UNDERGROUND STORAGE TANK SETBACKS S.B. 991 (S-1):
REVISED SUMMARY OF SUBSTITUTE BILL
IN COMMITTEE
Senate Bill 991 (Substitute S-1)
Committee: Environmental Quality
CONTENT
The bill would amend Part 211 (Underground Storage Tank Regulations) of the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act (NREPA) to do the following:
-- Prohibit the installation of an underground storage tank within certain distances of existing water wells.
-- Specify that a person who wished to install an underground storage tank that did not meet the distance requirements prescribed by the bill could replace only an active underground storage tank if the replacement tank were more likely to prevent and detect a release than the existing tank and the existing tank was in compliance with Part 211.
Specifically, except as provided below, the bill would prohibit a person from installing an underground storage tank that met any of the following conditions:
-- The tank was within 2,000 feet of an existing type I community or type IIa noncommunity water well.
-- The tank was within 800 feet of an existing type IIb or type III noncommunity public water well.
-- The tank was within 300 feet of any other type of well not described above.
(Part 211 defines "underground storage tank system" as a tank or combination of tanks, including underground pipes connected to the tank or tanks, which is, was, or may have been used to contain an accumulation of regulated substances, and the volume of which, including the volume of the underground pipes connected to the tank or tanks, is 10% or more beneath the surface of the ground. See BACKGROUND for information concerning water well types.)
The bill specifies that a person who wished to install an underground storage tank that did not meet the conditions described above could replace only an active underground storage tank if both of the following requirements were met:
-- A professional engineer or qualified underground storage tank consultant certified that a combination of the construction material of the underground storage tank and the leak detection used to monitor the underground storage tank was more likely to prevent and detect a release from the replacement underground storage tank than the existing underground storage tank.
-- The facility where the active, existing underground storage tank was located was in compliance with Part 211 and the rules promulgated under Part 211.
(Part 211 defines "release" as any spilling, leaking, emitting, discharging, escaping, leaching, or disposing from an underground storage tank system into groundwater, surface water, or subsurface soils.)
The bill would define "professional engineer" as that term is defined in Section 2001 of the Occupational Code: a person who, by reason of knowledge of mathematics, the physical sciences, and the principles of engineering, acquired by professional education and practical experience, is qualified to engage in the practice of professional engineering. "Qualified underground storage tank consultant" would mean an individual who met the requirements under Section 21325. (Section 21325 of NREPA specifies that a person is considered a qualified underground storage tank consultant if the person has experience in all phases of underground storage tank work, possesses certain licenses, certifications, or educational attainment, has several insurance policies, such as worker's compensation insurance, and demonstrates compliance with Occupational Safety and Health Act regulations.)
BACKGROUND
According to the Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy, water wells are classified by the nature and size of the population they serve. Type I community water wells provide year-round service to at least 25 people or at least 15 living units. Type II noncommunity water wells serve at least 25 people for at least six months per year or at least 60 days per year, depending on their usage. Type II wells are further classified based on their water production: 1) type IIa wells have an average production of 20,000 gallons or more per day during their peak month; and 2) type IIb wells have an average production of less than 20,000 gallons per day during their peak month. Type III noncommunity public water wells are any wells not considered type I or type II water wells that serve fewer than 25 people and 15 connections, or that operate for fewer than 60 days a year.
Legislative Analyst: Tyler P. VanHuyse
FISCAL IMPACT
The bill would have no fiscal impact on the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs or local units of government. The bill would modify an existing permitting process at the Department and would not increase operating costs.
Fiscal Analyst: Elizabeth Raczkowski
This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.