2023 -- H 6034 | |
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LC002100 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2023 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO WATERS AND NAVIGATION -- COASTAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT | |
COUNCIL | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Tanzi, Cortvriend, Handy, Spears, Henries, Boylan, | |
Date Introduced: March 01, 2023 | |
Referred To: House State Government & Elections | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. The title of Chapter 46-23 of the General Laws entitled "Coastal Resources |
2 | Management Council" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | CHAPTER 46-23 |
4 | Coastal Resources Management Council |
5 | CHAPTER 46-23 |
6 | DEPARTMENT OF COASTAL RESOURCES |
7 | SECTION 2. Sections 46-23-1, 46-23-2, 46-23-4, 46-23-4.1, 46-23-6, 46-23-6.1, 46-23- |
8 | 6.2, 46-23-7, 46-23-7.1, 46-23-7.2, 46-23-7.3, 46-23-7.4, 46-23-7.5, 46-23-8, 46-23-9, 46-23-10, |
9 | 46-23-11, 46-23-13, 46-23-14, 46-23-15, 46-23-15.1, 46-23-16, 46-23-18, 46-23-18.1, 46-23-18.2, |
10 | 46-23-18.3, 46-23-18.4, 46-23-18.5, 46-23-18.6, 46-23-20, 46-23-20.1, 46-23-20.2, 46-23-20.3, |
11 | 46-23-20.4, 46-23-20.5, 46-23-20.6, 46-23-21, 46-23-22, 46-23-23, 46-23-24 and 46-23-25 of the |
12 | General Laws in Chapter 46-23 entitled "Coastal Resources Management Council" are hereby |
13 | amended to read as follows: |
14 | 46-23-1. Legislative findings. |
15 | (a)(1) Under article 1, § 17 of the Rhode Island Constitution, the people shall continue to |
16 | enjoy and freely exercise all the rights of fishery, and the privileges of the shore, to which they |
17 | have been heretofore entitled under the charter and usages of this state, including, but not limited |
18 | to, fishing from the shore, the gathering of seaweed, leaving the shore to swim in the sea and |
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1 | passage along the shore; and they shall be secure in their rights to use and enjoyment of the natural |
2 | resources of the state with due regard for the preservation of their values; and it is the duty of the |
3 | general assembly to provide for the conservation of the air, land, water, plant, animal, mineral and |
4 | other natural resources of the state, and to adopt all means necessary and proper by law to protect |
5 | the natural environment of the people of the state by providing adequate resource planning for the |
6 | control and regulation of the use of the natural resources of the state and for the preservation, |
7 | regeneration, and restoration of the natural environment of the state. |
8 | (2) The general assembly recognizes and declares that the coastal resources of Rhode |
9 | Island, a rich variety of natural, commercial, industrial, recreational, and aesthetic assets, are of |
10 | immediate and potential value to the present and future development of this state; that unplanned |
11 | or poorly planned development of this basic natural environment has already damaged or destroyed, |
12 | or has the potential of damaging or destroying, the state’s coastal resources, and has restricted the |
13 | most efficient and beneficial utilization of these resources; that it shall be the policy of this state to |
14 | preserve, protect, develop, and, where possible, restore the coastal resources of the state for this |
15 | and succeeding generations through comprehensive and coordinated long range planning and |
16 | management designed to produce the maximum benefit for society from these coastal resources; |
17 | and that preservation and restoration of ecological systems shall be the primary guiding principle |
18 | upon which environmental alteration of coastal resources will be measured, judged, and regulated. |
19 | (b)(1) That effective implementation of these policies is essential to the social and |
20 | economic well-being of the people of Rhode Island because the sea and its adjacent lands are major |
21 | sources of food and public recreation, because these resources are used by and for industry, |
22 | transportation, waste disposal, and other purposes, and because the demands made on these |
23 | resources are increasing in number, magnitude, and complexity; and that these policies are |
24 | necessary to protect the public health, safety, and general welfare. Pursuant to 16 U.S.C. § 1452 |
25 | (“The Coastal Zone Management Act”), the general assembly hereby directs the council department |
26 | of coastal resources (referred to as “CRMC” the "department") to exercise effectively its |
27 | responsibilities in the coastal zone through the development and implementation of management |
28 | programs to achieve wise use of the land and water resources of the coastal zone. |
29 | (2) Furthermore, that implementation of these policies is necessary in order to secure the |
30 | rights of the people of Rhode Island to the use and enjoyment of the natural resources of the state |
31 | with due regard for the preservation of their values, and in order to allow the general assembly to |
32 | fulfill its duty to provide for the conservation of the air, land, water, plant, animal, mineral, and |
33 | other natural resources of the state, and to adopt all means necessary and proper by law to protect |
34 | the natural environment of the people of the state by providing adequate resource planning for the |
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1 | control and regulation of the use of the natural resources of the state and for the preservation, |
2 | regeneration, and restoration of the natural environment of the state. |
3 | (c) That these policies can best be achieved through the creation of a department of coastal |
4 | resources management council as the principal mechanism for management of the state’s coastal |
5 | resources. |
6 | (d) The general assembly recognizes and declares that maintenance dredging is required to |
7 | remove natural silt accumulations; Rhode Island has not had a general maintenance dredging policy |
8 | and programs for ports, port facilities, channels, harbors, public and private marinas and boating |
9 | facilities, recreational facilities and habitat areas and such programs should continue.; other major |
10 | coastal states have maintenance dredging policies and in-water maintenance dredge disposal sites; |
11 | as a result of the lack of a general maintenance dredging policy and program and as a result there |
12 | has been: |
13 | (1) A decrease in the depth of the Providence Channel from forty-four (44) feet in 1971 to |
14 | twenty-four (24) feet in 1996; |
15 | (2) Navigational restrictions on ocean going vessels through the state’s waterways and |
16 | channels; and |
17 | (3) A decrease in the number of available slips and moorings at marinas throughout the |
18 | state; and the lack of a maintenance dredging policy and programs have significant adverse |
19 | environmental and economic effects on the state and therefore it is in the best interest of the state, |
20 | the cities and towns of the state, and the citizens thereof for the state to have a general maintenance |
21 | dredging policy and programs to resolve issues related to dredge maintenance and disposal and |
22 | avoid future significant direct and indirect adverse impact on the environment and economy of the |
23 | state. |
24 | (e) The department of coastal resources management council is hereby designated as the |
25 | lead state agency for purposes of dredging in tidal waters and as such shall have the following |
26 | duties and responsibilities: |
27 | (1) To coordinate the interest of the state with regard to dredging; |
28 | (2) To formulate and adopt a state policy with regard to dredging which integrates those |
29 | interests; |
30 | (3) To cooperate with, negotiate, and to enter into agreements on behalf of the state with |
31 | the federal government and with other public bodies and private parties with regard to dredging; |
32 | (4) To act as the initial and primary point of contact for all applications to the state for |
33 | dredging projects in tidal waters; |
34 | (5) To develop, prepare, adopt pursuant to § 46-23-11, implement, and maintain a |
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1 | comprehensive plan for dredge material management; and |
2 | (6) To cooperate and coordinate with the departments of environmental management, |
3 | transportation, administration, and health, and the economic development corporation in the |
4 | conduct of these duties and responsibilities. |
5 | (f)(1) The legislature recognizes that under Article I, § 17, the submerged lands of the state |
6 | are impressed with a public trust and that the state is responsible for the protection of the public’s |
7 | interest in these lands. The state maintains title in fee to all soil within its boundaries that lies below |
8 | the high water mark, and it holds that land in trust for the use of the public. In benefiting the public, |
9 | the state preserves certain public rights which include, but are not limited to, fishery, commerce, |
10 | and navigation in these waters and the submerged lands that they cover. |
11 | (2) All the powers and duties previously vested in the coastal resources management |
12 | council since Since its establishment in 1971, are hereby transferred to the department of coastal |
13 | resources ("department"). the CRMC The department has had the authority to manage and plan for |
14 | the preservation of the coastal resources of the state including, but not limited to, submerged lands. |
15 | The legislature hereby declares that, in light of the unique size, scope, and overall potential impact |
16 | upon the environment of large scale filling projects involving twenty-five (25) acres or more, any |
17 | lease of tidal lands, or any license to use those lands, is subject to approval, disapproval, or |
18 | conditional approval by the direct enactment of the general assembly by legislative action. The |
19 | CRMC department shall review all requests for leases, licenses to use the land, and other authority |
20 | to use the land made by any applicant prior to presentation of the request to the general assembly, |
21 | and the CRMC department shall make recommendations on the request to the general assembly. |
22 | With the exception of any and all projects to fill land of twenty-five (25) acres or more, the general |
23 | assembly hereby recognizes and declares that the CRMC department is delegated the sole and |
24 | exclusive authority for the leasing of submerged and filled lands and giving licenses for the use of |
25 | that land. Accordingly, the CRMC department shall forthwith will develop, coordinate, and adopt |
26 | a system for the leasing of submerged and filled lands, and licenses for the use of that land, and |
27 | will ensure that all leases and licenses are consistent with the public trust. Pursuant thereto, the |
28 | CRMC department shall impose a maximum fee of eighty thousand dollars ($80,000) per annum |
29 | for any transatlantic cable that makes landfall in Rhode Island. All such fees collected shall be |
30 | deposited into the Bays, Rivers and Watersheds Fund, established pursuant to § 46-31-12.1, and |
31 | shall be disbursed according to the purposes of that fund as general revenue. Nothing contained in |
32 | this subsection negates, repeals, or alters the provisions, processes, and requirements for the leasing |
33 | of submerged land for the conduct of aquaculture as set out under chapter 10 of title 20. Therefore, |
34 | nothing in this chapter shall be construed to limit or impair the authority of the state, or any duly |
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1 | established agency of the state, to regulate filling or dredging affecting tidal lands owned by the |
2 | state or any other entity, and nothing in this chapter shall be construed to limit or impair the |
3 | obligation of the applicant to obtain all applicable regulatory approvals. Specifically, and without |
4 | limiting the foregoing, nothing in this subsection negates, repeals, or alters the provisions, |
5 | processes, and requirements for water quality certification contained in chapter 12 of this title. |
6 | (3) Definitions. As used in this chapter, the following words shall have the following |
7 | meanings, unless the context clearly requires otherwise: |
8 | (i) “Administrative penalty” means a monetary penalty not to exceed the civil penalty |
9 | specified by statute or, where not specified by statute, an amount not to exceed one thousand dollars |
10 | ($1,000). |
11 | (ii) “Department,” or “director” means the director of the department coastal resources as |
12 | established herein or his or her duly authorized agent, unless stated otherwise. |
13 | (i)(iii) “Filled land” means portions of tidal lands which have been rendered by the acts of |
14 | man to be no longer subject to tidal action or beneath tidal waters. |
15 | (iii)(iv) “Mean high water” means a line of contour representing the 18.6 year average as |
16 | determined by the metonic cycle and/or its equivalent as evidenced by the records, tidal datum, and |
17 | methodology of the United States Coastal Geodetic Survey within the National Oceanic and |
18 | Atmospheric Administration. |
19 | (v) “Person” means any agency or political subdivision of the state, any state, public or |
20 | private corporation or authority, individual, trust, firm, joint stock company, partnership, |
21 | association, or other entity or any group thereof or any officer, employee or agent thereof, any |
22 | individual, group of individuals, firm, corporation, association, partnership, or private or public |
23 | entity, including a district, county, city, town, or other governmental unit or agent thereof, and in |
