SB284INTRODUCED Page 0 RBJGNY-1 By Senator Chambliss RFD: State Governmental Affairs First Read: 03-May-23 2023 Regular Session 1 2 3 4 5 6 RBJGNY-1 05/03/2023 ZAK (L) cr 2022-5217 Page 1 SYNOPSIS: This bill would provide for the inspection of certain dams and reservoirs by an engineer who shall submit an accompanying report to the Alabama Department of Environmental Management. The department would serve as a public repository for dam related documents. This bill would require certain dam owners to notify the department of any new dam construction or enlargement, as well as require certain dam owners to develop and file emergency action plans with the department. This bill would also provide for a Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program to be used in assisting dam owners in repairing and rehabilitating their dams. A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT Relating to dam safety; to provide for the inspection of certain dams and reservoirs by an engineer; to provide for the Alabama Department of Environmental Management to serve as a public repository for dam related documents; to require certain dam owners to develop emergency action plans; to require certain dam owners to notify the department of any new 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 2 dam construction or enlargement; and to provide for a Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF ALABAMA: Section 1. This act shall apply only to state-owned dams and reservoirs and dams and reservoirs whose owner or owners have elected to be subject to this act. Section 2. For the purposes of this act, the following terms have the following meanings: (1) ABANDON or ABANDONMENT. To render a dam non-impounding by dewatering and filling the reservoir created by the dam with solid materials, by diverting the natural drainway around the site, or by removing a portion of a dam to allow drainage to occur the same, or nearly the same, as before the construction of the dam. (2) ADVERSE CONSEQUENCES. Negative impacts that may occur upstream, downstream, or at locations remote from the dam. The primary concerns are loss of human life, disruption of public infrastructure, environmental impact, and economic loss, including property damage. (3) ALTERATIONS or REPAIRS. Alterations or repairs to an existing dam and appurtenant structures that affect the safety of the dam or reservoir. (4) APPURTENANT WORKS. The structures or machinery incident or annexed to a dam that are built to operate, assist, and maintain a dam. The term includes spillways, either in the dam or separate therefrom, the reservoir and its rim, low level outlet works, and water conduits, including tunnels, pipelines, or penstocks, either through the dam or 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 3 its abutments. (5) BREACH. Partial removal of a dam, creating a channel through the dam to the original stream bottom elevation. (6) DAM. a. An artificial barrier, including appurtenant works, with the ability to impound water, wastewater, or liquid borne materials and to which either of the following apply: 1. Is 25 feet or more in height from the natural bed of the stream or watercourse measured at the downstream toe of the barrier, or from the lowest elevation of the outside limit of the barrier, if it is not across a stream channel or watercourse, to the maximum water storage elevation. 2. Has an impounding capacity at maximum water storage elevation of 50 acre feet or more. b. The term includes a fill or structure for highway or railroad use or for any other purpose which impounds water. c. This definition does not apply to any barrier not in excess of six feet in height regardless of storage capacity or which has a storage capacity at maximum water storage elevation not greater than 15 acre feet regardless of height, unless the barrier, due to its location or other physical characteristics, is classified as a high hazard potential dam. d. This definition does not apply to any dam subject to the jurisdiction of any other state or federal agency. e. The term does not include any obstruction in a canal used to raise or lower water. f. This term does not include privately owned dams, 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 4 regardless of the hazard designation, unless the owner has voluntarily elected to participate in the program in accordance with this act. (7) DAYS. In establishing deadlines, means all calendar days, including Sundays and holidays. (8) DEPARTMENT. The Alabama Department of Environmental Management. (9) DIRECTOR. The Director of the Alabama Department of Environmental Management. (10) EMERGENCY. Includes all conditions leading to or causing a breach, overtopping, or any other condition of a dam and its appurtenant structures that may be construed as unsafe or threatening to life or property. (11) EMERGENCY ACTION PLAN. A plan that identifies the area that would likely be inundated by the failure of a dam and the actions that should be taken in the event of a failure or threatening condition at the dam. (12) ENGINEER. An engineer who has a background in civil engineering and: a. Is a licensed professional engineer. b. Is competent in areas related to dam investigation, design, construction, and operation for the type of dam being investigated, designed, constructed, or operated. c. Has relevant experience in areas such as investigation, design, construction, reconstruction, enlargement, repair, alteration, maintenance, operation, breach, removal, or abandonment of dams. d. Understands adverse dam incidents, failures, and the 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 5 potential causes and consequences of failures. e. Continues with necessary training and continuing education to keep abreast of the state of the practice in dam safety engineering. (13) ENLARGEMENT. Any change in or addition to an existing dam or reservoir that raises or may raise the water storage elevation of the water impounded by the dam. (14) HAZARD POTENTIAL. The possible adverse incremental consequences that result from the release of water or stored contents due to failure of the dam or misoperation of the dam or appurtenances. The hazard potential classification of a dam does not reflect in any way on the current condition of the dam and its appurtenant structures, including safety, structural integrity, or flood routing capacity. (15) HIGH HAZARD POTENTIAL DAM. A dam assigned the high hazard potential classification where the dam's failure or misoperation will likely cause loss of human life. (16) LOW HAZARD POTENTIAL DAM. A dam assigned the low hazard potential classification where failure or misoperation results in no probable loss of human life and low economic or environmental losses with those economic losses that do occur being principally limited to the owner's property. (17) PARTICIPATING OWNER. The state and its departments, institutions, or agencies that own a dam or reservoir. The term may also include all of the following that elect to be included in this definition by written affidavit delivered to the department: a. Any municipal or quasi-municipal corporation. 