47 | | - | PART I SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the use of composted organics benefits farmers, enhances soil health and the ability of the soil to sequester carbon, and reduces waste going into landfills and the subsequent methane emitted by this waste. The purpose of this Act is to support local farmers while addressing the urgent need to expand the State's capacity for capturing and processing the organic waste its residents and visitors generate to reduce landfill waste and reinforce the State's commitment to taking effective and immediate action to protect our climate. This Act also clarifies that composting facilities are excluded from buffer zone requirements that apply to solid waste landfills and defines a class of artisan-scale composting operations, including the applicable regulations. SECTION 2. Section 342H-52, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§342H-52 Prohibitions; buffer zones. (a) No person, including any federal agency, the State, or any county, shall construct, operate, modify, expand, or close a municipal solid waste landfill unit, or any component of a municipal solid waste landfill unit, without first obtaining a permit from the director. All permits for municipal solid waste landfill units shall be subject to any terms and conditions that the director determines are necessary to protect human health or the environment. (b) No person, including the State or any county, shall construct, modify, or expand a [waste or] disposal facility including a municipal solid waste landfill unit, any component of a municipal solid waste landfill unit, a construction and demolition landfill unit, or any component of a construction and demolition landfill unit without first establishing a buffer zone of no less than one-half mile around the [waste or] disposal facility. This subsection shall not apply to the continued operation of an existing [waste or] disposal facility that is properly permitted; provided that continued operation does not require physical expansion, vertical or horizontal, of the facility requiring additional permitting review and a permit modification. For the purposes of this subsection: "Buffer zone" means the distance between the edge of waste or waste activity and the nearest residential, school, or hospital property line. ["Waste or disposal facility" excludes individual, state certified, non-industrial redemption centers.]" PART II SECTION 3. Chapter 225P, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§225P- Artisan-scale composting program. (a) There is established within the department a class of artisan-scale composting operations that are sited on land zoned industrial or agricultural. Each artisan-scale composting operation shall disclose their operation to the department and shall be exempt from requiring a solid waste management facilities permit; provided that such operations do not produce vectors, dust, or odors that unreasonably impact neighbors of the operation, as determined by the department; provided further that no waste accepted by the operation remains on-site for more than thirty-six months; provided further that treated lumber, sewage sludge, animal waste, fats, oils, and grease shall be accepted as waste by an operation. (b) No more than one exempt facility specified in this section may be located on geographically contiguous land owned or operated by the same person. Sufficient bulking agent shall be used to provide proper aeration and control leachate migration. In order to maintain the compost permitting exemption, an artisan scale composting operation shall maintain documentation that the operation is in compliance with this section; provided that the documentation shall include but is not limited to the amount and type of waste accepted and when and where the finished compost is land-applied. (c) All artisan-scale composting operations shall make records available for the department to review upon request. (d) For the purposes of this section, "artisan-scale composting operation" means a composting operation that accepts, measured on a monthly average, no more than one cubic yard of green waste or yard trimmings, agricultural materials, vegetable and fruit waste, or coffee grounds and tea leaves per month at a site controlled and owned by the waste generator with the finished compost applied and controlled by the same waste generator." PART III SECTION 4. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050. |
---|
| 47 | + | PART I SECTION 1. Section 342G-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "food waste" to read as follows: ""Food waste" means all animal and vegetable solid wastes [generated by food facilities and residences] that result from the storage, preparation, cooking, or handling of food." SECTION 2. Section 342H-52, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows: "(b) No person, including the State or any county, shall construct, modify, or expand a waste or disposal facility including a municipal solid waste landfill unit, any component of a municipal solid waste landfill unit, a construction and demolition landfill unit, or any component of a construction and demolition landfill unit without first establishing a buffer zone of no less than one-half mile around the waste or disposal facility. This subsection shall not apply to the continued operation of an existing waste or disposal facility that is properly permitted; provided that continued operation does not require physical expansion, vertical or horizontal, of the facility requiring additional permitting review and a permit modification. For the purposes of this subsection: "Buffer zone" means the distance between the edge of waste or waste activity and the nearest residential, school, or hospital property line. "Recycling drop-off facility" means a structure or site designated for collection, temporary storage, and small scale (low technology) segregation of recyclable materials. "Waste or disposal facility" means: (1) A transfer station or landfill as defined in section 340A-1; (2) An open dump as defined in section 342H-1; (3) A solid waste reduction facility or waste reduction facility as defined in section 342G-1, except facilities designed primarily for composting organic material such as food waste and green waste, as those terms are defined in section 342G-1, and on-site school campus food waste composting programs; (4) A disposal facility; or (5) Any other facility for the disposal of solid waste that is required by law to obtain a permit from the department of health. "Waste or disposal facility" excludes recycling drop-off