The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
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PETITION OF:
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In the Year Two Thousand and Seven.
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An Act to update the bottle deposit system and lower the cost of recycling beverage containers in the Commonwealth. |
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
SECTION 1. PURPOSE: An economically sound and environmentally safe solid waste management strategy includes components of conservation, source reduction, reuse, recycling and litter control. In order to stimulate the construction of an appropriate infrastructure in an integrated system of solid waste management, business and government must engage in cooperative participation to accomplish these goals. The following statutory changes are necessary in order to stimulate the creation of an appropriate solid waste management infrastructure: expanded access and participation to comprehensive recycling programs, development of comprehensive litter abatement programs, analysis and expansion of markets for recyclable materials, and facilitation of expanded residential and commercial recycling throughout the Commonwealth.
SECTION 2. Chapter
21A of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is hereby
amended by inserting after Section 18A the following new section:—
Section 18B. The Secretary shall establish a program to determine the use of
recyclable materials in the Commonwealth. Such program shall include, but not
be limited to, a method for determining the percentage of recyclable material
that is actually reused rather than discarded. The Secretary shall file a
report on the program annually with the Joint Committee on Natural Resources
and Agriculture, the Joint Committee on Energy, and the House and Senate
Committees on Ways and Means on or before December thirty-first of each year.
The report shall contain, but not be limited to, information concerning
statewide use of recycled material in the Commonwealth.
SECTION 3. Chapter
21H of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is hereby
amended by inserting after Section 7 the following new section:—
Section 7A. The Department shall establish a program to increase recycling
opportunities at public facilities visited by at least five thousand
individuals annually, including but not limited to, stadiums, arenas, marinas,
airports, theatres, and pedestrian walkways. The Department shall work with
MassPort, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, the State Racing Commission, the
Bureau of State Office Buildings, WasteCap of Massachusetts, and other entities
in order to establish a program. The Department shall file a report on the
program annually with the Joint Committee on Natural Resources and Agriculture,
the Joint Committee on Energy, and the House and Senate Committees on Ways and
Means on or before December thirty-first of each year. The report shall
contain, but not be limited to, activities promoting recycling at public
facilities visited by at least five thousand individuals annually.
SECTION 4. Section
33 of Chapter 92 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition
is hereby amended by inserting after the first paragraph the following new
paragraph:—
The Commission shall include the development of recycling opportunities in all
new designs and redesigns of reservations.
SECTION 5. Section
33 of Chapter 92 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official
Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after the second paragraph the
following new paragraph:—
The Commission shall establish a program to increase recycling opportunities in
all public reservations located within the metropolitan parks district. The
Commission shall file a report on the program annually with the Joint Committee
on Natural Resources and Agriculture, the Joint Committee on Energy, and the
House and Senate Committees on Ways and Means on or before December
thirty-first of each year. The report shall contain, but not be limited to,
activities promoting recycling in all public reservations within the
metropolitan parks district.
SECTION 6.
Effective July 1, 2007, Chapter 94 of the General Laws is hereby amended by
inserting a new section 323F:—
Section 323F. Clean Environment Fund.
(a) There shall be established on the books of the Commonwealth a separate fund
to be known as the Clean Environment Fund (the “Fund”). Amounts deposited in
said fund shall be used, subject to appropriation, for programs described in
paragraphs (c) through (f) of this section.
(b) The Fund shall be governed by the Solid Waste Management Board (the
“Board”). The members of the Board shall consist of eleven persons appointed by
the Governor, each of whom shall be represented by the following: the Secretary
of Environmental Affairs, five representatives from the various segments of
business and industry being assessed pursuant to Section 323G of Chapter 94
(beverage container manufacturer, wholesaler/distributor, and dealer), two
representatives of the solid waste management and recycling industries, two
representatives of statewide environmental organizations, and one
representative of organized labor.
(c) Not more than sixty-five percent of amounts deposited in the Fund shall be
used for recycling collection programs including, but not limited to, municipal
performance-based incentive grants; unit-based pricing programs; municipal
grants for recycling equipment and technical assistance; private sector grants
to qualified redemption centers in order to develop innovative materials
collection operations; and recycling media and education campaigns.
(d) Not more than fifteen percent of amounts deposited in the Fund shall be
used for recycling market development programs including, but not limited to,
the recycling loan fund for small recycling businesses; demonstration projects
to process and manufacture recycled products; recycled product purchasing by
state agencies; municipal buy recycled programs; and expanded source reduction
initiatives.
(e) Not more than twenty percent of amounts deposited in the fund shall be used
for litter prevention and removal programs including, but not limited to, a
state grant program for litter pickup and removal; litter education programs
for the public and for schools; research relating to litter control; and
enforcement of litter related laws in state/municipal-owned places and areas
that are accessible to the public.
