2015 -- H 5508 | |
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LC001505 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2015 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY - REDUCE MARINE DEBRIS AND PRESERVE | |
LANDFILL SPACE WHILE INCREASING THE RECYCLING OF POST-CONSUMER | |
PACKAGING MATERIAL | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Carson, Regunberg, Fogarty, Handy, and Blazejewski | |
Date Introduced: February 12, 2015 | |
Referred To: House Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 23 of the General Laws entitled "HEALTH AND SAFETY" is hereby |
2 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 18.18 |
4 | REDUCTION OF MARINE DEBRIS AND PRESERVATION OF LANDFILL SPACE WHILE |
5 | INCREASING THE RECYCLING OF POST-CONSUMER PACKAGING MATERIAL ACT |
6 | 23-18.18-1. Short title. – This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Rhode |
7 | Island Marine Debris Reduction Act." |
8 | 23-18.18-2. Purpose. -- The purposes of this chapter are: |
9 | (1) To reduce the amount of post-consumer packaging that ends up as marine and beach |
10 | debris; |
11 | (2) To increase statewide recovery rates of post-consumer packaging materials for reuse |
12 | and recycling programs; |
13 | (3) To establish a manufacturer financed system to increase the collection, recycling and |
14 | reuse of discarded post-consumer packaging materials; |
15 | (4) To promote the development of infrastructure for the reuse and recycling of discarded |
16 | post-consumer packaging materials; |
17 | (5) To minimize costs incurred by Rhode Island municipalities to collect, dispose of, or |
18 | recycle discarded post-consumer packaging materials; |
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1 | (6) To encourage the reduction of packaging for consumer goods and, alternatively, the |
2 | use of more reusable and recyclable materials in the packaging of consumer goods; and |
3 | (7) To research baseline marine litter data in Rhode Island, and develop and fund new |
4 | programs to prevent further degradation and monitoring statewide progress. |
5 | 23-18.18-3. Findings. – The general assembly hereby finds and declares: |
6 | (1) The state of Rhode Island plays an integral role in protecting its coast and ocean |
7 | waters, "The Rhode Island Marine Debris Reduction Act" recognizes the necessity of reducing |
8 | the amount of unrecovered post-consumer packaging found as waste and litter at our beaches, on |
9 | our coasts, in the bay, in our storm drains, and in the surrounding ocean. |
10 | (2) Current data shoes hat up to eighty percent (80%) or more of marine debris is |
11 | attributable to land-based sources. Of the debris that ends up in our water resources, as much as |
12 | two-thirds (2/3) originates as post-consumer packaging materials. |
13 | (3) Municipal governments and taxpayers currently bear the entire cost associated with |
14 | managing plastics packaging, including its collection for recycling, beach clean-ups and disposal |
15 | in landfills. Municipal governments in Rhode Island are struggling financially and the costs of |
16 | bearing sole responsibility for collecting post-consumer packaging material is coming at the |
17 | expense of funding for police and fire protection, teachers and education, and other essential |
18 | government services. |
19 | (4) Many governments throughout the world require the producers of post-consumer |
20 | packaging to pay for collection, recovery and recycling to help reduce the cost burden of |
21 | managing post-consumer packaging materials, encourage recycling, and educate consumers about |
22 | how to dispose of their products and attendant packaging. |
23 | (5) Rhode Island municipalities representing over half of the state's population have |
24 | passed resolutions to support industry financing for the collection, processing and recycling of |
25 | their post-consumer materials. It is critically important that Rhode Island benefit from industry's |
26 | financial support, experience and assistance to capture more of these materials for reuse and |
27 | recycling before they are brought to the landfill or left as litter on our roads, rivers and beaches, |
28 | resulting in marine debris. |
29 | 23-18.18-4. Definitions. – The words and phrases defined in this section shall be |
30 | controlling in all local ordinances, regulations and rules created under this chapter. |
31 | (1) "Brand" means a name, symbol, word or mark that identifies a product and attributes |
32 | the product to the owner of the brand as the producer. |
33 | (2) "Department" means the Rhode Island department of environmental management. |
34 | (3) "Packaging" means materials that are used for the containment, protection, handing, |
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1 | delivery, and presentation of goods sold or delivered in the state. |
2 | (4) "Post-Consumer" means the material that would normally be discarded as municipal |
3 | solid waste having completed its life cycle as a consumer item. |
4 | (5) "Producer" means a person: |
5 | (i) Who manufactures materials used in the packaging of consumer goods and sells, |
6 | offers to sell, or distributes in Rhode Island under the manufacture's own name or brand; |
7 | (ii) If subsection (i) of this section does not apply, who is not the manufacturer of the |
8 | packaging material but is the owner of licensee of a trademark or brand under which the material |
9 | is sold or distributed in Rhode Island, whether or not the trademark is registered; |
10 | (iii) If subsections (i) and (ii) of this section do not apply, who imports the packaging |
11 | material into Rhode Island for sale or distribution; or |
12 | (iv) Who sells at wholesale or retail a designated material, does not have legal ownership |
13 | of the brand, and elects to fulfill the responsibilities of the producer for that product. |
14 | (6) "Producer responsibility organization" means an organization designated by a group |
15 | of producers to act as an agent on behalf of each producer to develop and operate a producer |
16 | responsibility program for packaging and printed paper. |
17 | (7) "Program plan" means a detailed plan that describes the manner in which producers |
18 | shall arrange for the collection and recycling of post-consumer plastic. |
19 | (8) "Recycling" means the process of collecting and preparing designated material for use |
20 | in manufacturing processes or for recovery of usable materials followed by delivery of such |
21 | materials for use as standalone material input, as a replacement for, or supplement to, raw |
22 | materials. Recycling does not include destruction by incineration; waste-to-energy incineration, |
23 | conversion into a fuel or other such processes; or landfill disposal. |
