Massachusetts 2023-2024 Regular Session

Massachusetts House Bill H872 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/16/2023

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HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 3460       FILED ON: 1/20/2023
HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 872
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_________________
PRESENTED BY:
Steven Owens
_________________
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 a climate change superfund and promoting polluter responsibility.
_______________
PETITION OF:
NAME:DISTRICT/ADDRESS :DATE ADDED:Steven Owens29th Middlesex1/18/2023Lindsay N. Sabadosa1st Hampshire1/27/2023David Henry Argosky LeBoeuf17th Worcester1/27/2023Samantha Montaño15th Suffolk2/2/2023Mike Connolly26th Middlesex2/2/2023Jack Patrick Lewis7th Middlesex2/6/2023Jason M. LewisFifth Middlesex2/7/2023David M. Rogers24th Middlesex2/7/2023David Allen Robertson19th Middlesex2/8/2023James C. Arena-DeRosa8th Middlesex2/8/2023Frank A. Moran17th Essex2/8/2023Margaret R. Scarsdale1st Middlesex2/9/2023Carmine Lawrence Gentile13th Middlesex2/9/2023James B. EldridgeMiddlesex and Worcester2/10/2023Natalie M. Higgins4th Worcester2/23/2023Simon Cataldo14th Middlesex3/3/2023 1 of 14
HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 3460       FILED ON: 1/20/2023
HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 872
By Representative Owens of Watertown, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 872) of 
Steven Owens and others relative to establishing a climate change superfund and promoting 
polluter responsibility. Environment and Natural Resources.
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_______________
In the One Hundred and Ninety-Third General Court
(2023-2024)
_______________
An Act establishing a climate change superfund and promoting polluter responsibility.
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. The General Laws are hereby amended by inserting after Chapter 21O the 
2following chapter:
3 CHAPTER 21P
4 CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION COST RECOVERY ACT
5 Section 1. Definitions.
6 For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings 
7unless the context clearly requires otherwise:
8 "Applicable payment date", July first of the calendar year following the year in which this 
9chapter is enacted into law.   2 of 14
10 "Climate change adaptive infrastructure project", an infrastructure project designed to 
11avoid, moderate, repair or adapt to negative impacts of climate change or to assist communities, 
12households and businesses in preparing for future climate change-driven disruptions. Such 
13projects include but are not limited to restoring coastal wetlands and developing other nature-
14based solutions and coastal protections; upgrading storm water drainage systems; making 
15defensive upgrades to roads, bridges, subways, and transit systems; preparing for and recovering 
16from hurricanes and other extreme weather events; undertaking preventive health care programs 
17and providing medical care to treat illness or injury caused by the effects of climate change; 
18relocating, elevating, or retrofitting sewage treatment plants vulnerable to flooding; installing 
19energy efficient cooling systems and other weatherization and energy efficiency upgrades and 
20retrofits in public and private buildings, including schools and public housing; upgrading parts of 
21the electrical grid to increase stability and resilience, including supporting the creation of self-
22sufficient clean energy microgrids; addressing urban heat island effects through green spaces, 
23urban forestry, and other interventions; and responding to toxic algae blooms, loss of agricultural 
24topsoil, and other climate-driven ecosystem threats to forests, farms fisheries, and food systems.
25 “Commissioner”, commissioner of the department of environmental protection.
26 "Controlled group", two or more entities treated as a single employer under section 52(a) 
27or (b) or section 414(m) or (o) of the internal revenue code. Subsections (a) and (b) of section 52, 
28section 1563 of the internal revenue code shall be applied without regard to subsection(b)(2)(c). 
29For purposes of this article, entities in a controlled group are treated as a single entity for 
30purposes of meeting the definition of responsible party and are jointly and severally liable for 
31payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the controlled group. 3 of 14
32 "Cost recovery demand", a charge asserted against a responsible party for cost recovery 
33payments under the program for payment to the fund.
34 "Covered greenhouse gas emissions", with respect to any entity, the total quantity of 
35greenhouse gasses released into the atmosphere during the covered period, expressed in metric 
36tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, resulting from the use of fossil fuels or petroleum products 
37extracted, produced, refined, or sold by such entity.
38 "Covered period", the period that began January first, two thousand and ended on 
39December thirty-first, two thousand eighteen.
40 "Crude oil", oil or petroleum of any kind and in any form, including bitumen, oil sands, 
41heavy oil, conventional and unconventional oil, shale oil, natural gas liquids, condensates, and 
42related fossil fuels.
43 “Department”, department of environmental protection.
44 "Entity", any individual, trustee, agent, partnership, association, corporation, company, 
45municipality, political subdivision, or other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that 
46holds or held an ownership interest in a fossil fuel business during the covered period.
