Bill Text: HI SB997 | 2022 | Regular Session | Amended


Bill Title: Relating To Environmental Management.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-12-10 - Carried over to 2022 Regular Session. [SB997 Detail]

Download: Hawaii-2022-SB997-Amended.html

THE SENATE

S.B. NO.

997

THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021

S.D. 1

STATE OF HAWAII

 

 

 

 

 

 

A BILL FOR AN ACT

 

 

RELATING TO ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT.

 

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:

 


     SECTION 1.  The legislature finds that the people of the State are entitled to have access to wastewater treatment system facilities that provide affordable, reliable, and sustainable services in their communities.  With wastewater being increasingly recognized as a valued source of renewable resources, regulatory agencies are urging wastewater treatment facilities that treat human and animal waste to be viewed as resource recovery facilities that produce water, energy, and nutrients.  The Water Environment Federation believes that wastewater treatment plants are not waste disposal facilities, but rather water resource recovery facilities that produce water, energy, and recover nutrients.  These facilities have the potential to reduce the nation's dependence on fossil fuels through the production and use of renewable energy.  These facilities have the possibility of generating gas that can service communities, biosolids that can be turned into fertilizer, and reclaimed water that can be used for golf courses, agricultural purposes, and landscaping.

     In 2020, the United States Supreme Court held that wastewater injection wells can be a regulated pollution source under the Clean Water Act in County of Maui, Hawaii v. Hawaii Wildlife Fund, 140 S.Ct. 1462 (2020).  By ruling that these underground wells are "point sources" for pollution, and thus requiring a permit for discharge, this decision will have a significant impact on both public and industrial underground injection wells, as well as municipally owned wastewater facilities.  To comply with the ruling, Maui county estimates it will be responsible for $2,500,000 in upgrades, plus additional civil penalties.  These high operational costs are a substantial burden for local governments.

     The legislature finds that current wastewater systems throughout the State are outdated and require major upgrades and the replacement of entire facilities.  Estimated costs for these systems are greater than $500,000,000 in capital improvement project funds and $1,000,000,000 in resource recovery systems funding.

     For these reasons, Hawaii's wastewater treatment systems will require state-of-the-art facilities that private entities, through their experience in resource recovery services, technological expertise, and economies of scale, can provide more economically and effectively than county governments.  Aside from the critical financial benefits, residents would benefit from cleaner water, reduced landfilling, increased resilience to climate change, and more sustainable

utilization of resources.

     Throughout Hawaii, county wastewater treatment departments seek to explore public-private partnerships allowed under section 323F-7.6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, including undertaking three formal solicitation efforts to gauge the interest of potential private partners both on a local and national level.  However, in Konno v. County of Hawaii, 937 P.2d 397 (1997), the Hawaii supreme court held that public landfill worker positions were "civil service" positions governed by merit principles and thus Hawaii county violated civil service statutes and article XVI, section 1, of the Hawaii State Constitution when it privatized its landfill operations.  This holding has limited Hawaii county in its ability to establish an effective business model that would create resource recovery systems that are regulatory compliant, and environmentally and financially sound.

     Hawaii county has begun to evaluate different models of delivery and operation systems for wastewater resource recovery.  Potential partners have reservations in working with the Hawaii county in evaluating opportunities without enabling legislation that would address structural issues related to these systems for wastewater resource recovery.

     The purpose of this Act is to allow county governments to:

     (1)  Enter into private-public partnerships for the services and transferring or joint venturing of one or more of their wastewater treatment facilities to a private entity, or its wholly owned nonprofit management entity, for the delivery of those services; and

     (2)  Transfer the rights and responsibilities to manage, operate, and provide wastewater treatment and resource recovery services in those facilities to one or more private entities or their nonprofit management entities.

     SECTION 2.  Chapter 46, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new part to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:

"Part    .  PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS FOR THE DELIVERY OF WASTEWATER TREATMENT AND RESOURCE RECOVERY SERVICES AT HAWAII WASTEWATER TREATMENT SYSTEM FACILITIES.

     §46-A  Definitions.  As used in this part:

     "Full scale resource recovery services" means service related to the extraction, conversion to energy, separation, preparation, or reprocessing of solid waste into new products including but not limited to clean water, nutrients, fertilizer, and renewable energy from reclaimed resources, such as reused water, renewable energy, gas, and biosolids.

