Massachusetts 2023-2024 Regular Session

Massachusetts House Bill H736 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/16/2023

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HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 2689       FILED ON: 1/19/2023
HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 736
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
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PRESENTED BY:
David Henry Argosky LeBoeuf
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To the Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in General
Court assembled:
The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the adoption of the accompanying bill:
An Act establishing the climate resilient capital task force.
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PETITION OF:
NAME:DISTRICT/ADDRESS :DATE ADDED:David Henry Argosky LeBoeuf17th Worcester1/19/2023 1 of 7
HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 2689       FILED ON: 1/19/2023
HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 736
By Representative LeBoeuf of Worcester, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 736) of 
David Henry Argosky LeBoeuf for legislation to establish a climate resilient capital task force to 
recommend options for the uninterrupted continuity of Commonwealth civil government under 
worst-case climate scenarios. Emergency Preparedness and Management.
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
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In the One Hundred and Ninety-Third General Court
(2023-2024)
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An Act establishing the climate resilient capital task force.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority 
of the same, as follows:
1 SECTION 1. Chapter 21N of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2020 Official 
2Edition, is hereby amended by adding the following section:-
3 Section 12. (1) There is hereby established a Climate Resilient Capital Task Force for the 
4purpose of identifying, considering, and recommending options for the uninterrupted continuity 
5of Commonwealth civil government under worst-case climate scenarios either by the defense of 
6the existing state capital and neighborhoods or the relocation and distribution of state offices and 
7neighborhoods to more naturally advantageous sites. 
8 (2)(a) All members of the Task Force shall be appointed on or before August 15, 2023, 
9and the Task Force shall hold its first meeting on or before September 15, 2023. The Task Force 
10shall be composed of 17 members as follows: 
11 1. One member appointed by the Governor.  2 of 7
12 2. One member appointed by the Lieutenant Governor. 
13 3. One member appointed by the Secretary of the Commonwealth. 
14 4. One member appointed by the President of the Senate. 
15 5. One member appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate.
16 6. One member appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives. 
17 7. One member appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
18 8. Two members appointed by the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency. 
19 9. One member appointed by the Massachusetts AFL-CIO.
20 10. One member appointed by Associated Industries of Massachusetts.
21 11. One member appointed by the Massachusetts Municipal Association.
22 12. One member appointed by the Metropolitan Area Planning Council.
23 13. One member appointed by the University of Massachusetts.
24 14. One member appointed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
25 15. One member appointed by the Teamsters Local Unions 3, 25, 42, 59, 122, 127, 170, 
26404 and 653 in agreement.
27 16. One member appointed by the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management.
28 (b) Members of the Task Force may participate in meetings by telephone or by other 
29electronic means of communication.  3 of 7
30 (c) That the members of the Task Force should devote their full professional capacity to 
31the effort, and that the appointers under Section 2 should be free to choose appointees from 
32among the full diversity of the commonwealth’s residents, members of the Task Force shall 
33serve with compensation while performing their duties as described below and furthermore are 
34entitled to reimbursement for per diem and travel expenses in accordance applicable General 
35Laws and regulations. 
36 The Task Force may receive and expend such funds to carry out its mission as may be 
37authorized and appropriated or donated from time to time.
38 (d) Members of the Task Force shall, as first order of business, familiarize themselves 
39with the skills and ambitions of their colleagues and, by ranked choice ballots, choose a 
40presiding member to set meeting agendas, a secretary to take minutes and comply with public 
41records requests, and a treasurer to manage funds sent per paragraph (c) of this section, if any. 
42The Secretary of the Commonwealth shall conduct the vote.
43 (e) A majority of the Task Force may at any time call another vote to choose a new 
44presiding member, secretary or treasurer as in paragraph (d) of this section.
45 (f) Upon the death or resignation of any member, the office of their original appointer, or 
46the organization(s) named in Section 2 as appointer, shall re-appoint the successor member.
47 (g) The Task Force may by three-quarters of the members in approval adopt such other 
48internal rule or by-law as they deem fit provided such rule or by-law is in accordance with this 
49Act.
50 (3)(a) In conducting the study, the Task Force shall consider, without limitation:  4 of 7
51 1. The maintenance and defense of the current capital in Boston, as follows:
52 a. For the purpose of creating a microcosm on which decisions about the larger city may 
53be made, the Task Force shall estimate the probability-weighted cost of catastrophic storm 
54damage to the State House, the offices of the agencies, and the offices of the Supreme Judicial 
55Court as currently situated, as well as at least one high-risk coastal or riparian residential 
56neighborhood within 15 miles of the State House as the crow flies (e.g., Nahant, Hull, Back Bay, 
57etc.). This cost shall be calculated assuming the low-likelihood, high impact scenario of 1.75 
58meters of sea level rise by 2100 as published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 
59(IPCC) 2021 Physical Science Basis Summary for Policymakers, or the most recent IPCC report 
60published as of the appointment of this Task Force, as well as the low-likelihood, high impact 
61estimates for storm intensity and other factors over and above that sea level rise. This cost shall 
62include the economic losses and cost to residents of interruption to the Commonwealth’s 
63governing institutions.
