SECTION 1. The General Laws are hereby amended by inserting after chapter 21O the following chapter:-
CHAPTER 21P.
CLIMATE RISK AND FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY
Section 1. As used in this chapter, the following words shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise:
“Adaptation”, as defined in section 1 of chapter 21N of the General Laws.
“Adaptation measures,” location, design, engineering, construction, landscaping or other creation or modification of natural or non-structural features, ecological design, and other elements of a structure, operation, system, activity, or process that (a) eliminate or reduce loss, damage, or interruption of function due to climate risk, or (b) facilitate rapid restoration or recovery following loss, damage, or interruption of function due to climate risk.
“Alternative floodplain map”, any map adopted by a city or town by ordinance or bylaw that establishes, using the best available science and data, the area at flood risk based on forward-looking climate projections or on past, documented flood history, to be used in place of the federal emergency management agency’s flood insurance rate maps only if the map is more expansive in area and more restrictive in base flood elevation than the federal flood insurance rate maps.
“Climate resilience”, the ability to prepare and plan for, absorb, and recover from, and more successfully adapt to adverse events resulting from increase climate risks.
“Climate risks”, the reasonably foreseeable risks to the economy, public services and infrastructure, and public health and safety based on best available data and current science, that are attributable to current and reasonably foreseeable climate conditions, including but not limited to changes in sea level, storm frequency or intensity, drought, wind, extreme precipitation, and extreme temperature changes projected to occur as a result of climate change.
"Electric power company'', as defined in section 1 of chapter 164 of the General Laws.
“Environmental justice population”, a neighborhood that meets 1 or more of the following criteria: (i) the annual median household income is not more than 65 percent of the statewide annual median household income; (ii) minorities comprise 40 percent or more of the population, (iii) 25 percent or more of households lack English language proficiency; or (iv) minorities comprise 25 percent or more of the population and the annual median household income of the municipality in which the neighborhood is located does not exceed 150 percent of the statewide annual median household income; provided, however, that for a neighborhood that does not meet said criteria, but a geographic portion of that neighborhood that meets at least 1 criterion, the secretary may designate that geographic portion as an environmental justice population upon the petition of at least 10 residents of the geographic portion of that neighborhoods meeting any such criteria; provided further, that the secretary may determine that a neighborhood, including any geographic portion thereof, shall not be designated an environmental justice population upon finding that: (A) the annual median household income of that neighborhood is greater than 125 percent of the statewide median household income; (B) a majority of persons age 25 and older in that neighborhood have a college education; (C) the neighborhood does not bear an unfair burden of environmental pollution; and (D) the neighborhood has more than limited access to natural resources, including open spaces and water resources, playgrounds, and other constructed outdoor recreational facilities and venues.
“Maintenance”, as defined in section 1 of chapter 7C of the General Laws.
"Natural gas company'', as defined in section 1 of chapter 164 of the General Laws.
“Nature-based solutions”, as defined in section 1 of chapter 21N of the General Laws.
''Regulation'' includes the whole or any part of every rule, regulation, standard or other requirement of general application and future effect, including the amendment or repeal thereof, adopted by an agency to implement or interpret the law enforced or administered by it, but does not include (a) regulations concerning only the internal management or discipline of the adopting agency or any other agency, and not substantially affecting the rights of or the procedures available to the public or that portion of the public affected by the agency's activities; or (b) decisions issued in adjudicatory proceedings.
''Secretary'', the officer in charge of each executive office established by chapter 6A or chapter 7 and the supreme judicial court.
“State agency”, a legal entity of state government established by the legislature as an agency, board, bureau, department, office or division of the commonwealth with a specific mission that may either report to an executive office or secretariat or be independent division or department.
“State authority”, a body politic and corporate constituted as a public instrumentality of the commonwealth and established by an act of the legislature to serve an essential governmental function; provided, however, that “state authority” shall include energy generation and transmission, solid waste, drinking water, wastewater and stormwater and telecommunication utilities serving areas identified by the executive office as subject to material risk of flooding; provided further, that unless designated as such by the secretary of energy and environmental affairs, “state authority” shall not include: (i) a state agency; (ii) a city or town; (iii) a body controlled by a city or town; or (iv) a separate body politic for which the governing body is elected, in whole or in part, by the general public or by representatives of member cities or towns
“Steam distribution company”, as defined in Section 1 of chapter 164 of the General Laws.
“Water Companies”, every person, partnership, association or corporation, other than a municipal corporation, and other than a landlord supplying his tenant, engaged in the distribution and sale of water in the commonwealth through its pipes or mains.
