2018 -- H 8120 SUBSTITUTE A | |
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LC005383/SUB A | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2018 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT - ENERGY FACILITY SITING | |
ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Keable, Newberry, Price, Handy, and Ruggiero | |
Date Introduced: April 26, 2018 | |
Referred To: House Environment and Natural Resources | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 42-98-1, 42-98-2, 42-98-3, 42-98-5, 42-98-6, 42-98-7, 42-98-8, |
2 | 42-98-9, 42-98-9.1, 42-98-10, 42-98-11, 42-98-12, 42-98-16, 42-98-17 and 42-98-20 of the |
3 | General Laws in Chapter 42-98 entitled "Energy Facility Siting Act" are hereby amended to read |
4 | as follows: |
5 | 42-98-1. Legislative findings. |
6 | (a) The general assembly recognizes that reasonably priced, reliable sources of energy are |
7 | vital to the well-being and prosperity of the people of this state; that there are major issues of |
8 | public health and safety and impact upon the environment related to the technologies and energy |
9 | sources used in some facilities; that some energy facilities require a major commitment of funds |
10 | and resources and require many years to build that the decision to permit or deny their |
11 | construction will have long term impact on the economy of the state; that these decisions will |
12 | affect the availability and cost of the energy; and that the evaluation of proposals must recognize |
13 | and consider the need for these facilities in relation to the overall impact of the facilities upon |
14 | public health and safety, the environment and the economy of the state; |
15 | (b) The general assembly further finds that the authority to regulate many aspects of the |
16 | issues involved in the siting of major energy or power generating facilities currently exists in a |
17 | variety of agencies within the government of the state and the political subdivisions of the state; |
18 | that there is overlapping jurisdiction among several state agencies in the siting of energy |
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1 | facilities; and that there is the potential for conflicting decisions being issued by the various |
2 | agencies having authority over the different aspects of the siting of a major energy facility; |
3 | (c) The jurisdiction of each state agency should be defined, and the role of each agency in |
4 | energy siting should be delineated, to eliminate overlap and duplication and to insure that |
5 | expeditious decisions are made within a time frame to be determined by law; and that in addition |
6 | to the existing regulation, statewide and regional planning for energy resources and the |
7 | assessment of our state's need for energy should be on-going activities within Rhode Island; |
8 | (d) There is need for a coordinated decision on any major energy and power generating |
9 | facility; the technical expertise for this evaluation is available within existing agencies involved |
10 | with the siting process; and |
11 | (e) There is a need for coordinating and expediting the review of each state agency and |
12 | that the authority and responsibility to perform that function should be established.; and |
13 | (f) The general assembly recognizes that each host community for any proposed or |
14 | existing power generating facility is uniquely affected by the energy facility siting process. |
15 | 42-98-2. Declaration of policy. |
16 | It shall be the policy of this state to assure that: |
17 | (1) The facilities required to meet the energy needs of this and succeeding generations of |
18 | Rhode Islanders are planned for, considered, and built in a timely and orderly fashion; |
19 | (2) Construction, operation, and/or alteration of major energy and power generating |
20 | facilities shall only be undertaken when those actions are justified by long term state and/or |
21 | regional energy need forecasts; |
22 | (3) The energy shall be produced at the least possible cost to the consumer consistent |
23 | with the objective of ensuring that the construction, operation, and decommissioning of the |
24 | facility shall produce the fewest possible adverse effects on the quality of the state's environment; |
25 | most particularly, its land and its wildlife and resources, the health and safety of its citizens, the |
26 | purity of its air and water, its aquatic and marine life, and its esthetic and recreational value to the |
27 | public; |
28 | (4) The licensure and regulatory authority of the state be consolidated in a single body, |
29 | which will render the final licensing decision concerning the siting, construction, operation and/or |
30 | alteration of major energy facilities; |
31 | (5) An energy facility planning process shall be created through which the statewide |
32 | planning program, in conjunction with the division of public utilities and carriers, will be |
33 | empowered to undertake evaluations and projections of long and short term energy needs, and |
34 | any other matters that are necessary to establish the state energy plans, goals, and policies. The |
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1 | state planning council shall be authorized and empowered to adopt a long term plan assessing the |
2 | state's future energy needs and the best strategy for meeting them, as part of the state guide plan |
3 | by January 1, 1991. |
4 | (6) The construction, operation and/or alteration of major energy and power generating |
5 | facilities shall be consistent with the state's established energy plans, goals, and policy. |
6 | (7) Before approving the construction, operation and/or alteration of a major energy or |
7 | power generating facilities facility, the board shall determine whether cost effective efficiency |
8 | and conservation opportunities provide an appropriate alternative to the proposed facility. |
9 | (8) The energy facilities siting board shall give priority to energy generation projects |
10 | based on the degree to which such projects meet, criteria including, but not limited to: |
11 | (i) Using renewable fuels, natural gas, or coal processed by "clean coal technology" as |
12 | The relative environmental impact of their primary fuel; |
13 | (ii) Maximizing efficiency; |
14 | (iii) Using low levels of high quality water; |
15 | (iv) Using existing energy-generation facilities and sites; |
16 | (v) Producing low levels of potentially harmful air emissions; |
17 | (vi) Producing low levels of wastewater discharge; |
18 | (vii) Producing low levels of waste into the solid waste stream; and |
19 | (viii) Having dual fuel capacity Complying with the state's greenhouse gas emissions |
20 | reduction targets in the Resilient Rhode Island Act of 2014, §§ 42-6.2-1 et seq. |
