2017 -- S 0137 | |
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LC000917 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2017 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY - RHODE ISLAND RESOURCE RECOVERY | |
CORPORATION | |
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Introduced By: Senators Lombardo, Archambault, Lombardi, and Conley | |
Date Introduced: February 01, 2017 | |
Referred To: Senate Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 23-19-13 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-19 entitled "Rhode |
2 | Island Resource Recovery Corporation" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 23-19-13. Municipal participation in state program. |
4 | (a) (1) Any person or municipality which intends to transfer, treat, or dispose of solid |
5 | waste originating or collected within the state, or which intends to make arrangements to do so, |
6 | shall utilize, exclusively, a system or facility designated by the corporation as provided under this |
7 | chapter. All transfer stations in existence as of December 1, 1986 are empowered so long as they |
8 | maintain the appropriate license to continue their operations, and the corporation shall not |
9 | exercise its powers under this chapter to compete with their operation and activity. No |
10 | municipality shall have power to engage in, grant any license, or permit for or enter into any |
11 | contract for the collection, treatment, transportation, storage, or disposal of solid waste, and no |
12 | municipality or any person shall engage in any activities within the state, including disposal of |
13 | solid waste, which would impair the ability of the corporation to meet its contractual obligations |
14 | to its bondholders and others, or which would be in competition with the purposes of the |
15 | corporation as provided in this chapter. The corporation shall not be empowered to engage in the |
16 | transportation, transfer, or storage of solid waste, except in temporary situations where a |
17 | municipality has defaulted in its obligation under this section, or in conjunction with its activities |
18 | at its disposal sites. Provided, however, that municipal contracts which were in existence on |
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1 | March 1, 1985, are excepted from this requirement until expiration of the original term of the |
2 | contract or the expiration of any extension approved by the corporation, or sooner termination of |
3 | the contracts, and provided, further, that municipalities operating their own landfills on December |
4 | 1, 1986 shall be free to continue to use the landfills until closure of the landfills. Without limiting |
5 | the generality of the preceding, municipalities and persons are expressly empowered to contract |
6 | with the corporation and/or, subject to the approval of the corporation, with a duly licensed |
7 | private disposal facility for the disposal of solid wastes. The approval shall be conditioned upon a |
8 | finding by the board of commissioners of the corporation that any proposed contract with a |
9 | Rhode Island municipality or person is in conformity with the statewide resource recovery system |
10 | development plan and this chapter, and that the proposed contract will not impair the ability of |
11 | the corporation to meet its contractual obligations to its bondholders and others. The contracts |
12 | may have a maximum total term, including all renewals, of up to fifty (50) years. |
13 | (2) The corporation shall charge fees for its solid waste management services that, |
14 | together with other revenues available to the corporation, will, at a minimum, be sufficient to |
15 | provide for the support of the corporation and its operations on a self-sustaining basis, including |
16 | debt service on its bonds and other obligations. |
17 | (b) Insofar as the provisions of this chapter are inconsistent with the provisions of any |
18 | other laws of this state, general, special, or local, restricting the power of any municipality to |
19 | enter into long term contracts with the corporation, the provisions of this chapter shall be |
20 | controlling. The corporation shall provide suitable and appropriate assistance to communities |
21 | under these circumstances. Notwithstanding the preceding, if the corporation deems it desirable, |
22 | it may from time to time permit municipalities to contract among themselves for the disposal of |
23 | their wastes. |
24 | (c) Municipalities, along with private producers of waste which contract with the |
25 | corporation for disposal of their wastes, shall continue to be free to make their own arrangements |
26 | for collection of wastes at the source and/or the hauling of wastes to the designated processing |
27 | and/or transfer stations, so long as those arrangements are in compliance with the provisions of |
28 | chapter 18.9 of this title and with this chapter, and any municipal license relating thereto. |
29 | (d) All municipalities and state agencies which are participants in the state waste disposal |
30 | program shall initiate a separation and recycling program within one year after the date on which |
31 | the resource recovery facility utilized by that municipality or agency is operational and accepting |
32 | waste for incineration. |
33 | (e) (1) The corporation and any municipality may enter into a contract or contracts |
34 | providing for or relating to the disposal of solid waste originating in the municipality and the cost |
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1 | and expense of the disposal. |
2 | (2) The contract may be made with or without consideration and for a specified or |
3 | unspecified time not to exceed fifty (50) years, and on any terms and conditions which may be |