Section 2. (a) The secretary of the executive office and energy and environmental affairs shall require that every permit or project requiring review pursuant to sections sixty one through sixty two i of chapter 30 of the General Laws(i) shall require disclosure of climate risk relevant to the application and require the applicant identify the assumptions, analysis, modeling or projections on which the disclosure is based; (ii) shall require, as a condition of approval, any adaptation measures that the applicant or the Secretary identifies as reasonable and appropriate for applicable climate risks; and (iii) may deny as incomplete any application, DEIR or EIR as to which the Secretary determines that either the climate risk disclosure or adaptation measures are insufficient. Every permit or project shall prioritize, to the maximum extent practicable, adaptation measures that (i) promote the preservation, protection, restoration and enhancement of the commonwealth’s natural infrastructure through nature-based solutions, (ii) account for the existing natural, built, and economic characteristics of the commonwealth’s most vulnerable areas and human populations. Adaptation measures that include the use of hard-engineered, hardscape, or gray infrastructure features shall be supported by evidence the measures will not cause of exacerbate negative environmental impacts and that alternative green or green and gray hybrid solutions are not feasible.
(b) The secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs shall adopt, in consultation and concurrence with the executive office of public safety and security and other affected state agencies and departments, a climate projections dataset based on the best available climate science using reasonably likely scenarios, to be uniformly applied when considering climate risks pursuant to section sixty-one of chapter thirty. Prior to adopting a climate projections dataset, the secretary shall provide public notice and comment in accordance with section three of chapter 30A. The secretary shall review and, as necessary, revise the adopted dataset at least every five years to ensure that it reflects the best available climate science.
(c) The secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs shall develop, in consultation and concurrence with the executive offices of public safety and security and housing and economic development, climate resilient design standards for integrating climate risks and adaptation measures into public and private construction, development, redevelopment, and new or expanded capital infrastructure projects based on the best available climate science. Prior to adopting the climate resilient design standards, the secretary shall provide public notice and comment in accordance with section three of chapter 30A.
Section 3. Applicants for state grants, loans, or other funding or financing including, without limitation, tax credit allocations for construction, development, redevelopment, and new or expanded capital infrastructure projects shall (a) demonstrate to the relevant agency or authority that the planning, design, engineering and specifications for the project include adaptation measures sufficient to address climate risks that will arise over the economic life of the project or the term of financing, whichever is longer, in accordance with the climate resilient design standards published by the secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs pursuant to section 3 of this chapter; (b) disclose in all design engineering, architectural, or other drawings and analyses the climate assumptions used in evaluating and addressing climate risks; (c) comply with and not seek variances for flood-resistant construction standards in the state building code.
Section . Requests for proposals for state capital projects shall require that proposals (a) demonstrate to the relevant agency or authority that the planning, design, engineering and specifications for the project include adaptation measures sufficient to address climate risks that will arise over the economic life or service life of the project, whichever is longer, in accordance with the climate resilient design standards published by the secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs pursuant to section 3 of this chapter; and (b) disclose in all design engineering, architectural, or other drawings and analyses the climate assumptions used in evaluating and addressing climate risks. This section shall not apply to emergency procurements as defined in section eight of chapter 30B.
Section 5. The requirements for risk disclosure and adoption of adaptation measures set forth in this chapter include the requirement that such disclosures and adaptation measures identify and alleviate any climate risks that disproportionately burden low and moderate income and minority populations, populations with limited English proficiency or foreign origin, or populations historically subject to higher rates of exposure to environmental risks than the general population. Adaptation measures shall further be designed to avoid disparate impacts on the basis of race, color, national origin, or income. Every permit or project requiring review pursuant to sections sixty one through sixty two i of chapter 30 of the General Laws shall submit a statement describing measures to eliminate disproportionate impacts on these populations.
Section 6. The secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs may promulgate such rules and regulations as are necessary to promptly and effectively enforce the provisions of sections one through five, inclusive.
Section 7.
(a) The following shall be exempt from the requirements of this Chapter:
(i)Any project for which the secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs certifies in writing in consultation with the director of the Massachusetts emergency management agency, after a 15 day review period, that the project poses no climate risks and has no potential to result in an increase in emergency response costs;
(ii)Any action or project for the operation, or maintenance of existing public infrastructure except actions or projects intended to address the vulnerability of existing infrastructure to extreme weather and climate change impacts including but not limited to flooding.
(iii)Any grant or financing by the commonwealth in a cumulative amount less than $250,000, inclusive of all state funding sources, which threshold is subject to revision by regulation promulgated by the secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs;
(iv)Any category of actions or activities for which a state agency or state authority establishes by regulation, with the concurrence of the secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs and the director of the Massachusetts emergency management agency, pose no climate risks and have no potential to result in an increase in emergency response costs.
(v)Any adaptation measure which is designed solely to mitigate climate impacts and enhance climate resilience that relies solely on nature-based solutions.
