An Act Concerning Water Quality in Watersheds
Sec. 1. 30-A MRSA §4211, sub-§5, ¶D, as amended by PL 1999, c. 228, §3, is further amended to read:
Sec. 2. 38 MRSA §353-B, sub-§2, ¶A, as amended by PL 2007, c. 558, §3, is further amended to read:
Discharge Group | Base fee not to exceed | Maximum fee for individual in group | Annualized license renewal service fee | Water quality improvement surcharge | ||
Publicly owned treatment facilities, 10,000 gallons per day or less | annual fee | $67 | none | $150 | ||
Publicly owned treatment facilities, more than 10,000 gallons per day to 0.1 million gallons per day | annual fee | $219 | none | $150 | ||
Publicly owned treatment facilities, more than 0.1 million gallons per day to 1.0 million gallons per day | annual fee | $219 | none | $225 | ||
Publicly owned treatment facilities, more than 1.0 million gallons per day to 5.0 million gallons per day | annual fee | $219 | none | $450 | ||
Publicly owned treatment facilities, greater than 5 million gallons per day or with significant industrial waste | annual fee | $770 | none | $650 | ||
Major industrial facility, process wastewater (based on EPA list of major source discharges) | annual fee | $1,850 | none | $650 | ||
Other industrial facility, process wastewater | annual fee | $630 | none | $300 | ||
Food handling or packaging waste-water | annual fee | $315 | $2,100 | $150 | ||
Fish rearing facility over 0.1 million gallons per day | annual fee | $288 | $1,753 | $300 | ||
Fish rearing facility 0.1 million gallons per day or less | annual fee | $288 | $400 | none | ||
Marine aquaculture facility | annual fee* | $288 | --- | none | ||
Noncontact cooling water | annual fee | $90 | $7,000 | $60 | ||
Industrial or commercial sources, miscellaneous or incidental non-process wastewater | annual fee | $115 | $2,100 | $150 | ||
Municipal combined sewer overflow | annual fee | $115 | $1,400 | $150 | 25% or $350, whichever is less | |
Sanitary wastewater, excluding overboard discharge | annual fee | $60 | $1,200 | $300 | ||
Sanitary overboard discharge, commercial sources | annual fee | $210 | $1,200 | $75 | ||
Sanitary overboard discharge, residential sources 600 gallons per day and less | annual fee | $175 | --- | $75 | ||
Sanitary overboard discharge, residential sources more than 600 gallons per day | annual fee | $200 | $600 | $75 | ||
Sanitary overboard discharge, public sources | annual fee | $210 | $500 | $75 | ||
Aquatic pesticide application | annual fee* | $200 | --- | $370 | ||
Snow dumps | annual fee* | $125 | --- | $150 | ||
Salt and sand storage pile | annual fee* | $150 | --- | $225 | ||
Log storage permit | annual fee* | $200 | --- | $150 | ||
General permit coverage for industrial storm water discharges (except construction) | annual fee* | $300 | --- | |||
General permit coverage for marine aquaculture facility | annual fee* | $125 | --- | none | ||
General permit coverage (other) | annual fee* | $100 | --- | $30 | ||
Experimental discharge license | license fee* | $500 | --- | $225 | ||
New or amended mixing zone, in addition to other applicable fees | flat fee* | $4,000 | --- | |||
Formation of sanitary district | flat fee* | $300 | --- | |||
Transfer of license for residential or commercial sanitary wastewater | flat fee* | $100 | --- |
*Discharge or license quantity fees do not apply to these categories.
When a license authorizes multiple discharge points in different categories in the same license, the total maximum fee for the license may not exceed the maximum fee for the most significant category plus 1/2 of the maximum fee for each of the other applicable categories.
A publicly owned treatment facility shall submit annually in conjunction with its annual license fee an amount that represents $2 per every ratepayer served by the facility.
Sec. 3. 38 MRSA §353-B, sub-§7 is enacted to read:
Sec. 4. 38 MRSA §410-I, sub-§3 is enacted to read:
The agencies shall prepare a draft work plan by February 1st of each year and make it available for review at a regularly scheduled meeting of the Shellfish Advisory Council, set out under Title 12, section 6038.
The agencies shall begin implementing the work plan by March 1st annually.
Sec. 5. 38 MRSA §424-B is enacted to read:
§ 424-B. Clean Shores Fund
Sec. 6. Water quality standards for shellfish harvesting. The Department of Environmental Protection shall consider bacteria and viral standards used by the National Shellfish Sanitation Program's model ordinance when issuing waste discharge licenses to ensure that shellfish harvesting is protected as a designated use under the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 38, section 465-B.
The Department of Environmental Protection shall review whether the imposition of year-round disinfection requirements at licensed wastewater discharge facilities would serve to improve the ability of the Department of Marine Resources to upgrade the classification of shellfish growing areas, where such facilities affect classification status. The Department of Marine Resources shall identify which facilities affect shellfish growing area classification. If the Department of Environmental Protection determines that year-round disinfection improves the ability to upgrade the classification of any shellfish growing areas, it shall change the license of that facility to require year-round disinfection sufficient to improve the classification.
SUMMARY
This bill creates the Clean Shores Fund within the Department of Environmental Protection to provide a funding source for grants to municipalities and other entities to identify and abate pollution in shellfish growing areas and to pay the Personal Services cost for 3 employees within the Department of Marine Resources in the growing area classification program within the public health division. The dedicated revenue for the Clean Shores Fund is established through surcharges on the installation of new sewer systems and the municipal combined sewer overflow and overboard discharges and on sewer utilities based on the number of ratepayers.
The bill requires the Department of Environmental Protection to work in coordination with the Department of Marine Resources to establish an annual work plan to prioritize monitoring and classification of shellfish growing areas and remediation projects within those areas. The process of developing the work plan must include input from municipalities with approved municipal shellfish programs.
The bill also requires the Department of Environmental Protection to consider bacteria and viral standards when issuing waste discharge licenses to ensure that shellfish harvesting is protected as a designated use under the Maine Revised Statutes, Title 38, section 465-B. The department shall also review whether disinfection requirements at licensed wastewater discharge facilities would improve the ability of the Department of Marine Resources to upgrade classifications of shellfish growing areas and may change license requirements based on the outcome of the review.