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 6 b. Any county or quasi-county corporation. c. Any public utility. d. Any district as defined by Section 11-99A-2, Code of Alabama 1975. e. Any person. f. The duly authorized agent, lessee, or trustee of any of the foregoing. g. Receivers or trustees appointed by any court for any of the foregoing. (18) PERSON. Any individual, bankruptcy trustee, firm, association, organization, partnership, business trust, corporation, LLC, LLP, or company. (19) PROBABLE. More likely than not to occur; reasonably expected; realistic. (20) RECONSTRUCTION. Removal and replacement of an existing dam or a portion thereof. (21) REMOVAL. Complete elimination of the dam embankment or structure to restore the approximate original topographic contours of the valley. (22) RESERVOIR. Any area that contains or will contain impounded water, wastewater, or liquid-borne materials by virtue of its having been impounded by a dam. This term does not include privately owned reservoirs, regardless of the hazard designation, unless the owner has elected to participate in the program in accordance with this act. (23) SIGNIFICANT HAZARD POTENTIAL DAM. A dam assigned the significant hazard potential classification where failure or misoperation results in no probable loss of human life but 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 7 can result in major economic loss, environmental damage, disruption of lifeline facilities, or other issues impacting public safety and welfare. (24) WATER STORAGE ELEVATION. The maximum elevation of water surface which can be obtained by the dam or reservoir. Section 3.(a) The department has neither inspection nor regulatory duty or responsibility. (b) Records pertaining to dams and reservoirs kept by and in the possession of the department shall be public documents. The department shall act as a repository to allow public access to documents related to dams. (c) Nothing in this act shall be construed to relieve a participating owner or operator of a dam or reservoir of the legal duties, obligations, or liabilities incident to the ownership or operation of the dam or reservoir. Section 4. (a) A participating owner shall ensure plans and specifications for initial construction, reconstruction, enlargement, alteration, repair, operation, breach, abandonment, or removal of dams and reservoirs, and the supervision of the construction of dams and reservoirs shall be in the charge of an engineer and assisted by qualified geologists and other specialists as necessary. (b) A participating owner of any dam or reservoir shall ensure the dam or reservoir is inspected a minimum of once every two years by an engineer who shall file with the department a record of the inspection. (c) A participating owner shall notify the department in writing of the construction or the enlargement of any dam 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 8 or reservoir. Plans and specifications signed and sealed by the design engineer shall accompany the notification. (d) Prior to the transfer of ownership of any dam or reservoir, the current participating owner shall notify the department of any proposed change in ownership. The subsequent owner may elect to continue participating in the inspection program but may also elect to cease participation with no penalty. Section 5. (a) It shall be the duty of the inspecting engineer to assign a hazard potential classification to dams and reservoirs. (b) In order to protect life and property, participating owners of high and significant hazard potential dams and reservoirs shall develop and file with the department an emergency action plan prepared by an engineer in consultation with the director of the local emergency management organization for the county or municipality in which the dam or reservoir is located which shall be implemented in the event of an emergency involving that participating owner's dam or dams. The participating owners of such dams shall periodically test and update this emergency action plan. This plan shall include all of the following elements: (1) Emergency notification plan with flowchart. (2) Statement of purpose. (3) Project description. (4) Emergency detection, evaluation, and classification. 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 9 (5) General responsibilities. (6) Preparedness. (7) Inundation maps or other acceptable description of the inundated area. (8) Appendices. (c) Participating owners of dams and reservoirs have the responsibility for determining when an emergency involving a dam or reservoir may exist. When the participating owner of a dam or reservoir makes this determination, the participating owner shall immediately implement the emergency action plan required by this section, notify any person who may be endangered if the dam should fail, notify emergency management organizations, and take additional actions necessary to safeguard life, health, and property. Section 6. (a) The department shall create a Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program or may partner with other public or private agencies or organizations to create a Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program, which shall be a revolving fund to be used exclusively for the purposes of this act. (b) The program shall initially be funded with monies appropriated by the Legislature. Subsequently, the program shall be funded through additional monies appropriated by the Legislature, payments of principal and interest collected by the department, monies paid to the fund pursuant to a directive of the Legislature, and all interest earned on the investment of monies in the fund by the State Treasurer. The Legislature may also subsequently authorize funding to expand the financial size of the program. 