24 | the case of a corporation, any individual having active and general supervision of the properties of |
25 | the corporation. |
26 | (vi) “Service” means service upon a corporation under this section shall be deemed to |
27 | include service upon both the corporation and upon the person having active and general |
28 | supervision of the properties of the corporation. |
29 | (ii)(vii) “Tidal Lands” means those lands that are below the mean high water. |
30 | 46-23-2. Coastal resources management council created — Appointment of members |
31 | Department of coastal resources -- Transfer of responsibilities and citizen advisory |
32 | committee. |
33 | (a) There is hereby created the coastal resources management council. The coastal |
34 | resources management council shall consist of ten (10) members. Nine (9) members shall be |
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1 | appointed by the governor, with advice and consent of the senate, and one member shall serve ex |
2 | officio. All current appointments to the coastal resources management council made by the |
3 | governor with advice and consent of the senate are hereby validated and ratified and those |
4 | appointees shall serve for the remainder of their term. |
5 | (1) Six (6) of the members shall be appointed or elected officials of local government: three |
6 | (3) of whom shall be appointed or elected officials in a municipality of fewer than twenty-five |
7 | thousand (25,000) in population, three (3) of whom shall be appointed or elected officials in a |
8 | municipality of more than twenty-five thousand (25,000) in population. The populations are to be |
9 | determined by the latest federal census. Elected or appointed municipal officials shall hold seats on |
10 | the council only so long as they remain in their elected or appointed office. Each municipal |
11 | appointment shall cease if the appointed or elected official shall no longer hold or change the office |
12 | which they held upon appointment. At least five (5) out of the six (6) appointed or elected members |
13 | must be appointed or elected in a coastal municipality. When the governor submits his or her |
14 | appointments to the senate for advice and consent, the governor shall specify the appointed or |
15 | elected office that each municipal appointment holds; the population of the municipality |
16 | represented; and the member being replaced. |
17 | (2) Three (3) members shall be appointed by the governor from the public, with the advice |
18 | and consent of the senate, one of the public members and his or her successors shall reside in a |
19 | coastal municipality. |
20 | (3) All members shall serve until their successors are appointed and qualified; during the |
21 | month of January, the governor shall appoint, with the advice and consent of the senate, a member |
22 | to succeed the members whose term will then next expire for a term of three (3) years commencing |
23 | on the first day of February next following and until their successor is named and qualified. A |
24 | member shall be eligible for successive appointments. No more than two (2) persons on the council |
25 | shall be from the same municipality. A vacancy other than by expiration shall be filled in the |
26 | manner of the original appointment but only for the unexpired portion of the term. |
27 | (a) There is hereby established within the executive branch of the state government a |
28 | department of coastal resources. The head of the department shall be the director of the department |
29 | coastal resources who shall be in the unclassified service and who shall be appointed by the |
30 | governor, with the advice and consent of the senate, and shall serve at the pleasure of the governor. |
31 | (b) Whenever, in any general law, public law or regulation the words “coastal resources |
32 | management council”, the “council” or “CRMC” shall appear, the same shall be deemed to refer to |
33 | and to mean the “department of coastal resources.” Whenever, in any general law, public law or |
34 | regulation the words “chairman” or “chairperson of the coastal resources management council” |
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1 | shall appear, the same shall be deemed to refer to and mean the “director of the department of |
2 | coastal resources”. |
3 | (c) The director of the department of coastal resources ("director") assuming any duties |
4 | formerly imposed upon any other department, division, board, commission, or other agency shall |
5 | perform those duties, notwithstanding that those duties were formerly performed by a board, |
6 | council department, or a single officer. Any ruling, decision, or order made by the director with |
7 | regard to matters within the director's jurisdiction shall be subject to any existing right of appeal to |
8 | a court of competent jurisdiction. |
9 | (d) There is hereby established a citizens advisory committee for coastal resources |
10 | (“committee”). The role of the advisory committee is to provide the department with input on policy |
11 | initiatives and program improvements and the director shall schedule and hold public committee |
12 | meetings at least two (2) times per year. |
13 | (1) The committee shall consist of ten (10) members. Nine (9) members shall be appointed |
14 | by the governor and one member shall serve ex officio. Members of the committee shall be |
15 | knowledgeable in coastal law and/or policy and include members representing coastal, urban, |
16 | indigenous, and environmental justice communities. No two (2) members shall reside in the same |
17 | community; and |
18 | (4)(2) The director of the department of environmental management, or their designee, |
19 | shall serve ex officio. The ex-officio member shall not be counted as serving from any particular |
20 | municipality. |
21 | (b) In addition to the foregoing voting members, the council may include a varying number |
22 | of other members who may serve in an advisory capacity without the right to vote and who may be |
23 | invited to serve by either the governor or the voting members. These advisory members may |
24 | represent the federal agencies such as the navy, coast guard, corps of engineers, public health |
25 | service, and the Federal Water Pollution Control Administration, and such regional agencies as the |
26 | New England River Basins Commission and the New England Regional Commission and any other |
27 | group or interest not otherwise represented. |
28 | (c)(e) There may be established a coastal resources The director may establish other |
29 | advisory committee which committee committees, appointed by the executive director of the |
30 | coastal resources management council, which may include, but not be limited to, representation |
31 | from the following groups: one of whom may be a representative of the university of Rhode Island |
32 | graduate school of oceanography and the college of resources development, one of whom may be |
33 | a representative of the Sea Grant National College Program, one of whom may be a representative |
34 | of the army corps of engineers, one of whom may be a representative of the federal environmental |
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1 | protection agency’s Narragansett Bay laboratory, one of whom shall be a representative of the |
2 | department of coastal resources management council, one of whom may be the director of the |
3 | department of environmental management; one of whom may be a member of the Rhode Island |
4 | Marine Trade Association and one of whom may be a representative of a regional environmental |
5 | group. The council director shall have the authority to appoint these additional members to the |
6 | advisory committee committees, established pursuant to the provisions of this subsection, as is |
7 | deemed necessary or advisable by the advisory committee or the council director. It shall be the |
8 | responsibility of the committee committees to advise the coastal resources management council |
9 | department on environmental issues relating to dredging and permitting related thereto, including, |
10 | but not limited to, those issues defined in §§ 46-23-18.1 — 46-23-18.3, inclusive coastal programs. |
11 | (d) The council shall have the authority to form committees of other advisory groups as |
12 | needed from both its own members and others. |
13 | 46-23-4. Officers of the council — Quorum and vote required for action Attorneys |
14 | and employees of the department. |
15 | The governor shall select from the appointed members a chairperson and vice chairperson. |
16 | The council shall thereupon select a secretary from among its membership or staff. The council |
17 | may engage staff, including legal counsel, as it deems necessary. A quorum shall consist of six (6) |
18 | members of the council. A majority vote of those present shall be required for action. |
19 | (a) Staff attorney. There is hereby created the position(s) of staff attorney to the director of |
20 | the department of coastal resources. The director is hereby empowered and directed to hire a staff |
21 | attorney(s) consistent with this section. The director shall have at least one full-time attorney-at- |
22 | law on staff. The staff attorney(s) shall be hired by and serve at the pleasure of the director and |
23 | shall serve in the unclassified service. The position of staff attorney(s) shall be a full-time and report |
24 | directly to the director. The staff attorney(s) shall be an attorney(s)-at-law and shall not otherwise |
25 | engage in the practice of law. The staff attorney(s) shall represent the director and staff on all |
26 | matters including representation at hearings. |
27 | (b) The director may engage staff, including legal counsel, as it deems necessary. |
28 | (c) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary and upon the effective date of this |
29 | section, all employees of the coastal resources management council shall be transferred to the |
30 | department of coastal resources and retain civil service status, title, rate of pay and benefits. |
31 | 46-23-4.1. The commissioner of coastal resources management Coordination of |
32 | agencies. |
33 | The council shall engage a commissioner of coastal resources management who shall be |
34 | an employee of the council and who shall not be a member of the council. The commissioner |
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1 | director shall coordinate and liaison with the director of the department of environmental |
2 | management, and his or her director's staff shall be at the same staff level as the other |
3 | commissioners staff at the department of environmental management and shall work directly with |
4 | each other. the other commissioners. The commissioner of coastal resources management shall be |
5 | in the unclassified service. The duties and powers of the commissioner of coastal resources |
6 | management shall be determined by the council. The council shall not engage a commissioner of |
7 | coastal resources management for more than five (5) years; provided, however, that the council |
8 | may renew its contract with the commissioner of coastal resources management. |
9 | 46-23-6. Powers and duties — Rights-of-way Continuing authorities -- Powers and |
10 | duties -- Rights-of-way. |
11 | All prior actions taken by the coastal resources management council including, but not |
12 | limited to, permits issued, enforcement actions taken, special area management plans, policies and |
13 | all duly promulgated regulations remain valid and enforceable by the department. In order to |
14 | properly manage coastal resources the council has department is empowered to exercise all the |
15 | functions, powers, and duties heretofore vested in the coastal resources management council, |
16 | including, but not limited to, the following powers and duties: |
17 | (1) Planning and management. |
18 | (i) The primary responsibility of the council department shall be the continuing planning |
19 | for and management of the resources of the state’s coastal region. The council department shall be |
20 | able to make any studies of conditions, activities, or problems of the state’s coastal region needed |
21 | to carry out its responsibilities. |
22 | (ii) The resources management process shall include the following basic phases: |
23 | (A) Identify all of the state’s coastal resources, water, submerged land, air space, fin fish, |
24 | shellfish, minerals, physiographic features, and so forth. |
25 | (B) Evaluate these resources in terms of their quantity, quality, capability for use, and other |
26 | key characteristics. |
27 | (C) Determine the current and potential uses of each resource. |
28 | (D) Determine the current and potential problems of each resource. |
29 | (E) Formulate plans and programs for the management of each resource, identifying |
30 | permitted uses, locations, protection measures, and so forth. |
31 | (F) Carry out these resources management programs through implementing authority and |
32 | coordination of state, federal, local, and private activities. |
33 | (G) Formulation of standards where these do not exist, and reevaluation of existing |
34 | standards. |
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1 | (H) To develop comprehensive programs for dredging in tidal waters and related beneficial |
2 | use, disposal, monitoring dewatering and transportation of dredge materials. |
3 | (I) To accept and administer loans and grants from the federal government and from other |
4 | sources, public or private, for the carrying out of any of its functions, which loans or grants shall |
5 | not be expended for other than the purposes for which provided. |
