SP0451
LD 1308
Session - 126th Maine Legislature
C "A", Filing Number S-270, Sponsored by
LR 1123
Item 2
Bill Tracking, Additional Documents Chamber Status

Amend the bill in section 1 in §2144 by striking out all of subsection 2 and inserting the following:

2 Establishment of a paint stewardship program.   By April 1, 2015, a producer, a group of producers or a representative organization shall submit a plan for the establishment of a paint stewardship program to the commissioner for approval. The plan must include:
A A description of how the program will collect, transport, recycle and process post-consumer paint from entities covered by the program for end-of-life management to meet the following goals:

(1) A reduction in the generation of unwanted paint and the promotion of its reuse and recycling;

(2) Provision of convenient and available statewide collection of post-consumer paint from entities covered by the program in all areas of the State;

(3) Management of post-consumer paint using environmentally sound management practices in an economically sound manner, including following the paint waste management hierarchy of source reduction, reuse, recycling, energy recovery and disposal;

(4) Establishment of a process for managing paint containers collected under the program, including recycling all recyclable containers;

(5) Negotiation and execution by the operator of agreements to collect, transport, reuse, recycle, burn for energy recovery and dispose of post-consumer paint using environmentally sound management practices; and

(6) Provision of education and outreach efforts by the operator to promote the program. The education and outreach efforts must include strategies for reaching consumers in all areas of the State and the method the program will use to evaluate the effectiveness of its education and outreach efforts;

B Contact information for all persons that will be responsible for the operation of the paint stewardship program and a list of paint brands and producers covered under the program;
C Goals as may be practical to reduce the generation of post-consumer paint, to promote the reuse and recycling of post-consumer paint, for the overall collection of post-consumer paint and for the proper end-of-life management of post-consumer paint. The goals may be revised by a representative organization based on information collected annually;
D A list of all potential processors that will be used to manage post-consumer paint collected by the paint stewardship program, a list of each collection site name and location that will accept post-consumer paint under the program and a list of all processors that will be used for final disposition;
E A method to determine the number and geographic distribution of paint collection sites based on the use of geographic information modeling. The plan must provide that at least 90% of state residents have a permanent paint collection site within a 15-mile radius of their residences, unless the commissioner determines that the 90% requirement is not practicable due to geographical constraints. If the commissioner determines the 90% requirement is not practicable, the commissioner may approve a plan that includes a geographic distribution of paint collection sites that is practicable. The distribution of paint collection sites must include at least one additional paint collection site for each 30,000 residents in a population center that is located to provide convenient and reasonably equitable access for residents within the population center unless otherwise approved by the commissioner;
F Identification of the ways in which the program will coordinate with existing solid waste collection programs and events, including strategies to reach the State's residents that do not have a permanent paint collection site within a 15-mile radius of their residences and to ensure adequate coverage of service center communities as defined in Title 30-A, section 4301, subsection 14-A;
G A time frame for accomplishing the geographical coverage required under paragraphs E and F;
H An anticipated budget for operation of the paint stewardship program, including the suggested method of funding the program, which must include the method of calculating a paint stewardship assessment that meets the requirements of subsection 4;
I A description of how post-consumer paint collected under this section will be managed at each collection site, including how post-consumer paint will be labeled and provisions for secondary containment;
J A description of how consolidation facilities in the State accepting materials under this section will meet applicable requirements for the consolidation of universal waste in accordance with rules adopted by the department; and
K For a consolidation facility where post-consumer paint may be transferred out of the post-consumer paint's original container, an environmental monitoring plan and a closure plan with financial assurance and proof of liability insurance.