47 "Environmental justice population'', a neighborhood that meets 1 or more of the 
48following criteria: (i) the annual median household income is not more than 65 per cent of the 
49statewide annual median household income; (ii) minorities comprise 40 per cent or more of the 
50population; (iii) 25 per cent or more of households lack English language proficiency; or (iv) 
51minorities comprise 25 per cent or more of the population and the annual median household 
52income of the municipality in which the neighborhood is located does not exceed 150 per cent of  4 of 14
53the statewide annual median household income; provided, however, that for a neighborhood that 
54does not meet said criteria, but a geographic portion of that neighborhood meets at least 1 
55criterion, the secretary may designate that geographic portion as an environmental justice 
56population upon the petition of at least 10 residents of the geographic portion of that 
57neighborhood meeting any such criteria; provided further, that the secretary may determine that a 
58neighborhood, including any geographic portion thereof, shall not be designated an 
59environmental justice population upon finding that: (A) the annual median household income of 
60that neighborhood is greater than 125 per cent of the statewide median household income; (B) a 
61majority of persons age 25 and older in that neighborhood have a college education; (C) the 
62neighborhood does not bear an unfair burden of environmental pollution; and (D) the 
63neighborhood has more than limited access to natural resources, including open spaces and water 
64resources, playgrounds and other constructed outdoor recreational facilities and venues.
65 "Fossil fuel", coal, petroleum products and fuel gasses.
66 "Fossil fuel business", a business engaging in the extraction of fossil fuels or the refining 
67of petroleum products.
68 "Fuel gasses", shall include but not be limited to methane, natural gas, liquefied natural 
69gas, and manufactured fuel gasses.
70 "Fund", the climate change adaptation superfund. 
71 "Greenhouse gas", any chemical or physical substance that is emitted into the air and that 
72the department may reasonably anticipate will cause or contribute to climate change including, 
73but not limited to, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons 
74and sulfur hexafluoride. 5 of 14
75 “Nature-based solutions”, projects that utilize or mimic nature or natural processes and 
76functions and that may also offer environmental, economic, and social benefits, while increasing 
77resilience. Nature-based solutions include both green and natural infrastructure.
78 "Notice of cost recovery demand", the written communication informing a responsible 
79party of the amount of the cost recovery demand payable to the fund.
80 "Petroleum products", a product that is obtained from distilling and processing crude oil 
81and that is capable of being used as a fuel for the propulsion of a motor vehicle, boat or aircraft. 
82The term does not include 	naphtha-type jet fuel, kerosene-type jet fuel, a petroleum product 
83destined for use in chemical manufacturing or feedstock of that manufacturing or fuel oil used 
84for heating purposes.    
85 "Program", the climate change adaptation cost recovery program.
86 "Qualifying expenditure", an authorized payment from the fund in support of a climate 
87change adaptive infrastructure project, including its operation and maintenance, as defined by the 
88department.
89 "Responsible party", any entity or a successor in interest to such entity described herein, 
90which, during any part of the covered period, was engaged in the trade or business of extracting 
91fossil fuel or refining crude oil and is determined by the department to be responsible for more 
92than one billion tons of covered greenhouse gas emissions. The term responsible party shall not 
93include any person who lacks sufficient connection with the state to satisfy the nexus 
94requirements of the United States Constitution.
95 SECTION 2. The Climate Change Adaptation Cost Recovery Program. 6 of 14
96 (a) There is hereby established a climate change adaptation cost recovery program 
97administered by the department.
98 (b) The purposes of the program shall be the following
99 (1) To secure compensatory payments from responsible parties based on a standard of 
100strict liability to provide a source of revenue for climate change adaptive infrastructure projects 
101within the state;
102 (2) To determine proportional liability of responsible parties;
103 (3) To impose cost 	recovery demands on responsible parties and issue notices of cost 
104recovery demands;
105 (4) To accept and collect payment from responsible parties;
106 (5) To identify climate change adaptive infrastructure projects;
107 (6) To disperse funds to climate change adaptive infrastructure projects; and 
108 (7) To allocate funds in such a way as to achieve a goal that at least forty percent of the 
109qualified expenditures from the program, but not less than thirty-five percent of such 
110expenditures shall go to climate change adaptive infrastructure projects that directly benefit 
111environmental justice populations
112 (c)(1) A responsible party shall be strictly liable, without regard to fault, for a share of the 
113costs of climate change adaptive infrastructure projects, including their operation and 
114maintenance, supported by the fund. 7 of 14
115 (d) With respect to each responsible party, the cost recovery demand shall be equal to an 
116amount that bears the same ratio to seventy-five billion dollars as the responsible party's 
117applicable share of covered greenhouse gas emissions bears to the aggregate applicable shares of 
118covered greenhouse gas emissions of all responsible parties.