6 | (J) To encourage, participate in, or conduct studies, investigations, research, and |
7 | demonstrations relating to dredging, disposal of dredge materials and transportation thereof in the |
8 | tidal waters of the state as the coastal resources management council department may deem |
9 | advisable and necessary for the discharge of its duties under this chapter. |
10 | (K) To collect and disseminate information relating to dredging, disposal of dredge |
11 | materials and transportation thereof within the tidal waters of the state. |
12 | (L) To work with the appropriate federal and state agencies to develop as provided for in |
13 | this chapter and in chapter 6.1 of this title, a comprehensive plan for dredging in tidal waters and |
14 | related beneficial use, disposal, monitoring dewatering and transportation of dredge materials. |
15 | (M) To apply for, accept and expend grants and bequests of funds, for the purpose of |
16 | carrying out the lawful responsibilities of the coastal resources management council department. |
17 | (iii) An initial series of resources management activities shall be initiated through this basic |
18 | process, then each phase shall continuously be recycled and used to modify the council’s resources |
19 | management department programs and keep them current. |
20 | (iv) Planning and management programs shall be formulated in terms of the characteristics |
21 | and needs of each resource or group of related resources. However, all plans and programs shall be |
22 | developed around basic standards and criteria, including: |
23 | (A) The need and demand for various activities and their impact upon ecological systems. |
24 | (B) The degree of compatibility of various activities. |
25 | (C) The capability of coastal resources to support various activities. |
26 | (D) Water quality standards set by the director of the department of environmental |
27 | management. |
28 | (E) Consideration of plans, studies, surveys, inventories, and so forth prepared by other |
29 | public and private sources. |
30 | (F) Consideration of contiguous land uses and transportation facilities. |
31 | (G) Whenever possible consistency with the state guide plan. |
32 | (v) The council department shall prepare, adopt, administer, and cause to be implemented, |
33 | including specifically through its powers of coordination as set forth in subdivision (3) of this |
34 | section, a marine resources development plan and such special area management plans as the |
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1 | council department may determine to be appropriate or desirable as follows: |
2 | (A) Marine resources development plan. |
3 | (I) The purpose of the marine resources development plan shall be to provide an integrated |
4 | strategy for: (a) improving the health and functionality of Rhode Island’s marine ecosystem; (b) |
5 | providing for appropriate marine-related economic development; and (c) promoting the use and |
6 | enjoyment of Rhode Island’s marine resources by the people of the state. |
7 | (II) The marine resources development plan shall include specific goals and objectives |
8 | necessary to accomplish its purposes, performance measures to determine progress toward |
9 | achieving such goals and objectives, and an implementation program. |
10 | (III) The marine resources development plan shall be prepared in cooperation with the |
11 | department of environmental management, the statewide planning program, and the commerce |
12 | corporation, with the involvement of such other state agencies as may be appropriate, and with such |
13 | technical support as may be necessary and appropriate from the Narragansett Bay Estuary Program, |
14 | the Coastal Institute at the University of Rhode Island, and Rhode Island Sea Grant. |
15 | (IV) The plan shall be responsive to the requirements and principles of the federal coastal |
16 | zone management act as amended, including, but not limited to, the expectations of the act for |
17 | incorporating the federal Clean Water Act into coastal zone management programs. |
18 | (V) The marine resources development plan shall take into account local land use |
19 | management responsibilities as provided for under title 45 and harbor management responsibilities, |
20 | and the preparation of the plan shall include opportunities for involvement and/or comment by |
21 | cities and towns. |
22 | (VI) The marine resources development plan shall be previously adopted by the council in |
23 | accordance with the provisions of this subsection by July 1, 2005, shall be adopted by the |
24 | department and shall as appropriate incorporate the recommendations of the Governor’s |
25 | Narragansett Bay and Watershed Planning Commission, and shall be made consistent with systems |
26 | level plans as appropriate, in order to effectuate the purposes of systems level planning. The council |
27 | department shall update the marine resources development plan at least once every five (5) years. |
28 | (VII) The council department shall administer its programs, regulations, and |
29 | implementation activities in a manner consistent with the marine resources development plan. |
30 | (VIII) The marine resources development plan and any updates thereto shall be adopted as |
31 | appropriate as elements of the state guide plan pursuant to § 42-11-10. |
32 | (B) Special area management plans. |
33 | (I) The council department shall adopt such special area management plans as deemed |
34 | necessary and desirable to provide for the integration and coordination of the protection of natural |
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1 | resources, the promotion of reasonable coastal-dependent economic growth, and the improved |
2 | protection of life and property in the specific areas designated council by the department as |
3 | requiring such integrated planning and coordination. |
4 | (II) The integrated planning and coordination herein specified shall include, but not be |
5 | limited to, federal agencies, state agencies, boards, commissions, and corporations, including |
6 | specifically the commerce corporation, and cities and towns, shall utilize to the extent appropriate |
7 | and feasible the capacities of entities of higher education, including Rhode Island Sea Grant, and |
8 | shall provide for the participation of advocacy groups, community-based organizations, and private |
9 | persons. |
10 | (III) The council department shall administer its programs, regulations, and |
11 | implementation activities in a manner consistent with special area management plans. |
12 | (IV) Special area management plans and any updates thereto shall be adopted as |
13 | appropriate as elements of the state guide plan pursuant to § 42-11-10. |
14 | (2) Implementation. |
15 | (i) The council department is authorized to formulate policies and plans and to adopt |
16 | regulations necessary to implement its various management programs. With respect to such policies |
17 | and plans which relate to matters where the coastal resources management council department and |
18 | the department of environmental management have concurrent jurisdiction and upon formulation |
19 | of the plans and regulations, the council department shall, prior to adoption, submit the proposed |
20 | plans or regulations to the director of the department of environmental management for the |
21 | director’s review. The director shall review and submit comments to the council department within |
22 | thirty (30) days of submission to the director by the council department. The comments of the |
23 | director shall include findings with regard to the consistency of the policies, plans and/or |
24 | regulations with the requirements of laws administered by the department. The council director of |
25 | the department of coastal resources shall consider the director’s comments prior to adoption of any |
26 | such policies, plans or regulations and shall respond in writing to findings of the director with |
27 | regard to the consistency of said policies, plans and/or regulations with the requirements of laws |
28 | administered by the department. |
29 | (ii)(A) The council department shall have exclusive jurisdiction below mean high water for |
30 | all development, operations, and dredging, consistent with the requirements of chapter 6.1 of this |
31 | title and except as necessary for the department of environmental management to exercise its |
32 | powers and duties and to fulfill its responsibilities pursuant to §§ 42-17.1-2 and 42-17.1-24, and |
33 | any person, firm, or governmental agency proposing any development or operation within, above, |
34 | or beneath the tidal water below the mean high water mark, extending out to the extent of the state’s |
| LC002100 - Page 12 of 38 |
1 | jurisdiction in the territorial sea, shall be required to demonstrate that its proposal would not: |
2 | (I) Conflict with any resources management plan or program; |
3 | (II) Make any area unsuitable for any uses or activities to which it is allocated by a |
4 | resources management plan or program adopted by the council department; or |
5 | (III) Significantly damage the environment of the coastal region. |
6 | (B) The council department shall be authorized to approve, modify, set conditions for, or |
7 | reject any such proposal. |
8 | (iii) The authority of the council department over land areas (those areas above the mean |
9 | high water mark) shall be limited to two hundred feet (200′) from the coastal physiographic feature |
10 | or to that necessary to carry out effective resources management programs. This shall be limited to |
11 | the authority to approve, modify, set conditions for, or reject the design, location, construction, |
12 | alteration, and operation of specified activities or land uses when these are related to a water area |
13 | under the agency’s jurisdiction, regardless of their actual location. The council's department's |
14 | authority over these land uses and activities shall be limited to situations in which there is a |
15 | reasonable probability of conflict with a plan or program for resources management or damage to |
16 | the coastal environment. These uses and activities are: |
17 | (A) Power generating over forty (40) megawatts and desalination plants. |
18 | (B) Chemical or petroleum processing, transfer, or storage. |
19 | (C) Minerals extraction. |
20 | (D) Shoreline protection facilities and physiographical features, and all directly associated |
21 | contiguous areas which are necessary to preserve the integrity of the facility and/or features. |
22 | (E) Coastal wetlands and all directly associated contiguous areas which are necessary to |
23 | preserve the integrity of the wetlands including any freshwater wetlands located in the vicinity of |
24 | the coast. The actual determination of freshwater wetlands located in coastal vicinities and under |
25 | the jurisdiction of the coastal resources management council department shall be designated on |
26 | such maps that are agreed to in writing and made available for public use by the coastal resources |
27 | management council department and the director, and department of environmental management, |
28 | within three (3) months of [August 6, 1996]. The CRMC department shall have exclusive |
29 | jurisdiction over the wetlands areas described in this section notwithstanding any provision of |
30 | chapter 1, title 2 or any other provision, except as provided in subsection (iv) of this section. Within |
31 | six (6) months of [August 6, 1996] the council The department in cooperation with the director of |
32 | the department of environmental management shall develop maintain rules and regulations for the |
33 | management and protection of freshwater wetlands, affected by an aquaculture project, outside of |
34 | those freshwater wetlands located in the vicinity of the coast and under the exclusive jurisdiction |
| LC002100 - Page 13 of 38 |
1 | of the director of the department of environmental management. For the purpose of this chapter, a |
2 | “coastal wetland” means any salt marsh bordering on the tidal waters of this state, whether or not |
3 | the tidal waters reach the littoral areas through natural or artificial watercourses, and those uplands |
4 | directly associated and contiguous thereto which are necessary to preserve the integrity of that |
5 | marsh. Marshes shall include those areas upon which grow one or more of the following: smooth |
6 | cordgrass (spartina alterniflora), salt meadow grass (spartina patens), spike grass (distichlis |
7 | spicata), black rush (juncus gerardi), saltworts (salicornia spp.), sea lavender (limonium |
8 | carolinianum), saltmarsh bulrushes (scirpus spp.), hightide bush (iva frutescens), tall reed |
9 | (phragmites communis), tall cordgrass (spartina pectinata), broadleaf cattail (typha latifolia), |
10 | narrowleaf cattail (typha angustifolia), spike rush (eleocharis rostellata), chairmaker’s rush (scirpus |
11 | amercana), creeping bentgrass (agrostis palustris), sweet grass (hierochloe odorata), and wild rye |
12 | (etlymus virginicus). |
13 | (F) Sewage treatment and disposal and solid waste disposal facilities. |
14 | (G) Beneficial use, dewatering, and disposal of dredged material of marine origins, where |
15 | such activities take place within two hundred feet (200′) of mean high water or a coastal |
16 | physiographic feature, or where there is a reasonable probability of conflict with a plan or program |
17 | for resources management or damage to the coastal environment. |
18 | (iv) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections (ii) and (iii) above, the department of |
19 | environmental management shall maintain jurisdiction over the administration of chapter 1, title 2, |
