SB-0513, As Passed Senate, June 28, 2007
SUBSTITUTE FOR
SENATE BILL NO. 513
A bill to amend 1994 PA 451, entitled
"Natural resources and environmental protection act,"
by amending sections 11503, 11505, 11506, and 11514 (MCL 324.11503,
324.11505, 324.11506, and 324.11514), sections 11503 and 11506 as
amended by 1998 PA 466 and section 11514 as amended by 2005 PA 243,
and by adding section 11521.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 11503. (1) "De minimis" refers to a small amount of
material or number of items, as applicable, commingled and
incidentally disposed of with other solid waste.
(2) (1) "Department" means the
department of environmental
quality.
(3) (2)
"Director" means the director of the department.
(4) (3)
"Discharge" includes, but is not limited to, any
spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying,
discharging, injecting, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing
of a substance into the environment which is or may become
injurious to the public health, safety, or welfare, or to the
environment.
(5) (4)
"Disposal area" means 1 or more of the following at a
location as defined by the boundary identified in its construction
permit or engineering plans approved by the department:
(a) A solid waste transfer facility.
(b) Incinerator.
(c) Sanitary landfill.
(d) Processing plant.
(e) Other solid waste handling or disposal facility utilized
in the disposal of solid waste.
(6) (5)
"Enforceable mechanism" means a legal method whereby
the
state, a county, a municipality, or a another person is
authorized to take action to guarantee compliance with an approved
county solid waste management plan. Enforceable mechanisms include
contracts, intergovernmental agreements, laws, ordinances, rules,
and regulations.
(7) (6)
"Escrow account" means an account managed by a bank or
other financial institution whose account operations are regulated
and examined by a federal or state agency and which complies with
section 11523b.
(8) "Farm" means that term as defined in section 2 of the
Michigan right to farm act, 1981 PA 93, MCL 286.472.
(9) "Farm operation" means that term as defined in section 2
of the Michigan right to farm act, 1981 PA 93, MCL 286.472.
(10) (7)
"Financial assurance" means the mechanisms used to
demonstrate that the funds necessary to meet the cost of closure,
postclosure maintenance and monitoring, and corrective action will
be available whenever they are needed.
(11) (8)
"Financial test" means a corporate or local
government financial test or guarantee approved for type II
landfills
under subtitle D of the solid waste disposal act, title
II
of Public Law 89-272, 42 U.S.C. 6941 and 6942 42 USC 6941 to
6949a. An owner or operator may use a single financial test for
more than 1 facility. Information submitted to the department to
document compliance with the test shall include a list showing the
name and address of each facility and the amount of funds assured
by the test for each facility. For purposes of the financial test,
the owner or operator shall aggregate the sum of the closure,
postclosure, and corrective action costs it seeks to assure with
any other environmental obligations assured by a financial test
under state or federal law.
(12) (9)
"Food processing residuals" means any of the
following:
(a) Residuals of fruits, vegetables, aquatic plants, or field
crops.
(b) Otherwise unusable parts of fruits, vegetables, aquatic
plants, or field crops from the processing thereof.
(c) Otherwise unusable food products which do not meet size,
quality, or other product specifications and which were intended
for human or animal consumption.
(13) (10)
"Garbage" means rejected food wastes including waste
accumulation of animal, fruit, or vegetable matter used or intended
for
food or that attends results
from the preparation, use,
cooking, dealing in, or storing of meat, fish, fowl, fruit, or
vegetable matter.
(14) (11)
"Scrap wood" means wood
or wood product that is 1 or
more of the following:
(a) Plywood, pressed board, oriented strand board, or any
other wood or wood product mixed with glue or filler.
(b) Wood or wood product treated with creosote or
pentachlorophenol.
(c) Any other wood or wood product designated as scrap wood in
rules promulgated by the department.
(15) (12)
"Treated wood" means wood
or wood product that has
been treated with 1 or more of the following:
(a) Chromated copper arsenate (CCA).