     "Nonprofit management entity" means a nonprofit organization duly authorized to transact business in the State, the sole shareholder or member of which is the private entity, whose principal purpose is to manage and operate a wastewater treatment facility.

     "Pre-transfer facility" means a facility of a county's wastewater treatment systems prior to its transformation into a transferred facility.

     "Private entity" means a business organization duly authorized to transact business in the State that:

     (1)  Possesses a certificate of need provided to the wastewater recovery facility's operator needed to design, construct, maintain, and operate a wastewater treatment plant, and is able to demonstrate the successfulness of the resource recovery facility pursuant to chapter 340A; or

     (2)  Is the sole member of a nonprofit management entity.

     "Transfer completion date" means the date specified as the any extensions allowed under the terms of the agreement.

     "Transferred facility" means a wastewater treatment facility within the state of Hawaii for which the right and responsibility to design, construct, manage, operate, and otherwise provide wastewater treatment services at the facility is transferred to a private entity or its nonprofit management entity pursuant to this part.

     §46-B  Transfer of rights and responsibility to manage, operate, and provide wastewater treatment services in a facility of the county's wastewater treatment system to a nonprofit management entity.  (a)  Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the mayor, or county directors of wastewater treatment systems, or their designees, shall negotiate with a private entity to transfer the right and responsibility to manage, operate, design, construct, and implement full scale resource recovery services at one or more facilities of the various county wastewater treatment systems to a nonprofit management entity wholly-owned by the private entity; provided that the private entity shall submit a statement of interest in response to a notice published by the county to submit statements of interest in acquiring the right and responsibility to manage, operate, design, construct, and implement full scale resource recovery services at one or more facilities in the State.

     (b)  Any agreement negotiated by the counties and entered into by the private entity and counties shall, at minimum, include a transfer completion date and a plan and schedule for completing the transfer that includes:

     (1)  Provisions and a deadline to terminate the agreement before a transfer is completed, at the parties' respective option;

     (2)  Provisions for winding down operations at the transferred facility or facilities and for terminating the agreement in the event that the lease entered into is terminated before the lease expires or the private entity or its nonprofit management entity abandons or otherwise discontinues its provision of wastewater management services in a transferred facility; and

     (3)  Provisions to transfer or assign interests in equipment and furnishings, including any leases for the same; accounts receivable; other provider agreements; business and commercial licenses and registrations; intellectual property and goodwill; administrative, financial, and regulatory records and information; or any other interests or property of the county wastewater system facility or facilities to be transferred under this part, that the parties agree to transfer or assign.

     (c)  On and after the transfer completion date for the transfer of one or more facilities of the county wastewater system to a private entity or its nonprofit management entity pursuant to this part, the county shall cease to have any responsibility for or control over the management and operation of the facility or facilities transferred by the agreement pursuant to this part.

     The county will retain administrative oversight over matters, including but not limited to contracting matters; assurance of full compliance with state and federal mandates; receipt of fines; and oversight of federal labor and performance bonds.

     §46-C  Approvals required.  Any documents associated with the transfer of a wastewater facility or facilities under this part shall be subject to review by the corporation counsel, director of environmental management, and the director of finance in their capacity to advise the mayor.

     §46-D  Real property; terms and conditions.  (a)  The county shall enter into a fixed-term lease with the private entity or its nonprofit management entity to rent the real property, including all improvements and fixtures on the property, of the wastewater system facility or facilities that are to be transferred to the private entity or its nonprofit management entity under this part.

     (b)  At minimum, the lease shall include the following terms and conditions:

     (1)  The lease shall not be terminated other than for good cause and upon a minimum of three hundred sixty-five days prior written notice to ensure that the delivery of wastewater services to the community will not be disrupted;

     (2)  During the term of the lease, the private entity or its nonprofit management entity shall have exclusive control of all matters related to the management, operation, and provision of wastewater treatment services in the leased facilities, except as otherwise set forth in the lease and section 46-B;

     (3)  The responsibility to oversee the performance of the terms and conditions of the lease by the private entity or its nonprofit management entity shall rest with the county as the custodial caretaker of the real property under section 46-20; and

     (4)  The county shall retain ownership of the leased property throughout the term of the lease.

