82R8781 JAM-F By: Shapiro S.B. No. 1475 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT relating to environmental and public health protections regarding smelter facilities at which lead-acid battery recycling activities are conducted. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: SECTION 1. Section 361.133(c), Health and Safety Code, is amended to read as follows: (c) The commission may use the money collected and deposited to the credit of the account under this section, including interest credited under Subsection (b)(4), only for: (1) necessary and appropriate removal and remedial action at sites at which solid waste or hazardous substances have been disposed if funds from a liable person, independent third person, or the federal government are not sufficient for the removal or remedial action; (2) necessary and appropriate maintenance of removal and remedial actions for the expected life of those actions if: (A) funds from a liable person have been collected and deposited to the credit of the account for that purpose; or (B) funds from a liable person, independent third person, or the federal government are not sufficient for the maintenance; (3) expenses concerning compliance with: (A) the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. Section 9601 et seq.) as amended; (B) the federal Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (10 U.S.C. Section 2701 et seq.); and (C) Subchapters F and I; (4) expenses concerning the regulation and management of household hazardous substances and the prevention of pollution of the water resources of the state from the uncontrolled release of hazardous substances; (5) expenses concerning the cleanup or removal of a spill, release, or potential threat of release of a hazardous substance where immediate action is appropriate to protect human health and the environment; (6) expenses concerning implementation of the voluntary cleanup program under Subchapter S or federal brownfields initiatives; and (7) expenses, not to exceed 10 percent of the annually appropriated amount of the fees on batteries collected under Section 361.138, related to lead-acid battery recycling activities, including expenses for programs: (A) for assessment and remediation of environmental impacts of the activities; [and] (B) to create incentives for the adoption of innovative technology in lead-acid battery recycling to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of the recycling process or reduce the negative environmental impacts of the recycling process; and (C) for studies evaluating the effects of the activities on the public health. SECTION 2. Subtitle G, Title 5, Health and Safety Code, is amended by adding Chapter 428 to read as follows: CHAPTER 428. RISK REDUCTION AND EMISSIONS CONTROLS FOR LEAD-ACID BATTERY RECYCLING FACILITIES Sec. 428.001. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter: (1) "Air contaminant" has the meaning assigned by Section 382.003. (2) "Commission" means the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. (3) "Facility" means a smelter at which lead-acid battery recycling activities are conducted. (4) "Solid waste" has the meaning assigned by Section 361.003. Sec. 428.0015. EMISSIONS HEALTH RISK ASSESSMENT. (a) Using methods prescribed by commission rule, the owner or operator of a facility shall perform a comprehensive health risk assessment of the facility's air contaminant emissions that evaluates: (1) the negative public health effects, other than effects related to cancer risks, of each air contaminant and combination of contaminants the facility emits; and (2) the increased risk of cancer for members of the public associated with exposure to each known or suspected carcinogenic chemical or combination of chemicals contained in the facility's emissions. (b) Not later than March 1, 2012, the owner or operator of the facility shall complete the assessment required by Subsection (a) and present the assessment to the commission and to the governing body of each municipality within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of which the facility operates. (c) The assessment performed under this section must be based on information from air monitoring and an accurate inventory of the facility's emissions and must address: (1) the presence of contaminants emitted by the facility as they may be found in any environmental medium, including the air, water, and soil; and (2) all pathways and combinations of pathways by which an emitted contaminant may affect the health of an individual, including: (A) respiration; (B) dermal exposure; and (C) ingestion of contaminated soil or ingestion of contaminants contained in plants grown in contaminated soil or in animals contaminated by exposure to contaminants or by contaminated feed. (d) In developing the methods to be prescribed under Subsection (a), the commission shall work with any municipality within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of which a facility operates. (e) This section expires September 1, 2013. Sec. 428.0016. SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT RISK ASSESSMENT. (a) Using methods prescribed by commission rule, the owner or operator of a facility shall perform a comprehensive health risk assessment of the facility's active, inactive, and closed solid waste management units to assess the scope of actual and potential contamination of soil, groundwater, and surface water from solid waste management activities at the units. The assessment must evaluate: (1) the negative public health effects presented and potentially presented, other than effects related to cancer risks, by contamination of soil, groundwater, and surface water from solid waste management activities at the solid waste management units; and (2) the increased risk of cancer for members of the public associated with exposure to each known or suspected carcinogenic chemical or combination of chemicals presented and potentially presented by contamination of soil, groundwater, and surface water from solid waste management activities at the solid waste management units. (b) Not later than March 1, 2012, the owner or operator of the facility shall complete the assessment required by Subsection (a) and present the assessment to the commission and to the governing body of each municipality within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of which the facility operates. (c) The assessment performed under this section