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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HJC
DATE TYPED 3/18/05
HB 1046/HJCS
SHORT TITLE Solid Waste Facility Permit Requirements
SB
ANALYST Hadwiger
APPROPRIATION
(in $000s)
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
New Mexico Department of Environment (NMED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HJC Substitute
The House Judiciary Committee substitute for HB1046 would amend the Solid Waste Act as fol-
lows:
1.
Change definitions of:
a.
“commercial hauler” to eliminate include persons who transport solid waste for
purposes other than disposing of the waste in a solid waste facility.
b.
“densified-refuse-derived fuel” to include only a product in pellet form.
c.
“director” would mean the Department of Environment (NMED) cabinet secre-
tary rather than the director of the Environmental Improvement Division (EID) of
that agency under current statute.
d.
“division” would mean NMED rather than the EID under current statute.
2.
Add definitions of:
a.
“dispose” or “disposal” to mean “causing, allowing or maintaining the abandon-
ment, discharge, deposit, placement, injection, dumping, spilling or leaking of any
solid waste into or on any land or water.”
b.
“large solid waste facility” would mean a solid waste facility not defined as a
pg_0002
House Bill 1046/HJCS -- Page 2
small solid waste facility.
c.
“permit” would mean an authorization to own, operate, construct or close a solid
waste facility, including but not limited to specified forms.
d.
“small solid waste facility” would include:
i.
an animal crematorium that is a multi-chambered unit with a total charging
capacity of less than five tons per day and is designed for the purpose of cre-
mating dead animals and animal parts.
ii.
a composting facility on less than five acres with a design capacity of 25 tons
or less per day on a dry weight basis and that only utilizes less than five dry
tons per day of sewage sludge, yard refuse or other types of feedstock.
iii.
a recycling facility with a design capacity of twenty-five tons or less per day.
iv.
a transfer station with a total operational rate of 120 cubic yards or less per
day of solid waste, which does not include separated recyclable material.
v.
an incineration facility used for burning yard refuse that operates by force-
fully projecting a curtain of air across an open chamber or pit in which com-
bustion occurs, controls emission of the combustion products and is not de-
signed to process more than ten tons of yard refuse per hour.
e.
“transfer station” would mean a facility used to receive and temporarily store
solid wastes or to transfer solid wastes directly from smaller to larger vehicles for
transport to a solid waste facility, excluding the operations premises of a duly li-
censed commercial hauler who receives, temporarily stores or transfers solid
waste in accordance with regulations adopted by the Environmental Improvement
Board (EIB).
3.
Differentiate permitting requirements for large and small solid waste facilities, such that
existing statutes would apply to large solid waste facilities and additional language would
be added to streamline the permitting and closure process for small solid waste facilities,
including giving the director discretion to determine if there is significant public interest
to merit a public hearing on a permit application for a small solid waste facility and re-
quiring prior hearings for adjudicatory actions.
4.
Public notice of permit applications for both large and small solid waste facilities would
include, in addition to certified mail, public posting and publication in a newspaper of
general circulation under current statute, providing the notice to residents of each com-
munity significantly affected by the proposed facility through at least one other medium
such as radio, television or newsletter distributed to the community.
Significant Issues
According to DFA, the original bill would streamline the permitting process and closure-post
closure plans for small solid waste facilities. The comments appear relevant to the HJC substi-
tute as well. These features would support the efforts of communities to:
- Provide solid waste facilities through small transfer stations
- Provide facilities for composting, recycling and yard waste burning that would otherwise go
to a landfill
- Provide for safe and convenient operation small solid waste facilities
DFA further noted that the registration process for small solid waste facilities would allow
NMED to document the operations and closure-post closure plans of these facilities while mini-
mizing registration costs to communities.
pg_0003
House Bill 1046/HJCS -- Page 3
NMED concurred about the benefits above and added that the bill requires public hearings for
small solid waste facilities only if significant public interest exists, which reduces the current re-
quirement for a public hearing for all solid waste facilities. This change is a significant reduction
in requirements on local governments in their efforts to provide solid waste services to their
communities and rural areas.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
NMED indicated there would be no fiscal impact on that agency from the bill.
DH/lg:yr