4 | approved by the municipality and which may be agreed to by the corporation in conformity with |
5 | its contracts with the holders of any bonds or other obligations. Subject to the contracts with the |
6 | holders of bonds, the municipality is authorized and directed to do and perform any and all acts or |
7 | things necessary, convenient, or desirable to carry out and perform the contract and to provide for |
8 | the payment or discharge of any obligation under the contract in the same manner as other |
9 | obligations of the municipality. |
10 | (3) All municipalities that contract with the corporation for the disposal of solid waste |
11 | shall prepare as an addendum to its fiscal year 2010 contract with the corporation and any |
12 | contracts with the corporation for the subsequent years a plan that includes a description of the |
13 | process by which thirty-five percent (35%) of its solid waste will be recycled and fifty percent |
14 | (50%) of its solid waste will be diverted beginning July 1, 2012. This addendum shall include a |
15 | residential and municipal waste stream evaluation, a plan for the reduction of solid waste and |
16 | recyclables generated and the process by which recyclable materials are to be segregated. The |
17 | corporation shall have the right to execute or deny execution of the municipal solid waste and |
18 | recycling services contract pending approval of the addendum. Once the corporation approves |
19 | this addendum, the municipality must implement the plan and report on the results annually to the |
20 | corporation. The corporation shall enforce the provisions of this section pursuant to subdivision |
21 | 23-19-13(g)(3). |
22 | (4) The corporation shall notify every city or town that it contracts with as to the |
23 | addendum requirements that must be included in contracts to recycle thirty-five percent (35%) |
24 | and divert fifty percent (50%) of solid waste beginning July 1, 2012. |
25 | (f) The municipalities and the state have shared responsibility for the payment of the cost |
26 | of municipal solid waste disposal. The state will pay its share of the cost of the solid waste |
27 | disposal services to be provided by the corporation to the municipalities at its solid waste |
28 | management facilities and its central landfill in the town of Johnston, and at any back-up facility |
29 | which the corporation is required to provide, by providing solid waste disposal operating |
30 | subsidies as provided in subsections (i) and (j). |
31 | (g) (1) The corporation shall charge each municipality with which it has a long-term |
32 | contract for solid waste disposal services a tipping fee per ton of source separated solid waste |
33 | excluding separated recyclable materials, sludge, and demolition debris delivered to any |
34 | corporation facility computed in accordance with this subsection. For purposes of this chapter, |
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1 | "fiscal year" shall mean the twelve-month period, July 1 to June 30. The municipal tipping fee |
2 | shall be equal to one hundred seven and one-half percent (107.5%) of the prior fiscal year's |
3 | municipal tipping fee through the end of the 2009 fiscal year. One dollar and ten cents ($1.10) per |
4 | ton on all garbage, including recycled garbage, collected by the corporation as tipping fee shall be |
5 | paid to the town of Johnston. In addition to any other fees the corporation shall also charge a |
6 | three dollar ($3.00) five dollar ($5.00) tipping fee per vehicle. Any vehicle carrying municipal |
7 | solid waste shall be exempt from this three dollar ($3.00) five dollar ($5.00) tipping fee. All fees |
8 | collected shall be paid to the town of Johnston on a biannual basis. No tipping fee shall be |
9 | charged for recyclable materials delivered to a recycling facility provided by or through the |
10 | corporation. |
11 | (2) Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision (g)(1), the municipal tipping fee may |
12 | be increased, if, due to the commencement of operation of a new resource recovery facility during |
13 | the previous fiscal year, the state subsidy as calculated pursuant to subsection (i), not considering |
14 | landfill revenues and losses, is projected to be greater than the state subsidy projected by the |
15 | corporation and the department of administration when the projections were officially accepted |
16 | by the corporation on the basis of contracts entered into for the initial resource recovery facility. |
17 | The amount by which the projected state subsidy exceeds the original projections will be |
18 | apportioned between the state and the municipalities in the same ratio as the state subsidy for the |
19 | previous year divided by the number of tons of municipal solid waste processed by the |
20 | corporation bears to the municipal tipping fee for that year. The increased municipal tipping fee |
21 | herein provided shall be subject to the same escalation factor as the municipal tipping fee set forth |
22 | above. |
23 | (3) The corporation shall establish in the contract, the maximum amount of municipal |
24 | solid waste that each municipality will be entitled to deliver to the corporation at the municipal |
25 | tipping fee. Solid waste in excess of the contract amount will be charged to the municipality at the |
26 | non-municipal rate. In determining the maximum amount of municipal solid waste which will |
27 | qualify for the municipal tipping fee, the corporation shall consider the municipality's solid waste |
28 | per capita average, the statewide solid waste per capita average, and any other factors that it shall |
29 | deem appropriate. |
30 | (4) Seaweed collected and removed by a municipality shall be deemed "yard waste" for |