Amend the bill in section 1 in §2144 in subsection 3 in the 9th line (page 3, line 39 in L.D.) by striking out the following: " may" and inserting the following: ' shall'

Amend the bill in section 1 in §2144 by striking out all of subsection 4 and inserting the following:

4 Funding of paint stewardship program.   An operator of a paint stewardship program shall administer a paint stewardship assessment for all architectural paint sold in the State. The amount of the paint stewardship assessment must be approved by the commissioner under subsection 3 and must be sufficient to recover, but may not exceed, the cost of the paint stewardship program. If the funds generated by the program exceed the amount necessary to operate the program, excess funds must be used to reduce future paint stewardship assessments or improve services under the program.
A A paint stewardship assessment must be added to the cost of all architectural paint sold to retailers and distributors in the State. A retailer or distributor shall add the paint stewardship assessment to the consumer's purchase price of the architectural paint sold by that retailer or distributor. A producer or a representative organization may not charge a paint stewardship assessment at the time of post-consumer paint collection. The collection of the paint stewardship assessment must commence no later than the implementation date established in subsection 5, paragraph A.
B An architectural paint producer participating in a representative organization shall remit to the representative organization payment of the paint stewardship assessment for each container of architectural paint it sells in the State.

Amend the bill in section 1 in §2144 in subsection 5 by striking out all of paragraphs A and B (page 4, lines 21 to 25 in L.D.) and inserting the following:

A Beginning July 1, 2015 or 3 months after a plan is approved by the commissioner under subsection 2, whichever occurs later, a producer or a representative organization shall implement the plan.
B Upon implementation of the plan, a producer may not sell or offer for sale architectural paint in the State unless the producer or a representative organization of which the producer is a member participates in a paint stewardship program. A representative organization shall notify the department of all producers participating in a paint stewardship program operated by the representative organization.

Amend the bill in section 1 in §2144 in subsection 5 by striking out all of paragraphs E and F (page 5, lines 7 to 25 in L.D.) and inserting the following:

E By October 15, 2016, and annually thereafter, the operator of a paint stewardship program shall submit a report to the commissioner regarding the paint stewardship program. The report must include, but is not limited to:

(1) A description of the methods used to collect, transport, reduce, reuse and process post-consumer paint in the State;

(2) The volume of post-consumer paint collected in the State;

(3) The volume and type of post-consumer paint collected in the State by method of disposition, including reuse, recycling and other methods of processing;

(4) The total cost of implementing the paint stewardship program, as determined by an independent financial audit funded from the paint stewardship assessment. The report of total cost must include a breakdown of administrative, collection, transportation, disposition and communication costs;

(5) A summary of outreach and educational activities undertaken and samples of educational materials provided to consumers of architectural paint;

(6) The total volume of post-consumer paint collected by the paint stewardship program and a breakdown of the volume collected at each collection site;

(7) Based on the paint stewardship assessment collected by the paint stewardship program, the total volume of architectural paint sold in the State during the preceding year;

(8) A list of all processors used to manage post-consumer paint collected by the paint stewardship program in the preceding year up to the paint's final disposition, the volume each processor accepted and the disposition method used by each processor; and

(9) An evaluation of the effectiveness of the paint stewardship program compared to prior years and anticipated steps, if any are needed, to improve performance throughout the State.

F Reports submitted to the department under this section must be made available to the public on the department's publicly accessible website, except that proprietary information submitted to the department in a plan, in an amendment to a plan or pursuant to reporting requirements of this section that is identified by the submittor as proprietary information is confidential and must be handled by the department in the same manner as confidential information is handled under section 1310-B.

As used in this paragraph, "proprietary information" means information that is a trade secret or production, commercial or financial information the disclosure of which would impair the competitive position of the submittor and would make available information not otherwise publicly available.

G A producer or representative organization shall submit to the department for approval a request to amend an approved plan if the producer or representative organization proposes to:

(1) Change the paint stewardship assessment;

(2) Cover an additional product under the plan; or

(3) Modify the goals of the plan.