21 | The board shall, within its rules and regulations, provide guidelines and definitions of |
22 | appropriate standards for the criteria designated in this subsection by January 1, 1991 January 1, |
23 | 2019. |
24 | 42-98-3. Definitions. |
25 | (a)(1) "Agency" means any agency, council, board, or commission of the state or political |
26 | subdivision of the state. |
27 | (b)(2) "Alteration" means a significant modification to a major energy or power |
28 | generating facility, which, as determined by the board, will result in a significant impact on the |
29 | environment, or the public health, safety, and welfare. Conversion from one type of fuel to |
30 | another shall not be considered to be an "alteration." |
31 | (3) "Applicant" means the entity that seeks board approval for the construction, operation |
32 | and/or alteration of a major energy or power generating facility. |
33 | (c)(4) "Board" for purposes of this chapter refers to the siting board. |
34 | (e)(5) "Clean coal technology" means one of the technologies developed in the clean coal |
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1 | technology program of the United States Department of Energy, and shown to produce emissions |
2 | levels substantially equal to those of natural gas fired power plants. |
3 | (6) "Designee" means a person currently employed by the agency that has designating |
4 | authority. |
5 | (7) "Environmental justice" means and includes the equal protection and meaningful |
6 | involvement of all people with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of |
7 | environmental laws, regulations, and policies and the equitable distribution of environmental |
8 | benefits. |
9 | (8) "Host community" means any city or town in the state in which all or a portion of a |
10 | power generating facility shall be or is located. |
11 | (d)(9) "Major energy facility" means facilities for the extraction, production, conversion, |
12 | and processing of coal; facilities for the generation of electricity designed or capable of operating |
13 | at a gross capacity of forty (40) megawatts or more; facilities for the generation of electricity |
14 | designed or capable of operating at a gross capacity less than sixty megawatts (60MW); |
15 | transmission lines of sixty-nine (69) Kv or over; facilities for the conversion, gasification, |
16 | treatment, transfer, or storage of liquefied natural and liquefied petroleum gases; facilities for the |
17 | processing, enrichment, storage, or disposal of nuclear fuels or nuclear byproducts; facilities for |
18 | the refining of oil, gas, or other petroleum products; facilities of ten (10) megawatts or greater |
19 | capacity for the generation of electricity by water power, and facilities associated with the |
20 | transfer of oil, gas, and coal via pipeline; any energy facility project of the Rhode Island |
21 | economic development corporation; the board may promulgate regulations to further define |
22 | "major energy facility" to the extent further definition is required to carry out the purpose of this |
23 | chapter, provided that any waste to energy facility shall not be deemed a major energy facility for |
24 | the purposes of this chapter. |
25 | (10) "Power generating facility" means a facility for the generation of electricity designed |
26 | or capable of operating at a gross capacity of sixty megawatts (60MW) or more. |
27 | 42-98-5. Board established. |
28 | (a) There is established the siting board which shall be a part of state government. When |
29 | the board sits for any purpose related to a major energy facility, The the siting board shall consist |
30 | of three (3) members, as follows: the chairperson of the public utilities commission, or their |
31 | designee, who shall serve as chairperson of the siting board; the director of the department of |
32 | environmental management; and, or their designee; and the associate director of administration |
33 | for planning., or their designee. When the board sits for any purpose related to a power generating |
34 | facility, the board shall consist of seven (7) members, as follows: the chairperson of the public |
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1 | utilities commission, or their designee; who shall serve as chairperson of the siting board; the |
2 | director of the department of environmental management, or their designee; the associate director |
3 | of administration for planning, or their designee; the director of the department of health, or their |
4 | designee; the state fire marshal, or their designee; and two (2) members of the public who shall be |
5 | appointed by the elected chief executive of the host community or, if there is no elected chief |
6 | executive, the president of the town council of the host community. One public member shall be a |
7 | resident of the host community, and the other public member shall be from the business |
8 | community of the host community, but need not be a resident of the host community. If there are |
9 | multiple host communities, those communities shall confer and make joint appointments pursuant |
10 | to this section. Any member of the board who recuses him or herself or is otherwise unable to |
11 | fulfill their obligations shall designate his or her own successor from his or her respective agency. |
12 | or, in the case of a public member, a successor shall be appointed in like manner. Each |
13 | application relating to a proposed or existing facility shall have a board established for that |
14 | application. A person may serve on two (2) or more boards simultaneously. |
15 | (b) Each member of the board shall take an oath to administer the duties of office |
16 | faithfully and impartially and that oath shall be filed in the office of the secretary of state. |
17 | (c) The members of the board who serve in their capacity as an employee of the state or |
18 | quasi-state agency or municipality shall serve without compensation,. Members of the board who |
19 | are not employees of the state or municipality shall receive reasonable compensation for their |
20 | services, as determined and approved by the board chairperson. but All members of the board |
21 | shall be reimbursed for their actual expenses necessarily incurred in the performance of their |
22 | duties. Such compensation and expense reimbursement shall be paid monthly by the applicant. |
23 | The board may engage, at the applicant's expense, any consultants or expert witnesses that it |
24 | deems necessary to implement its statutory responsibilities; provided, however, that to the |
25 | maximum extent possible, board staff be drawn from existing state agencies. The board shall |