(b) Ammoniacal copper quat (ACQ).
(c) Ammoniacal copper zinc arsenate (ACZA).
(d) Any other chemical designated in rules promulgated by the
department.
(16) (13)
"Wood" means trees,
branches, bark, lumber, pallets,
wood chips, sawdust, or other wood or wood product but does not
include scrap wood, treated wood, painted wood or painted wood
product, or any wood or wood product that has been contaminated
during manufacture or use.
Sec. 11505. (1) "Recyclable materials" means source separated
materials, site separated materials, high grade paper, glass,
metal, plastic, aluminum, newspaper, corrugated paper, yard
clippings, and other materials that may be recycled or composted.
(2) "Regional solid waste management planning agency" means
the regional solid waste planning agency designated by the governor
pursuant
to section 4006 of subtitle D of the solid waste disposal
act,
title II of Public Law 89-272, 42 U.S.C. 42 USC 6946.
(3) "Resource recovery facility" means machinery, equipment,
structures, or any parts or accessories of machinery, equipment, or
structures, installed or acquired for the primary purpose of
recovering materials or energy from the waste stream.
(4) "Response activity" means an activity that is necessary to
protect the public health, safety, welfare, or the environment, and
includes, but is not limited to, evaluation, cleanup, removal,
containment, isolation, treatment, monitoring, maintenance,
replacement of water supplies, and temporary relocation of people.
(5) "Rubbish" means nonputrescible solid waste, excluding
ashes, consisting of both combustible and noncombustible waste,
including paper, cardboard, metal containers, yard clippings, wood,
glass, bedding, crockery, demolished building materials, or litter
of any kind that may be a detriment to the public health and
safety.
(6) "Salvaging" means the lawful and controlled removal of
reusable materials from solid waste.
(7) "Site separated material" means glass, metal, wood, paper
products,
plastics, rubber, textiles, garbage, yard clippings, or
any other material approved by the department that is separated
from solid waste for the purpose of conversion into raw materials
or new products. Site separated material does not include the
residue remaining after glass, metal, wood, paper products,
plastics, rubber, textiles, or any other material approved by the
department is separated from solid waste.
(8) "Slag" means the nonmetallic product resulting from
melting or smelting operations for iron or steel.
Sec. 11506. (1) "Solid waste" means garbage, rubbish, ashes,
incinerator ash, incinerator residue, street cleanings, municipal
and industrial sludges, solid commercial and solid industrial
waste, and animal waste other than organic waste generated in the
production
of livestock and poultry. Solid However,
solid waste
does not include the following:
(a) Human body waste.
(b) Medical waste as it is defined in part 138 of the public
health code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.13801 to 333.13831, and regulated
under that part and part 55.
(c) Organic waste generated in the production of livestock and
poultry.
(d) Liquid waste.
(e) Ferrous or nonferrous scrap directed to a scrap metal
processor or to a reuser of ferrous or nonferrous products.
(f) Slag or slag products directed to a slag processor or to a
reuser of slag or slag products.
(g)
Sludges and ashes managed as recycled
, or nondetrimental
materials appropriate for agricultural or silvicultural use
pursuant to a plan approved by the department. Food processing
residuals; wood ashes resulting solely from a source that burns
only wood that is untreated and inert; lime from kraft pulping
processes generated prior to bleaching; or aquatic plants may be
applied on, or composted and applied on, farmland or forestland for
an agricultural or silvicultural purpose, or used as animal feed,
as appropriate, and such an application or use does not require a
plan described in this subdivision or a permit or license under
this part. In addition, source separated materials approved by the
department for land application for agricultural and silvicultural
purposes and compost produced from those materials may be applied
to the land for agricultural and silvicultural purposes and such an
application does not require a plan described in this subdivision
or permit or license under this part. Land application authorized
under this subdivision for an agricultural or silvicultural
purpose, or use as animal feed, as provided for in this subdivision
shall
occur be performed in a manner that prevents losses from
runoff
and leaching. , and if applied to land, the land Land
application under this subdivision shall be at an agronomic rate
consistent with generally accepted agricultural and management
practices under the Michigan right to farm act, 1981 PA 93, MCL
286.471 to 286.474.