20 | including permitting of freshwater wetlands alterations and enforcement, with respect to all |
21 | agricultural activities undertaken by a farmer, as that term is defined in § 2-1-22(j), wherever |
22 | located; provided, however, that with respect to activities located partially or completely within |
23 | two hundred feet (200′) of the coastal physiographic feature, the department shall exercise |
24 | jurisdiction in consultation with the council department. |
25 | (3) Coordination. The council department has the following coordinating powers and |
26 | duties: |
27 | (i) Functioning as a binding arbitrator in any matter of dispute involving both the resources |
28 | of the state’s coastal region and the interests of two (2) or more municipalities or state agencies. |
29 | (ii) Consulting and coordinating actions with local, state, regional, and federal agencies |
30 | and private interests. |
31 | (iii) Conducting or sponsoring coastal research. |
32 | (iv) Advising the governor, the general assembly, and the public on coastal matters. |
33 | (v) Serving as the lead state agency and initial and primary point of contact for dredging |
34 | activities in tidal waters and in that capacity, integrating and coordinating the plans and policies of |
| LC002100 - Page 14 of 38 |
1 | other state agencies as they pertain to dredging in order to develop comprehensive programs for |
2 | dredging as required by subparagraph (1)(ii)(H) of this section and chapter 6.1 of this title. The |
3 | Rhode Island resource recovery corporation prior to purchasing cover material for the state landfill |
4 | shall first contact the CRMC department to see if there is a source of suitable dredged material |
5 | available which shall be used in place of the purchase cover material. Other state agencies engaged |
6 | in the process of dump closures shall also contact the CRMC department to see if there is a source |
7 | of suitable dredged material available, which shall be used in place of the purchase cover material. |
8 | In addition, cities and towns may contact the CRMC department prior to closing city or town |
9 | controlled dump sites to see if there is a source of suitable dredge material available, which may be |
10 | used in place of the purchase cover material. |
11 | (vi) Acting as the state’s representative to all bodies public and private on all coastal and |
12 | aquaculture related matters. |
13 | (4) Operations. The council department is authorized to exercise the following operating |
14 | functions, which are essential to management of coastal resources: |
15 | (i) Issue, modify, or deny permits for any work in, above, or beneath the areas under its |
16 | jurisdiction, including conduct of any form of aquaculture. |
17 | (ii) Issue, modify, or deny permits for dredging, filling, or any other physical alteration of |
18 | coastal wetlands and all directly related contiguous areas which are necessary to preserve the |
19 | integrity of the wetlands, including, but not limited to, the transportation and disposal of dredge |
20 | materials in the tidal waters. |
21 | (iii) Grant licenses, permits, and easements for the use of coastal resources which are held |
22 | in trust by the state for all its citizens, and impose fees for private use of these resources. |
23 | (iv) Determining the need for and establishing pierhead, bulkhead, and harbor lines. |
24 | (v) Enforcing and implementing riparian rights in the tidal waters after judicial decisions. |
25 | (vi) The council department may require an owner or operator of a commercial wharf or |
26 | pier of a marine commercial facility, as defined in 300.3 of the Rhode Island coastal resources |
27 | management program, but not including those facilities defined in 300.4 of the Rhode Island coastal |
28 | resources management program, and which is capable of offloading cargo, and is or will be subject |
29 | to a new use or a significant intensification of an existing use, to demonstrate that the commercial |
30 | wharf or pier is fit for that purpose. For the purposes of this subsection, a “commercial wharf or |
31 | pier” means a pier, bulkhead, wharf, docking facility, or underwater utilities. The council |
32 | department may order said owner or operator to provide an engineering certification to the council's |
33 | department's satisfaction that the commercial wharf or pier is fit for the new use or intensification |
34 | of an existing use. If the council department determines that the commercial wharf or pier is not fit, |
| LC002100 - Page 15 of 38 |
1 | it may order the owner or operator to undertake the necessary work to make the commercial wharf |
2 | or pier safe, within a reasonable time frame. If the council department determines that the |
3 | commercial wharf or pier, because of is condition, is an immediate threat to public health and safety |
4 | it may order the commercial wharf or pier closed until the necessary work to make the commercial |
5 | wharf or pier safe has been performed and approved by the council department. All work performed |
6 | must conform to the council's department's management program. The council department is also |
7 | given the authority to develop regulations to carry out this provision and to impose administrative |
8 | penalties of five thousand dollars ($5,000) per day up to a maximum of twenty thousand dollars |
9 | ($20,000) consistent with § 46-23-7.1 where there has been a violation of the orders under this |
10 | provision. |
11 | (5) Rights-of-way. |
12 | (i) The coastal resources management council department is responsible for the designation |
13 | of all public rights-of-way to the tidal water areas of the state, and shall carry on a continuing |
14 | discovery of appropriate public rights-of-way to the tidal water areas of the state. |
15 | (ii) The coastal resources management council department shall maintain a complete file |
16 | of all official documents relating to the legal status of all public rights-of-way to the tidal water |
17 | areas of the state. |
18 | (iii)(A) The council department has the power to designate for acquisition and |
19 | development, and posting, and all other functions of any other department for tidal rights-of-way |
20 | and land for tidal rights-of-way, parking facilities, and other council related purposes. |
21 | (B) Further, the council department has the power to develop and prescribe a standard sign |
22 | to be used by the cities and towns to mark designated rights-of-way. |
23 | (iv) In conjunction with this subdivision, every state department controlling state-owned |
24 | land close to or adjacent to discovered rights-of-way is authorized to set out the land, or so much |
25 | of the land that may be deemed necessary for public parking. |
26 | (v) No use of land for public parking shall conflict with existing or intended use of the land, |
27 | and no improvement shall be undertaken by any state agency until detailed plans have been |
28 | submitted to and approved by the governing body of the local municipality. |
29 | (vi) In designating rights-of-way, the council department shall consider the following |
30 | matters in making its designation: |
31 | (A) Land evidence records; |
32 | (B) The exercise of domain over the parcel such as maintenance, construction, or upkeep; |
33 | (C) The payment of taxes; |
34 | (D) The creation of a dedication; |
| LC002100 - Page 16 of 38 |
1 | (E) Public use; |
2 | (F) Any other public record or historical evidence such as maps and street indexes; |
3 | (G) Other evidence as set out in § 42-35-10. |
4 | (vii) A determination by the council department that a parcel is a right-of-way shall be |
5 | decided by substantial evidence. |
6 | (viii) The council department shall be notified whenever by the judgment of the governing |
7 | body of a coastal municipality, a public right-of-way to tidal water areas located in such |
8 | municipality has ceased to be useful to the public, and such governing body proposes an order of |
9 | abandonment of such public right-of-way. Said notice shall be given not less than sixty (60) days |
10 | prior to the date of such abandonment. |
11 | (6) Pre-existing residential boating facilities. |
12 | (i) The council department is hereby authorized and empowered to issue assent for pre- |
13 | existing residential boating facilities constructed prior to January 1, 1985. These assents may be |
14 | issued for pre-existing residential boating facilities, even though such facilities do not meet current |
15 | standards and policies of the council department; provided, however, that the council department |
16 | finds that such facilities do not pose any significant risk to the coastal resources of the state of |
17 | Rhode Island and do not endanger human safety. |
18 | (ii) In addition to the above criteria, the applicant shall provide clear and convincing |
19 | evidence that: |
20 | (A) The facility existed in substantially the same configuration as it now exists prior to |
21 | January 1, 1985; |
22 | (B) The facility is presently intact and functional; and |
23 | (C) The facility presents no significant threat to the coastal resources of the state of Rhode |
24 | Island or human safety. |
25 | (iii) The applicant, to be eligible for this provision, shall apply no later than January 31, |
26 | 1999. |
27 | (iv) The council department is directed to develop rules and regulations necessary to |
28 | implement this subdivision. |
29 | (v) It is the specific intent of this subsection to require that all pre-existing residential |
30 | boating facilities constructed on January 1, 1985, or thereafter conform to this chapter and the plans, |
31 | rules and regulations of the council department. |
32 | (7) Lease of filled lands which were formerly tidal lands to riparian or littoral owners. |
33 | (i) Any littoral or riparian owner in this state who desires to obtain a lease from the state |
34 | of Rhode Island of any filled lands adjacent to his or her upland shall apply to the council |
| LC002100 - Page 17 of 38 |
1 | department, which may make the lease. Any littoral or riparian owner who wishes to obtain a lease |
2 | of filled lands must obtain pre-approval, in the form of an assent, from the council department. Any |
3 | lease granted by the council department shall continue the public’s interest in the filled lands |
4 | including, but not limited to, the rights of navigation, fishery, and commerce. The public trust in |
5 | the lands shall continue and run concurrently with the leasing of the lands by the state to private |
6 | individuals, corporations, or municipalities. Upon the granting of a lease by the council department, |
7 | those rights consistent with the public trust and secured by the lease shall vest in the lessee. The |
8 | council department may approve a lease of filled lands for an initial term of up to fifty (50) years, |
9 | with, or without, a single option to renew for an additional term of up to fifty (50) years. |
10 | (ii) The lessor of the lease, at any time, for cause, may by express act cancel and annul any |
11 | lease previously made to the riparian owner when it determines that the use of the lands is violating |
12 | the terms of the lease or is inconsistent with the public trust, and upon cancellation the lands, and |
13 | rights in the land so leased, shall revert to the state. |
14 | (8) “Marinas” as defined in the coastal resources management program in effect as of June |
15 | 1, 1997, are deemed to be one of the uses consistent with the public trust. Subdivision (7) is not |
16 | applicable to: |
17 | (i) Any riparian owner on tidal waters in this state (and any successor in interest to the |
18 | owner) which has an assent which was previously issued by the council ("council" refers to the |
19 | predecessor to the department, the coastal resources management council) to use any land under |
20 | water in front of his or her lands as a marina, which assent was in effect on June 1, 1997; |
21 | (ii) Any alteration, expansion, or other activity at a marina (and any successor in interest) |
22 | which has an assent previously issued by the council, which assent was in effect on June 1, 1997; |
23 | and |
24 | (iii) Any renewal of assent to a marina (or successor in interest), which assent was |
25 | previously issued by the council and in effect on June 1, 1997. |
26 | (9) “Recreational boating facilities” including marinas, launching ramps, and recreational |
27 | mooring areas, as defined by and properly permitted by the council department, are deemed to be |
28 | one of the uses consistent with the public trust. Subdivision (7) is not applicable to: |
29 | (i) Any riparian owner on tidal waters in this state (and any successor in interest to the |
30 | owner) which has an assent previously issued by the council to use any land under water in front |
31 | of his or her lands as a recreational boating facility; any alteration, expansion or other activity at a |
32 | recreational boating facility (and any successor in interest) which has an assent issued by the |
33 | council, which assent was in effect as of June 1, 1997; and |
34 | (ii) Any renewal of assent to a recreational boating facility (or successor in interest), which |
| LC002100 - Page 18 of 38 |
1 | assent was previously issued by the council and in effect on June 1, 1997. |
2 | 46-23-6.1. Newport “cliff walk” — Public right-of-way — Legal studies. |
3 | The council department is hereby directed to carry out any and all legal studies which it |
4 | shall deem necessary in order to designate the Newport “cliff walk”, so called, as a public right-of- |
5 | way pursuant to § 46-23-6(5). |
6 | 46-23-6.2. Abandonment of rights-of-way. |
7 | No city or town shall abandon a right-of-way designated as such by the council department |
8 | unless the council department approved the abandonment. |
