report is being submitted, or
which would meet the requirements of this chapter; and
(c) The method, form, and content of reporting to be used for such
reports.
(5) For treatment technologies requiring shipyard modification that
cannot reasonably be performed prior to July 1, 2007, the department
shall provide the vessel owner or operator with an extension to the
first scheduled drydock or shipyard period following July 1, 2007.
(6) The department shall make every effort to align ballast water
standards with adopted international and federal standards while
ensuring that the goals of this chapter are met.
(7) The requirements of this section do not apply to a vessel
discharging ballast water or sediments that originated solely within
the waters of Washington state, the Columbia river system, or the
internal waters of British Columbia south of latitude fifty degrees
north, including the waters of the Straits of Georgia and Juan de Fuca.
(((4))) (8) Open sea exchange is an exchange that occurs fifty or
more nautical miles offshore. If the United States coast guard
requires a vessel to conduct an exchange further offshore, then that
distance is the required distance for purposes of compliance with this
chapter.