119 (e) The applicable share of covered greenhouse gas emissions taken into account under 
120this section for any responsible party shall be the amount by which the covered greenhouse gas 
121emissions attributable to such responsible party exceeds one billion metric tons.
122 (f) Where an entity owns a minority interest in another entity of ten percent or more, the 
123calculation of the entity's applicable share of greenhouse gas emissions taken into account under 
124this section shall include the applicable share of greenhouse gas emissions taken into account 
125under this section by the entity in which the responsible party holds a minority interest, 
126multiplied by the percentage of the minority interest held.
127 (g) In determining the amount of greenhouse gas emissions attributable to any entity, an 
128amount equivalent to nine hundred forty-two and one-half metric tons of carbon dioxide 
129equivalent shall be treated as released for every million pounds of coal attributable to such entity; 
130an amount equivalent to four hundred thirty-two thousand one hundred eighty metric tons of 
131carbon dioxide equivalent shall be treated as released for every million barrels of crude oil 
132attributable to such entity; and an amount equivalent to fifty-three thousand four hundred forty 
133metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent shall be treated as released for every million cubic feet 
134of fuel gasses attributable to such entity.
135 (h) The commissioner may adjust the cost recovery demand amount of a responsible 
136party refining petroleum products, or its successor, if such responsible party establishes to the  8 of 14
137satisfaction of the commissioner that a portion of the cost recovery demand amount was 
138attributable to the refining of crude oil extracted by another responsible party, or its successor 
139that accounted for such crude oil in determining its cost recovery demand amount.
140 (i) Payment of a cost recovery demand shall be made in full on the applicable payment 
141date unless a responsible party elects to pay in installments pursuant to paragraph j of this 
142subdivision.
143 (j) A responsible party may elect to pay the cost recovery demand amount in twenty-four 
144annual installments, ten percent of the total due in the first installment and the balance to be paid 
145in equal installments over the remaining years. If an election is made under this paragraph, the 
146first installment shall be paid on the applicable payment date and each subsequent installment 
147shall be paid on the same date as the applicable payment date in each succeeding year.
148 (k) If there is any addition to the original amount of the cost recovery demand for failure 
149to timely pay any installment required under this subdivision, a liquidation or sale of 
150substantially all the assets of the responsible party, including in a proceeding under u.s. code: 
151title 11 or similar case, a cessation of business by the responsible party, or any similar 
152circumstance, then the unpaid balance of all remaining installments shall be due on the date of 
153such event, or in the case of a proceeding under u.s. code: title 11 or similar case, on the day 
154before the petition is filed.The preceding sentence shall not apply to the sale of substantially all 
155of the assets of a responsible party to a buyer if such buyer enters into an agreement with the 
156department under which such buyer is liable for the remaining installments due under this 
157subdivision in the same manner as if such buyer were the responsible party. 9 of 14
158 (l) Within one year of the effective date of this article, the department shall promulgate 
159such regulations as are necessary to carry out this article, including but not limited to:
160 (i) Adopting methodologies using the best available science to determine responsible 
161parties and their applicable share of covered greenhouse gas emissions consistent with the 
162provisions of this article;
163 (ii) Registering entities that are responsible parties under the program;
164 (iii) Issuing notices of cost recovery demand to responsible parties informing them of the 
165cost recovery demand amount; how and where cost recovery demands can be paid; the potential 
166consequences of nonpayment and late payment; and information regarding their rights to contest 
167an assessment;
168 (iv) Accepting payments from, pursuing collection efforts against, and negotiating 
169settlements with responsible parties; and
170 (v) Adopting procedures for identifying and selecting climate change adaptive 
171infrastructure projects eligible to receive qualifying expenditures, including legislative budget 
172appropriations, issuance of requests for proposals from localities and not-for-profit and 
173community organizations, grants to private individuals, or other methods as determined by the 
174department, and for dispersing moneys from the fund for qualifying expenditures. When 
175considering projects intended to stabilize tidal shorelines, the department shall encourage using 
176nature-based solutions. Total qualifying expenditures shall be allocated in such a way as to 
177ensure at least forty percent of the qualified expenditures from the program shall go to climate 
178change adaptive infrastructure projects that benefit environmental justice populations.  10 of 14
179 (m). Within two years of the effective date of this article, the department shall complete a 
180statewide climate change adaptation master plan for the purpose of guiding the dispersal of funds 
181in a timely, efficient, and equitable manner to all regions of the state in accordance with the 
182provisions of this chapter. In completing such plan, the department shall:
183 (i) Collaborate with the secretary of state, department of housing and community 
184development, the department of agriculture, the department of energy resources, and the 
185department of public utilities.
186 (ii) Assess the adaptation needs and vulnerabilities of various areas vital to the state’s 
187economy, normal functioning, and the health and well-being of residents, including but not 
188limited to: agriculture, biodiversity, ecosystem services, education, finance, healthcare, 
189manufacturing, housing and real estate, retail, tourism (including state and municipal parks), 
190transportation, and municipal and local government.