Amend the bill in section 1 in §2144 by striking out all of subsection 7 (page 5, lines 34 to 42 in L.D.) and inserting the following:

7 Retailers.   Beginning July 1, 2015 or 3 months after a plan is approved by the commissioner under subsection 2, whichever occurs later, a retailer may not sell architectural paint unless, on the date the retailer orders the architectural paint from the producer or its agent, the producer or the paint brand is listed on the department's publicly accessible website as implementing or participating in an approved paint stewardship program. A retailer may participate as a paint collection point pursuant to the paint stewardship program on a voluntary basis and pursuant to all applicable laws and rules. A retailer that collects post-consumer paint must follow a collection site procedure manual developed by a producer or representative organization to ensure the use of environmentally sound management practices when handling architectural paints at collection locations.
8 List of producers and brands.   The department shall post on its publicly accessible website a list of the producers participating and the brands included in a paint stewardship program.
9 Relationship to other product stewardship program laws.   A paint stewardship program established pursuant to this section is governed by the provisions of this section and is exempt from any requirements related to product stewardship programs established under chapter 18 unless otherwise specifically provided.
10 Rules.   The department may adopt rules to implement this section. Rules adopted pursuant to this subsection are routine technical rules as defined in Title 5, chapter 375, subchapter 2-A.

Sec. 2. Appropriations and allocations. The following appropriations and allocations are made.

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF

Administration - Environmental Protection 0251

Initiative: Provides an ongoing General Fund appropriation and Other Special Revenue Funds allocation to the Department of Environmental Protection for administrative and technology costs associated with an architectural paint product stewardship program.

GENERAL FUND 2013-14 2014-15
All Other
$887 $887
inline graphic sline.gif inline graphic sline.gif
GENERAL FUND TOTAL $887 $887

OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS 2013-14 2014-15
All Other
$675 $675
inline graphic sline.gif inline graphic sline.gif
OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS TOTAL $675 $675

Remediation and Waste Management 0247

Initiative: Provides an ongoing General Fund appropriation and Other Special Revenue Funds allocation to the Department of Environmental Protection for a full-time Environmental Specialist III position and related administrative and technology costs associated with an architectural paint product stewardship program.

GENERAL FUND 2013-14 2014-15
POSITIONS - LEGISLATIVE COUNT
0.500 0.500
Personal Services
$34,091 $36,337
All Other
$1,495 $1,495
inline graphic sline.gif inline graphic sline.gif
GENERAL FUND TOTAL $35,586 $37,832

OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS 2013-14 2014-15
POSITIONS - LEGISLATIVE COUNT
0.500 0.500
Personal Services
$34,091 $36,337
inline graphic sline.gif inline graphic sline.gif
OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS TOTAL $34,091 $36,337

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, DEPARTMENT OF
DEPARTMENT TOTALS 2013-14 2014-15
GENERAL FUND
$36,473 $38,719
OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS
$34,766 $37,012
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DEPARTMENT TOTAL - ALL FUNDS $71,239 $75,731

summary

This amendment is the majority report of the committee. It amends provisions in the bill related to paint stewardship plans, approval of paint stewardship plans, a paint stewardship assessment and operation of a paint stewardship program. The changes include:

1. Provisions authorizing the Commissioner of Environmental Protection to approve a plan that does not meet the geographic coverage requirement in the bill;

2. Provisions related to universal waste requirements;

3. Additional annual reporting requirements;

4. Provisions for proprietary information to be designated as confidential. The provisions provide that proprietary information submitted to the Department of Environmental Protection must be handled by the department in the same manner as confidential information is handled under the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 38, section 1310-B. Although section 1310-B, in part, governs the handling of confidential hazardous waste information, the reference to section 1310-B in the amendment is not intended to limit the applicability of the confidentiality provisions in the amendment to hazardous waste information but to provide a process for how proprietary information is to be handled; and

5. An exemption from requirements in other laws related to product stewardship programs.

The amendment also adds an appropriations and allocations section.

FISCAL NOTE REQUIRED
(See attached)


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