26 | select a coordinator to be responsible for the publication and distribution of all official minutes, |
27 | reports, and documents and to further serve as director of the board staff, which shall be located |
28 | at the division of public utilities and common carriers. The coordinator, under the direction of the |
29 | chairperson, shall coordinate and expedite the work of the various agencies to ensure that |
30 | decisions are made within the time frame established by this chapter. |
31 | (d) A quorum shall consist of a majority of the board. A quorum is required to conduct |
32 | any meeting of the board held for the purpose of considering and voting upon an adjudicatory |
33 | decision, a proposal to adopt, amend or rescind regulations, or any other matter requiring a vote |
34 | of the board. A majority vote of the board shall be required for all actions, including licensing |
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1 | decisions; provided, however, one member of the board may conduct any hearings the board is |
2 | authorized to conduct pursuant to this chapter. |
3 | (e) The board shall maintain and grant free access to records and reports in its files to |
4 | members of the public during normal working hours and shall permit copies of those records and |
5 | reports to be made by interested members of the public at their expense; provided, however, that |
6 | the board shall not permit disclosure, other than to another government agency for the sole |
7 | purpose of rendering an advisory opinion, of any information obtained by or submitted to the |
8 | board pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, upon a showing, satisfactory to the board, that |
9 | the information is entitled to protection as trade secrets or as privileged, confidential, or |
10 | proprietary information. No other governmental agency shall disclose any trade secrets or |
11 | privileged, confidential, or proprietary information. |
12 | (f) Time periods within this chapter are discretionary, not mandatory. For good cause |
13 | shown, the board may, at its discretion, extend any and all time periods herein. |
14 | 42-98-6. Holding over in office. |
15 | When the term of office of a member of the siting board expires or otherwise terminates, |
16 | and that person has participated in hearing all or a substantial part of the evidence in a proceeding |
17 | before the board, that person shall remain a member of the siting board for the sole purpose of |
18 | completing the hearing and deciding the matter pending and signing the findings, orders, and |
19 | judgments in the proceeding. For these services, the person shall be paid reasonable |
20 | compensation and necessary expenses as fixed by the siting board as composed following the |
21 | expiration of that person's term of office. For this purpose, a proceeding shall be deemed |
22 | completed when the siting board enters its final decision therein regardless of whether that |
23 | decision is or may be appealed to the supreme court and the case remanded to the siting board for |
24 | further proceedings. |
25 | 42-98-7. Powers and duties. |
26 | (a) (1) The siting board is the licensing and permitting authority for all licenses, permits, |
27 | assents, or variances which, under any statute of the state or ordinance of any political |
28 | subdivision of the state, would be required for siting, construction or alteration of a major energy |
29 | or power generating facility in the state. |
30 | (2) Any agency, board, council, or commission of the state or political subdivision of the |
31 | state which, absent this chapter, would be required to issue a permit, license, assent, or variance |
32 | in order for the siting, construction, or alteration of a major energy or power generating facility to |
33 | proceed, shall sit and function at the direction of the siting board. These agencies shall follow the |
34 | procedures established by statute, ordinance, and/or regulation provided for determining the |
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1 | permit, license, assent, or variance, but, instead of issuing the permit, license, assent, or variance, |
2 | shall forward its findings from the proceeding, together with the record supporting the findings |
3 | and a recommendation for final action, to the siting board. |
4 | (3) Notwithstanding any provision in this chapter to the contrary, in those instances in |
5 | which the department of environmental management exercises a permitting or licensing function |
6 | under the delegated authority of federal law, including, but not limited to, the Federal Clean |
7 | Water Act (33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.), the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (42 U.S.C. § |
8 | 6901 et seq.), the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. § 7401 et seq.), and those state laws and regulations |
9 | which implement those federal laws, the department of environmental management shall be the |
10 | licensing and permitting authority. Moreover, the authority to issue licenses and permits |
11 | delegated to the department of environmental management pursuant to chapter 1 of title 2 and to |
12 | the coastal resources management council pursuant to chapter 23 of title 46, shall remain with |
13 | those agencies, but in all other respects the department of environmental management and the |
14 | coastal resources management council shall follow the procedures set forth in this chapter. |
15 | (4) Each host community shall prepare and submit to the board a report as to the |
16 | consistency of the proposed power generating facility with all local ordinances, regulations, |
17 | standards and criteria that apply to the facility. |
18 | (b) The siting board is authorized and empowered to summon and examine witnesses and |
19 | to compel the production and examination of papers, books, accounts, documents, records, |
20 | certificates, and other legal evidence that may be necessary for the determination of its |
21 | jurisdiction and decision of any question before, or the discharge of any duty required by law of, |
22 | the board. |
23 | (c) The siting board is empowered to issue any orders, rules, or regulations as may be |
24 | required to effectuate the purposes of this chapter. |
25 | (d) The siting board shall, by regulation, determine the standards for intervention, which |
26 | shall be liberally granted. Each host community shall be granted intervenor status as a matter of |
27 | right. |
28 | (e) The siting board's proceedings shall in all respects comply with the requirements of |
29 | the Administrative Procedures Act, chapter 35 of this title, except where otherwise explicitly |
30 | provided. |
31 | 42-98-8. Applications -- Contents -- Acceptance for filing. |