     §46-E  Transfer or assignment of other business assets.  Provisions to transfer ownership or assign the interest of the county wastewater system in some or all of the equipment and furnishings of the facility or facilities transferred to the private entity or its nonprofit management entity under this part shall be included in the lease entered into under section 46-D.

     §46-F  Liabilities.  (a)  The counties shall be responsible for any and all obligations incurred by the facility or facilities to be transferred, prior to the transfer completion date including any accounts payable, accrued paid time off, debt, capital leases, malpractice liabilities, and other obligations incurred before the transfer completion date.  Any and all liabilities of the pre-transfer facility that were transferred to the wastewater system, all liabilities of the pre-transfer facility related to collective bargaining contracts negotiated by the State, and the liability for all current outstanding post-employment benefits of the wastewater system shall remain the responsibility of the counties.

     (b)  All liabilities arising out of a transferred facility's management and operation in a transferred facility, on or after the transfer completion date, shall be the responsibility of the private entity or its nonprofit management entity.

     §46-G  Employment, wages, and benefits.  (a)  The county and the unions representing employees of the pre-transfer facility or facilities shall meet to discuss the impact of a transfer on the employees and the feasibility of tempering the adverse effect of layoffs by amending the employees' collective bargaining agreements pursuant to section 89-8.5.

     (b)  The employees working at a transferred facility shall be subject to laws and regulations that apply to private sector employees.  The employees of a private entity or its nonprofit management entity shall not be governed by state laws that apply to public officers and employees of the county, including but not limited to chapters 76, 89, 89A, and 89C, and any other laws and regulations that govern public or government employment in the State.

     (c)  The private entity or its nonprofit management entity shall offer all employees of the pre-transfer facility, employment for a period of      , after the transfer completed date.

     (d)  No employee of the county who is separated from service as a result of implementation of an agreement and transfer under this part shall suffer any loss of any previously earned rights, benefits, or privileges.

     (e)  Subject to subsection (c), the private entity or its nonprofit management entity shall take all reasonable steps necessary to provide for the efficient transition of employees from county employment to employment by the private entity or its nonprofit management entity at a transferred facility.

     §46-H  Operating support.  (a)  The private entity or its nonprofit management entity to which one or more of the facilities of the county wastewater system has been transferred pursuant to this part may seek funds from the county for operating costs as defined in section 37-62, of a transferred facility by preparing a budgetary request in accordance with procedures and criteria established by the director of finance.  In no event shall the amount requested exceed the amount appropriated for the operating costs of the wastewater system facility or facilities.  The director of finance shall review the request and may include some or all the amount requested in the administrative budget of the department of environmental management.  Any appropriation made in response to the request shall be subject to the allotment system generally applicable to all appropriations made by the county.

     (b)  To qualify to request funds from the county under this section, the private entity or its nonprofit management entity to which one or more of the facilities of the county wastewater system has been transferred pursuant to this part shall satisfy the following standards and conditions:

     (1)  Be duly authorized to transact business in the State, and determined and designated to be a nonprofit organization by the Internal Revenue Service;

     (2)  Require its resource recovery facility operators to meet licensing and accredited requirements, in accordance with federal, state, or county statutes, rules, or ordinances, to conduct the activities for which funding is sought;

     (3)  Have a governing board whose members have no material conflict of interest and serve without compensation;

     (4)  Have bylaws or policies that describe the manner in which business is conducted, prohibit nepotism, and provide for the management of potential conflict of interest situations;

     (5)  Be in compliance with all county and state requirements with respect to the transferred facility and any other facility it operates;

     (6)  Submit tax clearances from the director of taxation and the Internal Revenue Service to the effect that:

          (A)  All tax returns due have been filed and all taxes, interest, and penalties levied or accrued against have been paid;

          (B)  The entity or nonprofit is in good standing under a plan in which delinquent taxes, interest, and penalties are being paid to the department of taxation or the Internal Revenue Service, if applicable in installments; or

          (C)  The validity of any outstanding taxes, penalties, or interest is being contested in an administrative or judicial appeal with the department of taxation or Internal Revenue Service.

          The department shall have the authority to mandate the electronic filing of the tax clearance application; and

     (7)  Submit its annual budget with respect to a transferred facility to the counties for review no later than thirty days before the mayors of the county submits their annual budget to the council.