191 (iii) Identify major potential, proposed, and ongoing climate change adaptive 
192infrastructure projects throughout the state;
193 (iv) Identify opportunities for alignment with existing federal, state, and local funding 
194streams;
195 (v) Consult with stakeholders, including local governments, businesses, environmental 
196advocates, relevant subject area experts, and representatives of disadvantaged communities;
197 (vi) Provide opportunities for public engagement in all regions of the state.
198  11 of 14
199 (n) The department and the attorney general are hereby authorized to enforce the 
200provisions of this article.
201 (o) The department shall provide an opportunity to be heard to any responsible parties 
202that seek to contest a cost recovery demand.determinations made in favor of a petitioner after 
203such hearing shall be final and conclusive. 
204 (p) Moneys received from cost recovery demands shall be deposited in the climate 
205change adaptation super fund 
206 (q) Projects funded pursuant to this article shall require compliance with prevailing wage 
207requirements pursuant to section two hundred twenty of the labor law.
208 (r) Any state entity or municipality receiving at least twenty-five million dollars 
209($25,000,000) from funds allocated pursuant to this article for a project costing greater than fifty 
210million dollars ($50,000,000) shall require use of apprenticeship agreements as defined by article 
211twenty-three of the labor law, with pre-apprenticeship direct entry providers registered with the 
212department of labor.
213 (s). Any state entity or municipality receiving at least twenty-five million dollars 
214($25,000,000) from funds allocated pursuant to this article for a project which involves the 
215construction, reconstruction, alteration, maintenance, 	moving, demolition, excavation, 
216development or other improvement of any building, structure or land, shall be subject to the 
217prevailing wage law
218 (t).(1) Any municipality or state entity, or a third party acting on behalf and for the 
219benefit of the municipality or state entity, in each contract for construction, reconstruction,  12 of 14
220alteration, repair, improvement or maintenance of a project receiving funds under this article that 
221is a public work, shall ensure that such contract contains a provision that the structural iron and 
222structural steel used or supplied in the performance of the contract or any subcontract thereto and 
223that is permanently incorporated into the public work, shall be produced or made in whole or 
224substantial part in the United States, its territories or possessions. In the case of a structural iron 
225or structural steel product, all manufacturing must take place in the United States, from the initial 
226melting stage through the application of coatings, except metallurgical processes involving the 
227refinement of steel additives. For the purposes of this subdivision, "permanently incorporated" 
228shall mean an iron or steel 	product that is required to remain in place at the end of the project 
229contract, in a fixed location, affixed to the public work to which it was incorporated. Iron and 
230steel products that are capable of being moved from one location to another are not permanently 
231incorporated into a public work.
232 (2) The provisions of paragraph (a) of this subdivision shall not apply if the head of the 
233department, agency, or municipal entity constructing the public work, in his or her sole 
234discretion, determines that the provisions would not be in the public interest, would result in 
235unreasonable costs, or that obtaining such steel or iron in the United States would increase the 
236cost of the contract by an unreasonable amount, or such iron or steel, including without 
237limitation structural iron and structural steel, cannot be produced or made in the United States in 
238sufficient and reasonably available quantities and of satisfactory quality.
239 (u)(1) The department shall conduct an independent evaluation of the climate change 
240adaptation cost recovery program. the purpose of this evaluation is to determine the effectiveness 
241of the program in achieving its purposes  13 of 14
242 (2) Such evaluation shall be provided to the governor, the temporary president of the 
243senate and the speaker of the assembly on or before January first of the second calendar year 
244following the year in which this article is enacted into law, and annually on or before September 
245thirtieth thereafter.
246  
247 SECTION 3. Climate Change Adaptation Fund. 
248 (a) There is hereby established within the Department of Environmental Protection a 
249special revolving fund to be known as the "climate change adaptation fund" for the purpose of 
250receiving moneys through cost recovery demands and issuing funds for qualifying expenditures 
251pursuant to the climate change adaptation cost recovery program 
252 (b) No monies shall be expended from the fund for any project except qualifying 
253expenditures pursuant to the program, including their operation and maintenance, as well as 
254reasonable costs incurred by the department of environmental conservation for administering the 
255program.
256 SECTION 4. Applicability of Chapter
257 (a)Nothing in this act shall be deemed to preclude the pursuit of a civil action or other 
258remedy by any person. The remedies provided in this act are in addition to those provided by 
259existing statutory or common law.
260 (b)If any word, phrase, clause, sentence, paragraph, section, or part of this act shall be 
261adjudged by any court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, 
262impair, or invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation to the word,  14 of 14
263phrase, clause, sentence, paragraph, section, or part thereof directly involved in the controversy 
264in which such judgment shall have been rendered.