32 | (a) The rules and regulations promulgated by the board pursuant to § 42-98-7(c) shall |
33 | prescribe the form and contents of applications under this chapter. The board shall review Energy |
34 | Siting Board Rules of Practice and Procedure every two (2) years to ensure standards for filing |
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1 | requirements and application contents are sufficient. The applications shall contain at least the |
2 | following, where applicable: |
3 | (1) Identification of the proposed owner(s) of the facility, including identification of all |
4 | affiliates of the proposed owners, as the term is defined in § 39-3-27. |
5 | (2) Detailed description of the proposed facility, including its function and operating |
6 | characteristics, and complete plans as to all structures, including underground construction and |
7 | transmission facilities, underground or aerial, associated with the proposed facility., and a |
8 | detailed description of applicant’s access to all necessary utilities, including, but not limited to: |
9 | water; sewer; electric; and gas. |
10 | The complete plans shall be the basis for determining jurisdiction under the energy |
11 | facility siting act and shall be the plans submitted to all agencies whose permit is required under |
12 | the law. The application shall include all information which, absent this chapter, the applicant |
13 | would be required to submit to each agency to obtain a permit, license, variance, or assent. |
14 | (3) A detailed description and analysis of the impact of the proposed facility on its |
15 | physical and social environment together with a detailed description of all environmental |
16 | characteristics of the proposed site, and a summary of all studies prepared and relied upon in |
17 | connection therewith. |
18 | Where applicable these descriptions and analysis shall include a review of current |
19 | independent, scientific research pertaining to electric and magnetic fields (EMF). The review |
20 | shall provide data assessing potential health risks associated with EMF exposure. For the |
21 | purposes of this chapter "prudent avoidance" shall refer to measures to be implemented in order |
22 | to protect the public from EMF exposure. |
23 | (4) All studies and forecasts, complete with the information, data, methodology, and |
24 | assumptions on which they are based, on which the applicant intends to rely in showing the need |
25 | for the proposed facility under the statewide master construction plan submitted annually. |
26 | (5) Complete detail as to the estimated construction cost of the proposed facility, the |
27 | projected maintenance and operation costs, estimated costs to the community such as safety and |
28 | public health issues, storm damage and power outages, estimated costs to businesses and |
29 | homeowners due to power outages, the estimated unit cost of energy to be produced by the |
30 | proposed facility, and expected methods of financing the facility. |
31 | (6) A complete life-cycle management plan for the proposed facility, including a detailed |
32 | schedule providing design, material acquisition, construction, testing, and operation dates; and |
33 | measures for protecting the public health and safety and the environment during the facility's |
34 | operations, including, but not limited to, plans for the handling and disposal of wastes from the |
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1 | facility, plans for emergency operations and shutdowns, and plans for the decommissioning of the |
2 | facility at the end of its useful life. |
3 | (7) A study of alternatives to the proposed facility, including alternatives as to energy |
4 | sources, methods of energy production, and sites for the facility, together with reasons for the |
5 | applicant's rejection of these alternatives. The study shall include estimates of facility cost and |
6 | unit energy costs of alternatives considered. |
7 | (8) A detailed and specific statement as to the effects the proposed facility would have on |
8 | the ability of the state to meet the carbon-emissions-reduction goals set forth in § 42-6.2-2(a)(2). |
9 | (b) Within thirty (30) days of the filing of an applicant application under this chapter, and |
10 | prior to docketing the application, the board shall notify the applicant whether the application is |
11 | in the form and addresses the matters that are required by this section and the rules and |
12 | regulations as are promulgated pursuant to § 42-98-7. An application meeting these requirements |
13 | shall then be docketed. Any application deemed must meet every requirement of this section and |
14 | all applicable regulations in order to be docketed; no application will be docketed that does not |
15 | satisfy every requirement of this section and all applicable regulations. If the application is in the |
16 | form and addresses all matters that are required by this section and the rules and regulations |
17 | promulgated pursuant to § 42-98-7, then the application shall be docketed. Any application |
18 | deemed to be deficient shall be returned to the applicant, together with a concise and explicit |
19 | statement of the application's deficiencies. Within thirty (30) days of the resubmission of an |
20 | application following a rejection for deficiency, the board shall notify the applicant if the |
21 | application is still deficient by returning it to the applicant together with a concise and explicit |
22 | statement of the application's deficiencies. If a resubmitted application is in the form and |
23 | addresses all matters that are required by this section and the rules and regulations as are |
24 | promulgated pursuant to § 42-98-7, then the board shall docket the resubmitted application |
25 | together with the correspondence from the board specifying the deficiencies in all earlier |
26 | applications. The application may be resubmitted once all identified deficiencies have been |
27 | remedied. Within fifteen (15) days of the resubmission of an application following a rejection for |
28 | deficiency, the board shall docket the application together with specification of continuing |
29 | deficiencies noted by the board, if any. |
30 | 42-98-9. Applications -- Procedures for review -- Preliminary hearing. |
31 | (a) Within sixty (60) days following the board's docketing of an application the board |
32 | shall, on not less than forty-five (45) days' notice to all agencies, subdivisions of the state, and the |
33 | public, convene a preliminary hearing on the application to determine the issues to be considered |
34 | by the board in evaluating the application, and to designate those agencies of state government |