(h) Materials approved for emergency disposal by the
department.
(i) Source separated materials.
(j) Site separated material.
(k) Fly ash or any other ash produced from the combustion of
coal, when used in the following instances:
(i) With a maximum of 6% of unburned carbon as a component of
concrete, grout, mortar, or casting molds.
(ii) With a maximum of 12% unburned carbon passing M.D.O.T.
test method MTM 101 when used as a raw material in asphalt for road
construction.
(iii) As aggregate, road, or building material which that in
ultimate use will be stabilized or bonded by cement, limes, or
asphalt.
(iv) As a road base or construction fill that is covered with
asphalt, concrete, or other material approved by the department and
which
that is placed at least 4 feet above the seasonal
groundwater
table.
(v) As the sole material in a depository designed to reclaim,
develop, or otherwise enhance land, subject to the approval of the
department. In evaluating the site, the department shall consider
the physical and chemical properties of the ash including
leachability, and the engineering of the depository, including, but
not limited to, the compaction, control of surface water and
groundwater that may threaten to infiltrate the site, and evidence
that the depository is designed to prevent water percolation
through the material.
(l) Other wastes regulated by statute.
(2) "Solid waste hauler" means a person who owns or operates a
solid waste transporting unit.
(3) "Solid waste processing plant" means a tract of land,
building, unit, or appurtenance of a building or unit or a
combination of land, buildings, and units that is used or intended
for use for the processing of solid waste or the separation of
material for salvage or disposal, or both, but does not include a
plant engaged primarily in the acquisition, processing, and
shipment of ferrous or nonferrous metal scrap, or a plant engaged
primarily in the acquisition, processing, and shipment of slag or
slag products.
(4) "Solid waste transporting unit" means a container that may
be an integral part of a truck or other piece of equipment used for
the transportation of solid waste.
(5) "Solid waste transfer facility" means a tract of land, a
building and any appurtenances, or a container, or any combination
of land, buildings, or containers that is used or intended for use
in the rehandling or storage of solid waste incidental to the
transportation of the solid waste, but is not located at the site
of generation or the site of disposal of the solid waste.
(6) "Source separated material" means glass, metal, wood,
paper
products, plastics, rubber, textiles, garbage, yard
clippings,
or any other material approved by
the department that is
separated at the source of generation for the purpose of conversion
into raw materials or new products including, but not limited to,
compost.
(7) "Type I public water supply", "type IIa public water
supply", "type IIb public water supply", and "type III public water
supply" mean those terms, respectively, as described in R 325.10502
of the Michigan administrative code.
(8) (7)
"Yard clippings" means
leaves, grass clippings,
vegetable or other garden debris, shrubbery, or brush or tree
trimmings, less than 4 feet in length and 2 inches in diameter,
that can be converted to compost humus. Yard clippings do not
include stumps, agricultural wastes, animal waste, roots, sewage
sludge, or garbage.
Sec. 11514. (1) Optimizing recycling opportunities and the
reuse of materials shall be a principal objective of the state's
solid waste management plan. Recycling and reuse of materials are
in the best interest of promoting the public health and welfare.
The state shall develop policies and practices that promote
recycling and reuse of materials and, to the extent practical,
minimize the use of landfilling as a method for disposal of its
waste.
(2) A person shall not knowingly deliver to a landfill for
disposal, or, if the person is an owner or operator of a landfill,
knowingly permit disposal in the landfill of, any of the following:
(a) Medical waste, unless that medical waste has been
decontaminated or is not required to be decontaminated but is
packaged in the manner required under part 138 of the public health
code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.13801 to 333.13831.