facilities, facilities for composting as defined in section 342G-1, and individual, state certified, non-industrial redemption centers." PART II SECTION 3. The legislature finds that the human-induced global climate requires a thoughtful, bold, and coordinated response on many fronts in order to reverse global warming and make Hawaii communities more resilient to the impact of storms, floods, fire, and sea level rise that threaten the very survivability of these fragile islands. Lest Hawaii lose its leadership position in meeting the future, and in the arenas of labor, justice, and equity, the legislature embraces aloha aina to decarbonize Hawaii's systems of food, energy, and transportation, and to sequester carbon through systems of agriculture, waste management, and ecosystem restoration. The good jobs created thereby also expand access to health, housing, and education, ensuring justice and equity for Hawaii's citizens. This part represents a forward step in adapting Hawaii to inevitable change. As evidence mounts that the earth's survival depends on transitioning away from carbon-based fuels, a greater understanding of the relationship between human activities and the earth's natural systems points to the additional need for an equally ambitious effort to remove carbon from the atmosphere by increasing the carbon sequestration capacity of earth's soils. The rationale for this strategy can be found in long-standing soil science as well as current sober assessments that greenhouse gas reduction efforts alone would be inadequate to restore livable climatic conditions. Even if humans stop emitting greenhouse gases (GHGs) immediately, the volume of GHGs already present in the atmosphere is enough to ensure increased warming for thirty years. While climate scientists have determined that 106.25 gigatons of carbon must be withdrawn from the atmosphere to reverse global warming, soil scientists have demonstrated that the potential for earth's soils to absorb carbon far exceeds this amount. Scientific studies demonstrate that because healthy soils are capable of holding twice the carbon stocks of plants, the key to building soil carbon sequestration capacity lies in building healthy soil. The legislature further finds that the use of composted organics with their vast stores of macro- and micro- nutrients greatly improves the health of all soils in ways that protect and enhance natural systems, while imported, petroleum-based, and energy-intensive fertilizers destabilize a healthy soil microbiome. The legislature also acknowledges that actions taken to improve soil health as a means to reverse climate change support Hawaii's goal, as outlined in the Aloha+ Challenge, of a seventy per cent reduction in the State's solid waste stream. Although the exact percentage varies from island to island, organics constitute the largest single component of Hawaii's waste stream, and account for at least fifty per cent of the materials discarded each year, with this category including food, food-contaminated paper, and yard trimmings. As grassroots initiatives like the City and County of Honolulu's recent single-use plastics ban expand statewide, and as businesses voluntarily adopt earth-friendly plastic substitutes, the percentage of organics in the waste stream will grow, making the diversion of waste organics into composting programs the least costly and most direct method for the State to meet its solid waste reduction goals. The legislature additionally finds that because organics in landfilled waste are the largest source of human-generated methane, and because methane is a GHG with a global warming potential thirty-six times that of carbon dioxide over a twenty-year period, the diversion of waste organics into composting programs offer the least costly and most direct method for significantly reducing the amount of methane emitted from Hawaii's landfills. The legislature also seeks to acknowledge the economic benefits that accrue to Hawaii's farmers when they are able to include compost sales and carbon sequestration incentives to their income streams. The purpose of this part is to address the urgent need to expand the State's capacity for capturing and processing the organic waste its residents and visitors generate in a way that reduces landfill waste while supporting local farmers and the State's commitment to take effective climate action. This part proposes to create a class of artisan-scale composting operations that are exempt from department of health regulations and easily established by farmers and others as a means to divert organic materials from Hawaii's landfills and sequester atmospheric carbon. SECTION 4. Chapter 225P, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§225P- Artisan-scale composting program. There is established within the department a class of artisan-scale composting operations that are sited on land zoned industrial or agricultural and are exempt from department of health rules given that these operations do not produce vectors, dust, or odors that unreasonably impact neighbors of the operation, as determined by the department, and when no waste accepted remains on-site for more than thirty-six months. No more than one exempt facility specified in this section may be located on geographically contiguous land owned or operated by the same person. Sufficient bulking agent shall be used to provide proper aeration and control leachate migration. For these facilities, precipitation, surface water, and groundwater that have come in contact with yard trimmings or the resultant product shall not be considered leachate, if it is managed within the site and is allowed to enter a surface waterbody or a conveyance to a surface waterbody, and does not cause a violation of state water quality standards." SECTION 5. Section 225P-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding two new definitions to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows: ""Artisan-scale" means a composting operation that accepts, measured on a monthly average, no more than one thousand pounds or one cubic yard, whichever is greater, of organic materials per week; provided that no more than two thousand pounds are accepted in any one week; a composting facility located at a site controlled by the waste generator; or a composting facility that accepts no more than three thousand cubic yards of yard trimmings per year. "Department" means the department of health." PART III SECTION 6. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 7. This Act shall take effect upon its approval. INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________ |
---|