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1 | and of political subdivisions of the state which shall act at the direction of the board for the |
2 | purpose of rendering advisory opinions on these issues, and to determine petitions for |
3 | intervention. |
4 | (b) The board shall consider as issues in every proceeding the ability of the proposed |
5 | facility to meet the requirements of the laws, rules, regulations, and ordinances under which, |
6 | absent this chapter, the applicant would be required to obtain a permit, license, variance, or |
7 | assent. The agency of state government or of a political subdivision of the state which, absent this |
8 | chapter, would have statutory authority to grant or deny the permit, license, variance, or assent, |
9 | shall function at the direction of the board for hearing the issue and rendering an advisory opinion |
10 | thereon. |
11 | (c) The board shall limit the scope of any agency's investigation where it finds that more |
12 | than one agency has jurisdiction over a matter at issue in the licensing process. In these instances, |
13 | the board shall determine which agency shall make the necessary findings on the issue after |
14 | giving proper consideration to the expertise and resources available to each of the agencies |
15 | involved. |
16 | (d) The public utilities commission shall conduct an investigation in which the division of |
17 | planning of the department of administration, the governor's office of energy resources assistance |
18 | and the division of public utilities and carriers shall participate and render an advisory opinion as |
19 | to the need for the proposed facility. |
20 | (e) The statewide planning program within the department of administration shall |
21 | conduct an investigation and render an advisory opinion as to the socio-economic impact of the |
22 | proposed facility and its construction and consistency with the state guide plan. This investigation |
23 | shall include review of municipal comprehensive plans for all host communities to ensure the |
24 | proposed project conforms to each municipal comprehensive plan. |
25 | (f) The board shall seek advisory opinions from the zoning, planning, and building |
26 | departments of each host community. The board shall also seek advisory opinions from all public |
27 | utilities serving the facility, including, but not limited to, water, sewer, electric and gas. Advisory |
28 | opinions from municipal entities shall include a study of the financial impact of the proposed |
29 | facility on local services, infrastructure, and all public and private property located within three |
30 | (3) miles of the proposed site boundaries. No advisory opinion shall be sought until the |
31 | application is docketed. |
32 | (f)(g) A decision of the board under this section shall be issued within thirty (30) days |
33 | following the conclusion of the preliminary hearing and in any event within forty-five (45) days |
34 | of the commencement of the hearing. |
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1 | 42-98-9.1. Public notice and hearings on construction projects in cities and towns |
2 | affected. |
3 | (a) The applicant shall notify each host community no less than thirty (30) days prior to |
4 | filing its application with the board. |
5 | (a)(b) Upon receiving a utility company application the board shall immediately notify, in |
6 | writing, the councils of the towns and cities affected by the construction. This includes, but is not |
7 | limited to, each host community. |
8 | (b)(c) When the subject of the application is a power generating facility, The the board |
9 | shall have at least one three (3) public hearing hearings in each town or city affected host |
10 | community prior to holding its own hearings and prior to taking final action on a power |
11 | generating facility the application. All details of acceptance for filing in § 42-98-8(a)(1) -- |
12 | (a)(6)(7) shall be presented at town or city hearings for public comment. No public hearing shall |
13 | occur until the application is deemed sufficient and docketed by the board as required in § 42-98- |
14 | 8(b). Public hearings shall be held within six (6) months of the date the application is docketed |
15 | by the board. When the subject of the application is a facility for the generation of electricity, or |
16 | new facilities for the transmission of electricity, the town or city Each host community, including |
17 | quasi-municipal corporations within the host community, where the proposed facility would be |
18 | located may request funding from the applicant to perform studies of the local environmental |
19 | effects of the proposed facility. The expense of those studies shall not exceed the greater of the |
20 | lesser of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) |
21 | or one-tenth percent (.1%) of the estimated capital cost of the proposed facility. located in such |
22 | city or town. If the applicant contests the relevance of the requested study, or believes it to be |
23 | redundant with studies already performed, the applicant may request a ruling from the board |
24 | whether the study is necessary and reasonably expected to produce relevant information. The |
25 | board's ruling shall be conclusive and final, and shall not be the basis for an interlocutory appeal, |
26 | injunction or otherwise delay the board's processing of the application. The applicant shall also |
27 | pay any and all fees and expenses reasonably incurred by each host community, including quasi- |
28 | municipal corporations within the host community, to fully participate in the facility siting |
29 | process, and local review, including, but not limited to, fees and expenses for legal counsel, |
30 | expert evaluations, transcripts and other costs associated with the entire facility siting process. At |
31 | the request of an applicant, the chairperson of the board may refuse to approve any fee or expense |
32 | incurred by the host community if the chairperson believes the fee or expense is excessive or |
33 | unreasonable. |
34 | (d) When the subject of the application is a major energy facility, the board shall have at |
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1 | least one public hearing in each town or city affected by the major energy facility. Each town or |
2 | city affected by the major energy facility, including quasi-municipal corporations located therein, |
3 | may request funding from the applicant to perform studies of the local environmental effects of |
4 | the proposed facility. The expense of the studies shall not exceed the lesser of one hundred |
5 | thousand dollars ($100,000) or one-tenth percent (.1%) of the estimated capital cost of the |
