HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 1133 FILED ON: 1/14/2015
HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 646
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The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
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PRESENTED BY:
Mark J. Cusack and Michael O. Moore
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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 improving recycling in the Commonwealth.
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PETITION OF:
Name: | District/Address: | Date Added: |
Mark J. Cusack | 5th Norfolk | 1/14/2015 |
Michael O. Moore | Second Worcester | 1/14/2015 |
Michael J. Rodrigues | First Bristol and Plymouth | 1/30/2015 |
Jeffrey N. Roy | 10th Norfolk | 8/30/2019 |
Chris Walsh | 6th Middlesex | 8/30/2019 |
Eileen M. Donoghue | First Middlesex | 8/30/2019 |
Patricia A. Haddad | 5th Bristol | 8/30/2019 |
Keiko M. Orrall | 12th Bristol | 8/30/2019 |
Randy Hunt | 5th Barnstable | 8/30/2019 |
Claire D. Cronin | 11th Plymouth | 8/30/2019 |
Brian M. Ashe | 2nd Hampden | 8/30/2019 |
Danielle W. Gregoire | 4th Middlesex | 8/30/2019 |
Paul K. Frost | 7th Worcester | 8/30/2019 |
John J. Lawn, Jr. | 10th Middlesex | 8/30/2019 |
Thomas A. Golden, Jr. | 16th Middlesex | 8/30/2019 |
Paul McMurtry | 11th Norfolk | 8/30/2019 |
HOUSE DOCKET, NO. 1133 FILED ON: 1/14/2015
HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 646
By Representative Cusack of Braintree and Senator Moore, a joint petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 646) of Mark J. Cusack, Michael Moore and others relative to the development of economically sound and environmentally progressive solid waste management strategies to improve recycling. Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture. |
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
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In the One Hundred and Eighty-Ninth General Court
(2015-2016)
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An Act improving recycling in the Commonwealth.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
SECTION 1. PURPOSE: An economically sound and environmentally progressive solid
waste management strategy includes components of conservation, source reduction, reuse,
recycling and litter control. Businesses, consumers, and governments share responsibility for
managing solid waste and all must cooperate in developing and maintaining the best programs to
manage solid waste effectively and efficiently. These statutory changes are necessary to ensure
effective solid waste management recovery systems in the Commonwealth including expanded
access to and participation in comprehensive recycling programs at home, in public places, and
in commercial settings; better recycling promotion and education efforts; incentives for
households and businesses to recycle more of their solid waste; and development of
comprehensive litter prevention and control programs.
SECTION 2. Chapter 21H of the General Laws is hereby amended by inserting after
section 7 the following section:-
Section 7A. The Department shall establish a program to increase recycling opportunities
at public facilities visited by at least five thousand individuals annually including, but not limited
to, stadiums, arenas, marinas, airports, theaters, and parks. The Department shall work with
MassPort, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, the State Racing Commission, the Bureau of
State Office Buildings and other entities in order to establish a program. The Department shall
file a report on the program annually with the Joint Committee on Environment, Natural
Resources and Agriculture, the Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy,
and the House and Senate Committees on Ways and Means on or before December thirty-first of each year. The report shall, at a minimum, describe activities promoting recycling at these public
facilities and quantify the impacts of the programs.
SECTION 3. Section 33 of chapter 92 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2012
Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting at the end thereof the following paragraph:-
The division shall include the provision of recycling opportunities into all new designs
and redesigns of reservations and shall establish a program to increase recycling opportunities in
all reservations located within the urban parks district. The division shall file an annual report on
activities promoting recycling with the Joint Committee on Environment, Natural Resources and
Agriculture, the Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy, and the House
and Senate Committees on Ways and Means on or before December thirty-first of each year.
SECTION 4. Effective July 1, 2015, Chapter 94 of the General Laws is hereby amended
by inserting after section 323 the following section:-
Section 323G. Municipal Recycling Enhancement Fund.
(a) There shall be established on the books of the Commonwealth a separate fund
to be known as the Municipal Recycling Enhancement Fund (the “Fund”). Amounts deposited in
said fund shall be used, subject to appropriation, for programs described in paragraphs (c) and
(d) of this section.
(b) The Fund shall be governed by the Solid Waste Management Board (the
“Board”). The members of the Board shall consist of eleven persons appointed by the Governor
including: the Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, five distributor/wholesaler representatives
subject to the recycling fee pursuant to Section 323H of Chapter 94, two representatives of the
solid waste management and recycling industries, two representatives of statewide
environmental organizations, and one representative of organized labor.