9 | 46-23-7. Violations. |
10 | (a)(1) In any instances wherein there is a violation of the coastal resources management |
11 | program, or a violation of regulations or decisions of the council department, the commissioner of |
12 | coastal resources management shall have the power to order any person to cease and desist or to |
13 | remedy any violation of any provisions of this chapter, or any rule, regulation, assent, order, or |
14 | decision of the council department whenever the commissioner director of coastal resources |
15 | management shall have reasonable grounds to believe that such violation has occurred. The director |
16 | shall have the power and duty to give notice of an alleged violation of law to the person responsible |
17 | thereof whenever the director determines that there are reasonable grounds to believe that there is |
18 | a violation of any provision of law within the director's jurisdiction or of any rule or regulation |
19 | adopted pursuant to authority granted to the director. Nothing in this chapter shall limit the authority |
20 | of the attorney general to prosecute offenders as required by law. |
21 | (b) The notice pursuant to subsection (a) of this section shall provide for a time within |
22 | which the alleged violation shall be remedied, and shall inform the person to whom it is directed |
23 | that a written request for a hearing on the alleged violation may be filed with the director within |
24 | twenty (20) days after service of the notice. The notice will be deemed properly served upon a |
25 | person if a copy thereof is served on the person personally; or sent by registered or certified mail |
26 | to the person's last known address; or if the person is served with notice by any other method of |
27 | service now or hereafter authorized in a civil action under the laws of this state. If no written request |
28 | for a hearing is made to the director within twenty (20) days of the service of notice, the notice |
29 | shall automatically become a compliance order; |
30 | (c) Whenever the director determines that there exists a violation of any law, rule, or |
31 | regulation within the director's jurisdiction that requires immediate action to protect the |
32 | environment, the director may, without prior notice of violation or hearing, issue an immediate- |
33 | compliance order stating the existence of the violation and the action the director deems necessary. |
34 | The compliance order shall become effective immediately upon service or within such time as is |
| LC002100 - Page 19 of 38 |
1 | specified by the director in such order. No request for a hearing on an immediate-compliance order |
2 | may be made; |
3 | (d) Any immediate-compliance order issued pursuant to subsection (c) of this section |
4 | without notice and prior hearing shall be effective for no longer than forty-five (45) days; provided, |
5 | however, that for good cause shown, the order may be extended one additional period not exceeding |
6 | forty-five (45) days; |
7 | (e) The director may, at their director's discretion and for the purposes of timely and |
8 | effective resolution and return to compliance, cite a person for alleged noncompliance through the |
9 | issuance of an expedited citation in accordance with § 46-23-7.1; |
10 | (f) If a person upon whom a notice of violation has been served under the provisions of this |
11 | section or if a person aggrieved by any such notice of violation requests a hearing before the director |
12 | within twenty (20) days of the service of notice of violation, the director shall set a time and place |
13 | for the hearing, and shall give the person requesting that hearing at least five (5) days’ written |
14 | notice thereof. After the hearing, the director may make findings of fact and shall sustain, modify, |
15 | or withdraw the notice of violation. If the director sustains or modifies the notice, that decision |
16 | shall be deemed a compliance order and shall be served upon the person responsible in any manner |
17 | provided for the service of the notice in this section; |
18 | (g) A compliance order issued pursuant to the provisions of this section shall state a time |
19 | within which the violation shall be remedied, and the original time specified in the notice of |
20 | violation shall be extended to the time set in the order; |
21 | (h) Whenever a compliance order has become effective, whether automatically where no |
22 | hearing has been requested, where an immediate-compliance order has been issued, or upon |
23 | decision following a hearing, the director may institute a proceeding for an injunction or other |
24 | equitable relief in the superior court of the state for enforcement of the compliance order and for |
25 | appropriate temporary relief, and in that proceeding, the correctness of a compliance order shall be |
26 | presumed and the person attacking the order shall bear the burden of proving error in the |
27 | compliance order, except that the director shall bear the burden of proving in the proceeding the |
28 | correctness of an immediate-compliance order. The remedy provided for in this section shall be |
29 | cumulative and not exclusive and shall be in addition to remedies relating to the removal or |
30 | abatement of nuisances or any other remedies provided by law; |
31 | (i) Any party aggrieved by a final judgment of the superior court may, within thirty (30) |
32 | days from the date of entry of such judgment, petition the supreme court for a writ of certiorari to |
33 | review any questions of law. The petition shall set forth the errors claimed. Upon the filing of the |
34 | petition with the clerk of the supreme court, the supreme court may, if it sees fit, issue its writ of |
| LC002100 - Page 20 of 38 |
1 | certiorari; |
2 | (j) The director may impose administrative penalties in accordance with the provisions of |
3 | § 46-23-7.1 and direct that such penalties be deposited as general revenue. |
4 | (2)(k) Council Department staff, conservation and law enforcement officers within the |
5 | department of environmental management, and state and municipal police shall be empowered to |
6 | issue written cease and desist orders in any instance where activity is being conducted which |
7 | constitutes a violation of any provisions of this chapter, or any rule, regulation, assent, order, or |
8 | decision of the council department. |
9 | (3)(l) Conservation Law enforcement officers within the department of environmental |
10 | management, council department staff, and state and municipal police shall have authority to apply |
11 | to a court of competent jurisdiction for a warrant to enter on private land to investigate possible |
12 | violations of this chapter; provided, that they have reasonable grounds to believe that a violation |
13 | has been committed, is being committed, or is about to be committed. |
14 | (b)(m) Any order or notice issued pursuant to subsection (a) shall be eligible for recordation |
15 | under chapter 13 of title 34, and shall be recorded in the land evidence records in the city/town |
16 | wherein the property subject to the order is located, and any subsequent transferee of the property |
17 | shall be responsible for complying with the requirements of the order and notice. |
18 | (c)(n) The coastal resources management council department shall file a discharge of |
19 | record in the land evidence records any notice filed pursuant to subsection (b) within thirty (30) |
20 | days after the violation has been remedied. |
21 | 46-23-7.1. Administrative penalties Administrative penalties -- Authority to access. |
22 | (a) Any person who violates, or refuses or fails to obey, any notice or order issued pursuant |
23 | to § 46-23-7(a); or any assent, order, or decision of the council department, regulations or law |
24 | which the director has the authority to enforce, including any license or approval issued or adopted |
25 | by the director may be assessed an administrative penalty by the chairperson or executive director |
26 | in accordance with the following: |
27 | (1) The chairperson or executive director is authorized to assess an administrative penalty |
28 | of not more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each violation of this section, and is authorized |
29 | to assess additional penalties of not more than one thousand ($1,000) for each day during which |
30 | this violation continues after receipt of a notice of violation, immediate-compliance order or cease- |
31 | and-desist order from the council pursuant to § 46-23-7(a), but in no event shall the penalties in |
32 | aggregate exceed fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). Prior to the assessment of a penalty under this |
33 | subdivision, the property owner or person committing the violation shall be notified by certified |
34 | mail or personal service that a penalty is being assessed. The notice shall include a reference to the |
| LC002100 - Page 21 of 38 |
1 | section of the law, rule, regulation, assent, order, or permit condition violated; a concise statement |
2 | of the facts alleged to constitute the violation; a statement of the amount of the administrative |
3 | penalty assessed; and a statement of the party’s right to an administrative hearing. |
4 | (2) The party shall have twenty-one (21) days from receipt of the notice within which to |
5 | deliver to the council a written request for a hearing. This request shall specify in detail the |
6 | statements contested by the party. The executive director shall designate a person to act as hearing |
7 | officer. If no hearing is requested, then after the expiration of the twenty-one (21) day period, the |
8 | council shall issue a final order assessing the penalty specified in the notice. The penalty is due |
9 | when the final order is issued. If the party shall request a hearing, any additional daily penalty shall |
10 | not commence to accrue until the council issues a final order. |
11 | (3) If a violation is found to have occurred, the council may issue a final order assessing |
12 | not more than the amount of the penalty specified in the notice. The penalty is due when the final |
13 | order is issued. |
14 | (4) The party may within thirty (30) days appeal the final order, of fine assessed by the |
15 | council to the superior court which shall hear the assessment of the fine de novo. |
16 | (b) Notice of violation and assessment of penalty. |
17 | (1) Whenever the director seeks to assess an administrative penalty on any person, the |
18 | director shall cause to be served upon the person, either by service, in hand, or by certified mail, |
19 | return receipt requested, a written notice of its intent to assess an administrative penalty that shall |
20 | include: |
21 | (i) A concise statement of the alleged act or omission for which the administrative penalty |
22 | is sought to be assessed; |
23 | (ii) Each law, rule, regulation, order, permit, license, or approval that has not been complied |
24 | with as a result of the alleged act or omission; |
25 | (iii) The amount that the director seeks to assess as an administrative penalty for each |
26 | alleged act or omission; |
27 | (iv) A statement of the person’s right to an adjudicatory hearing on the proposed |
28 | assessment; |
29 | (v) The requirements the person shall comply with to avoid being deemed to have waived |
30 | the right to an adjudicatory hearing; and |
31 | (vi) The manner of payment thereof if the person elects to pay the penalty and waive an |
32 | adjudicatory hearing. |
33 | (2) After written notice of noncompliance or intent to assess an administrative penalty has |
34 | been given, each day thereafter during which the noncompliance occurs or continues shall |
| LC002100 - Page 22 of 38 |
1 | constitute a separate offense and shall be subject to a separate administrative penalty if reasonable |
2 | efforts have not been made to promptly come into compliance. |
3 | (3) For purposes of timely and effective resolution and return to compliance, the director |
4 | may cite a person for alleged noncompliance through the issuance of an expedited citation, which |
5 | may include assessment of penalties up to five thousand dollars ($5,000). Each expedited citation |
6 | shall include a concise statement of the alleged act or omission that constitutes noncompliance and |
7 | each law, rule, regulation, order, permit, license, or approval that has not been complied with; and |
8 | that person alleged to be in noncompliance shall have the right at any time to opt out of the alleged |
9 | expedited citation process. Failure to respond to an expedited citation shall be deemed as exercising |
10 | the right to opt out. An expedited citation shall not take effect without the voluntary agreement of |
11 | the person alleged to be in noncompliance. Expedited citations issued under this section without |
12 | notice and prior hearing shall be effective no longer than sixty (60) days from the date of receipt |
13 | by the person alleged to be in noncompliance. In the event that the alleged noncompliance and |
14 | penalty is unresolved and the expedited citation expires, the director retains the right to issue a |
15 | separate notice of violation and order and penalty, subject to appeal pursuant to § 46-23-6.2. A |
16 | person issued an expedited citation shall have the right at any time during the sixty (60) day |
17 | expedited citation process to request that the director issue a separate notice of violation and order |
18 | and penalty, subject to appeal pursuant to § 46-23-7. |
19 | (4) Whenever the director seeks to assess an administrative penalty on any person other |
20 | than through an expedited citation issued pursuant to § 46-23-7.1(c), the person shall have the right |