(f) The amounts deposited in the Fund shall be used to promote and expand waste
diversion programs in the Commonwealth. This shall include, but not be limited
to, enhancing capabilities to recycle beverage containers in residential and
commercial programs, improving access to comprehensive recycling and composting
programs, providing technical assistance to residential and commercial
recycling and composting programs, promoting reduction efforts, improving
markets for diverted material, and other such programs as determined by the
Board. The Fund shall also support comprehensive litter prevention and control
measures including, at a minimum, a statewide litter education and prevention
campaign, promotion of voluntary and public/private partnerships for litter
control, and coordination of existing litter programs in the state.
Subject to the approval of the Board, the Department of Environmental
Protection shall develop model municipal litter prevention and control
programs. Monies distributed from the Fund, to eligible municipalities, shall
be used solely to supplement litter pickup and removal activities. To be
eligible for a grant under this section, a municipality must certify to the
department the adoption of at least one of the model programs.
A sum of not less than $250,000 shall be allocated to WasteCap of Massachusetts
on an annual basis for developing programs that shall include, but are not
limited to, enhancing the ability of existing Massachusetts’ manufacturers to
utilize and process recovered materials; assisting businesses and technologies
in the Commonwealth; identifying support needs (i.e., research and technical
assistance); and addressing waste reduction and recycling issues confronted by
businesses (i.e., Awareness Campaigns, Business Recycling Cooperatives, Buy
Recycled Programs).
(g) The Board shall submit to the Secretary of Administration and Finance, the
House and Senate Committees on Ways and Means, the Joint Committee on Energy,
and the Joint Committee on Natural Resources and Agriculture an annual report
of its activities and an evaluation of any and all programs entered into during
the course of the fiscal year.
SECTION 7. Section
323F of Chapter 94 is hereby amended by adding the following new section:—
323G. Assessment.
Between January 1, 2010 and December 31, 2010
an amount not to exceed five million six hundred thousand dollars ($5,600,000)
shall be deposited into said Fund based on assessments levied by the
Commissioner of Revenue (“Commissioner”) as follows:
(a) Distributors/wholesalers shall contribute the sum of five million two
hundred sixty-four thousand dollars ($5,264,000). The Commissioner shall
compute the assessment for each distributor/wholesaler of these beverages based
on the distributor/wholesaler’s pro-rated share of the total number of beverage
containers sold within the state between January 1, 2008
and December 31, 2008. The Commissioner shall undertake the necessary steps
to obtain beverage container sales information for this period, shall treat the
information as confidential, and, by June 30, 2009,
shall compute each distributor/wholesaler’s assessment and notify each
distributor/wholesaler of his assessment.
(b) Beverage container manufacturers shall contribute the sum of two hundred
eighty thousand dollars ($280,000). After consultation with the Can
Manufacturers Institute, Glass Packaging Institute, American Plastics Council,
and the Steel Recycling Institute, the Board shall file a report with the
Commissioner, no later than June 30, 2009,
detailing the assessment on beverage container manufacturers.
(c) Dealers shall contribute the sum of fifty-six thousand dollars ($56,000).
This assessment shall be in addition to any liability of dealers who may also
be subject to assessments as distributor/wholesalers under paragraph (a). After
consultation with the Massachusetts Food Association and the Massachusetts
Package Store Association, the Board shall file a report with the Commissioner,
no later than June 30, 2009, detailing the assessment on dealers.
SECTION 8. The effective date of Sections 10 through 19 is January 1, 2010.
SECTION 9. Chapter
94 of the General Laws as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is hereby
amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-one and replacing it with
the following new section:—
Section 321. DEFINITIONS. The following definitions shall, unless the context
clearly requires otherwise, have the following meaning:
“Beverage,” carbonated, noncarbonated-alcoholic and noncarbonated-nonalcoholic
drinks intended for human consumption except milk and dairy derived products,
infant formula, or medical food.
“Beverage container,” any sealable bottle, can, jar, or carton, which is
primarily composed of glass, metal, plastic or any combination of those
materials and is produced for purpose of containing a beverage. This definition
shall not include containers made of biodegradable material.
“Beverage container manufacturer,” any person who engages in the manufacture or
fabrication of beverage containers.
“Carbonated beverage,” soda water or similar carbonated soft drinks, mineral
water, and beer and other malt beverages intended for human consumption.
“Dealer,” any person including any operator of a vending machine who sells,
offers to sell or engages in the sale of beverages in beverage containers to
consumers in the state.
“Distributor/wholesaler,” any person who engages in the sale of beverages in
beverage containers directly to dealers in the state, including any
manufacturer who engages in such sales.
“Infant formula,” any liquid food described or sold as an alternative for human
milk for the feeding of infants.
