HB-4583, As Passed House, October 10, 2017
HB-4583, As Passed Senate, October 10, 2017
SUBSTITUTE FOR
HOUSE BILL NO. 4583
A bill to amend 1994 PA 451, entitled
"Natural resources and environmental protection act,"
by amending sections 21506a and 21510d (MCL 324.21506a and
324.21510d), section 21506a as amended by 2016 PA 467 and section
21510d as added by 2016 PA 380, and by adding section 21519a.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:
Sec. 21506a. (1) The refined petroleum fund is created within
the state treasury.
(2) The state treasurer may receive money or other assets from
any source for deposit into the refined petroleum fund. The state
treasurer shall direct the investment of the refined petroleum
fund. The state treasurer shall credit to the refined petroleum
fund interest and earnings from refined petroleum fund investments.
(3) Money in the refined petroleum fund at the close of the
fiscal
year shall remain remains in the refined petroleum fund and
shall
does not lapse to the general fund.
(4) Money from the refined petroleum fund shall be expended,
upon appropriation, only for 1 or more of the following purposes:
(a) Corrective actions performed by the department pursuant to
section 21320.
(b) The legacy release program created in section 21519a.
(c) (b)
The reasonable costs of the
department in
administering the refined petroleum fund and implementing part 213.
(d) (c)
Not more than $5,000,000.00
annually for petroleum
product inspection programs under both of the following:
(i) The weights and measures act, 1964 PA 283, MCL 290.601 to
290.635.
(ii) The motor fuels quality act, 1984 PA 44, MCL 290.641 to
290.650d.
(e) (d)
Not more than $3,000,000.00
annually for the bureau of
fire services and office of the state fire marshal, storage tank
division, in the department of licensing and regulatory affairs.
(e)
Other purposes as determined by the legislature.
(f) Reimbursement by the authority to local units of
government and county road commissions for the costs of corrective
action to manage, relocate, or dispose of any media contaminated by
regulated substances left in place within a public highway pursuant
to section 21310a if all of the following occur:
(i) The local unit of government or county road commission has
submitted to the authority a claim for reimbursement on a form
created by the authority.
(ii) The claim for reimbursement is for reasonable and
necessary eligible corrective action costs determined by the
administrator pursuant to section 21515(2) to (10).
(iii) The amount of reimbursement is not more than $200,000.00
per claim.
(g) Not more than $5,000,000.00 annually for the department to
provide grants and loans in accordance with part 196 to facilitate
brownfield redevelopment at part 213 properties. Money shall not be
provided under this subsection to fund the performance of response
activities at a part 213 property to address contamination that is
solely attributable to a release regulated under part 201.
(h) The permanent closure of an underground storage tank
system by the department if the underground storage tank system
meets the conditions that require permanent closure under R 29.2153
of the Michigan Administrative Code or the department determines it
is necessary to protect public health, safety, welfare, or the
environment.
Sec. 21510d. If an owner or operator intends to rely on the
fund to meet financial responsibility requirements, the owner or
operator shall submit to the authority a request for a
determination that the owner or operator would be eligible for
funding under this part in the event of a release from a refined
petroleum underground storage tank system. Upon receipt of a
request under this subsection, the authority shall make a
determination and provide notice of that determination, in writing,
to the owner or operator. The notice may contain conditions for
maintenance of that eligibility. A determination under this section
is based upon a demonstration of all of the following:
(a) The owner or operator is not ineligible for funding under
section 21510(4) and (5).
(b) The refined petroleum underground storage tank or tanks
are presently in compliance with the registration and fee
requirements of part 211.
(c) The owner or operator is not the United States government.
(d) The owner or operator has financial responsibility for the
deductible amount. In order to demonstrate that the owner or
operator has financial responsibility for the deductible amount
under this section and section 21510(1)(f), the owner or operator
may rely upon any financial assurance mechanism listed in 40 CFR
280.95 to 280.107 or either of the following:
(i) A financial test of self-insurance. To pass the financial
test of self-insurance, the owner or operator must submit, on a
form developed by the authority, financial information certified as
accurate by the chief financial officer or comparable position that
demonstrates a tangible net worth of at least 3 times the
deductible amount required under this part.
(ii) A deposit account in the amount of the deductible amount
required under this part in a financial institution as defined in
section 1202 of the banking code of 1999, 1999 PA 276, MCL
487.11202, if access to the deposit account is restricted by a
deposit account control agreement or similar restriction as
approved by the authority that requires the approval of the
administrator for a withdrawal from the deposit account.
Sec. 21519a. (1) The department shall establish and the
authority shall administer a legacy release program as provided in
this section to reimburse eligible persons for costs of corrective
actions for certain historic releases from refined petroleum
underground storage tank systems. An eligible person may be
reimbursed for corrective action costs incurred if the eligible
person demonstrates all of the following:
(a) The release from which the corrective action or
indemnification arose was discovered and reported prior to December
30, 2014.
(b) The release upon which the request for reimbursement is
based has not been closed pursuant to part 213 prior to December
30, 2014.
(c) Any refined petroleum underground storage tank systems
that are operating at the location from which the release occurred
are currently in compliance with the registration requirements of
part 211.
(d) The request for reimbursement does not include
reimbursement for money that was reimbursed from any other source,
including insurance policies.
(e) A claim submitted to the legacy release program shall not
be approved by the authority for any of the prohibitions listed
under section 21510c.
(f) The request for reimbursement is for corrective action
performed on or after December 30, 2014.
(2) An eligible person that seeks to be reimbursed under the
legacy release program established under this section shall submit
to the authority a request for reimbursement on a form provided by
the authority containing the documentation required by the
authority.
(3) The authority shall approve a request for reimbursement
under this section only as follows:
(a) The amount approved for reimbursement shall be 50% of the
aggregate indemnification and corrective action costs incurred, but
not more than 50% of the reasonable and necessary eligible costs as
determined by the administrator pursuant to section 21515(2) to
(10).
(b) The total amount approved for reimbursement shall not
exceed a total of $50,000.00 for all releases from refined
petroleum underground storage tank systems at a single location.
(c) An owner or operator may request a review of a denied
claim or work invoice per section 21521.
(4) As used in this section, "eligible person" means the owner
or operator of a refined petroleum underground storage tank system
at the time of the reporting of the release.
Enacting section 1. This amendatory act takes effect 90 days
after the date it is enacted into law.