6 | proposed facility. If the applicant contests the relevance of the requested study, or believes it to be |
7 | redundant with studies already performed, the applicant may request a ruling from the board |
8 | whether the study is necessary and reasonably expected to produce relevant information. The |
9 | board's ruling shall be conclusive and final, and shall not be the basis for an interlocutory appeal, |
10 | injunction or otherwise delay the board's processing of the application. |
11 | (c)(e) The applicant shall notify the citizens in towns and cities affected thirty (30) days |
12 | prior to public meetings through local papers. Newspaper notices shall be at least one-half (1/2) |
13 | page in size, and shall include a map depicting the project and all associated corridors. If the |
14 | board determines that any notice was substantially inaccurate, then the board may order an |
15 | additional hearing with appropriate notice. |
16 | (d)(f) The applicant shall notify abutting the following land owners individually, in |
17 | writing, thirty (30) days prior to the any hearings, by certified mail, postage prepaid.: |
18 | (1) For proposed or existing power generating facilities, applicants shall notify all land |
19 | owners whose property is located within one and one-half (1.5) miles of the proposed site |
20 | boundaries; |
21 | (2) For all other projects, applicants shall notify all land owners whose property is located |
22 | within three hundred feet (300') from the proposed project or corridor. |
23 | (e)(g) Public input shall be a part of the decision-making process. |
24 | 42-98-10. Agency procedures -- Advisory opinion. |
25 | (a) Each agency of the state or political subdivision of the state designated under § 42-98- |
26 | 9 shall proceed to consider the issue or issues consigned to it for review. Each agency shall |
27 | conclude its consideration and issue its advisory opinion not more than six (6) months following |
28 | its designation under § 42-98-9, and receipt of all details required under § 42-98-8(a)(1) through |
29 | (a)(7), or any lesser time that the board may require, or the right to exercise the function shall be |
30 | forfeited to the board. If sufficient details to allow agencies to consider and issue advisory |
31 | opinions are unavailable for any reason, the application proceeding shall be suspended for up to |
32 | sixty (60) days to allow sufficient details to be submitted by the applicant. If, at the end of sixty |
33 | (60) days, sufficient details have not been provided in writing, the application shall be denied. |
34 | The applicant may refile its applications no sooner than sixty (60) days from the date of denial. |
| LC005383/SUB A - Page 12 of 19 |
1 | (b) Advisory opinions issued by agencies designated under § 42-98-9 shall not be |
2 | considered as final decisions of the agencies making the opinions, and shall not be subject to |
3 | judicial review under § 42-35-15, or any other provision of the general laws. |
4 | (c) Advisory opinions issued by zoning boards of review, building inspectors, or any |
5 | other agency of a municipality designated under § 42-98-9 shall not be reviewable by the public |
6 | utilities commission under § 39-1-30. |
7 | (d) Failure or refusal of the applicant to provide requested information may shall be |
8 | considered as grounds for recommending denial. |
9 | (e) At the request of the siting board, the director of environmental management and the |
10 | coastal resources management council shall give priority to the review of permits for energy |
11 | facilities. |
12 | (f) Any town or city council may submit to the board a resolution setting forth the |
13 | council’s support or opposition to the project at any time after the application is docketed by the |
14 | board and no later than thirty (30) days following the submission of advisory opinions, unless an |
15 | extension is granted by the board for good cause shown. |
16 | 42-98-11. Final hearing -- Standards -- Decisions. |
17 | (a) Within forty-five (45) days after the final date for submission of advisory opinions |
18 | pursuant to § 42-98-10, the board shall convene the final hearing on the application. The purpose |
19 | of this hearing shall not be to rehear the evidence which was presented previously in hearings |
20 | before agencies designated under § 42-98-9, but rather to provide the applicant, intervenors, the |
21 | public, and all other parties in the proceeding, the opportunity to address in a single forum, and |
22 | from a consolidated, statewide prospective, the issues reviewed, and the recommendations made |
23 | in the proceedings before the agencies designated under § 42-98-9. The board at this hearing may, |
24 | at its discretion, allow the presentation of new evidence by any party, including intervenors, as to |
25 | the issues considered by the agencies designated under § 42-98-9. The board may limit the |
26 | presentation of repetitive or cumulative evidence. The hearing shall proceed on not less than |
27 | thirty (30) days' notice to the parties and the public, shall be concluded not more than sixty (60) |
28 | days following its initiation, and shall be conducted expeditiously. |
29 | (b) The board shall issue a decision granting a license only upon finding that the |
30 | applicant has shown that: |
31 | (1) Construction of the proposed facility is necessary to meet the needs of the state and/or |
32 | region for energy of the type to be produced by the proposed facility. |
33 | (2) The proposed facility is cost-justified, and can be expected to produce energy at the |
34 | lowest reasonable cost to the consumer consistent with the objective of ensuring that the |
| LC005383/SUB A - Page 13 of 19 |
1 | construction and operation of the proposed facility will be accomplished in compliance with all of |
2 | the requirements of the laws, rules, regulations, and ordinances, under which, absent this chapter, |
3 | a permit, license, variance, or assent would be required, or that consideration of the public health, |
4 | safety, welfare, security and need for the proposed facility justifies a waiver of some part of the |
5 | requirements when compliance cannot be assured. |
6 | (3) The proposed facility will not cause unacceptable harm to the environment, will not |
7 | prevent the state from reaching its greenhouse gas emissions reduction target in the Resilient |
8 | Rhode Island Act of 2014, §§ 42-6.2-1 et seq., and will enhance the socio-economic fabric of the |
9 | state. |
10 | (c) The board shall not issue a decision granting a license to any applicant unless the |
11 | board has thoroughly considered whether construction of the proposed facility will adversely |
12 | impact the ability of the state to achieve the carbon-emissions-reduction goals set forth in § 42- |