24 | (9) "Recycling rate" means the percentage of packaging sold, offered for sale, delivered, |
25 | or distributed to households that is collected, processed, and delivered for use in manufacturing |
26 | processes for use as standalone material input, as a replacement for, or supplement to, raw |
27 | materials. |
28 | 23-18.18-5. Recycling of post-consumer packaging. – (a) Producers of packaging, or a |
29 | producer responsibility organization acting as a designated agent, are required to develop and |
30 | submit a program plan to the department within twelve (12) months of the passage of this chapter |
31 | that arranges for and finances the collection and recycling of post-consumer packaging as |
32 | described within this section. |
33 | (b) The submitted plan shall, at a minimum: |
34 | (1) Indicate how producers of post-consumer packaging shall achieve a recycling rate of |
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1 | eighty percent (80%) for each type of packaging by the year 2020; |
2 | (2) Identify the packaging materials that any producer, or producer responsibility |
3 | organization, is taking responsibility. For each material identified, the producer or producer |
4 | responsibility organization will outline how they will achieve a recycling rate of no less than |
5 | eighty percent (80%) target by weight by the year 2020; |
6 | (3) Include an explanation of the process for determining how much packaging is sold |
7 | into the state each year, and determining the amount of material recovered and recycled; |
8 | (4) Include a financing structure that is sufficient to cover the cost of developing the plan, |
9 | operating to program and maintaining a financial reserve sufficient to operate the program in a |
10 | fiscally prudent and responsible manner; |
11 | (5) Include a description of the public education program to develop awareness of this |
12 | program and invest the public in participation; |
13 | (6) Indicate how the producers, or the producer responsibility organization, will work |
14 | with municipalities and the Rhode Island resource recovery corporation to operate and/or expand |
15 | current collection programs that are just as or more convenient to Rhode Island residents; |
16 | (7) Indicate how the producers, or the producer responsibility organization, will work |
17 | with the Rhode Island economic development corporation, or its assigns and successors, to |
18 | identify ways in which the state can motivate local infrastructure investment, business |
19 | development and job creation related to the collection, transportation and processing of post- |
20 | consumer packaging materials; |
21 | (8) Include a program to work with local, regional and national groups that collect beach |
22 | and marine debris to determine baseline data on what types of materials end up as beach and |
23 | marine debris and the methods by which it travels from manufacturer to discarding on public land |
24 | in order to identify the most effective ways that this public nuisance can be currently mitigated |
25 | and provide for future prevention; |
26 | (9) The plan must allow for on-going monitoring of the incidents of post-consumer |
27 | packaging as beach and marine debris and include funding for effective and efficient beach and |
28 | marine litter abatement programs. |
29 | (c) Waste incineration, waste-to-energy or waste-to-fuel conversion is not a form of |
30 | recycling or a means to reach this goal. |
31 | (d) Consultation required. A producer or group of producers shall consult with |
32 | stakeholders during the development of the plan, solicit stakeholder comments, and attempt to |
33 | address any stakeholder concerns regarding the plan before submitting the plan to the department |
34 | for review. |
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1 | (e) Not later than ninety (90) days after the submission of a plan pursuant to this section, |
2 | the department shall make a determination whether to: |
3 | (1) Approve the plan as submitted; |
4 | (2) Approve the plan with conditions; or |
5 | (3) Deny the plan. |
6 | (f) Not later than six (6) months after the date the plan is approved, the producers, or |
7 | producer responsibility organization, shall implement the approved plan. |
8 | (g) Not later than the implementation date of the program, the department shall list the |
9 | names of participating producers and the brands covered by the approved program. |
10 | (h) Within twenty-four (24) months of the passage of this chapter, no producer, |
11 | distributor or retailer shall sell or offer for sale any packaging materials to any person in this state |
12 | if the producer of such materials has not had a plan approved by the department independently or |
13 | through a producer responsibility organization. |
14 | (i) Producers of packaging shall submit an annual report to the department, by March 15, |
15 | each year the program plan is in operation, which shall include information and data from the |
16 | process for determining how much packaging is sold into the state each year, and determining the |
17 | amount of material recovered and recycled. Such audit will also include a review of fees assessed |
18 | and expenses incurred to ensure that it is consistent with the budget contained within the plan |
19 | described in this section. This information may be audited by the department by an independent |
20 | auditor chosen by the department, and paid under the plan outlined in this section. |
21 | 23-18.18-6. Regulations. – The department is hereby authorized to promulgate rules and |
22 | regulations as may be necessary to implement and carry out the provisions of this chapter. |
23 | 23-18.18-7. Enforcement. – Failure to achieve a recycling rate for a specific material- |
24 | type established by or pursuant to § 23-18.18-5(b) shall obligate the producers covered under the |
25 | material-type to make available not more than one million dollars ($1,000,000) per year of non- |
26 | compliance, to the department. The department shall deposit the funds received from producers |
27 | into an expendable trust for grants for market development related to the collection and recycling |
28 | of the material type. Producers' individual contributions shall not exceed their respective market |
29 | shares of packaging sold in the state. |
30 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC001505 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY - REDUCE MARINE DEBRIS AND PRESERVE | |
LANDFILL SPACE WHILE INCREASING THE RECYCLING OF POST-CONSUMER | |
PACKAGING MATERIAL | |
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1 | This act would establish the Rhode Island Marine Debris Reduction Act. |
2 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC001505 | |
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