64 b. The Task Force shall define the high-confidence climate resilience defense against this 
65low-likelihood, high impact scenario in the form of upgrades to the region and surroundings of 
66the State House, to the offices of the agencies, and to the offices of the Supreme Judicial Court, 
67and the chosen neighborhood(s), each as presently situated. This resilience plan shall describe 
68the required road, rail, airport, seaport, and communications infrastructure essential to preserve 
69the functions of these offices and the security of these residences. This resilience plan shall 
70include ecotone water levees, seawalls, or other measures of defense against sea level rise in 
71Boston and co-flooding low-lying communities. The resilience plan shall be designed such that, 
72if put into practice, it will in every way possible result in net zero additional emissions. 5 of 7
73 c. The Task Force shall estimate the material and labor cost of the resilience plan; the 
74additional cost of Massachusetts workforce training and apprenticeship needed to effect the 
75resilience plan with local hands; the cost of the purchase without taking of any land or property 
76required; the cost of removing and recultivating any ecology or natural habitat so displaced; and 
77the time needed for the resilience plan to be effected.
78 d. In every estimate of the above, uncertainty shall be a given, such that estimates should 
79be rendered no more precisely than is warranted, at a minimum with ranges around the correct 
80order of magnitude of the cost in dollars or the time in months.
81 2. The relocation and distribution of capital offices throughout the Commonwealth, as 
82follows: 
83 a. For the purpose of creating a microcosm on which decisions about the larger city may 
84be made, the Task Force shall define the relocation plan, either for a new capital and new 
85neighborhoods near the geographic center of the Commonwealth or for separate capital districts 
86and neighborhoods distributed throughout the Commonwealth. In the interests of long-term 
87stability, the relocation plan shall not place any new office, neighborhood or district below the 
88estimated inundation elevation, calculated under the assumption of the melting of all ice across 
89the globe, as most recently published by the United States Geological Survey. The relocation 
90plan shall relocate the executive branch offices; the offices of the agencies, the halls, chambers 
91and offices of the General Court; the Supreme Judicial Court, and the chosen neighborhood(s). 
92The relocation plan shall account for the likelihood of rain and river flood, fire, and damaging 
93winds in any prospective site. The relocation plan shall be designed such that, if put into practice, 
94it will in every way possible result in net zero additional emissions. 6 of 7
95 b. The Task Force shall estimate the material and labor cost of the relocation plan; the 
96additional cost of Massachusetts workforce training and apprenticeship needed to effect the 
97relocation with local hands; the cost of the purchase without taking of any land or property 
98required; the cost of removing and recultivating any ecology or natural habitat so displaced; and 
99the time needed for the relocation plan to be effected.
100 c. The Task Force shall estimate the economic impact of relocation on Boston and 
101surrounding communities; the economic impact on the new location or locations and surrounding 
102communities; the impact on housing costs in Boston and on the new location or locations; the 
103required density changes; the impact on democratic participation of residents of the furthest 
104Berkshire, Dukes, Barnstable, and Nantucket counties; the climate justice implications of such a 
105relocation; and any other considerations the Task Force may deem necessary and proper to 
106estimate.
107 d. In every estimate of the above, uncertainty shall be a given, such that estimates should 
108be rendered no more precisely than is warranted, at a minimum with ranges around the correct 
109order of magnitude of the cost in dollars or the time in months.
110 (b) The Task Force may request data, information, and assistance from any state agency, 
111local government, or any political subdivision thereof, which to the extent permitted by law shall 
112provide the Task Force with all relevant information and assistance on any matter within their 
113knowledge or control as promptly as is reasonably practicable. The Task Force may: (i) use such 
114voluntary and uncompensated services of private individuals, agencies and organizations as may 
115from time to time be offered and needed; and (ii) hold regular, public meetings and fact-finding 
116hearings and other public forums as it may consider necessary. The Task Force shall be subject  7 of 7
117to the provisions of Chapter 30A, Section 11B. The Task Force shall be subject to the 
118requirements of Chapter 66. The secretary of the Task Force shall be responsible for compliance 
119under Chapter 66 Section 10.
120 (4) No later than 18 months after the first meeting of the Task Force, the Task Force shall 
121submit a report of the resilience plan, including findings and recommendations, to each appointer 
122under Section 2, including but not limited to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and the 
123Speaker of the House of Representatives, and also to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Judicial 
124Court, and shall publish electronically the same for public review. No later than 18 months after 
125the report of the resilience 	plan, the Task Force shall submit a report of the relocation plan, 
126including findings and recommendations, to the same, and shall likewise publish it. The Task 
127Force shall be dissolved upon submission and publication of the relocation plan, except if at the 
128request of the Governor the Task Force shall continue for the purpose of advising on the 
129implementation of its recommendations.
130 (5) If any appointer under section 2 should fail to appoint their member or members of 
131the Task Force, or if any member should fail to participate meaningfully in the work of the Task 
132Force, or if the Task Force should fail to produce either or both plans, or if any state agency, 
133local government or political subdivision thereof should fail to provide the assistance or 
134information required under this Act, then the supreme judicial or superior court may, upon 
135petition of not less than ten taxable inhabitants of the commonwealth, compel the participation of 
136said delinquent or delinquents, levy fines against compensation already paid up to and including 
137the amount of compensation awarded here, or both.