21 | to an adjudicatory hearing under chapter 35 of this title, the provisions of which shall apply except |
22 | when they are inconsistent with the provisions of this chapter. |
23 | (5) A person shall be deemed to have waived the person's right to an adjudicatory hearing |
24 | unless, within twenty (20) days of the date of the director’s notice that the director seeks to assess |
25 | an administrative penalty, the person files with the director a written statement denying the |
26 | occurrence of any of the acts or omissions alleged by the director in the notice, or asserting that the |
27 | money amount of the proposed administrative penalty is excessive. In any adjudicatory hearing |
28 | authorized pursuant to chapter 35 of this title, the director shall, by a preponderance of the evidence, |
29 | prove the occurrence of each act or omission alleged by the director. |
30 | (6) If a person waives his or her right to an adjudicatory hearing, the proposed |
31 | administrative penalty shall be a final agency order immediately upon the waiver. The director may |
32 | institute a proceeding for an injunction or other equitable relief in the superior court for Providence |
33 | county for enforcement of the final administrative penalty as a final agency order. |
34 | (c) Judicial review. |
| LC002100 - Page 23 of 38 |
1 | If an administrative penalty is assessed at the conclusion of an adjudicatory hearing, the |
2 | administrative penalty shall be final upon the expiration of thirty (30) days if no action for judicial |
3 | review of the decision is commenced pursuant to § 46-23-20.4. |
4 | (d) Determination of administrative penalty. |
5 | (1) In determining the amount of each administrative penalty, the director shall include, |
6 | but not be limited to, the following to the extent practicable in his or her considerations: |
7 | (2) The actual and potential impact on public health, safety and welfare and the |
8 | environment of the failure to comply; |
9 | (3) The actual and potential damages suffered, and actual or potential costs incurred, by |
10 | the director, or by any other person; |
11 | (4) Whether the person being assessed the administrative penalty took steps to prevent |
12 | noncompliance, to promptly come into compliance and to remedy and mitigate whatever harm |
13 | might have been done as a result of such noncompliance; |
14 | (5) Whether the person being assessed the administrative penalty has previously failed to |
15 | comply with any rule, regulation, order, permit, license, or approval issued or adopted by the |
16 | director, or any law which the director has the authority or responsibility to enforce; |
17 | (6) Making compliance less costly than noncompliance; |
18 | (7) Deterring future noncompliance; |
19 | (8) The financial condition of the person being assessed the administrative penalty; |
20 | (9) The amount necessary to eliminate the economic advantage of noncompliance |
21 | including, but not limited to, the financial advantage acquired over competitors from the |
22 | noncompliance; |
23 | (10) Whether the failure to comply was intentional, willful, or knowing and not the result |
24 | of error; |
25 | (11) Any amount specified by state and/or federal statute for a similar violation or failure |
26 | to comply; |
27 | (12) Any other factor(s) that may be relevant in determining the amount of a penalty; |
28 | provided that, the other factors shall be set forth in the written notice of assessment of the penalty; |
29 | and |
30 | (e) The public interest. |
31 | (1) Limitations on amount of penalty. The administrative penalty shall be not more than |
32 | one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each violation or failure to comply unless a different amount is |
33 | authorized by statute as a civil penalty for the subject violation. Each and every occurrence and/or |
34 | day during which the violation or failure to comply is repeated shall constitute a separate and |
| LC002100 - Page 24 of 38 |
1 | distinct violation. |
2 | (2) Rules and regulations. No administrative penalty shall be assessed by the director |
3 | pursuant to this chapter until the director has promulgated rules and regulations for assessing |
4 | administrative penalties. Notwithstanding the foregoing, penalties may be imposed within one |
5 | hundred and twenty (120) days of the effective date of this section prior to promulgation of penalty |
6 | regulations. |
7 | 46-23-7.2. Proceedings for enforcement. |
8 | The superior court shall have jurisdiction to enforce the provisions of this chapter, the |
9 | coastal resource management program, or any rule, regulation, assent, or order issued pursuant |
10 | thereto. Proceedings under this section may follow the course of equity, and shall be instituted and |
11 | prosecuted in the name of and at the direction of the chairperson and council director by the attorney |
12 | general or counsel designated by the council director. Proceedings provided in this section shall be |
13 | in addition to, and may be utilized in lieu of, other administrative or judicial proceedings authorized |
14 | by this chapter. |
15 | 46-23-7.3. Criminal penalties. |
16 | Any person who knowingly violates any provision of this chapter, the director of the coastal |
17 | resources management program department, or any rule, regulation, assent, or order shall be guilty |
18 | of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars |
19 | ($1,000) or by imprisonment of not more than three (3) months or both; and each day the violation |
20 | is continued or repeated shall be deemed a separate offense. |
21 | 46-23-7.4. Penalty for blocking or posting of rights-of-way. |
22 | Any person who shall post or block any tidal water, public right-of-way, as designated by |
23 | the council department, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) or |
24 | by imprisonment for not more than three (3) months or both; and each day the posting or blocking |
25 | continues or is repeated shall be deemed a separate offense. The chairperson of the council |
26 | department, through council's the department's legal counsel or the attorney general, may apply to |
27 | any court of competent jurisdiction for an injunction to prevent the unlawful posting or blocking of |
28 | any tidal water, public right-of-way. |
29 | 46-23-7.5. Prosecution of criminal violations. |
30 | The chairperson and anyone designated by the chairperson director, without being required |
31 | to enter into any recognizance or to give surety for cost, may institute proceedings in the name of |
32 | the state. It shall be the duty of the attorney general and/or the solicitor of the city or town in which |
33 | the alleged violation has occurred to conduct the prosecution of all the proceedings. The |
34 | chairperson director may delegate his or her authority to bring prosecution by complaint and |
| LC002100 - Page 25 of 38 |
1 | warrant to any law enforcement officials authorized by law to bring complaints for the issuance of |
2 | search or arrest warrants pursuant to chapters 5 and 6 of title 12. |
3 | 46-23-8. Gifts, grants, and donations. |
4 | The council department is authorized to receive any gifts, grants, or donations made for |
5 | any of the purposes of its program, which shall be deposited as general revenues, and to disburse |
6 | and administer the gifts, grants, or donations amounts appropriated in accordance with the terms |
7 | thereof. The council department is authorized to receive any sums provided by an applicant for use |
8 | by the council department in its hearing process, which shall be deposited as general revenues, and |
9 | to disburse and administer the general revenue amounts appropriated in accordance with the rules |
10 | and regulations promulgated by the council department. |
11 | 46-23-9. Subpoena. |
12 | The council department is hereby authorized and empowered to summon witnesses and |
13 | issue subpoenas in substantially the following form: |
14 | Sc. |
15 | To_______________________________ of __________________________ greeting: |
16 | You are hereby required, in the name of the state of Rhode Island, to make your appearance |
17 | before the commission on ___________________ in the _______________________________ |
18 | city of ___________________ on the___________________ day of__________________ to give |
19 | evidence of what you know relative to a matter upon investigation by the commission on |
20 | _______________________________________ and produce and then and there have and give the |
21 | following: |
22 | Hereof fail not, as you will answer to default under the penalty of the law in that behalf |
23 | made and provided. |
24 | Dated at ____________________ the __________________ day of ____________ in the |
25 | year _____________. |
26 | 46-23-10. Cooperation of departments. |
27 | All other departments and agencies and bodies of state government are hereby authorized |
28 | and directed to cooperate with and furnish such information as the council department shall require. |
29 | 46-23-11. Rules and regulations. |
30 | The rules and regulations promulgated by the council department shall be subject to the |
31 | Administrative Procedures Act (chapter 35 of title 42). |
32 | 46-23-13. Application and hearing fees. |
33 | The council department shall be authorized to establish reasonable fees for applications |
34 | and hearings. All fees collected by the council department, including fees collected for leases, shall |
| LC002100 - Page 26 of 38 |
1 | be deposited as general revenues. The state controller is hereby authorized and directed to draw his |
2 | or her orders upon the general treasurer for payment of such sum or sums as may be necessary from |
3 | time to time and upon receipt by him or her of duly authenticated vouchers presented by the |
4 | commissioner director of coastal resources management. |
5 | 46-23-14. Expert testimony. |
6 | The council department shall be authorized to engage its own expert and outside |
7 | consultants, and the council department shall be empowered to use that testimony in making its |
8 | decisions. |
9 | 46-23-15. Federal grants and interstate cooperation. |
10 | The council department is authorized to accept any federal grants. It is further given the |
11 | power to administer land and water use regulations as necessary to fulfill their responsibilities under |
12 | the Federal Coastal Zone Management Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1451 et seq., and to acquire fee simple and |
13 | less than fee simple interests under any federal or state program. The council department is |
14 | authorized to coordinate and cooperate with other states in furtherance of its purposes. The council |
15 | department may expend those grants and appropriations. The coastal resources management |
16 | council department for the purposes of the federal Coastal Zone Management Act, 16 U.S.C. § |
17 | 1451 et seq., is the coastal zone agency under §§ 301 through 313 and §§ 318 and 6217 of said act. |
18 | 46-23-15.1. Coordination of harbor safety and enforcement patrols. |
19 | Coastal municipalities which share a common boundary along their public waters may |
20 | enter into a binding memorandum of agreement allowing for harbormasters and other officials |
21 | charged with enforcement of harbor management plan harbor ordinances from one coastal |
22 | municipality to enforce the harbor ordinances of the bordering coastal municipality upon the public |
23 | waters of the bordering coastal municipality when the coastal municipalities have harbor |
24 | management plans approved by the coastal resources management council department and the |
25 | memorandum of agreement is approved by the respective town or city councils departments. This |
26 | binding memorandum of agreement shall specify how each coastal municipality is to receive any |
27 | fines collected under this reciprocal enforcement agreement and the jurisdiction in which any |
28 | disputes arising out of this reciprocal enforcement agreement shall be litigated. |
29 | 46-23-16. Length of permits, licenses, and easements. |
30 | The council department is authorized to grant permits, licenses, and easements for any term |
31 | of years or in perpetuity. Permits, licenses, or easements which are issued by the council department |
32 | for the filling of the submerged or submersible lands of the state of Rhode Island remain subject to |
33 | the public trust, and no title is conveyed by such documents. All such permits, licenses, and |
34 | easements shall clearly state that no title is being conveyed. Permits, licenses or easements issued |
| LC002100 - Page 27 of 38 |
1 | by the council department are valid only with the conditions and stipulation under which they are |
2 | granted and imply no guarantee of renewal. The initial application or an application for renewal |
3 | may be subject to denial or modification. If an application is granted, said permit, license and |
4 | easement may be subject to revocation and/or modification for failure to comply with the conditions |
5 | and stipulations under which the same was issued or for other good cause. The division of coastal |
6 | resources of the department of environmental management shall transfer all of the records and files |
7 | of the former division of harbours and rivers to the council. |
8 | 46-23-18. Prohibited activities. |
9 | (a) No person, either as principal, agent or servant nor any firm, corporation, or any other |
10 | entity shall, without a permit issued by the department of coastal resources management council, |
11 | construct a marina within two thousand feet (2000′) of a shellfish management area as defined by |
12 | rules and regulations of the department of environmental management. Such permit shall include |