13 | 6.2-2(a)(2). |
14 | (d) Prior to the making of a decision, the board shall take into consideration any town or |
15 | city council resolution regarding the application. Where a host community is already burdened |
16 | by one or more fossil fuel energy facilities of two hundred fifty megawatts (250MW) or more, the |
17 | board shall abide by the town or city council’s wishes with regard to a proposed new facility, |
18 | unless the board is presented with clear and convincing evidence to the contrary. |
19 | (e) Where multiple applications relate to a single project, the board shall consider the |
20 | cumulative impacts of the related applications. |
21 | (c)(f) Within sixty (60) days of the conclusion of the final hearing the board shall issue its |
22 | final decision on the application. A decision in favor of the application shall constitute a granting |
23 | of all permits, licenses, variances, appraisals, or assents, which under any law, rule, regulation, or |
24 | ordinance of the state or of a political subdivision thereof which would, absent this chapter, be |
25 | required for the proposed facility. The decision may be issued requiring any modification or |
26 | alteration of the proposed facility, and may be issued on any condition the board deems warranted |
27 | by the record, and may be issued conditional upon the applicant's receipt of permits required by |
28 | federal law. The board's decision shall explicitly address each of the advisory opinions received |
29 | from agencies, and the board's reasons for accepting, rejecting, or modifying, in whole or in part, |
30 | any of those advisory opinions; any resolution from a host community, and the board's reasons |
31 | for accepting or rejecting that resolution. The board shall, within ten (10) days of granting a |
32 | license, with or without conditions, deliver the decision to the speaker of the Rhode Island house |
33 | of representatives, and the president of the Rhode Island senate. |
34 | 42-98-12. Appeals and judicial review. |
| LC005383/SUB A - Page 14 of 19 |
1 | (a) The licensing decision issued by the siting board shall constitute the sole, final, |
2 | binding, and determinative regulatory decision within the state for the purposes of siting, |
3 | building, operating, or altering a major energy or power generating facility. |
4 | (b) Any person aggrieved by a decision of the board may within ten (10) thirty (30) days |
5 | from the date of ratification of the decision, obtain judicial review of the decision in the manner |
6 | and according to the standards and procedures provided in chapter 5 of title 39. appeal the |
7 | decision to the Rhode Island supreme court by filing a notice of appeal with the board and the |
8 | supreme court. |
9 | 42-98-16. Violations. |
10 | (a) Failure to comply with any promulgated board rule, regulation, requirement or |
11 | procedure for the licensing of energy facilities shall constitute grounds for suspension or |
12 | dismissal, with or without prejudice in its discretion, of licensing proceedings, provided that the |
13 | applicant shall have a reasonable opportunity to show cause for and remedy the lack of |
14 | compliance. |
15 | (b) Failure to comply with any provision, condition or limitation contained in a board |
16 | license to site, build, or alter a major energy or power generating facility and/or failure to comply |
17 | with a board cease and desist order and/or a board order to remedy a non-complying action shall |
18 | be grounds for suspension or revocation of the license, and/or shall be punishable by a fine of not |
19 | more than twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). Each day of |
20 | continuing noncompliance shall be considered a separate violation and so punished. |
21 | (c) The board may require the licensee to maintain those records as are reasonable and |
22 | necessary to monitor compliance with license provisions, and shall have the authority to enter |
23 | onto the property of licensees to investigate complaints of noncompliance and to perform routine |
24 | inspections. |
25 | (d) The board shall take reasonable steps to ensure each facility for which a certificate |
26 | has been issued is constructed, maintained, and operated in compliance with such certificate and |
27 | any other standard established pursuant to this chapter. The board may designate officials or staff |
28 | of any state agencies as its agents for the purposes of investigating complaints, performing |
29 | routine maintenance functions and issuing written cease and desist orders. |
30 | (e) Any license may be revoked or suspended for any materially false statement in the |
31 | application or supplemental submissions by the applicant when a true answer would have |
32 | warranted the board’s refusal to issue a license in the first instance. |
33 | (f) Civil proceedings to enforce this chapter may be brought by the attorney general or |
34 | any host community in the superior court. |
| LC005383/SUB A - Page 15 of 19 |
1 | (g) Nothing in this chapter shall preclude a host community from enforcing municipal |
2 | ordinances, levying fines, or pursuing any other legally available enforcement remedies, unless |
3 | such ordinances are in direct conflict with a certificate or license issued by the board. |
4 | 42-98-17. Appropriation, fees and grants. |
5 | (a) There is created an account to be known as the "energy facility siting account", an |
6 | account within the public utilities commission in the general fund, hereinafter referred to as the |
7 | "account", for the purpose of providing the financial means for the board to purchase materials |
8 | and to employ on a contract or other basis legal counsel, official stenographers, engineers, |
9 | accountants, and expert witnesses and for other necessary expenses of the board in investigations |
10 | and hearings on applications for licensure under this chapter. The general assembly shall annually |
11 | appropriate to the account the amounts as may be required to bring the balance of the account to |
12 | the sum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000); provided, however, that if at June 30 in any |
13 | year the balance in the account shall be in excess of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), the |
14 | amount of the excess shall be transferred to the general account of the state. The controller is |
15 | authorized and directed to draw his or her orders upon the general treasurer for the payment from |
16 | the account of the sums as may be required from time to time upon receipt by the controller of |
17 | proper vouchers approved by the chairperson of the board or the secretary. |