31 | purposes of this chapter and any rules, regulations and/or plans promulgated by the corporation |
32 | pursuant to this chapter, and shall be accepted by the corporation at the same rate and cost as all |
33 | other municipal yard waste. |
34 | (h) The corporation, after the initial resource recovery facility becomes operational, shall |
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1 | charge each non-municipal user of its facilities a fee per ton equal to the projected annual |
2 | resource recovery system cost less energy revenues and interest earnings on bond reserve funds, |
3 | if any, divided by the projected tons to be processed by the corporation at its resource facilities |
4 | for the year. Landfill costs shall not be considered in the calculation unless landfill costs exceed |
5 | revenues generated at the landfills; in those cases, excess landfill costs will be added to the |
6 | system costs. |
7 | (i) The annual state subsidy for the cost of disposal of municipal solid waste shall be |
8 | calculated for each fiscal year or portion of each fiscal year according to the following formula: |
9 | The annual state subsidy shall equal the total projected annual resource recovery system costs |
10 | (minus costs associated with the central landfill) for the next fiscal year less the sum of the |
11 | following: (1) projected resource recovery system revenues for the year; and (2) projected landfill |
12 | revenues; provided, however, that in the event that the landfill is projected to operate at a loss, the |
13 | amount of the loss shall be added to the subsidy. |
14 | (j) (1) On or before October 1 of each year, the corporation shall submit a budget to the |
15 | director of administration for the succeeding fiscal year using actual resource recovery system |
16 | revenues and costs, and the audit of the preceding fiscal year prepared by the corporation's |
17 | independent auditors and accepted by the auditor general. On or before December 1 of each year, |
18 | the director of administration, in consultation with the corporation, shall review the budget of the |
19 | corporation and shall determine and certify the annual state subsidy for the succeeding fiscal year |
20 | to the governor who shall submit to the general assembly printed copies of a budget which shall |
21 | include the state subsidy as previously determined in this subsection. The state subsidy |
22 | appropriation shall be on a system basis but shall contain specific appropriations for each |
23 | resource recovery facility. If the amount appropriated exceeds the amount needed for a specific |
24 | facility, the corporation, with the approval of the director of administration, may reallocate the |
25 | appropriated but unadvanced funds to other corporation facilities or costs. If the audit prepared by |
26 | the corporation's independent auditors indicates that the amounts appropriated and disbursed to |
27 | the corporation as a subsidy were in excess of the amounts which would have been required for |
28 | the year if actual resource recovery system revenues and costs had been used in the calculation of |
29 | the subsidy, the excess shall be credited against the current fiscal year's subsidy. |
30 | (2) At any time, if the corporation determines that the state subsidy will be insufficient to |
31 | discharge the corporation's obligations for the current fiscal year, it shall request, in writing, to |
32 | the director of administration for a supplemental appropriation. After review, the director of |
33 | administration will recommend to the governor additional funding for the corporation, and the |
34 | governor after further review, shall submit a supplemental appropriation bill request for the funds |
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1 | to the general assembly. |
2 | (3) From the appropriations made by the general assembly, the state controller is |
3 | authorized and directed to draw his or her orders upon the general treasurer every month for the |
4 | payment of those sums that may be required upon receipt by him or her of properly authenticated |
5 | vouchers. |
6 | (k) If, in any fiscal year, the appropriation for the state subsidy is not made and if the |
7 | corporation has insufficient other funds to discharge its obligations to holders of its bonds and |
8 | notes as certified by the state auditor general, the corporation shall be empowered to charge both |
9 | municipal and non-municipal users whatever fees are necessary to discharge its obligations to |
10 | holders of its bonds and notes, and the municipal tipping fee set forth in subsection (g) shall not |
11 | be applicable for the fiscal year. |
12 | (l) On or after the date established for separation of recyclable solid waste in the |
13 | statewide plan for separation of recyclables by the department of environmental management, |
14 | only segregated solid waste shall be accepted at the corporation's facilities. |
15 | (m) Costs associated with participation in the state program shall not constitute state |
16 | mandated costs under ยง 45-13-7. |
17 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on July 1, 2017. |
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LC000917 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HEALTH AND SAFETY - RHODE ISLAND RESOURCE RECOVERY | |
CORPORATION | |
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1 | This act would increase the Resource Recovery Corporation tipping fee from three |
2 | dollars ($3.00) to five dollars ($5.00) per vehicle to be paid to the town of Johnston on a biannual |
3 | basis. |
4 | This act would take effect on July 1, 2017. |
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LC000917 | |
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