13 | any permit required under subsection (b). |
14 | (b) No person, either as principal, agent, or servant, or any firm, corporation or any other |
15 | entity, shall, within the tidal waters of the state, conduct or cause to conduct dredging, |
16 | transportation and/or disposal of dredge materials without a permit issued by the coastal resources |
17 | management council department, a water quality certification issued by the department of |
18 | environmental management pursuant to chapter 12 of this title and any permit required by the army |
19 | corps of engineers. In addition, no person, either as principal, agent, or servant, nor any firm, |
20 | corporation or any other entity, shall dispose of dredge materials other than in tidal waters without |
21 | any permit, approval or certification that may otherwise be required. |
22 | 46-23-18.1. Permitting. |
23 | (a) Any person, either as principal, agent, or servant, or any firm, corporation or any other |
24 | entity desiring to conduct any activity or activities specified in § 46-23-18 shall file an application |
25 | for a permit with the coastal resources management council department upon forms furnished by |
26 | coastal resources management council the department. |
27 | (b) A hearing shall be held on the application within thirty (30) days of filing. |
28 | (c) The applicant shall bear the burden of proving that the activity or activities specified in |
29 | the application will cause no significant adverse impact upon the environment or natural resources |
30 | of the state, and the coastal resources management council department shall be empowered to deny |
31 | the application if the applicant does not demonstrate, in addition to other requirements of this |
32 | chapter, that the activity or activities will not: |
33 | (i) Significantly adversely affect any shellfish management area as designated by the |
34 | department of environmental management or the marine fisheries council; |
| LC002100 - Page 28 of 38 |
1 | (ii) Be in a significant conflict with the marine ecology within or adjacent to the state’s |
2 | territorial waters; or |
3 | (iii) Significantly harm or destroy existing fishing grounds. |
4 | (d) With respect to an application seeking a permit from the coastal resources management |
5 | council department to conduct or cause to conduct dredging, transportation and/or disposal of |
6 | dredge material, the applicant shall also satisfy the council department that the proposal in the |
7 | application is consistent with a comprehensive program developed pursuant to § 46-23-6(1)(ii)(H). |
8 | (e) In determining whether an applicant has met the burden of proof under subsection (c), |
9 | the coastal resources management council department shall apply standards that conform with the |
10 | federal Environmental Protection Agency’s applicable standards and guidelines for the |
11 | management of dredge materials, including, but not limited to, the federal Environmental |
12 | Protection Agency’s rules, regulations and guidelines for deviating from said standards. |
13 | (f) The applicant shall, at least three (3) days before commencing any dredging, give |
14 | written notice to the coastal resources management council department of the intent to commence |
15 | the activities specified in the permit. |
16 | 46-23-18.2. Rules and regulations. |
17 | The council, upon recommendation by the coastal resources advisory committee, |
18 | department shall issue reasonable rules and regulations governing the dredging, transporting and |
19 | disposal of all dredge materials in accordance with this chapter. |
20 | 46-23-18.3. Sites for disposal of spoil from dredge operations, selection. |
21 | (a) The council, upon recommendation of the coastal resources advisory committee, on or |
22 | before the first day of January, 1999 and department shall, periodically thereafter as necessary, |
23 | shall consistent with the comprehensive programs required in § 46-23-6(1)(ii)(H), identify and |
24 | establish one or more in-water disposal sites to be used for the purpose of disposal of dredge |
25 | materials from marinas and yacht clubs. |
26 | (b) The council, upon recommendation of the coastal resources advisory committee, on or |
27 | before the first day of January, 2002 and department shall, periodically thereafter as necessary, |
28 | shall and consistent with the comprehensive programs required in § 46-23-6(1)(ii)(H), identify and |
29 | establish one or more in-water disposal sites to be used for the purpose of disposal of dredge |
30 | materials from all sources not otherwise delineated in (a) above. |
31 | 46-23-18.4. Enforcement. |
32 | The provisions of §§ 46-23-18 through 46-23-18.3 this chapter shall be enforced by the |
33 | coastal resources management council department. Nothing herein shall be deemed to abrogate the |
34 | department of environmental management’s authority to enforce its water quality standards adopted |
| LC002100 - Page 29 of 38 |
1 | pursuant to § 46-12-3(7) or (24). |
2 | 46-23-18.5. Fees for disposal. |
3 | The council department is authorized to impose a fee of not less than eleven dollars and |
4 | sixty-five cents ($11.65) per cubic yard for the disposal of dredge materials at the sites established |
5 | by the council department pursuant to § 46-23-18.3, with eleven dollars and sixty-five cents |
6 | ($11.65) being deposited into the general fund. The amount of the fee established by the council |
7 | department pursuant to the section shall be reviewed by the council department on an annual basis |
8 | and revised as the council department deems necessary, but in no event shall the fee be set at an |
9 | amount less than eleven dollars and sixty-five cents ($11.65) per cubic yard of material. |
10 | 46-23-18.6. Coastal Resources Management Council Dredge Fund Department of |
11 | coastal resources dredge fund. |
12 | There is hereby created a separate fund to be held by the coastal resources management |
13 | council department to be known as the dredge fund. Any amount charged above the eleven dollars |
14 | and sixty-five cents ($11.65) must be deposited into the fund and shall not be deposited into the |
15 | general fund of the state, but shall be kept by the general treasurer of the state in a separate fund |
16 | for the coastal resources management council department, and shall be paid out by the treasurer |
17 | upon the order of the council director, without the necessity of appropriation or re-appropriation by |
18 | the general assembly. Funds must be used to create additional dredging and disposal options. |
19 | 46-23-20. Administrative hearings. |
20 | All contested cases, all contested enforcement proceedings, and all contested |
21 | administrative fines shall be heard by the an administrative hearing officers, or by subcommittees |
22 | officer as provided in § 46-23-20.1, pursuant to the regulations promulgated by the council; |
23 | provided, however, that no proceeding and hearing prior to the appointment of the hearing officers |
24 | shall be subject to the provisions of this section. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the commissioner |
25 | of coastal resources management director shall be authorized, in his or her the director's discretion, |
26 | to resolve contested licensing and enforcement proceedings through informal disposition pursuant |
27 | to regulations promulgated by the council department. |
28 | 46-23-20.1. Hearing officers — Appointment — Compensation — Subcommittee. |
29 | (a) The governor, with the advice and consent of the senate, shall appoint two (2) hearing |
30 | officers at least one hearing officer who shall be attorneys-at-law, who, prior to their appointment, |
31 | shall have practiced law for a period of not less than five (5) years for a term of five (5) years; |
32 | provided, however, that the initial appointments shall be as follows: one hearing officer shall be |
33 | appointed for a term of three (3) five (5) years and one if a second hearing officer shall be is |
34 | appointed then the appointment shall be for a term of five (5) three (3) years. The appointees shall |
| LC002100 - Page 30 of 38 |
1 | be addressed as hearing officers. |
2 | (b) The If multiple hearing officers are appointed, the governor shall designate one of the |
3 | hearing officers as chief hearing officer. The hearing officers shall hear proceedings as provided |
4 | by this section, and the council department, with the assistance of the chief hearing officer, may |
5 | promulgate such rules and regulations as shall be necessary or desirable and consistent with the |
6 | administrative adjudication regulations to effect the purposes of this section. |
7 | (c) A hearing officer shall be devoted full time to these administrative duties, and shall not |
8 | otherwise practice law while holding office nor be a partner nor an associate of any person in the |
9 | practice of law. |
10 | (d) Compensation for hearing officers shall be determined by the unclassified pay board. |
11 | (e) Whenever the chairperson of the coastal resources management council or, in the |
12 | absence of the chairperson, the commissioner of coastal resources makes a finding that the hearing |
13 | officers are otherwise engaged and unable to hear a matter in a timely fashion, he or she may |
14 | appoint a subcommittee which will act as hearing officers in any contested case coming before the |
15 | council. The subcommittee shall consist of at least one member; provided, however, that in all |
16 | contested cases an additional member shall be a resident of the coastal community affected. The |
17 | city or town council of each coastal community shall, at the beginning of its term of office, appoint |
18 | a resident of that city or town to serve as an alternate member of the aforesaid subcommittee should |
19 | there be no existing member of the coastal resources management council from that city or town |
20 | available to serve on the subcommittee. Any member of the subcommittee actively engaged in |
21 | hearing a case shall continue to hear the case, even though his or her term may have expired, until |
22 | the case is concluded and a vote taken thereon. Hearings before subcommittees shall be subject to |
23 | all rules of practice and procedure as govern hearings before hearing officers. Notwithstanding any |
24 | other law to the contrary, if a hearing officer is not appointed, confirmed and engaged within sixty |
25 | (60) days of the effective date of this section, or the position of hearing office is vacant for more |
26 | than sixty (60) days, the director shall hire a hearing officer, who shall be in the unclassified service, |
27 | for a term of five (5) years and shall meet the requirements set forth in subsections (c) and (d) of |
28 | this section. |
29 | (f) If at least one hearing officer has been appointed, confirmed and engaged or hired by |
30 | the director and is unable to hear a matter in a timely manner as required by law, the director may |
31 | hire a hearing officer employed by the state in such capacity, who shall have practiced law for a |
32 | period of not less than five (5) years and meets the requirements set forth in subsection (c) of this |
33 | section to adjudicate pending contested cases. |
34 | 46-23-20.2. Clerk. |
| LC002100 - Page 31 of 38 |
1 | The commissioner director of the department of coastal resources or his or her designee |
2 | shall serve as clerk to the hearing officers. The clerk shall have general charge of the office, keep |
3 | a full record of proceedings, file and preserve all documents and papers, prepare such papers and |
4 | notices as may be required, and perform such other duties as required. The commissioner director |
5 | shall have the power to issue subpoenas for witnesses and documents and to administer oaths in all |
6 | cases before any hearing officer or pertaining to the duties of his or her office. |
7 | 46-23-20.3. Prehearing procedure. |
8 | (a) Prior to the commencement of any hearing, the hearing officer may in his or her |
9 | discretion direct the parties or their attorneys to appear before him or her for such conferences as |
10 | shall be necessary. At the conferences, the hearing officer may order any party to file, prior to the |
11 | commencement of any formal hearing, exhibits that the party intends to use in the hearing, and the |
12 | names and addresses of witnesses that the party intends to produce in its direct case, together with |
13 | a short statement of the testimony of each witness. Following entry of an order, a party shall not be |
14 | permitted, except in the discretion of the hearing officer, to introduce into evidence, in the party’s |
15 | direct case, exhibits which are not filed in accordance with the order. At the conference, the hearing |
16 | officer may designate a date before which he or she requires any party to specify what issues are |
17 | conceded, and further proof of conceded issues shall not be required. The hearing officer shall also |
18 | require the parties to simplify the issues, to consider admissions of fact and of documents which |
19 | will avoid unnecessary proof, and to limit the number of expert witnesses. The hearing officer shall |
20 | enter an order reciting the concessions and agreements made by the parties, and shall enter an order |
21 | on such other matters as are pertinent to the conduct of the hearing, and unless modified, the hearing |
22 | shall be conducted by the order. |
23 | (b) The hearing officer may also order the parties to file, prior to the commencement of |
24 | any hearing, the testimony of any or all of their respective witnesses, and to submit the testimony |
25 | to the hearing officer and the opposing party or the opposing counsel by such date as the hearing |