(b) More than a de minimis amount of open, empty, or otherwise
used beverage containers.
(c) More than a de minimis number of whole motor vehicle
tires.
(d) More than a de minimis amount of yard clippings, unless
they
are diseased, or infested, or composed of invasive species as
authorized by section 11521(1)(i).
(3) A person shall not deliver to a landfill for disposal, or,
if the person is an owner or operator of a landfill, permit
disposal in the landfill of, any of the following:
(a) Used oil as defined in section 16701.
(b) A lead acid battery as defined in section 17101.
(c) Low-level radioactive waste as defined in section 2 of the
low-level radioactive waste authority act, 1987 PA 204, MCL
333.26202.
(d) Regulated hazardous waste as defined in R 299.4104 of the
Michigan administrative code.
(e) Bulk or noncontainerized liquid waste or waste that
contains free liquids, unless the waste is 1 of the following:
(i) Household waste other than septage waste.
(ii) Leachate or gas condensate that is approved for
recirculation.
(iii) Septage waste or other liquids approved for beneficial
addition under section 11511b.
(f) Sewage.
(g) PCBs as defined in 40 CFR 761.3.
(h) Asbestos waste, unless the landfill complies with 40 CFR
61.154.
(4) A person shall not knowingly deliver to a municipal solid
waste incinerator for disposal, or, if the person is an owner or
operator of a municipal solid waste incinerator, knowingly permit
disposal in the incinerator of, more than a de minimis amount of
yard
clippings, unless they are diseased, or infested, or composed
of invasive species as authorized by section 11521(1)(i). The
department shall post, and a solid waste hauler that disposes of
solid waste in a municipal solid waste incinerator shall provide
its customers with, notice of the prohibitions of this subsection
in the same manner as provided in section 11527a.
(5) If the department determines that a safe, sanitary, and
feasible alternative does not exist for the disposal in a landfill
or municipal solid waste incinerator of any items described in
subsection (2) or (4), respectively, the department shall submit a
report setting forth that determination and the basis for the
determination to the standing committees of the senate and house of
representatives with primary responsibility for solid waste issues.
(6)
As used in this section, "de minimis" means incidental
disposal
of small amounts of these materials that are commingled
with
other solid waste.
Sec. 11521. (1) Yard clippings shall be managed by 1 of the
following means:
(a) Composted on the property where the yard clippings are
generated.
(b) Temporarily accumulated under subsection (2).
(c) Composted at a site containing no more than 25 cubic yards
of yard clippings if decomposition occurs without creating a
nuisance.
(d) Composted on a farm as described by subsection (3).
(e) Composted at site that qualifies as a composting facility
under subsection (4).
(f) Decomposed in a controlled manner using a closed container
to create and maintain anaerobic conditions if in compliance with
part 55 and otherwise approved by the director.
(g) Composted and used as part of normal operations by a
municipal solid waste landfill if the composting and use meet all
of the following requirements:
(i) Take place on property described in the landfill
construction permit.
(ii) Are described in and consistent with the landfill
operation plans.
(iii) Are otherwise in compliance with this act.
(h) Processed at a processing plant in accordance with this
part and the rules promulgated under this part.
(i) Disposed of in a landfill or an incinerator, but only if
the yard clippings are diseased or infested or are composed of
invasive plants, such as garlic mustard, purple loosestrife, or
spotted knapweed, that were collected through an eradication or
control program, include no more than a de minimis amount of other
yard clippings, and are inappropriate to compost.
(2) A person may temporarily accumulate yard clippings at a
site not designed for composting if both of the following
requirements are met:
(a) The accumulation does not otherwise result in a violation
of this act.
(b) The yard clippings are moved to another location and
managed as otherwise provided by subsection (1) within 90 days of
being placed on the site. The owner or operator of the site shall
maintain records necessary to demonstrate that this requirement is
met.