must address: (1) the presence of solid wastes as they may be found in any environmental medium, including the air, water, and soil; and (2) all pathways and combinations of pathways by which the solid wastes may affect the health of an individual, including: (A) respiration; (B) dermal exposure; and (C) ingestion of contaminated soil or ingestion of contaminants contained in plants grown in contaminated soil or in animals contaminated by exposure to contaminants or by contaminated feed. (d) In developing the methods to be prescribed under Subsection (a), the commission shall work with any municipality within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of which a facility operates. (e) This section expires September 1, 2013. Sec. 428.0017. CESSATION OF OPERATIONS. (a) The owner or operator of a facility shall cease operations of the facility immediately if an assessment performed under Section 428.0015 or 428.0016 reveals that exposure to the facility's air contaminant emissions, residues from air contaminant emissions, or contamination from solid waste results in: (1) a combined and cumulative lifetime increase in risks of deleterious, noncancerous health effects that exceeds a hazard index of one for daily, chronic exposure for individuals residing three miles or less from the facility; or (2) a lifetime risk of cancer greater than one in one million for individuals residing three miles or less from the facility. (b) Operations must remain ceased under this section until corrective action has been taken and the commission has approved, after hearing, the operation of the facility. (c) This section expires September 1, 2017. Sec. 428.002. CONTROLS FOR AIR CONTAMINANT EMISSIONS. (a) The owner or operator of a facility shall have installed at the facility emissions controls as prescribed by commission rule. Emissions controls must include: (1) electrostatic precipitators; (2) thermal oxidizers; (3) enhanced filtration systems; and (4) negative pressure and enhanced filtration systems for materials handling and processing areas. (b) The owner or operator of the facility semiannually shall demonstrate by means of a performance test that the facility's installed emissions controls are effective at achieving a 95 percent reduction in the facility's emissions air contaminants in the form of metals and organic chemicals as particulates and vapors associated with known or suspected carcinogens. The owner or operator shall submit the performance test report in a form prescribed by the commission to the commission and to each municipality within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of which the facility operates. (c) The owner or operator of the facility shall take corrective action as necessary to bring the emissions controls into compliance with this section not later than the 30th day after the date a performance test or other information available to the owner or operator, including information from air monitoring, indicates a deficiency in the effectiveness of the controls. Sec. 428.003. AIR MONITORING AND REPORTING. (a) The owner or operator of a facility at which lead-acid battery recycling activities are conducted shall: (1) have installed and continuously operate at the northern, southern, eastern, and western boundaries of the facility property air monitors to detect speciated metals and speciated volatile organic compounds; and (2) have installed and continuously operate continuous opacity monitors and continuous emissions monitors for particulate matter emissions and volatile organic compounds emissions from the facility's process stacks and vents. (b) The emissions information generated by the monitors described by Subsection (a)(2) must be posted in real time to a publicly accessible Internet website if such a website is provided by a municipality within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of which the facility operates. (c) In addition to the monitors required by Subsection (a)(1), the owner or operator of the facility shall install and continuously operate air monitors for the same purpose at other locations as required by commission rule and at locations specified by a municipality within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of which the facility operates. Sec. 428.004. SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT UNITS. The owner or operator of a facility shall install: (1) impervious and wear-resistant caps on the facility's closed or inactive waste management units; and (2) negative pressure and enhanced filtration systems in active solid waste management units. Sec. 428.005. ENFORCEMENT. (a) In addition to any other enforcement means available to the commission under Chapter 7, Water Code, to enforce this chapter, the commission shall revoke any permit the commission has issued to a facility on a finding by the commission, after notice and opportunity for hearing, that the owner or operator of the facility has violated this chapter or a rule adopted or order issued under this chapter two or more times in a period of 36 months or less. (b) A municipality within the boundaries or extraterritorial jurisdiction of which the facility operates may revoke any permit or other authorization the municipality has issued to the facility on a finding by the governing body of the municipality, after notice and opportunity for hearing, that the owner or operator of the facility has violated this chapter or a rule adopted or order issued under this chapter two or more times in a period of 36 months or less. SECTION 3. The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality shall adopt rules as necessary to implement Chapter 428, Health and Safety Code, as added by this Act, as soon as practicable after the effective date of this Act. SECTION 4. (a) The owner or operator of a smelter facility at which lead-acid battery recycling activities are being conducted on the effective date of this Act shall install all equipment or devices required by Sections 428.002-428.004, Health and Safety Code, as added by this Act, not later than September 1, 2012. (b) The owner or operator of a smelter facility at which lead-acid battery recycling activities are being conducted on the effective date of this Act shall conduct the first semiannual performance test required by Section 428.002, Health and Safety Code, as added by this Act, not later than December 1, 2012. SECTION 5. This Act takes effect September 1, 2011.