26 | officer shall determine. The witness shall testify under oath, and all of the testimony shall be in a |
27 | question and answer format. Save for good cause shown, said testimony shall be the direct |
28 | examination of the witness; provided, however, that the witness shall be available at the hearing |
29 | for cross-examination by the opposing party or opposing counsel. |
30 | (c) The council department, with the assistance of the chief hearing officer, shall |
31 | promulgate, by regulation, such other prehearing procedures and/or hearing procedures as deemed |
32 | necessary, including the use of portions of the superior court civil rules of discovery where such |
33 | are not inconsistent with the applicable provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act, chapter |
34 | 35 of title 42. |
| LC002100 - Page 32 of 38 |
1 | 46-23-20.4. Hearings — Orders. |
2 | (a) Subject to the provisions of this chapter, every hearing for the adjudication of a violation |
3 | or for a contested matter shall be held before a hearing officer or a subcommittee. The chief hearing |
4 | officer shall assign a hearing officer to each matter not assigned to a subcommittee. After due |
5 | consideration of the evidence and arguments, the hearing officer shall make written proposed |
6 | findings of fact and proposed conclusions of law which shall be made public when submitted to the |
7 | council department for review. The council department may, in its discretion, adopt, modify, or |
8 | reject the findings of fact and/or conclusions of law; provided, however, that any modification or |
9 | rejection of the proposed findings of fact or conclusions of law shall be in writing and shall state |
10 | the rationales therefor. |
11 | (b) The director of the department of environmental management and the director of the |
12 | department of coastal resources management council shall promulgate such rules and regulations, |
13 | not inconsistent with law, as to assure uniformity of proceedings as applicable. |
14 | 46-23-20.5. Ex parte consultations. |
15 | Council members The department shall have no communication directly or indirectly, with |
16 | a hearing officer relating to any issue of fact or of law on any matter then pending before the hearing |
17 | officer. |
18 | 46-23-20.6. Oaths — Subpoenas — Powers of hearing officers. |
19 | The hearing officers are hereby severally authorized and empowered to administer oaths, |
20 | and the hearing officers, in all cases of every nature pending before them, are hereby authorized |
21 | and empowered to summon and examine witnesses and to compel the production and examination |
22 | of papers, books, accounts, documents, records, certificates and other legal evidence that may be |
23 | necessary or proper for the determination and decision of any question before or the discharge of |
24 | any duty required by law of the hearing officer. All subpoenas and subpoena duces tecum shall be |
25 | signed by a hearing officer or the commissioner of coastal resources director, and shall be served |
26 | as subpoenas are served in civil cases in the superior court; and witnesses so subpoenaed shall be |
27 | entitled to the same fees for attendance and travel as are provided for witnesses in civil cases in the |
28 | superior court. In cases of contumacy or refusal to obey the command of the subpoena so issued, |
29 | the superior court shall have jurisdiction upon application of the council department with proof by |
30 | affidavit of the fact, to issue a rule or order returnable, in not less than two (2) nor more than five |
31 | (5) days, directing the person to show cause why he or she should not be adjudged in contempt. |
32 | Upon return of such order, the justice, before whom the matter is brought for hearing, shall examine |
33 | under oath the person, and the person shall be given an opportunity to be heard, and if the justice |
34 | shall determine that the person has refused without reasonable cause or legal excuse to be examined |
| LC002100 - Page 33 of 38 |
1 | or to answer legal or pertinent questions, he or she may impose a fine upon the offender or forthwith |
2 | commit the offender to the adult correctional institutions, there to remain until he or she submits to |
3 | do the act which he or she was so required to do, or is discharged according to law. |
4 | 46-23-21. Notice of permit — Recordation. |
5 | A notice of permit shall be eligible for recordation under chapter 13 of title 34 as |
6 | determined by the executive director, and shall be recorded at the expense of the applicant in the |
7 | land evidence records of the city or town where the property subject to permit is located, and any |
8 | subsequent transferee of the property shall be responsible for complying with the terms and |
9 | conditions of the permit. The clerk of the various cities and towns shall record any orders, findings, |
10 | or decisions of the council department at no expense to the council department. |
11 | 46-23-22. Solid waste disposal licenses — Hearings. |
12 | The chairperson director of the department of coastal resources management council and |
13 | the commissioner of the environmental protection branch director of the department of |
14 | environmental management shall coordinate concurrent hearings on solid waste disposal license |
15 | applications; provided, however, that the chairperson and the commissioner of the environmental |
16 | protection branch of the department of environmental management director may designate a |
17 | hearing officer or subcommittee to hear all matters pertaining to the application and; provided |
18 | further, that the hearing officer may be from the department of environmental management, or the |
19 | department of coastal resources management council hearing officer, a subcommittee, or an ad hoc |
20 | hearing officer. The commissioner director of coastal resources management with the approval of |
21 | the chairperson may waive jurisdiction in those instances where the commissioner director finds |
22 | that there is no substantive coastal resources issue or that another agency or branch has adjudicated |
23 | or addressed the issue. |
24 | 46-23-23. Municipal comprehension plan consideration. |
25 | The coastal resources management council department shall conform to the requirements |
26 | of the Comprehensive Planning and Land Use Regulation Act, § 45-22.2. |
27 | 46-23-24. Lien on property. |
28 | The executive director may record the notice of fee or final order of fine as a lien on the |
29 | subject property in the land evidence records of the town or city in which said property is located. |
30 | Recordation of said fee or final order of fine shall be the only manner by which said lien may be |
31 | perfected against the subject property. |
32 | 46-23-25. Issuance of beach vehicle registration permits. |
33 | (a) The department of coastal resources management council may issue beach vehicle |
34 | registration permits in accordance with § 31-8-1.1 of the general laws and adopt regulations that |
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1 | the council department deems necessary to carry out the provisions of this section. The council |
2 | department may appoint responsible citizens or corporations of the state, engaged in operating |
3 | sporting goods stores to act as agents with authority to issue permits in the manner and under the |
4 | conditions as set forth below. Before an appointment shall occur, that citizen or corporation of the |
5 | state shall deliver to the council department a bond with a surety company authorized to do business |
6 | in the state of Rhode Island. The requirements and conditions of the bond shall be established by |
7 | the regulations. |
8 | (b) Any person or corporation appointed by the council department as provided in section |
9 | (a) above shall, upon the application of any person entitled to receive a permit under this chapter |
10 | and upon payment of the specified permit fee, register and issue to the person a beach vehicle |
11 | registration permit in the form prescribed and furnished by the council department. The permit shall |
12 | bear the name, place of residence, and signature of the registrant, and the vehicle make, model, |
13 | year, and license plate number and shall authorize the registrant to own and operate a beach vehicle |
14 | in the state of Rhode Island during those seasons and in those manners and according to those |
15 | conditions as shall be provided by regulations established by the council department. |
16 | SECTION 3. Chapter 46-23 of the General Laws entitled "Coastal Resources Management |
17 | Council" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
18 | 46-23-6.4. Uniform appeal period established. right to adjudicatory hearing. |
19 | All requests for an adjudicatory hearing with the department shall be in writing and shall |
20 | be filed with the department or clerk within twenty (20) calendar days of receipt of the contested |
21 | agency action for all enforcement actions, including appeal of an administrative penalty. All license |
22 | and permit appeals shall be filed with the director of the department of coastal resources within |
23 | thirty (30) calendar days of receipt of the contested agency action. Every notice of contested agency |
24 | action shall provide notice of the twenty (20) day or thirty (30) day appeal period and of the |
25 | procedures for filing an appeal. The time and manner of filing established in this chapter are |
26 | mandatory and jurisdictional. |
27 | 46-23-26. Severability. |
28 | If any provision of this chapter or the application thereof to any person or circumstances is |
29 | held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications of the chapter, which |
30 | shall be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of |
31 | this chapter are declared to be severable. |
32 | SECTION 4. Sections 46-23-2.1, 46-23-5, 46-23-6.3 and 46-23-12 of the General Laws in |
33 | Chapter 46-23 entitled "Coastal Resources Management Council" are hereby repealed. |
34 | 46-23-2.1. Members — Term of office — Vacancies. |
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1 | (a) The term of office of the appointed members shall be three (3) years, only so long as |
2 | the members shall remain eligible to serve on the council under the appointment authority. |
3 | (b) The members are eligible for successive appointments. |
4 | (c) Elected or appointed municipal officials shall hold seats on the council, only so long as |
5 | they remain in their elected or appointed office. |
6 | (d) A vacancy other than by expiration shall be filled in the manner of the original |
7 | appointment but only for the unexpired portion of the term. The governor shall have the power to |
8 | remove his or her appointee for just cause. |
9 | 46-23-5. Expenses of members. |
10 | (a) The members of the council and the chairperson shall not be compensated for their |
11 | service on the board, but the members and chairperson shall be reimbursed for their actual expenses |
12 | necessarily incurred in the performance of their duties. |
13 | (b) [Deleted by P.L. 2005, ch. 117, art. 21, § 34.] |
14 | 46-23-6.3. Tolling of expiration periods. |
15 | (a) Notwithstanding any other provision set forth in this chapter, all periods pertaining to |
16 | the expiration of any approval or permit issued pursuant to any state statute or any regulation |
17 | promulgated thereto pertaining to the development of property shall be tolled until June 30, 2016. |
18 | For the purposes of this section, “tolling” means the suspension or temporary stopping of the |
19 | running of the applicable permit or approval period. |
20 | (b) Said tolling need not be recorded in the land evidence records to be valid, however, a |
21 | notice of the tolling must be posted in the municipal planning department and near the land evidence |
22 | records. |
23 | (c) The tolling shall apply only to approvals or permits in effect on November 9, 2009, and |
24 | those issued between November 9, 2009, and June 30, 2016, and shall not revive expired approvals |
25 | or permits. |
26 | (d) The expiration dates for all permits and approvals issued before the tolling period began |
27 | will be recalculated as of July 1, 2016, by adding thereto the number of days between November |
28 | 9, 2009, and the day on which the permit or approval would otherwise have expired. The expiration |
29 | dates for all permits and approvals issued during the tolling period will be recalculated as of July |
30 | 1, 2016, by adding thereto the number of days between the day the permit or approval was issued |
31 | and the day the permit or approval otherwise would have expired. |
32 | 46-23-12. Representation from coastal communities. |
33 | Upon the expiration of a term of a member appointed by the governor, as an appointed or |
34 | elected official of local government from a coastal municipality as set out in § 46-23-2, the governor |
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1 | shall appoint an appointed or elected official of a coastal municipality which, at the time of the |
2 | governor’s appointment, has no appointed or ex officio representation on the council. |
3 | SECTION 5. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO WATERS AND NAVIGATION -- COASTAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT | |
COUNCIL | |
*** | |
1 | This act would replace the coastal resources management council with a state department |
2 | of coastal resources and transfers all of the powers and duties between the two (2) authorities. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC002100 | |
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