Section 8.
The secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs shall develop, in consultation with the division of professional licensure, recommendations for integrating best available climate science into the state code including but not limited to commercial and residential base building codes, mechanical codes, electrical codes, and plumbing codes. The recommendations shall include, at a minimum, consideration of the impact of climate change on structural strength and integrity, means of egress facilities, stability, light and ventilation, potable water, waste, drainage, electrical wiring and electrical fixtures used for light, heat, power, signaling and communications purposes in buildings and structures, and safety to life and property, including but not limited to impacts from coastal and inland flooding and extreme temperature changes. It shall also consider public health implications including human stress thresholds associated with heat and cold. The recommendations shall also include specific standards for adoption as an appendix to the state building code a municipal opt-in climate resilience stretch code that incorporates forward-looking climate risks, including but not limited to the impacts of extreme heat and cold, flooding, and wind, and standards for addressing these impacts in residential and commercial construction. The recommendations shall be published for public comment no later than 250 days of enactment. The executive office of energy and environmental affairs, in consultation with the division of professional licensure, shall periodically update these recommendations based on the best available climate science at least once every five years.
SECTION 2. The Section 95 of chapter 143 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2014 Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking all text and inserting in place the following:
Section 95. The powers and duties of the board set forth in section ninety-four shall be exercised to effect the following objectives:
(a)Uniform standards and requirements for construction and construction materials, compatible with accepted standards of engineering and fire prevention practices, energy conservation, climate resilience, and public health and safety. In the formulation of such standards and requirements, performance for the use intended shall be the test of acceptability, in accordance with accredited testing standards.
(b)Adoption of modern technical methods, devices and improvements which may, over the long term, reduce the cost of construction, and maintenance over the life of the building, and mitigate the impacts of and damage from climate change without affecting the health, safety, and security of the occupants or users of buildings.
(c)Elimination of restrictive, obsolete, conflicting and unnecessary building regulations and
requirements which may increase the cost of construction and maintenance over the life of the building or retard unnecessarily the use of new materials, or which may provide unwarranted preferential treatment of types of classes of materials, products or methods of construction without affecting the health, safety, and security of the occupants or users of buildings; provided, however, that such building regulations and requirements are not necessary to mitigate the impacts of and damage from climate change.
SECTION 3. The Section 94 of chapter 143 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2014 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting the following after subsection (r):
(s) In consultation with the executive office of energy and environmental affairs, the division of professional licensure, professional organizations, non-governmental organizations, and other stakeholders, develop and adopt, as an appendix to the state building code, a municipal opt-in climate resilience stretch code that incorporates forward-looking climate risks, including but not limited to the impacts of extreme heat and cold, flooding, and wind, and standards for addressing these impacts in residential and commercial construction.
SECTION 4. The Section 98 of chapter 143 of the General Laws, as appearing in the
2014 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting the following after the first paragraph:
The board of selectmen in a town or the city council in a city may request the use of alternative floodplain maps, based on best available climate science, including forward-looking projections, and or floodplain maps based on past, documented flood history, in lieu of federal emergency management agency flood insurance rate maps for the purposes of determining base flood elevation and mandating the applicability of flood-resistant construction standards as contained in the residential and commercial base building codes where flood hazard areas are referenced. The board of selectman in a town or the city council in a city shall certify that the city or town has formally adopted alternative floodplain maps for official use in the town by ordinance or bylaw and that the alternative floodplain maps are more expansive in area and more stringent in base flood elevation than the existing federal emergency management agency flood insurance rate maps. A city or town shall not use alternative floodplain maps that are less restrictive than existing federal flood insurance rate maps. If the board finds that the use of alternative floodplain maps are in the interest of public health and safety and with the general purposes of a statewide building code, the board shall, after notice to said board of selectmen or mayor, and after a public hearing, adopt rules and regulations, impose conditions in connection with the adoption thereof. If the board rejects the request, the board of selectmen or mayor may file an appeal within 30 days to undersecretary of the office of consumer affairs and business regulation. If the undersecretary upholds the decision of the board, the board of selectmen or mayor may file a request for reconsideration within 30 days to the secretary of the executive office of housing and economic development. The secretary of the executive office of housing and economic development, in consultation with the secretary of the executive office of energy and environmental affairs, shall respond to the request for reconsideration within 15 days.
SECTION 5. The General Laws are hereby amended by inserting after section (23) of
chapter 25 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2014 Official Edition, the following section:
Section 24
Climate Vulnerability and Adaptation Plan
(a)The Department of Public Utilities shall develop, in consultation with the secretary of
the executive office of energy and environmental affairs, climate adaptation standards for all investor-owned electric, natural gas, steam distribution, and water companies based on best available climate science. Prior to adopting climate adaptation standards, the Department of Public Utilities shall provide public notice and comment in accordance with section three of chapter 30A. The Department shall publish final climate adaptation standards no later than 250 days after enactment.