     §46-I  Annual audit and report; disclosure of revenue projections; internal performance audit.  (a)  The private entity or its nonprofit management entity to which one or more of the facilities of the county wastewater system has been transferred to shall engage a certified public accountant to conduct an annual audit of its financial affairs, books, and records in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.  The private entity or its nonprofit management entity may retain an audit firm to conduct an independent audit of the entity.  Each private entity or its nonprofit management entity must submit to the governor and the legislature, within one hundred fifty days after the close of its fiscal year that shall include the audited financial report.

     (b)  In addition to the submittal of the audit required under subsection (a), the private entity or its nonprofit management entity shall submit a report to the legislature at least twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session that shall include, but not be limited to:

     (1)  The projected revenues for each private entity or its nonprofit management entity; and

     (2)  A list of all proposed capital improvement projects planned for implementation during the following fiscal year.

     (c)  There shall be an annual internal audit of the management and operations of the private entity or nonprofit management entity.  The private entity or nonprofit management entity shall submit a report to the legislature at least twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session on the results of the annual internal audit of the management and operations of the private entity or nonprofit management entity.

     §46-J  Capital project support.  (a)  Without regard to chapter 42F, the private entity to which one or more of the facilities of the wastewater system has been transferred pursuant to this part may seek funds from the county for capital expenditures, as that term is defined in section 37-62, for a transferred facility for each or all of the first       years of the lease entered into under section 46-D.  Each year's request for funds shall be submitted to the director of finance in accordance with procedures and criteria established by the director and shall be reviewed by the director and comptroller with pertinent capital planning and expenditure documents and the capital planning procedures supplied by the private entity or its nonprofit management entity.  The director of finance may include some or all funds requested in the executive budget.  Any appropriation made in response to a request shall be subject to the allotment system generally applicable to all appropriations made by the legislature.  The county department of finance shall be responsible for transferring the funds allotted to the private entity or its nonprofit management entity for expenditure.

     (b)  After the first       years of the lease entered into under section 46-D, the nonprofit management entity and the private entity shall be responsible for funding all capital expenditures of the transferred facility.

     §46-K  Strategic commitment during term of lease.  (a)  The private entity shall be committed to supporting the nonprofit management entity and any transferred facility that seeks to improve its performance.

     (b)  The private entity and the nonprofit management entity shall apply efficiencies of scale, consolidation of shared services, and administrative and technological expertise to improve the wastewater treatment performance of a transferred facility or facilities."

     SECTION 3.  Section 89-8.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:

     "§89-8.5  Negotiating authority; Hawaii health systems corporation[.]; counties.  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, including section 89-6(d), the counties, the Hawaii health systems corporation, or any of the regional boards, as a sole employer negotiator, may negotiate with the exclusive representative of any appropriate bargaining unit and execute memorandums of understanding for employees under its control to alter any existing or new collective bargaining agreement on any item or items subject to section 89-9."

     SECTION 4.  Section 340A-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding the definition of "resource recovery facility" to read as follows:

     ""Resource recovery facility" means a facility in which solid waste is extracted, converted to energy, or otherwise separated, prepared or reprocessed for use into new products including but not limited to clean water, nutrients, fertilizer, renewable energy, gas, and biosolids in such manner that original products lose their identity."

     SECTION 5.  The governor shall inform the president of the senate and the speaker of the house of representatives of the transfer completion date specified in each agreement negotiated and entered into pursuant to chapter 46, part      , Hawaii Revised Statutes, by sending the president and the speaker each a copy of each fully executed agreement.

     SECTION 6.  In codifying the new sections added by section 2 of this Act, the revisor of statutes shall substitute appropriate section numbers for the letters used in designating the new sections in this Act.

     SECTION 7.  Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken.  New statutory material is underscored.

     SECTION 8.  This Act shall take effect upon its approval; provided that the amendment to section 89-8.5 in section 3 of this Act shall be repealed one year after the transfer completion date specified in an agreement negotiated and entered into under chapter 46, part      , Hawaii Revised Statutes, and section 89-8.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, shall be reenacted in the form in which it read on the day prior to the effective date of this Act.


 


 

Report Title:

Environmental Management; County Wastewater Treatment Facilities

 

Description:

Allows county governments to enter into private-public partnerships for the services and transferring, or joint venturing of one or more of their wastewater treatment facilities to a private entity, or its wholly owned nonprofit management entity, for the delivery of those services.  (SD1)

 

 

 

The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.

 

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