(c) Not more than eighty percent of amounts deposited in the Fund shall be used
to enhance recycling collection programs in the following three areas through a combination of population-based and merit-based grants based on the recommendations of the Board:
(i) Achieving parallel access to recycling statewide, whereby residents are able to recycle materials in the same location and with the same ease that they are able to dispose of materials. Program elements to achieve parallel access include recycling collection on the same day as trash collection, use of large capacity covered carts for recyclables collection, collection of a comprehensive list of materials that may be developed by the Board, single stream collection of recyclables, and mandatory participation in recycling programs.
(ii) Adopting broad-based economic incentives to promote recycling including the use of unit-based pricing for disposal (often called pay as you throw programs) whereby residents pay a higher per unit price (per weight or per volume) for disposing of greater quantities of material and embedding recycling charges in an overall waste management fee for residents so recycling service is available to residents at no additional cost compared to disposal service.
(iii) Developing effective outreach and education programs to promote recycling on a consistent basis.
(d) Not more than twenty percent of amounts deposited in the fund shall be used
for litter prevention and removal programs including, but not limited to, a state grant program for
litter pickup and removal; litter education programs for the public and for schools; increased
access to recycling in public spaces; research relating to litter control; and enforcement of litter
related laws in state/municipal-owned places and areas that are accessible to the public. Funds
shall be distributed through a combination of population-based and merit-based grants based
on the recommendations of the Board.
(e) The Board shall work with the Department to develop best practices and
standards to use as criteria for awarding grants and other funding for recycling and litter control
programs and for documenting the impact of investments from the Fund.
(f) The Board shall submit to the Secretary of Administration and Finance, the
House and Senate Committees on Ways and Means, the Joint Committee on
Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy, and the Joint Committee on Environment, Natural
Resources and Agriculture an annual report of its activities and an evaluation of any and all
programs entered into during the course of the fiscal year.
SECTION 5. Section 323D of said chapter 94, as so appearing, is hereby amended by
inserting at the end thereof the following sentence:-
Effective July 1, 2015, 50% of amounts collected by the commissioner of revenue
pursuant to this section shall be deposited in the Municipal Recycling Enhancement Fund
established pursuant to section 323G.
SECTION 6. Said chapter 94 is hereby further amended by inserting after section 323F
the following section:-
323H. Assessment.
(a) Beginning July 1, 2016 all beverages in beverage containers sold in the
Commonwealth shall be subject to a 1¢ recycling fee. The fee shall be in effect for three years to support the transition to a broader, more effective recycling system in the Commonwealth. The fee shall end on June 30, 2019 and sales of beverages in beverage containers will no longer be subject to the fee after that date.
(b) The recycling fee shall be levied on the sale of beverages in beverage containers by a
distributor/wholesaler. Beverage containers sold for consumption outside of the Commonwealth are exempt from the fee.
(c) The Commissioner of Revenue (“commissioner”) shall develop implementing
regulations for the collection and deposit of the recycling fee into the Fund including procedures
for identifying and registering distributor/wholesalers subject to the fee and for quarterly payment of the fee by distributor/wholesalers. The commissioner shall also develop an annual payment procedure to reduce the administrative burden on smaller distributor/wholesalers. The commissioner shall prepare an annual report at the conclusion of each fiscal year listing registered distributor/wholesalers and reporting total Fund collections. Payment amounts from individual distributor/wholesalers shall be considered confidential business information and not disclosed by the Commissioner except in conjunction with audits conducted under (d).
(d) The Commissioner shall coordinate periodic audits of distributor/wholesalers to ensure that appropriate records exist to document fee payments and that all distributor/wholesalers subject to the fee are paying in to the Fund.
SECTION 7. Said chapter 94 is hereby further amended by striking out section 321 and
inserting in place thereof the following section:-
Section 321. DEFINITIONS. The following definitions shall, unless the context clearly
requires otherwise, have the following meaning:
“Beverage,” any ready to drink beverage intended for human consumption whether carbonated or noncarbonated and including both alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks except milk and dairy derived products, infant formula, or medical food.
”Beverage container,” any sealed bottle, can, jar, or carton, which is primarily
composed of glass, metal, plastic, paper, or any combination of those materials, has a capacity of
4 liters or less, and is produced for purpose of containing a beverage. Beverage container does not include cups.
“Dealer,” any person including any operator of a vending machine, who sells, offers to
sell or engages in the sale of beverages in beverage containers to consumers in the state.
“Distributor/wholesaler,” any person who engages in the sale of beverages in beverage
containers directly to dealers in the state, including any manufacturer who engages in such sales.