(b)The Department of Public Utilities shall require investor-owned electric, natural gas,
steam distribution, and water companies to prepare and file a climate vulnerability and adaptation plan at least once every five years based on best available climate science and in accordance with the Department’s climate adaptation standards. Climate vulnerability and adaptation plans shall prioritize, to the maximum extent practicable, adaptation measures that (i) promote the preservation, protection, restoration and enhancement of the commonwealth’s natural infrastructure through nature-based solutions, (ii) account for the existing natural, built, and economic characteristics of the commonwealth’s most vulnerable areas and human populations. Adaptation measures that include the use of hard-engineered, hardscape, or gray infrastructure features shall be supported by evidence the measures will not cause of exacerbate negative environmental impacts and that alternative green or green and gray hybrid solutions are not feasible. Climate vulnerability and adaptation plans shall be prepared in collaboration with communities most impacts by the effects of climate change, including environmental justice communities, and shall include a community engagement plan that describes outreach efforts that will be undertaken including but not limited to public meetings, notices thereof, language access accommodations for low-English proficiency populations, narrative and numerical outreach foals and targets, past engagement goal shortfalls or deficiencies.
(c) The Department of Public Utilities shall require, in any ratemaking proceeding pursuant to sections seventy-six, ninety-three, and ninety-four of chapter one hundred and sixty-four and sections two and four of chapter one hundred and sixty-five, that investor-owned electric power, natural gas, steam distribution, and water companies identify in priority order the climate risks to its facilities, that will arise over the projected economic life of such facilities or fifty years, whichever is greater, in accordance with climate adaptation plans as required by subsection (b). The companies shall present evidence documenting their evaluation of climate risks and measures addressing such climate risks based on the best available data and other evidence in the record before the agency and shall identify how their operating and capital budgets address such climate risks. The companies shall also (a) consider and present evidence addressing likely climate change risk scenarios in relation to the risk tolerance of the infrastructure and (b) disclose in all design engineering, architectural, or other drawings and analyses the climate assumptions used in evaluating and addressing climate risks
(d) In adjudicating ratemaking proceedings pursuant to sections seventy-six, ninety-three, and ninety-four of chapter one hundred and sixty-four and sections two and four of chapter one hundred and sixty-five, the Department of Public Utilities shall determine whether the applicant’s costs proposed or incurred for capital investment projects included consideration and minimization of climate risks for the economic life of the proposed investment or fifty years, whichever is greater. In considering climate risks, the Department of Public Utilities shall consult the most recent climate vulnerability and adaptation plan on file for the applicant and analyze likely climate change risk scenarios and shall conclude in writing that those scenarios are appropriate based on the risk tolerance of the project or facility.
(d) The Department of Public Utilities shall promulgate such rules and regulations as are necessary to promptly and effectively enforce the provisions of section twenty-four.
SECTION 4. Section 69J1/4 of chapter 164 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2014 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting the following:
All petitions shall a) demonstrate to the board that the planning, design, engineering and specifications for the project include adaptation measures sufficient to address climate risks that will arise over the economic life of the project or the term of financing, whichever is longer, based on the best available climate science; and (b) disclose in all design engineering, architectural, or other drawings and analyses the climate assumptions used in evaluating and addressing climate risks.
SECTION 6. Section 2 of chapter 21A of the General Laws, as appearing in the
2014 Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after clause (30) the following subsections:
(31) Establish, conduct, and maintain an annual program of education and training for members of local planning boards, zoning boards, and commissions on climate science and the physical effects of climate change including but not limited to sea level rise, storm surge, drought, wind, extreme precipitation, and extreme high and low temperature changes including heat waves and based on the best available data. Each city or town receiving financial assistance pursuant to section 11 of chapter 21N of the General Laws shall require members of any planning board, zoning board of appeals or zoning commission, health board, conservation commission, or other local board or commission comprised of volunteer members, to participate in training and education classes on climate science and the physical effects of climate change. Each member shall complete a minimum of five (5) hours of training in order to be certified by this subsection. Upon completion of the training, the board or commission member shall file with the municipal clerk a statement asserting that the training course has been completed.
(32) The secretary may, in establishing, conducting and maintaining this program of education and training, confer with and, if necessary, consolidate efforts with other mandatory board training programs as appropriate. Any consolidated training program must retain the requirement that members complete a minimum of five (5) hours of training on climate science and the physical effects of climate change.Non-governmental organizations may assist with the development, maintenance, and implementation of this program of education and training with the approval of the secretary.
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