“Manufacturer,” any person who bottles, cans, or otherwise places beverages in
beverage containers for sale to a distributor/wholesaler or dealer.
“Medical food,” a food or beverage that is formulated to be consumed, or
administered enterally under the supervision of a physician, and that is
intended for specific dietary management of diseases or health conditions for
which distinctive nutritional requirements, based on recognized scientific
principles, are established by medical evaluation. A “medical food” is a
specially formulated and processed product, for the partial or exclusive
feeding of a patient by means of oral intake or enteral feeding by tube, and is
not a naturally occurring foodstuff used in its natural state. “Medical food”
includes any product that meets the definition of “medical food” in the federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. Sec.360ee (b)(3)).
“Noncarbonated-alcoholic beverage,” any liquid intended for human consumption
and containing one-half of one percent or more of alcohol by volume at sixty
degrees Fahrenheit, including wine and wine-based drinks, spirits and spirit-based
drinks and hard cider.
“Noncarbonated-nonalcoholic beverage,” fruit and vegetable juice, still water,
iced tea, sports drinks and other noncarbonated drinks intended for human
consumption, except for milk and dairy derived products, infant formula, or
medical food.
“Sales within the state,” within the exterior limits of the state of Massachusetts
and includes all territory within these limits owned by or ceded to the United States of America.
SECTION 10. Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-two.
SECTION 11. Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-three.
SECTION 12. Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-three B.
SECTION 13.
Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is
hereby amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-three C and
replacing it with the following new section:—
Section 323C. Abandoned deposit amounts; determination.
Any amounts that are or should be in a bottler’s or distributor’s Deposit
Transaction Fund and that are in excess of the sum of (a) income earned on
amounts in said account and (b) the total amount of refund values received by
said bottler or distributor for non-reusable beverage containers shall be
deemed to constitute abandoned deposit amounts. Income earned on said fund may
be transferred from said fund for use as funds of the bottler or distributor.
SECTION 14.
Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is
hereby amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-three D and
replacing it with the following new section:—
Section 323D. Transfer of abandoned deposit amounts.
Each bottler or distributor shall turn over to the commissioner of revenue any
deposit amounts deemed to be abandoned, pursuant to section three hundred and
twenty-three C. Such amounts may be paid from the Deposit Transaction Fund.
Amounts collected by the commissioner of revenue pursuant to this section shall
be deposited into the Clean Environment Fund, established pursuant to section
three hundred and twenty-three F.
SECTION 15. Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition is amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-three E.
SECTION 16. Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-five.
SECTION 17.
Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is
hereby amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-six and replacing
it with the following section:—
Section 326. Administration; rules and regulations.
The secretary of environmental affairs shall administer the provisions of
sections three hundred and twenty-one, three hundred and twenty-three F, and
three hundred and twenty-four. Said secretary shall promulgate and from time to
time revise rules and regulations to effectuate the purposes of said sections.
The commissioner of revenue shall administer the provisions of sections three
hundred and twenty-three C, three hundred and twenty-three D, and three hundred
and twenty-three G. The collection of revenues pursuant to sections three
hundred and twenty-three D and three hundred and twenty-three G by said
commissioner shall, to the extent consistent with this chapter, be governed by the
provisions of chapter sixty-two C.
The commissioner of revenue shall promulgate and from time to time revise rules
and regulations to effectuate the purposes of said sections. Said rules and
regulations shall include a provision to permit manufacturers, wholesalers,
distributors and retailers to borrow, without any interest charge, against
their deposit transaction funds subject to such terms and conditions as the
commissioner deems appropriate.
Said secretary shall determine through rules and regulations which plastic
bottles and rigid plastic containers may be exempt from the labeling
requirements of section three hundred and twenty-three A, including but not
limited to the following: (1) readily identifiable plastic bottles and rigid
plastic containers; (2) plastic bottles and rigid plastic containers for which
there is no technological capability for recycling, reclamation or reuse; and
(3) plastic bottles and rigid plastic containers for which recycling,
reclamation or reuse is not economically feasible.
SECTION 18.
Chapter 94 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 Official Edition, is
hereby amended by striking section three hundred and twenty-seven and replacing
it with the following section:—
Section 327. Enforcement; penalty; interest.
The attorney general and district attorneys shall enforce the provisions of
sections three hundred and twenty-one to three hundred and twenty-seven,
inclusive. Any manufacturer, wholesaler, distributor, or retailer who knowingly
violates any provisions of sections three hundred and twenty-one to three
hundred and twenty-six, inclusive, shall be subject to a civil penalty for each
violation of not more than one thousand dollars.
Any manufacturer, wholesaler, distributor or retailer failing to make full and
timely payments as required by section three hundred and twenty-three G shall
pay interest on any unpaid amounts at the rate of one and one-half percent for
each month or part thereof until payment is made in full.