18 | (b) The board shall be authorized to establish reasonable fees for investigations, |
19 | applications and hearings. Applicants shall pay those fees in full prior to the hearing process |
20 | commencing unless the board agrees to an alternative payment schedule. All fees collected by the |
21 | board shall be deposited with the general treasurer and appropriated to the board. The state |
22 | controller is authorized and directed to draw his or her orders upon the general treasurer for |
23 | payment of any sum or sums as may be necessary from time to time and upon receipt by him or |
24 | her of authenticated vouchers presented by the coordinator of the board. |
25 | (c) All moneys collected by the chairperson or the secretary pursuant to this section shall |
26 | be paid by him or her monthly to the general treasurer to be added to the energy facility siting |
27 | account. |
28 | (d) Failure of the applicant to pay expenses lawfully assessed by the board shall |
29 | constitute grounds for suspension of licensing proceedings or revocation of any license granted, |
30 | until the applicant has paid the expenses. |
31 | (e) The board shall be empowered to draw upon this account and to distribute monies |
32 | from the fees to and bodies of state and local government participating in licensing actions or |
33 | acting as the board's agents for the purposes of insuring compliance with license provisions and |
34 | for employing staff or consultants and for carrying out the provisions of this chapter. |
| LC005383/SUB A - Page 16 of 19 |
1 | (f) The board shall be authorized to receive any grants made for the purpose of planning |
2 | for or regulating the siting of energy facilities and to disburse and administer the grants under the |
3 | terms of the grants. |
4 | (g) The board shall not issue a license to build a new power generating facility unless the |
5 | applicant demonstrates it has satisfied the following requirements: |
6 | (1) Applicant shall provide adequate funds for the host community’s fire marshal to |
7 | retain at least one special inspector to assist the host community’s fire marshal, for the duration of |
8 | the construction project; and |
9 | (2) Applicant shall provide adequate funds to be used in the training of local public safety |
10 | and emergency management personnel in the host community, including quasi-municipal |
11 | corporations within the host community, and personnel from neighboring communities which |
12 | would likely provide mutual aid within the host community, on the complex issues of electric |
13 | generating facility construction and operation. |
14 | (h) The special inspector retained under subsection (g) of this section shall: |
15 | (1) Be approved by the board and not otherwise employed by or financially involved in |
16 | the construction or operation of the facility; |
17 | (2) Have knowledge and field experience in electric generating facility construction; and |
18 | (3) Assist the local fire marshal with review and approval of an appropriate safety plan |
19 | for the electric generating facility, and conduct inspections during construction of the facility to |
20 | ensure compliance with certificates and safety standards. |
21 | 42-98-20. Informational filings. |
22 | (a) To assist the board in achieving the policy objectives set forth in § 42-98-2, the |
23 | owners of any proposed energy facility, whether or not the facility qualified as a major energy or |
24 | power generating facility, shall make an informational filing with the board at the time of first |
25 | application to any other agency, board, council, or commission of the state or political |
26 | subdivision of the state required to issue a permit, license, assent, or variance in order for the |
27 | siting, construction, or alteration of the facility to proceed. Copies of any informational filing |
28 | shall be provided to the councils of the towns and cities affected by the proposed facility within |
29 | seven (7) days of filing with the board. |
30 | (b) The informational filing shall contain at least the following: |
31 | (1) Identification of the proposed owner(s) of the facility, including identification of all |
32 | affiliates of the proposed owners, as the term is defined in § 39-3-27. |
33 | (2) Detailed description of the proposed facility, including its function and operating |
34 | characteristics, and complete plans as to all structures, including underground construction and |
| LC005383/SUB A - Page 17 of 19 |
1 | transmission facilities, underground or aerial, associated with the proposed facility. |
2 | SECTION 2. Chapter 42-98 of the General Laws entitled "Energy Facility Siting Act" is |
3 | hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
4 | 42-98-7.1. Counsel for the public. |
5 | (a) Within fifteen (15) days of the board's docketing of an application related to a power |
6 | generating facility, the attorney general shall appoint an attorney or attorneys, licensed in Rhode |
7 | Island, to serve as counsel for the public. |
8 | (b) Counsel for the public shall represent the public in seeking to protect the quality of |
9 | the environment, including advocating for environmental justice matters. |
10 | (c) Counsel for the public shall be accorded all the rights, privileges, and responsibilities |
11 | of an attorney representing a party in formal action and shall serve until the decision to issue or |
12 | deny an application is final. |
13 | (d) Fees for compensation of the counsel for the public, including fees for expert |
14 | witnesses, if any, shall be paid by the applicant through the board's assessment process. |
15 | (e) Nothing contained herein shall be construed as preventing any person or entity from |
16 | being represented by counsel of their own choosing and at their own expense. |
17 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect on January 1, 2019 and apply to applications filed |
18 | on or after January 1, 2019. |
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LC005383/SUB A | |
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| LC005383/SUB A - Page 18 of 19 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT - ENERGY FACILITY SITING | |
ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would make changes to the membership of the energy facilities siting board by |
2 | increasing the size of the board from three (3) to seven (7) members for certain application, and |
3 | also imposes additional requirements on applicants for energy facilities. |
4 | This act would take effect on January 1, 2019 and would apply to applications filed on or |
5 | after January 1, 2019. |
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LC005383/SUB A | |
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| LC005383/SUB A - Page 19 of 19 |