“Infant formula,” any liquid food described or sold as an alternative for human milk for
the feeding of infants.
“Manufacturer,” any person who bottles, cans, or otherwise places beverages in beverage
containers for sale to a distributor/wholesaler or dealer.
“Medical food,” a food or beverage that is formulated to be consumed, or administered
enterally under the supervision of a physician, and that is intended for specific dietary
management of diseases or health conditions for which distinctive nutritional requirements,
based on recognized scientific principles, are established by medical evaluation. A “medical
food” is a specially formulated and processed product, for the partial or exclusive feeding of a
patient by means of oral intake or enteral feeding by tube, and is not a naturally occurring
foodstuff used in its natural state. “Medical food” includes any product that meets the definition
of “medical food” in the federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. Sec.360ee (b)(3)).
“Sales within the state,” within the exterior limits of the state of Massachusetts and
includes all territory within these limits owned by or ceded to the United States of America.
SECTION 8. Section 322, 323 and 323B of said chapter 94 of the General Laws are
hereby repealed.
SECTION 9. Said chapter 94 is hereby further amended by striking out section 323C and
inserting in place thereof the following section:-
Section 323C. Abandoned deposit amounts; determination.
Any amounts that are or should be in a bottler’s or distributor’s Deposit Transaction Fund
and that are in excess of the sum of (a) income earned on amounts in said account and (b) the
total amount of refund values received by said bottler or distributor for non-reusable beverage
containers shall be deemed to constitute abandoned deposit amounts. Income earned on said fund
may be transferred from said fund for use as funds of the bottler or distributor.
SECTION 10. Said chapter 94 is hereby further amended by striking out section 323D
and inserting in place thereof the following section:-
Section 323D. Transfer of abandoned deposit amounts.
Each bottler or distributor shall turn over to the commissioner of revenue any deposit
amounts deemed to be abandoned, pursuant to section three hundred and twenty-three C. Such
amounts may be paid from the Deposit Transaction Fund. Amounts collected by the
commissioner of revenue pursuant to this section shall be deposited into the Municipal Recycling
Enhancement Fund, established pursuant to section three hundred and twenty-three G.
SECTION 11. Section 323E and 325 of said chapter 94 of the General Laws are hereby
repealed.
SECTION 12. Said chapter 94 is hereby further amended by striking out section 326 and
inserting in place thereof the following section:-
Section 326. Administration; rules and regulations.
(a) The Secretary of the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs shall
administer the provisions of sections three hundred and twenty-one, three hundred and twenty-
three G (b) through (f), and three hundred and twenty-four. Said Secretary shall promulgate and
from time to time revise rules and regulations to effectuate the purposes of said sections. Said
Secretary shall determine through rules and regulations which plastic bottles and rigid plastic
containers may be exempt from the labeling requirements of section three hundred and twenty-
three A, including but not limited to the following: (1) readily identifiable plastic bottles and
rigid plastic containers; (2) plastic bottles and rigid plastic containers for which there is no
technological capability for recycling, reclamation or reuse; and (3) plastic bottles and rigid
plastic containers for which recycling, reclamation or reuse is not economically feasible.
(b) The Commissioner of the Department of Revenue shall administer the provisions of
sections three hundred and twenty-three C, three hundred and twenty-three D, three hundred and
twenty-three G (a), and three hundred and twenty-three H. The collection of revenues pursuant to
sections three hundred and twenty-three D and three hundred and twenty-three H by said
commissioner shall, to the extent consistent with this chapter, be governed by the provisions of
chapter sixty-two C. The Commissioner of the Department of Revenue shall promulgate and
from time to time revise rules and regulations to effectuate the purposes of said sections.
SECTION 13. Said chapter 94 is hereby further amended by striking out section 327 and
inserting in place thereof the following section:-
Section 327. Enforcement; penalty; interest.
The Attorney General and District Attorneys shall enforce the provisions of sections three
hundred and twenty-one to three hundred and twenty-seven, inclusive. Any manufacturer,
wholesaler, distributor, or dealer who knowingly violates any provisions of sections three hundred and twenty-one to three hundred and twenty-six, inclusive, shall be subject to a civil
penalty for each violation of not more than one thousand dollars.
Any manufacturer, wholesaler, distributor, or retailer failing to make full and timely
payments as required by section three hundred and twenty-three H shall pay interest on any
unpaid amounts at the rate of one and one-half percent for each month or part thereof until
payment is made in full.
SECTION 14. Sections 7 to 13 shall take effect on July 1, 2016.