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 10 (c) The Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program may obtain funds through partnerships with any private or public bonding or loaning agency or organization. (d) State funding to the Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program shall not be reduced because of federal funds provided for a rehabilitation loan program. (e) Monies in the Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program shall not revert to the State General Fund. Monies in the fund are exempt from lapsing. Section 7. (a) If the balance of the Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program exceeds one million dollars ($1,000,000), no single loan shall be made for more than 20 percent of the monies available in the fund. No loan shall be made to any participating owner that, at the time of the loan application, has more than 20 percent of the outstanding loans of the fund. (b) The loans granted by the department shall be for a term of not more than 20 years and the loans shall bear interest at rates set by the department in the rules. (c) Each loan shall be evidenced by a contract between the participating owner and the department acting on behalf of this state. The contract shall provide for the loan by this state of a stated amount to defray some or all eligible costs. The contract shall provide for equal annual payments of principal and interest for the term of the loan. (d) All of the following costs and fees shall be eligible costs pursuant to subsection (c): (1) Any costs directly related to rehabilitating safety deficiencies of a dam. 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 11 (2) Fees for analysis, feasibility work, alternative evaluation, and engineering design after construction has been initiated, or at the point that analysis has shown a dam to be in compliance. (3) Up to 100 percent of rehabilitation costs for a dam. Participating owners may use multiple programs or sources to fund the rehabilitation costs for a dam. (4) Any costs directly related to compliance with other laws that are above the state's minimum dam safety requirements. (5) Any costs for state agency-required fish passage, if the costs are part of an overall rehabilitation project. (e) The department may take mutually agreeable security interest in the participating owner's property in exchange for the loan. If the department chooses to take a security interest in the participating owner's property, the department shall perfect that security interest by filing appropriate documentation with the proper authorities. (f) The Attorney General or the department's legal counsel, with the consent of the department, may commence whatever actions are necessary to enforce the contract and achieve repayment of loans provided by the department pursuant to this act. Section 8. The participating owner's responsibilities under the Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program shall include all of the following: (1) As part of the application process, participating owners must demonstrate the ability to appropriately operate 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 12 and maintain the dam after rehabilitation is complete. (2) Once a loan has been granted, creating an operation and maintenance plan with written, regularly scheduled reports so as to maintain and keep the structure and its appurtenant works in the state of repair and operating condition required by the exercise of prudence; due regard for life or property; the application of sound and accepted engineering principles; and applicable rules, guidelines, and policies. (3) As part of any rehabilitation project utilizing funds from this program, developing an emergency action plan if one does not currently exist. (4) Cooperating with the department's agents, engineers, and other employees in the conduct of the statute. (5) Facilitating access to the structure or appurtenance. (6) Furnishing, upon request, the plans, specifications, operating and maintenance data, or other information that is pertinent to the structure, appurtenance, and loan. Section 9. The following general loan guidelines apply: (1) Participating owners of dams without taxing authority shall be allowed to participate in the Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program. (2) Complete rehabilitations are to be encouraged, but phased projects can be funded. (3) Removal of dams as a rehabilitation alternative shall be allowed. (4) Participating owners are allowed to partner with an 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 13 individual, local agency, or organization for purposes of the loan and for purposes of operation and maintenance. (5) Rehabilitation projects that are in compliance with state statutes and rules, and are permitted, accepted, and approved by the department are eligible to be funded through the Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program. (6) Costs for lake enhancement projects such as lake dredging, sediment removal projects, or boat ramps, which do not enhance the safety of the dam, are not eligible to be funded through the Dam Rehabilitation Loan Program. (7) For dams and reservoirs for which a loan has been applied for, the department and its agents, engineers, and other employees may enter upon the land on which the dam is located or water which forms the reservoir without a search warrant or liability for trespass. (8) This act does not create a liability for damages against the department, its officers, agents, and employees caused by or arising out of any of the following: a. The construction, maintenance, operation, or failure of a dam or appurtenant works. b. The issuance and enforcement of an order or a rule issued by the department to carry out the department's duties. (9) The state does not assume ownership obligations, responsibilities, or liabilities if a participating owner defaults on a loan. Section 10. The department shall adopt rules as necessary to implement and administer this act. Section 11. This act shall become effective on the 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 SB284 INTRODUCEDSB284 INTRODUCED Page 14 first day of the third month following its passage and approval by the Governor, or its otherwise becoming law. 366 367 368 369