(3) A person may compost yard clippings on a farm if
composting does not otherwise result in a violation of this act and
is done in accordance with generally accepted agricultural and
management practices under the Michigan right to farm act, 1981 PA
93, MCL 286.471 to 286.474, and if 1 or more of the following
apply:
(a) Only yard clippings generated on the farm are composted.
(b) There are less than 5,000 cubic yards of yard clippings on
the farm.
(c) There are 5,000 cubic yards or more of yard clippings on
the farm at any time and all of the following requirements are met:
(i) The farm operation accepts yard clippings generated at a
location other than the farm only to assist in management of waste
material generated by the farming operation.
(ii) The farm operation does not accept yard clippings
generated at a location other than the farm for monetary or other
valuable consideration.
(iii) The owner or operator of the farm registers with the
department of agriculture on a form provided by the department of
agriculture and certifies that the farm operation meets and will
continue to meet the requirements of subparagraphs (i) and (ii).
(4) A site qualifies as a composting facility if all of the
following requirements are met:
(a) The owner or operator of the site registers as a
composting facility with the department and reports to the
department within 30 days after the end of each state fiscal year
the amount of yard clippings composted in the previous state fiscal
year. The registration and reporting shall be done on forms
provided by the department. The registration shall be accompanied
by a fee of $600.00. The registration is for a term of 3 years.
Registration fees collected under this subdivision shall be
forwarded to the state treasurer for deposit in the solid waste
staff account of the solid waste management fund established in
section 11550.
(b) If the site begins operation after the effective date of
the amendatory act that added this section, the management or
storage of yard clippings, compost, and residuals occurs in an area
that is not in the 100-year floodplain and is at least the
following applicable distance from any of the following features:
(i) 50 feet from a property line.
(ii) 100 feet from a body of surface water, including a lake,
stream, or wetland.
(iii) 2,000 feet from a type I or type IIA water supply well.
(iv) 800 feet from a type IIB or type III water supply well.
(v) 500 feet from a church or other house of worship, school,
hospital, nursing home, or licensed day care center.
(vi) 4 feet above groundwater.
(c) Composting and management of the site occurs in a manner
that meets all of the following requirements:
(i) Does not violate this act or create a facility as defined
in section 20101.
(ii) Unless approved by the department, does not result in more
than 5,000 cubic yards of yard clippings, compost, and residuals
present on any acre of property where those materials are managed
or stored.
(iii) Does not result in an accumulation of yard clippings for a
period of over 3 years unless the site has the capacity to compost
the yard clippings and the owner or operator of the site can
demonstrate, beginning in the third year of operation and each year
thereafter, that the amount of yard clippings and compost that is
transferred off-site in a calendar year is not less than 75% by
weight or volume, accounting for natural volume reduction, of the
amount of yard clippings and compost that was on-site at the
beginning of the calendar year.
(iv) Results in finished compost with not more than 1%, by
weight, of foreign matter that will remain on a 4 millimeter
screen.
(v) If yard clippings are collected in bags other than paper
bags, debags the yard clippings by the end of each business day.
(vi) Prevents the pooling of water by maintaining proper slopes
and grades.
(vii) Properly manages storm water runoff.
(viii) Does not attract or harbor rodents or other vectors.
(d) The owner or operator maintains, and makes available to
the department, all of the following records:
(i) Records identifying the volume of yard clippings accepted
by the facility and the volume of yard clippings and compost
transferred off-site each month.
(ii) Records demonstrating that conditions in each compost
pile, including carbon to nitrogen ratio, temperature, and moisture
content, allow for proper composting and prevent anaerobic
decomposition.
(5) A site at which yard clippings are managed in accordance
with this section, other than a site described in subsection
(1)(g), (h) or (i), is not a disposal area, notwithstanding section
11503(5).
(6) Except with respect to subsection (1)(h) and (i),
management of yard clippings in accordance with this section is not
considered disposal for purposes of section 11538(6).